Spent this summer and fall having the extraordinary opportunity to work with people in the Cleveland neighborhoods of Stockyards, Buckeye-Shaker-Larchmere, Glenville, Central and Mill Creek to design out how they wanted to make the places they live be more inviting, beautiful, creative, and inspiring. This was a pilot year for a project called City Repair (which originated in Portland, OR) in Cleveland. The dedication people showed over the course of 6 months-- to making meeting after meeting, drawing in new people and putting in a huge amount of hours and brain-power to get projects implemented-- was pretty unbelievable. The photo above is of Newark Court, an alleyway in Stockyards about 850 feet long. The long-term plan is to paint the entire length of the alley as a stream (since a stream actually does run underneath the street). Because the actual painting of the pavement has to wait until City approval comes through, neighbors came up with a Plan B of getting permission of every single property owner on the alley to pain their fences and garages as the streambed. It came out gorgeously. But more importantly, I have maybe never seen any other project pull together so many people in such a short period of time as new friends, and collaborators in re-envisioning our world together. I am so excited to see where this goes from here!
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Newark Creek
Spent this summer and fall having the extraordinary opportunity to work with people in the Cleveland neighborhoods of Stockyards, Buckeye-Shaker-Larchmere, Glenville, Central and Mill Creek to design out how they wanted to make the places they live be more inviting, beautiful, creative, and inspiring. This was a pilot year for a project called City Repair (which originated in Portland, OR) in Cleveland. The dedication people showed over the course of 6 months-- to making meeting after meeting, drawing in new people and putting in a huge amount of hours and brain-power to get projects implemented-- was pretty unbelievable. The photo above is of Newark Court, an alleyway in Stockyards about 850 feet long. The long-term plan is to paint the entire length of the alley as a stream (since a stream actually does run underneath the street). Because the actual painting of the pavement has to wait until City approval comes through, neighbors came up with a Plan B of getting permission of every single property owner on the alley to pain their fences and garages as the streambed. It came out gorgeously. But more importantly, I have maybe never seen any other project pull together so many people in such a short period of time as new friends, and collaborators in re-envisioning our world together. I am so excited to see where this goes from here!
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