Monday, December 15, 2008

An Interview with Terry Schwarz, Senior Planner at the UDC

Why do you like Cleveland so much?
  • “I grew up in Chicago and I moved here from upstate New York, where I was in school, and I didn’t think I would stay in Cleveland, but I’ve been here since 1990, so I’m staying and I like it because it’s home. It’s an accessible city, a beautiful city, and there are lots of opportunities here.”
What’s with the temporary exhibits? Why can’t we get some of these awesome Pop-Up City events to stay put?
  • “We can, it just takes a long time. Development in Cleveland is a slow process, especially with the economy being the way that it is. So temporary uses aren’t intended to replace permanent development, but to complement it. We’ve got this giant amount of vacant property—about 3,300 acres of vacant sites and probably 15,000 vacant buildings, maybe more than that. So if there are ways that we can activate these dead zones in the city for a little while and move things around, that’s what we’re about.”
  • “As a model for a city, to be this kind of place where something happens in one place and then it disappears and turns up somewhere else, it could really make Cleveland a pretty interesting place to live and visit because it’s a city that’s always changing. You never know what you’ll find.”
What can Clevelanders do to get more cool things to stay in Cleveland (especially in the current economic state of things)?
  • “Yeah, well the economy is sort of the bottom line. There is a lot of good stuff in Cleveland; it’s just kind of spread apart. It’s just the nature of population decline and it’s the nature of changing development patterns. What Clevelanders can do to get more good things happening in the city is to patronize the things that are happening. When an event happens in the city, or an art gallery, or a restaurant, or a cultural event, go there and experience it.”
  • “If we all just made a point of actually turning up and participating, that would make a big difference. That means experiencing cultural events, finding opportunities to shop and eat in the city, and spending as much time in the city as you can. When the city’s energies are being spread outward, it’s harder to keep things going. The money goes where the people go. We can change the course of the city, each of us just has to do it.”
What are you most excited about for the upcoming year in Cleveland?
  • “The Land Lab process we’re working on is going to have some pilot projects that will reuse vacant land in productive ways. The point is to extract some value out of this growing resource that we have. That’s what vacant land is – it’s a resource.”
  • “I hope that a lot of the work we’re doing with vacancy and population decline seeds some implementation, at the same time I hope that conventional development takes flight as well.”
  • “In terms of development in the next year, the Flats East Bank project is imminent, I hope. So that’s going to be great when that project goes forward.”
What’s the biggest project that the CUDC is wrapped up in right now?
  • “Right now it’s probably the Re-imagining a More Sustainable Cleveland Initiative – the Land Lab Initiative that we’re doing with Neighborhood Progress Inc. It’s a citywide conceptual master plan dealing with vacancy and re-using vacant land. It’s a really big initiative that’s underway.”
  • “We have a couple of other substantial projects that have been with us for a while. One of which is the Steps to a Healthier Cleveland Initiative in which we’re mapping health issues in city neighborhoods. This is the fifth year of the initiative and each year we produce a couple of maps. This year we’re doing a downtown map, which is a change for us because downtown includes so much stuff and graphically the map can be pretty interesting and fun. So the Steps project is big.”
  • “We’re also doing a lot of neighborhood planning around Northeast Ohio. We’re currently working in Larchmere, on the stockyards neighborhood, and on West 117th Street in the west side of Cleveland.”
What were some of the best and the worst reactions to what the CUDC is doing?
  • “We’ve gotten tremendously positive feedback from the Pop-Up City events. As a planner, most of the work that we do is kind of removed from day-to-day life. Implementation is what happens after we finish our project. Pop-Up City, of course, is much more immediate, so we can see the results as we’re in the thick of it. People—community folks and public officials who come to the events—get it. We’ve had fantastic support from the City Planning Commission staff and members of Council, so that’s fun.”
  • “On the negative side, some of our older projects gave us this reputation about being an organization that draws pretty pictures that don’t get implemented. A lot of our plans that we did early on were very ambitious, and in a stronger market and with more developer collaboration maybe would have been implemented, but our clients aren’t developers, our clients are community-developed corporations. So implementation is harder. We still work with communities and neighborhoods all the time, but what we try to do now in response to that criticism is develop plans that are ambitious—because if you’re not ambitious, you don’t get anywhere; people don’t come to us for a few modest improvements—but now we show a range of alternatives for every plan. These alternatives range from very modest, small-scale changes that a community development corporation can get off the ground quickly, but also more ambitious kinds of things that the community can then adapt to market conditions. We work with market consultants for some of our planning projects, but even a market consultant can’t predict the future. So when the demand doesn’t materialize, then certain plans can’t be implemented. What we try to show is the shape of development that would really enhance the sense of community if a demand surges in a specific place. If development demand is farther off, then we propose some other things that the community can do. We try to respond to the market so that our work is realistic, without losing the creative side we think is so critical for the future of the city. If you can’t imagine a better future, then you’re never going to get one.”
  • “Some of the most fun, positive responses have been from communities where they have been able to pull things off and implement them.”
How do you balance the wants, needs, and eccentricities of Kent students, the CUDC staff, designers, architects, construction workers, community leaders, community members, concerned moms, and everyone else?
  • “We have three main missions here: there’s research, there’s advocacy, and then there’s practice. They all have to co-exist.”
  • “So far, the design practice in which we work with community groups and officials has been the primary focus. It’s not intended to be that way – they really should be in balance. But when you have clients that are paying for a design service, then they tend to rise in priority.”
  • “The research is the academic side, which includes teaching students and producing new knowledge about community design and urban conditions.”
  • “What we find now is that the balance of research and practice is where the most interesting stuff lies. The practice can be our laboratory for testing new ideas that we derive from the research.”
  • “Students come up with interesting ideas and new ways of thinking. If you go into the studio and look at what the students are doing, some of the stuff is kind of crazy. When we work for a client, we don’t have that creative freedom that the students have in the studio. So what we’re trying to do is nurture the relationship between the practice and the academic side so that they become mutually beneficial. Because the students also benefit when they see how these things play out in the community. Sometimes when you’re a student you think you’ll spend your life as a designer or architect sitting in your own place, imagining all this stuff, but in reality, it’s an applied art. You’ve got to work with your audience and we give them that little taste of reality, and in exchange, they give us their unbridled creativity!”
  • “The advocacy side is how we touch communities, trying to change public perceptions and raise awareness about the value of design in the city and in this region.”
  • “Practice, research, and advocacy are mutually beneficial. The energy comes from where they intersect.”
Do you ever wonder why you took this job?
  • “Before I got the funding from the Civic Innovation Lab to do the Pop-Up City events, we had an international exhibit and a series of events, one of which was a concert in a park in Slavic Village. It was terrific. There were four bands, and we showed movies from the Shrinking Cities Project. It was a beautiful night. The week after that, a twelve-year-old girl got shot to death just a few blocks from the very site. It made me think that I was so in the wrong business because the park was nice to make a happy memory—it was really fun—but it’s meaningless in the end if the neighborhood has reached the point where you can’t let your little girl out in the middle of the day. She was literally walking home from the store and got caught in the crossfire between two drug dealers. So it made all the work feel a little meaningless. All the concerts in the park aren’t going to bring that little girl back or help with crime. I mean, it helps with crime for that night; there was no drug dealing or prostitution in the park while we were there.”
  • “At the event we had this jump rope troupe dressed completely in spandex! I mean, it was this magical night, and all these kids came out, and they started jumping rope, and then the moms started jumping! We were feeling really good about it, but then you’ve got to kind of wonder. And it’s not just the crime; when you look at the level of foreclosures, when you look at the amount of vacancy, and we’re doing these tiny little interventions with all the things we do. It’s just these little things that are trying to change the course of what’s happening in the city. Sometimes you look at it and wonder, ‘Does it add up to anything?’ I don’t know if in our lifetime we’re going to see whether it changes the city for the better or whether it’s past the point of no return.”
  • “It’s a real heartbreaker because when we started in 2000, 2001, we thought Slavic Village was going to be the next Tremont. Now it’s hard to imagine what recovery’s going to look like in that particular area, and there’s no area that’s experienced foreclosure more than Slavic Village.”
  • “You do what you can do and you contribute what you can. If I was any good at law enforcement, I would be doing that instead, but I’d be the most useless cop ever!”
What do you like most about your job?
  • “What I like most about my job is that it’s always changing. It’s a great city to work for. It’s a city with a lot of planning traditions. And it feels really great to see different things from different perspectives. We do everything from high-demand areas, like Oberlin, to inner city issues where you’re dealing with vacancy. It’s that mix of issues that makes it exciting. Plus I can do whatever I want, more or less, as long as I can find someone to pay for it! Which is a big caveat, but whatever.”

Down the Rabbit Hole


The Tremont Pedestrian Bridge Pre-Event

The Masterminds


The artists and designers behind Bridge Mix

Monday, December 1, 2008

Friday, October 10, 2008

Thoughts on Bridge Mix

“If there’s good weather, and there will be, there’s going to be a lot going on. There’s going to be live music, there will be capoeira dancers, some folks from the Natural History Museum are going to come out with telescopes. Apparently Jupiter will be visible that night. If not a full moon, we’ll be close to one.

And then the artists are going to transform the bridge itself. The bridge is a little bit scary, but it’s an important piece of connective infrastructure in the city. The northern part of Tremont where Lincoln Park, and the galleries, and the restaurants are has really experienced a lot of investment and energy. The southern part has a dog park, it has Clark Fields, and it’s a place where there is burgeoning energy. So the bridge is just this important link, and if people are scared to go across it, it harms the neighborhood.

For the night, the bridge isn’t going to be scary. For the night, the bridge is going to be welcoming, comfortable, exciting, beautiful.

So the bridge will be lit (by Gauri Torgalkar). Alex Tapie and Wes Johansen are going to install a living room on the bridge itself to kind of promote this idea that this is a community space. It may be kind of an odd, scary sort of community space over a freeway, but for that night, it will be beautiful and comfortable and fun.

And then at the northern end, Patsy Kline is going to set up a mobile art gallery out of a U-Haul, where she’s doing a work about being present and not being present in your life. So she will have interviews and video installations and connections to the other side of the bridge, that you can experience from the north side.

Also on the north side we’ve got Gypsy Bean, my very favorite cafĂ©. Nicky is coming out for the night with coffee and sweats. So there will be food for sale from them.

On the southern side of the bridge is a stage, and that’s where there’ll be the dancers from the capoeira school in Tremont, and they’ll be doing a performance. The band is Miss Melvis and the Buford Pusser Experience and they’ll be really good. I’ve heard them perform and they’re really good. They’re loud and they’re fun and it’s a really good band.

Eric Hooper wants to do a greenhouse raising that night. He has a farm at the southern end. Kind of like a farm raising, but a greenhouse raising, to celebrate the fact that agriculture is flourishing in the city. Eric’s been there since, I think 1999, so he has an established farm in the city.

Other than that, it’s just people and fun, and on a nice night, it’s a beautiful place to be."
- CUDC Senior Planner Terry Schwarz

And the weather forecast says that it will be a gorgeous night, so go experience it for yourself!

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Go To This Pop-Up Event on Friday, October 10th!!!!

Bridge Mix
“a nite under the stars and over the headlights”

A Pop up City Event

LOCATION: Tremont Pedestrian Bridge; dead end of West 11th Street, south of Starkweather; dead end at west 11th, south of pedestrian bridge.

DATE: October 10, 2008

TIME: 6 – 10 p.m.

POP UP CITY: Pop Up City is a series of temporary events in Cleveland’s vacant and underutilized places that is supported by the Cleveland Foundation’s Civic Innovation Lab and operated through Kent State University’s Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative.

EVENT DESCRIPTION: The Tremont pedestrian bridge is a transition from the more developed Tremont on the North side into the older and more rustic Tremont to the south. This naturally suggests the theme of development and also coincides with Pop up City's goals. With impending plans for studies to draw attention to linkage and connectivity of the bridge, we found this to be an intriguing spot. This allows pedestrians and motorists to experience this space very differently for the first time, and draw attention to this generationally new connection, spawned by infrastructure development and expansion.

Planned events and exhibits include the following:

NORTH END.
• Gallery U-Haul – Art exhibition in U-Haul truck
• Coffee Stand with non-alcoholic beverages and food by Gypsy Beans and Baking Co..

PEDESTRIAN BRIDGE
• Makeshift living room in center span of bridge with egress at either end from middle at all times.
• Colored glass prisms and wind chimes tied securely to bridge.
• Lighting of approaches to bridge span on either side.

SOUTH END
• Use of space adjacent to Hooper Farm. Hooper Farm sell produce.
• Performance space with cultural dances, music, storytellers and Capoeira.

Artists’ Ideas for the Bridge Mix Pop-Up Event

This pop-up event on October 10th is going to be top notch. I went to the space where the Pop-Up event will take place (the Tremont pedestrian bridge and the surrounding area) and met with Terry Schwarz (Head Honcho of the CUDC) and some of the artists who are designing the event. As we looked at the space for the first time, here are some of the ideas that people tossed around:

South End
- The south end of the bridge is right next to a beautiful, rustic small farm (Hooper’s Farm), where people can buy local produce during the event.
- A trail leads away from the edge of the bridge into the woods, creating a transition from stark urbanity to nature.
- By the farm will also be a performance space with cultural dancing, music, storytellers and Capoeira. Terry was thinking of using some of the chopped logs in the area as seating, bringing together the urban and the natural aspects of the space.

Bridge
- The narrow, slightly slanted bridge vibrates from pedestrian steps and perhaps even from the cars and trucks buzzing below on the highway. The vibrations can be slightly frightening, especially for those who become nervous around heights, so to make the space more comfortable, artists have planned to build a cozy living room in the middle of the bridge.
- Designers hope that increasing the comfort level in the bridge will encourage people to transition between spaces, manifesting the connectivity that the bridge represents.
- The sound of the cars beneath the bridge, the lights, the edgy design, and the music coming from the event will produce quite the visceral experience for anyone who attends.

North End
- The north end will have quite a different style from the south end, not only because the surroundings have a more developed, suburban look.
- There will be a U-Haul that contains an art exhibition.
- Gypsy Beans and Baking Co. will have a coffee stand with food and non-alcoholic beverages!

Although this list is puzzlingly similar to the general write-up of the event, the point of it was to give you some insight into what the artists and designers were thinking when they first went to the space. Go to the event and see for yourself what it’s all about!

LOVE YOUR PLACE

I just moved back to Cleveland, my hometown, after graduating from college in New Hampshire, and one thing kept me from moving off to New York, Boston, or Chicago to join so many of my peers: the Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative.

Although I loved growing up under the shade of the giant oak trees in Shaker Heights—where I walked the block to and from lower and middle school—I convinced myself while I was away in New Hampshire that the only place to live and work after graduation was some other city… any other city.

Why was this? Many of us Clevelanders have come to terms with the fact that Cleveland is indeed a shrinking city. Young people need jobs, and they want to be around other young people. I was lucky enough to find work in Cleveland, but many of my peers have not been so lucky.

So Cleveland needs to work on Sustainability. Sustaining the younger generations so that we have a growing (and constantly improving) workforce. Sustaining the economy with jobs – jobs that could be created through up and coming Green enterprises (plug for the wind turbines on the lake, among many other ideas to make Cleveland the Green City on the Blue Lake). Sustaining the environment by redeveloping in our city instead of continually sprawling.

While rooting for Cleveland is a lot like rooting for the Browns, many of us will never give up hope. There are so many people in this town that are dreaming, striving, and toiling to make Cleveland the Great City that it is and will become. The Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative is chock-full of people like this. They’re constantly concocting new and exciting ideas and then turning them into realities.

The CUDC is a Community of Practice. Their work has transformed many areas of Cleveland and its surrounding suburbs through redesign and redevelopment. The people at the Urban Design Center inspired me to re-imagine the way I thought about Cleveland and what I hoped for its future.

The CUDC taught me to once again “Love My Place” and to work towards making it the Perfect City for both myself and for many others.