Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts

Public Housing, Beauty and Inclusive Design



"The Raymond Hilliard Homes (also called Center) was a Chicago Housing Authority complex located on the near south side of Chicago, containing two 16-story round towers for elderly housing and two 18-story curved towers for low-income family housing. Supporting 756 dwelling units, the complex included lawns, playgrounds, and an open air theater. It has since been renovated by the private sector and converted to mixed-income housing, still with a significant lower income population. It is also now listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1997, recognized for exceptional design. (...)
Meant as a new solution to public housing woes, Raymond Hilliard was built to be a structure which residents would be proud to live in. Goldberg felt that much public-housing was designed in such a way to make the poor feel that they were punished for being poor and did little other than warehouse them. As stated by Goldberg in a 1965 promotional piece, "their architecture must meet them and recognize them, not simply store them." Residents were chosen from records of model citizenry in other housing projects, and for many years this was the only public housing complex which needed no constant police supervision. The unusual tower shapes maximized the space allowed by Public Housing Authority standards while creating a sense of community and openness."
Raymond Hilliard Homes


::: DOWNLOAD: Integration by Design: Bertrand Goldberg, Stanley Tigerman, and Public Housing Architecture in Postwar Chicago, Marisa Angell Brown, Brown University

Excerpt (p. 218):
This essay examines a critical moment in public housing design in which two architects—Bertrand Goldberg and Stanley Tigerman, both white, Jewish, and Chicago residents—deliberated over what would constitute appropriate designs for African American residents on the South Side of Chicago in the 1960s. The Raymond Hilliard Homes (Figure 1) and Woodlawn Gardens (Figure 2), built six miles from each other—one at the northern edge of the Black Belt, the other at its southeastern boundary near Hyde Park—reveal Goldberg and Tigerman grappling with race, poverty, and spatial segregation in thoughtful and empathetic ways and coming to two very different conclusions about how an architecture of black empowerment might look.
Goldberg, drawing on the work of contemporary sociological thinkers such as Herbert J. Gans, Edward T. Hall, and Nathan Glazer, believed that different social groups have intrinsically different cultures, and that architecture must suit the users’ particular cultural mores and needs.

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photograph via chicago modern

"Black Chicago" Exhibition in Paris



Photograph: Boy blowing bubble gum, Chicago, 1951; taken by Marvin Newman

More photographs of African-American life in Chicago can be seen here: The Guardian
More about the exhibition: More

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photograph via The Guardian

Spectrum Toy Store: A Shop for Children with Autism in Chicago



After noticing that most parents tend to order toys for their autistic children online, home behavioural therapist Jamilah Rahim decided to open a shop for children on the autism spectrum. As these children's sensory processing often differs and shows a tendency to either overstimulation or understimulation, certain sensations may play a major role. The shop offers objects than can help calm down. (CityLab)

“When kids come in here with behavioral needs, and they’re flapping their arms or screaming, it’s 100 percent acceptable. No one is staring at them. It feels more like a community here.”
Jamilah Rahim

::: More: Spectrum Toy Store

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photograph via CityLab

Disability Pride Parade in Chicago



- When?
July 23, 2016, 11 am - 1 pm
- Where?
State St. from Van Buren to Lake, Lake to Dearborn to Daley Plaza Chicago, IL 60605
(City of Chicago)

"Disability Pride Parades are held to celebrate people with disabilities. Disability Pride Parades seek to change the way people think about and define disability, to end the stigma of disability, and to promote the belief that disability is a natural and beautiful part of human diversity in which people living with disabilities can take pride. The United States first Disability Pride Parade was held in Chicago in 2004. Today, Disability Pride Parades have been held in a number of places across the United States, including Silicon Valley/Santa Clara County, Chicago, Philadelphia, Colorado Springs, Houston, Atlanta, Detroit, New Jersey, and Columbus as well as around the world in locations such as South Korea, Norway, and the U.K." (EvoXLabs)