A City Built by Hand
Helen Liggett documents how residents of Youngstown and Warren are reimagining vacant land.
All photographs and text are by Helen Liggett.
The unhappy undertone with which one says “vacant land” is comparable to the tone one uses for “used to be”: as in, used to be a house, a school, a hospital, church grounds, a parking lot. Space that has been taken out of commission and no longer functions as usable space highlights the extent to which activity is foundational to public space. For example, legacy spaces such as Mill Creek Park and Wick Park in Youngstown and the Women’s Reading Garden and Perkins Park in Warren remain part of the cultural infrastructure of their cities only insofar as they attract users.
From this point of view, public space is an ongoing project in which enactment is as crucial as design, construction, and maintenance. The encounters and connections that define public space have been put under stress by the socioeconomic upheavals experienced in Warren and Youngstown. This has been compounded by the current pandemic. Community events such as outdoor children’s programs, community cleanup days, public performances, and sporting events have been cancelled or delayed.
The purpose of this photo essay is to show representative public spaces that persist in the context of these circumstances. Because of the perseverance of volunteer citizens, local governments and businesses, not-for-profit organizations, and church groups, “used-to-be-spaces” have new lives as green space, side lots, gardens, educational and markets places—often more than one of these at the same time. In addition to creating layered space, the activists I met continue to plan for a future of using public space to address local problems. I was struck by how plans for expansion were a common theme. In a typical conversation, a community activist would point off to a nearby lot or derelict house and explain what their group had in mind for it.
French urbanist Henri Lefebvre writes about an “architecture of enjoyment.” Community members represented here are creating cultural infrastructure that includes both joy and purpose.
The photo essay has four sections: 1) vacant land, 2) usable public space, 3) community bounty, and 4) building cultural infrastructure. Each section contains photographic sequences of land-based projects in Warren and Youngstown, as well as remarks made in conversation or overheard while on site. The hope is that viewers will be able to get a feel for what it is like being involved in these places.
Section One: Vacant Land
Trumbull Neighborhood Partnership
Boulevard Park Neighborhood Partnership
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Section Two: Usable Public Space
Glenwood Community Park
Warren Community Amphitheater
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Section Three: Community Bounty
Garfield Community Gardens
Hope for Newport Community Garden
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Section Four: Building Cultural Infrastructure
GROW Urban Farm
ACTION Pop Up Farmers Markets
Warren Farmers Market
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A project such as this has many authors. I wish to thank Terry Schwarz, director of the Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative, and Quilian Riano, associate director of the Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative, for giving me the opportunity to participate in the American Roundtable, and for their guidance and support. In Warren and Youngstown, design professionals and citizen activists generously shared their time and local knowledge, keeping me from being a stranger. They include: Matt Martin, executive director, Trumbull Neighborhood Partnership; Cassandra Clevenger, community resource coordinator, Trumbull Neighborhood Partnership; Paul Makosky, director, Engineering, Planning and Building Department, City of Warren; Danita Davis, master gardener, Garfield Community Gardens; Ian Deniston, executive director, Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation; Jack Daugherty, neighborhood stabilization director, Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation; John Bralich, senior manager of GIS services, Department of Geography and Urban-Regional Studies, Youngstown State University; Mary Danus, Boulevard Park Neighborhood Association; Carole Conaster, Hope for Newport Community Garden; Eric Barrett, associate professor and area leader, Ohio State University Extension, Mahoning County; Jeff Magada, executive director, Flying High, Inc.; and ACTION staff members. I especially want to thank the residents of Warren and Youngstown for their participation, conversation, and inspiration.
Biographies
is an adjunct professor and photographer teaching in the architectural studies program at Kent State University. She is the author of Urban Encounters and numerous articles and professional presentations, often incorporating urban photography. Recent projects include Design/ReBuild part of a project initiated and sponsored by the Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative and Fashioned in the Clay, shown at Heights Arts.
The views expressed here are those of the authors only and do not reflect the position of The Architectural League of New York.