Panel II
Panel II: political . art
Panelists Dan Adams, Landing Studio (Cambridge, MA) Amy Balkin, Invisible 5 (San Francisco, CA) John Fetterman, Mayor (Braddock, PA) Moderator Lonni Tanner, Loeb Fellow, Harvard Graduate School of Design; Director, In Kindness
Daniel Adams operates 'Landing Studio',
which is a design and planning practice that principally focuses on
developing tactics for integrating active industries into their local
contexts: 'landing'. He is actively working on projects with port facilities in Boston and New York.
Since 2004, he has been engaged with landing large salt piles through
such mediums as the design of shared industrial and public park
infrastructure, light projections, festivals, museum exhibitions,
tours, signage, neighborhood presentations, and industrial/community
operations agreements. Since 2005 he has
been studying the development of the salt industry around the world and
locally as part of a traveling research fellowship with Harvard University. Currently, he is also a visiting design critic at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.
Invisible 5 is a collaboration between artists Amy Balkin,
Tim Halbur, and Kim Stringfellow, and organizations Greenaction for
Health and Environmental Justice, and Pond: Art, Activism & Ideas.
Invisible 5 investigates the stories of people and communities fighting
for environmental justice along the I-5 corridor, through oral
histories, field recordings, found sound, recorded music, and archival
audio documents. Invisible-5 tells the stories of communities tied
together by the geopolitics of the I-5 corridor, and by their struggles
for environmental justice along the route of California's major
North-South highway. The communities in the San Joaquin
Valley along the I-5 are often hidden just out of sight of the freeway,
where easy truck access moves toxic waste to landfills through small
towns like Patterson, Kettleman City, or Buttonwillow. In the areas
around San Francisco and Los Angeles, communities sit directly under or
adjacent to the I-5, with homes, playgrounds, and schools just yards
from the freeway. Invisible-5 examines the historic reasons why
polluting industries and businesses are often sited near poor, rural
and inner-city communities of color in California, through the oral
histories of people fighting for environmental justice along the I-5.
John Fetterman, the mayor of Braddock, Pennsylvania, and a core group of activists are serving in Allegheny County’s
poorest community to re-energize a historically important steel town
confronted with staggering decay and neglect. This group has
implemented a number of projects in Braddock that fall within two broad
categories: those focused on the community within, and those designed
to attract from outside Braddock. Initiatives include activities and
jobs for community youth, facilitation of urban homesteading through
art and green practices including urban agriculture, and active
opposition of the construction of a large toll road designed to run
through the heart of town. This presentation will begin with a
historical framework of the town and what has been left behind in the
wake of it’s economic downturn. Focus will then turn towards
elaborating on the projects underway and the intention behind focusing
on small, targeted, grassroots projects as a means for development.
Lonni Tanner has
20+ years serving as "creative lightening rod" for companies,
non-profits, and foundations. She has an uncanny ability to take "ugly"
social problems and make them resonate in a brand new way. Her “fresh
approach” to solving problems has earned Lonni and her projects a dozen
awards, including a Lyndhurst Prize. Her specialty is taking
so called "lemons" - or social issues the world has grown weary of -
such as persistently low reading scores, homeless families that can't
get ahead, and the trailer cities of Katrina, and imbuing them with her
own brand of “lemon-aid”. Lonni is responsible for creating The Library
Initiative: 31 libraries designed by leading architects for New York
City’s public elementary schools; Camp Bookaweek: a reading camp to
ensure that failing kids don't fall further behind in the summer;
Home-Aid: an affordable solution to outfit thousands of apartments for
homeless families; a soup kitchen akin to a restaurant; a housing
project that feels like a high-end hotel; a school playground turned
into a slice of Central Park; and Emergency Cultural Vehicles to
dispense everything from arts to sports programs to families living in
the "instant neighborhoods," sprouting along the Gulf Coast following
Katrina. Lonni runs her own consulting practice based in New
York City, called In Kindness, which helps non-profits, foundations,
and companies think and act creatively to solve social problems. For 11
years, Lonni served as Director of Special Projects for the Robin Hood
Foundation in New York City, where she amassed more than $50 million in
cash, goods, and services on behalf of innovative poverty-fighting
projects. She was Director of New York Shares, a division of New York
Cares, which redistributed more than $1 million in used furniture and
business equipment to 200 New York City charities. And she served as
Vice President for Development during the launch of City Year, an
action tank for national service.
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SFI8 PAGE LINKS
Overview
Schedule
Keynote
Panel I
Panel II
Panel III
Panel IV
Workshops
Sponsors
SFI ARCHIVE LINKS
SFI1 (2000)
SFI2 (2002)
SFI3 (2003)
SFI4 (2004)
SFI5 (2005)
SFI6 (2006)
SFI7 (2007)
SFI8 (2008)
SFI9 (2009)
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