bcIMPACT 2014

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IMPACT 2014


Tarrant

Dallas

Harris

Starr Hidalgo

Willacy Cameron

Work by county. A model of Los Olmos multi-family housing in Raymondville, TX.


CHOICE EMPOWERS buildingcommunityWORKSHOP is a Texas based nonprofit community design center seeking to improve the livability and viability of communities through the practice of thoughtful design and making. We enrich the lives of citizens by bringing design thinking to areas of our city where resources are most scarce. To do so, [bc] recognizes that it must first understand the social, economic, and environmental issues facing a community before beginning work. Through a diverse roster of projects, [bc] tackles a range of issues related to the built environment, including city and neighborhood planning, housing, transportation, resource consumption, data systems, and health. [bc] was established in Dallas in 2005 and a field office in Brownsville opened in 2011, and a Houston office followed in 2013. As the only community design organization working across Texas, [bc] is unique in its approach to community engagement. We form strong relationships through our collaborative design work, educational outreach activities, and social media channels, enabling us to engage with a broad segment of the population. The success of our work is contingent upon reaching those residents not typically sought out by the design and planning community.


Today, the Trinity River Audubon Center is a place of discovery, education, and tranquility. Yet this location, adjacent to a middle-class African-American neighborhood, has not always been so peaceful. For a quarter century, the City of Dallas turned a blind eye to over two million cubic yards of trash being dumped illegally. This is the story of the precedentsetting environmental law case Cox v City of Dallas Texas, the reclamation of land, and a neighborhood’s fight for justice. outofdeepwood.com

On April 26, 2014, filmmakers, non-profits, and citizens from across the region went out to talk to folks about the future of the Lower Rio Grande Valley as part of One Day in the LRGV. We chatted with residents of the Linda Vista Estates Colonia about issues surrounding stormwater management and drainage. vimeo.com/bcWORKSHOP Residents and local architects work together during a community workshop for DR2 in Houston, TX.



1. A completed RAPIDO disaster recovery home in Brownsville, Texas. 2. The Ark Festival, an Activating Vacancy event, in the 10th Street Historic District in Dallas, TX. 3. A public gallery show of home designs developed for six Houston neighborhoods as a part of the DR2 project. 4. A map of Dallas parks and demographics. Part of the Race & Control of Public Parks exhibit in Dallas, TX. 5. A Little Free Libraries/Libros Libres created by Rick Fontenot (Art Con) with Readers2Leaders in Dallas, TX.

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Elm Thicket Park

Exall Park

Exline Park

Pike & Griggs Parks

1930

1940

1950

1960

2010 Looking at the city by block, as opposed to census tract, affords the opportunity for much closer look at the racial composition of the city; where there are truly mixed areas and where stark segregation remains. This is particularly apparent among white majority. For the most part, areas with 90% of more white residents are heavily insulated from more diverse parts of the city. This is particularly apparent around White Rock Lake and throughout north Dallas. The most significantly diverse parts of the city appear to be towards Mountain Creek, parts of Pleasant Grove, Kleberg and the area along I-30 east of White Rock Creek. Despite some growth in the Hispanic population, many historically black neighborhoods remained majority black in 2010, not just in South and southeast Dallas but also at Hamilton Park and at Roseland Homes, the last remnant of the black Freedmanstown community. The demographics in Elm Thicket and Arlington Park appear to be changing more rapidly. Major linear parks were added to the Dallas system in the 2000s including extensions of the greenbelt along the Elm Fork of the Trinity River, the old Trinity River channel, the Preston Ridge Trail. Large additions to the Great Trinity Forest came under the purview of the Parks Department, as well.

Viendo a la ciudad por cuadra en vez de por zona de censo ayuda a ver la composición racial de la ciudad, donde existen areas mixtas y donde segregación continua. Esto es particularmente obvio entre la mayoria blanca. Areas con el 90% o mas de la población blanca estan fuertemente aislados de las partes mas diversas de la ciudad. Esto se aparenta mas alrededor del lago White Rock y por el norte de dallas. Las areas mas diversas de la ciudad estan junto a Mountain Creek, partes de Pleasant Grove, Kleberg y el area junto a la carretera 30, al este del arroyo White Rock. Aunque la población hispana ha crecido, muchos vecindarios que historicamente han sido afroamericanos se mantuvieron así en el 2010, no solo al sur y sureste de dallas, pero tambien en el parque Hamilton y junto a las viviendas Roseland, los ultimos vestigios de la comunidad afroamericana Freedmanstown. La demográfica en Elm Thicket y Arlington Park aparentan cambiar mas rapidamente. Parques mayores fueron agregados al sistema en los años 2000 incluyendo extensiones junto a Elm Fork y el rio Trinity, el canal Old Trinity, y el recorrido Preston Ridge. Adiciones grandes al bosque Great Trinity fueron puestos en el ámbito de influencia del departamento de parques.

Notes: There was virtually no change in race and Hispanic origin data collection from the 2000 census to 2010 census.

Nota: No hubo ningún cambio en la colección de datos de raza u origen hispano en el censo del año 2000 hasta el censo del año 2010.

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1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

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Legend Percentage of Race by Block 2010

Map Features

Plurality Hispanic 50 - 60 %

Black 50 - 60 %

Hispanic 61 - 70 %

Black 61 - 70 %

Water Body

Park

5

Kidd Springs Park


2014 OVERVIEW

42 433,936 22,544 220 520

REVENUE contributed

earned

active projects & initiatives

45% fee for service

square feet designed

foundations 44% individuals 07% government 02%

voices heard

EXPENSES programs

histories documented community engagement meetings & events

activating 09% analyzing 08% informing 07% making 39% mapping 04% storytelling 04%

g&a

03% fundraising 13% operations 13% bcFELLOWs


[bc]’s RGV office moved into a new space in downtown Brownsville, TX. The space will also serve as a City Design Center for the Brownsville community.


2014 SUPPORTERS & PARTNERS A Resource in Serving Equality Advocates for Community Transformation Affordable Homes of South Texas AIA Dallas Akin Babatunde & Liz Mickel Alejandro Fernandez Alendra Lyons, Mill City Neighborhood Alert Residential Inspection Alphonso Smith Ambiotec Engineering Andra Johnson, Cornerstone Baptist Church Andrew Kramer Ann Keen Anne & Brent Brown Austin CDC AVANCE Bank of America Foundation Benny Walker Big Thought Brett Zamore Design Capstone Classic Construction Caruth Foundation Catherine Cuellar Catlin Whatley, VMLC - West Dallas CDC Brownsville CDC Dallas CDC Harlingen Cedric Douglas Central Dallas CDC Christopher Blay Citi Foundation CIty of Brownsville

City of Dallas City of Raymondville CitySquare Communities Foundation of Texas Contects CNCS, AmeriCorps VISTA Crossroads Community Services Cynthia Wallace, Jerome McNeil Detention Center Dallas CityDesign Studio Dallas County Criminal Justice System Dallas Foundation Dallas Public Library Dan Finnell, Est. 11 Daniel & Beshara, P.C. Deedie & Rusty Rose Diana O’Connor & Alpha Thomas, MLK Center Dolphin Heights Neighborhood Association Dorothea Leonhardt Foundation Downtown Dallas, Inc EDCO Eloise Lundy Recreation Center Equal Voice Network Eric Bartlett, 5g Studio Erika Huddleston Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Ford Foundation Fraizer Revitalization Inc FSG Consultants George Ellis Glassman Shoemake and Maldonado Golden Gate CDC Gray Garmon

Greater Dallas Planning Council Groundworks Dallas Gulf Coast Community Design Studio Healing Hands Ministeries Hocker Design Group Huitt-Zollars Hunt Institute for Engineering & Humanity Hunter Hunt Ideal Neighborhood Association Interfaith Housing Coalition Iv Amenti JaMonica Washington, Lakewest Family YMCA Jeffery Bennett Jewish Family Services John Spriggins Kadleck & Associates Kyle Talkington La Union Del Pueblo Entero Lantz Full Circle LaSalle Tippens, KAI Texas LaSheryl Walker, St. Philip’s School and Community Center Lauren Gaffney & Rachel Mattes Leonardo Gonzalez Sangri & Scott Taylor Linda Jones Literacy Instruction For Texas Local Initiatives Support Corporation LOJO: Jason Logan & Matthew Johnson Lou Nell Sims m+a architecture studio Maggie Winter MC2 Architects & MC2 Construction


McIntyre + Robinowitz Architects Melanie Wood Melissa and Trevor Fetter Family Fund Melody Bell MEP Systems Design & Engineering Inc. METALAB Metro Dallas Homeless Alliance Metrocare Services Michael Karnowski Morgan Chivers National Endowment for the Arts North Texas Giving Day Patricia Cox Patricia Williams/American Care Academy Paula Hutchinson, Muncie Neighborhood Phillip Collins Proyecto Azteca Proyecto Juan Diego Public Architecture Public Ulitity Board of Brownsville RabbleWorkshop Rick Fontenot, Art Conspiracy Roger Mainor, Est. 11 Ronnie Mestas, Los Altos Neighborhood Rosa E. Lopez, Vecinos Unidos, Inc. Rosie Lee, Marcello Pope RTKL SafeHaven of Tarrant County San Felipe de Jesus Sara Mendez & Isaac Cortez Senior Source Shahrzad Rizvi

Shaun Montgomery Sherri Mixon, TR Hoover Community Center South Texas Adult Resource and Training SouthFair CDC Stephanie Chandler, Vogel Alcove studioOutside Surdna Foundation Symone Construction Taft Architects Tammy Gomez Texas Association of Community Development Corporation Texas Organizing Project Texas RioGrande Legal Aid Texas Southmost College Architecture Program The Boone Family Foundation The Real Estate Council The Senior Source The Trinity Trust Tisha Crear TMBP|click Tosha Herron-Bruff, Habitat for Humanity Trena & Logan Lechleitner Trinity River Audubon Center TX A&M Center for Housing and Urban Development TX A&M Kingsville Extension Storm Water Task Force TX Low Income Housing Information Service unAbridged Architecture University of Houston, Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture Community Design Resource

Center University of North Texas UT Southwestern Medical Center UT Rio Grande Valley Victoria Ramirez, Readers 2 Leaders Working In Neighborhoods Strategically (WINS) Initiative YWCA BOARD MEMBERS Stephanie Hunt, Chair Brent Brown, President Betsy del Monte John Greenan Michael Sorrell


buildingcommunityWORKSHOP bcWORKSHOP.org inform@bcWORKSHOP.org 416 S. Ervay Dallas, TX 75201 214.252.2900

A community engagement meeting for the Macon Starks senior housing project in the Ideal neighborhood in Dallas, TX. Front cover: Jesse and Hugo meet with a future RAPIDO homeowner.

609 11th Street Brownsville, TX 78520 956.443.2211 601 Sawyer, 5th Floor Houston, TX 77006 713.304.6277


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