William Drenttel visits Alabama
Posted in: UncategorizedOn Design Observer today, William Drenttel posted a piece reflecting on his visit to Alabama, with intersections with H.E.R.O. (Hale Empowerment and Revitalization Organization), Project M, Americorps, and some other good folks. (Project M will be coming to Winterhouse this summer; I will be lucky enough to be a guest critic.) The piece is reflective with just a teaspoonful of the critical, and has great links throughout. Here’s a taste:
Hale County is ripe to become a national center for design research into rural poverty. It is uniquely positioned, given the convergence of design disciplines already in place there, the consequence of these initial efforts by architects and designers who have already established deep roots in the local communities. To be fair, conflicts may well arise: so many designers working in one zone will raise questions of identity and turf; local communities may be confused by an unexplained and sudden influx of do-gooders; new work inherently raises political issues about existing racial and political structures; and the current focus on housing and architecture does not expand design input to other potentially critical needs in the realm of healthcare, education or social services.
Read the whole post here.
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