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CAPACITY BUILDING

Land Use Studio: Richmond, California

While the city undergoes its formal General Plan update process, led by Professor John Landis in Fall 2006, a studio of graduate students in UC Berkeley's Department of City and Regional Planning are considering questions and possibilities for the consultants, city government officials and General Plan Advisory Committee. Some of the topics include:

  • What are the economics associated with bringing a new major grocery store to Richmond?
  • Can Richmond's extensive industrial spaces be converted to position the City to take a leadership role in the environmental cleanup industry? What would it take to get there?
  • What are some potential means of environmental remediation the city could pursue in different locations?

(This work cross-links with capacity building in Designing and Programming for the Public Realm)

 

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Arts and Community

In recent years, there has been growing interest in the arts, culture, and community revitalization among city planners, policy makers, funders, and scholars from a range of disciplines. A number of scholars have argued that the arts are correlated to gentrification the displacement of lower-income residents in urban neighborhoods caused by increases in rent. However, a considerable body of new research suggests that cultural institutions based in low-income neighborhoods, including community centers, churches, and parks, enhance community stability and are catalysts for change without displacement. CCI is researching the relationship between the arts and neighborhood change. How do community-based arts organizations and events help shape neighborhood consciousness and subsequent change? What makes them effective agents for community building? What kind of relationships enable them to thrive and what types of facilities do they use? How do their activities relate to the city's “official” arts and culture policies? And finally, how might funders, government officials, developers, and city planners think about and support the arts in the context of sustainable and equitable neighborhood revitalization?

 
© 2009 Center for Community Innovation at the Institute of Urban & Regional Development at UC Berkeley