Will You "CitySpeak"?

During a series of public performances at Worcester State University in April, CitySpeak, an innovative theater performance at Worcester State University, gave Worcesterites a chance to hear voices of those not usually heard in the public sphere.  As an arts- and research-based approach to urban planning and community development, the CitySpeak Project was based on the interviews of over fifty Worcester residents representing almost every zip code of the city.  Students from the Department of Urban Studies at Worcester State University, interviewed residents they met through the networks of its partner organizations including Girls Inc., Oak Hill CDC, Worcester Common Ground, African Community Education, Parent/Professional Advocacy League and Worcester’s NAACP.  Students from Visual + Performing Arts used anonymous transcripts of the interviews to create a public performance piece that stimulated dialogue on the issues raised – racism in the city, lack of adequate transportation networks , inability to get trash picked up to name a few. All were stories of connection, disconnection, and non-connection from each other, City Hall, and the city in general.  

Can Worcester afford to destroy yet another historical gem?

A district must mingle buildings that vary in age and condition, including a good proportion of old ones.  Cities need old buildings so badly it is probably impossible for vigorous streets and districts to grow without them...If a city has only new buildings, the enterprises that can exist there are automatically limited to those that can support the high costs of new construction.... 

WooVoice #4: Kevin Harrington, Co-Founder Technocopia

It’s a Thursday night, OpenHack night at Technocopia downtown at 44 Portland Street.  The space is alive with activity, laughter and conversations.  Before I interview Kevin, he stops to chat for five minutes with another member.  He asks the member’s advice for a student he met that day at the fab lab at Quinsigamond Community College.  The member offers to help the student who wants to make an exoskeleton for his hand that has no strength by printing and manufacturing his own upgrades.  So, this is what a makerspace is all about – to make things, to share tools and ideas and to create community together.  Technocopia is a big tool workshop that is a collectively shared resource. 

A Pilgrimage to Jane's New York

In order to celebrate the history, architecture, art, and community organizing initiatives that preserve livable urban neighborhoods, volunteer- led neighborhood walks have sprouted in cities across the globe during the first weekend of May, Jane Jacob’s birthday week.  Since 2016 is a special celebratory year for Jane Jacob’s 100th birthday, these “Jane’s walks” have proliferated.  Over 200 walks in all five boroughs in New York City were held during this past weekend, May 6 – 8.  The weather was horrible, rainy, cold, dark, but how could I let this stop me?  This was a pilgrimage trip, a way to get inspiration for a year of blogging for “Jane Jacobs in the Woo”.

WooVoice #3: Chris Sawyer, Store Window Designer

Chris Sawyer has not had a vacation in five years.  For his day job, he travels up and down the east coast and Chicago to design the store windows for over twenty Ralph Lauren stores.  For the past five years, he has returned to Worcester during his precious vacation time to donate his energy to beautifying the store windows of the Denholm building downtown at 484 Main Street.  He does whatever it takes to maintain the beauty he remembered during his youth, anything from washing the windows to creating intricate design stories for all to see on Main Street.

Are you a "Jane Jacobs in the Woo"?

CONSIDER THESE QUESTIONS:

1)      Do you want a Worcester that is more biking and walking centered?  Do you believe in building more bike lanes, pedestrian plazas and better public transportation options in the city?  Do you wish you didn’t have to use a car as much to get around town?

2)      Do you believe in the importance of maintaining, restoring and re-inventing our historic architectural infrastructure?  Do you support the model of the Crompton Collective, for example, to create new and innovative uses of our old buildings?

3)      Do you agree that bustling urban neighborhoods must combine a variety of mixed uses – residential, retail, industrial, cultural?  Do you believe in the importance of high density over urban or suburban sprawl?

WooVoice #2: Bram Yoffie, Urban Architect- turned-Artisanal- Bread-Maker

Bram Yoffie’s truck sits outside his parents’ home on the west side of Worcester.  In February, he returned from an eighteen month wheat growing and bread baking immersion experience in a two hundred person village in France.  Now, he is hoisting his motorcycle on his truck and filling up the cab with stores of canned tuna fish and almonds for his upcoming 6000 mile journey cross country.  His goal is to reach the west coast, anywhere from northern California to Oregon, find a farmer who can grow wheat from polycultures, establish a stone grinding mill and then start baking fine loaves of artisanal bread.  His dream is simply to recreate the paradise of a bread culture he found in France. Along the way, he plans to meet farmers, millers and bakers to share the vision of farm-to-table natural bread. We were lucky to catch him before he left.

WooVoice #1: Melissa Myozen Blacker, Roshi and Zen Teacher at Boundless Way Temple

There is no better way to initiate a series of “WooVoices” than to hear the wise words of a Zen master.  Ordained as a Soto Zen priest,  Melissa reminds us that “what we have here is what we get to work with” in this present moment and that we can cultivate a true appreciation of the Worcester we live in right now, not the Worcester we wish it to be.  She and her husband, David Dae An Rynick, Roshi are resident teachers at the Boundless Way Temple on Pleasant Street.