Tulane City Center 2014 - Recent Projects

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recent projects

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TULANE CITY CENTERRECENT PROJECTS INDEX

020405060708091012131415161718192022232425262728293031323334353637384041

What We Do and How We Do ItLOOP PavilionMagellan Street GardenGuardians Institute, Donald Harrison Sr. MuseumSt. Claude Main Street Pocket ParkPyramid Wellness InstitutePyramid Graphic Advocacy CampaignGrow Dat Youth FarmHollygrove GreenlineGerman Schoolhouse RedevelopmentParisite SkateparkBayou RoadLower Ninth Ward Food Action PlanColumbus Greenway InitiativeProject Home by HandHagar’s House Project IshMap of ProjectsJane Place Neighborhood Sustainability InitiativeRide New Orleans Transit AdvocacyLusher Playground ImprovementsVacant Land ManagementGreenbuild 1Eco Pavilion Sustainable ExhibitionLower Nine Visioning CoalitionFacade RenewMardi Gras Indian Cultural Arts PlanAL Davis ParkHollygrove Market and FarmHope Haven and Cafe HopeCITYbuild Consortium of SchoolsCornerstones: Candlelight LoungeBackstreet Cultural MuseumCircle Food StoreCommunity Partner Perspectives: Tony Lee TCC: What’s NextContact/Get Involved

PAGE CONTENT/PROJECT

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TULANE CITY CENTER

What We Do

The Tulane City Center’s mission is to educate, advocate and provide design services to New Orleans

neighborhoods and non-profit clients who are traditionally under-resourced and underserved by the

design disciplines. We believe in the necessity of design and its broad access by all citizens as a basic

democratic right. As a result, our work is characterized by deep citizen engagement in the planning

and design decisions that will affect their lives.

How We Do It

As the principal venue for outreach projects at the Tulane School of Architecture, the Tulane City

Center (TCC) enjoys a broad range of partnerships with numerous off-campus community-based

organizations. Each partnership provides opportunities for faculty and students to engage real

issues in the community and to participate in the life of our city. Projects range in scale from small

neighborhood gathering spaces to urban scale neighborhood planning processes. The Tulane City

Center works in both private and public spaces and always recognizes the importance of thinking

beyond the scale of the individual project.

ARCHITECTURE

PLANNING

DESIGN BUILD

GRAPHIC ADVOCACY

COMMUNITY CAPACITY BUILDING 10 %

8 %

28 %

16 %

38 %AR

PL

DB

GA

CB

Project Types Typical Team Composition Percentage of all Projects

1 3 1faculty students consultants

1 4 2faculty students consultants

2 14 1faculty students consultants

1 2 0faculty students consultants

1 4 1faculty students consultants

Tulane City Center Staff:

Maurice Cox, Director Dan Etheridge, Senior Consultant

Nick Jenisch, Project Manager Dozenia Marshall, Administrative Assistant

Jenga Mwendo, Community Consultant Emilie Taylor, Design Build Manager

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Our projects are conducted either as courses for which students receive credit or as design

internships for which students receive pay for their work. The ability to set up projects in multiple

ways allows for flexibility in working with the budget and the schedule of our community partners,

often outside of the traditional semester calendar.

The Tulane City Center has a small core staff who are responsible for the day-to-day operations

of the Center and for all project management. Using this model, we are able to assemble project-

based design teams of faculty and students based on our workload at any given time. In addition

to project management, our core staff is responsible for fundraising, community outreach, strategic

planning, and coordination with faculty and students and the Tulane School of Architecture

curriculum.

The recent and active projects highlighted in the following pages include the names of all the

faculty and students involved in each project. Please visit our website for additional project

information (www.tulanecitycenter.org)

ARCHITECTURE

PLANNING

DESIGN BUILD

GRAPHIC ADVOCACY

COMMUNITY CAPACITY BUILDING 10 %

8 %

28 %

16 %

38 %AR

PL

DB

GA

CB

Project Types Typical Team Composition Percentage of all Projects

1 3 1faculty students consultants

1 4 2faculty students consultants

2 14 1faculty students consultants

1 2 0faculty students consultants

1 4 1faculty students consultants

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The Fall 2013 Engage.Design.Build studio worked with community partner LOOP [Louisiana Outdoor Outreach Program] to design and construct a shade pavilion for use during the group’s programs on Scout Island. LOOP engages students in outdoor education programs through adventure-based activities on their challenge course in City Park. City Park and the staff of LOOP reached out to the TCC when they recognized a need for program expansion and support. Their current site is difficult to access and far from any seating, storage or shaded gathering spaces. A new pavilion would allow LOOP to provide better, safer programs for the students with whom they work and allow revenue generating options by attracting professional groups to use the course.

After engaging LOOP staff to assess needs, students designed a shade pavilion that incorporates storage and seating into a large shade structure used for gathering before and after challenge course activities. The design is inspired by the tree canopy surrounding the challenge course. It uses blank aluminum traffic signs as a modular, exterior grade unit to create an abstracted, high-performing canopy overhead. In keeping with the context of the adjacent ropes course structure, the canopy is suspended with steel cable from a larger steel structure in a way that creates an undulating complex curve. The seating is built into an earth berm created by reusing railroad ties from the St. Charles Ave. streetcar line.

LOOP PAVILION

Location: Scout Island, City Park

Project Leads: Emilie Taylor, Sam Richards

Project Team: Dan Ackerley, Madison Baker, Casey Bemis, Michelle Carroll, Rachel Conques, Jose Cotto, John Coyle, Maggie Easley, Ellen Hearle, Emma Jasinki, Kate Luxner, Sarah Satterlee, Meredith Zelenka

Partnering Organization: LOOP, New Orleans City ParkSpecial Thanks: Dash Lumber, Regional Transit Authority, Walter Zehner

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Magellan Street Garden is a community garden in Algiers led by Tony Lee, a retired electrician,

veteran, and founder and Lead Gardener of the Parkway Partners Community Garden. The Tulane

City Center sponsored Design Build studio worked with Tony to design and construct a shade

structure that collects rainwater and uses it to feed a constructed wetland on site. The structure

also houses raised beds, tool storage, and ground cover strategies to support Tony’s aim for a

community resource and teaching space.

Led by Tulane faculty Doug Harmon and Sam Richards, a team of 12 students worked on the design

and fabrication of the garden in a 12-week spring Engage.Design.Build studio. Work began in

January and was completed in May of 2013. The team devised a kit-of-parts strategy which enabled

them to build the roof structure, planters, and benches at the school’s shop and then transport them

in one moving day. Funded through a grant from the Surdna Foundation, the garden design serves

as a demonstration of rainwater collection and onsite water management strategies.

Location: 3320 Magellan Street, Algiers

Project Leads: Doug Harmon, Sam Richards advising professors; Dan Etheridge, Emilie Taylor, TCC leadsProject Team: Sarah Cumming, Michelle Finan, Elisha Grossman, Annelise Haskell, Kristen Korndoerfer, James Lacroix, Katlyn Leach, Gregory Mathieu, William Nemitoff, Devin Reynolds, Kyle Ryan, Fan XiongCecil Howell, Landscape Architect, Walter Zehner, Structural Engineer

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Parkway Partners

Website: See “Magellan Street Garden” Facebook page

See page 38 for the community partner Tony Lee’s persepective on the project

MAGELLAN STREET GARDEN

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The Guardians Institute and the Tulane City Center have built the Donald Harrison Sr. Museum, a performance and multipurpose space in the Upper 9th Ward. The Guardians Institute is dedicated to preserving, promoting and celebrating African and African American tradition and culture. The organization advances youth development in New Orleans by promoting literacy, physical well-being and indigenous cultural arts. This multifunctional outdoor covered space includes seating, restrooms, dressing space, and basic amenities. The space is used for Mardi Gras Indian performances, community-oriented programing, and as a support space for the Guardians Literacy Program.

The Guardians of the Flame design-build project is one of several TCC projects that was initiated in 2010 with the financial support of Johnson Controls, Inc. The Guardians Institute is one of many non-profit organizations in the New Orleans area who responded to our annual Request for Proposals.*

GUARDIANS INSTITUTE

Location: Independence Street at N. Johnson (Upper 9th Ward)

Project Leads: Scott Ruff, Seth Welty, Emilie Taylor, advising faculty and staff; Zach Lamb, InstructorProject Team: Evan Amato, Alexandra Bojarski-Stauffer, Mary Catherine Bullock, Jerelle Carriere, Michelle Carroll, Noah Conlay, Chris Cox, Sophie Dardant, Matt Decotiis, Alyce Deshotels, Natan Diacon-Furtado, Nels Erickson, Marianne Graffam, Mike Landry, Jake Lazere, Emile Lejeune, Jason Levy, Xiaoyun Li, Mary Beth Luster, Jeremy Maloney, Jordan Matthews, Oren Mitzner, Kathy Mu, Alison Rodberg, Cameron Ringness, Nicholas Sackos, Sarah Satterlee, Justin Siragusa, Nichole Woggon

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Guardians Institute, Alembic Development CompanySpecial Thanks To: Dash Lumber, James Hardie, Simpson Strong Ties, Yellawood, Walter ZehnerWebsite: http://guardiansinstitute.org

*For more information about the Request for Proposals process, visit: www.tulanecitycenter.org

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In support of the burgeoning arts and cultural community in a particular neighborhood, St. Claude

Main Street (SCMS) applied for and received a major grant from ArtPlace, a national foundation

whose mission is to support “creative place making” initiatives that increase community vibrancy.

The Tulane City Center gathered community input about the desired uses and ideas for the space

over the spring and summer of 2013. The team then used that community input to design a pocket

park at the corner of St. Claude and Independence that will double as a space for the monthly

SCMS night market.

The pocket park is along a major commercial corridor in the city, one of several projects SCMS has

initiated to improve the streetscape. The park includes spaces for relaxing, gathering, gardening,

and playing horseshoes and defines these through a series of low decks and earthen mounds.

The park also includes infrastructure for the night market and is flexible enough to accommodate

other activities.

The project has received HDLC approval and is currently under construction.

ST. CLAUDE MAIN STREET POCKET PARK

Location: St. Claude Avenue at Independence Street

Project Lead: Thaddeus Zarse, advising professor; Emilie Taylor, TCC leadProject Team: Gregory Mathieu, TCC Intern; Matt Ngo, Logan Leggett Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, St. Claude Main Street, Project HomecomingWebsite: http://stclaude.org

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This Engage.Design.Build studio studied the issues surrounding mental illness in New Orleans through the lens of a specific project: the Pyramid Resources Wellness Institute (PRWI). Located in Mid City, PRWI provides treatment services for persons in the greater New Orleans area who are homeless or have mental illness or co-occurring substance use and mental illness. The project partner provides housing assistance and intensive individualized support services under the direction of a treatment team consisting of psychiatrists, psychologists, clinical staff, nurses, support professionals, case managers, and others as needed.

The studio team worked with the staff and residents of the Pyramid House to redesign their common outdoor space into an area that can adapt to the multiple needs of the residents: a space that provides a calming outdoor area for Pyramid clients and staff and can accomodate group meetings, outdoor dining, conflict resolution, and other activities. The team worked with the staff and residents of Pyramid to include compents of the space that the residents designed and helped to construct. For example, the backdrop of the stage space is a driftwood wall constructed from material collected during a group outing and inscribed with quotes from the residents. Pyramid Wellness responded to the TCC’s annual call for Proposals and their project is funded through a Johnson Controls, Inc gift.*

Location: 3330 Canal Street

Project Leads: Abigail Feldman, Sam Richards, Emilie Taylor, advising professorsProject Team: Steven Baker, Victoria Bryant, Jose Cotto, Katherine Delacey, Hunter Duplantier, Gage Edwards, Rena Foster, Emily Green, Charlotte Hutton, Baha Javadi, Whitney Jordan, Leslie Katz, Michael Kirschner, Sarah Knapp, Jacob McGregor, Kevin Michniok, Danielle Musselman, Alison Rodberg, Risa Schoenfeld, Guan Wang, Grant Whittaker, William Zink

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Pyramid Resources Wellness Institute Website: www.pyramidnola.org

*For more information about the Request for Proposals process, visit: www.tulanecitycenter.org

PYRAMID WELLNESS INSTITUTE

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PYRAMID WELLNESS INSTITUTEOne in six people in the City of New Orleans has a mental illness. While a growing number of people are seeking mental wellness, there has been a dramatic decrease in funds for mental health care both at state and federal levels. While working on a design-build project with Pyramid Wellness, a mental health treatment facility in Mid City, a small team of students began working on a campaign to raise awareness of this issue and provide a community resource. The team produced a series of posters, postcards, magnets, stickers, and newspaper ads, all with the same message, aimed at people struggling with mental illness and their families. The resource card listing local treatment providers also lets people know that they are not alone in dealing with the issues. The team has started a series of distribution days over the summer to place the resources in corner stores, shelters, and coffee shops throughout the city.

PYRAMID GRAPHIC ADVOCACY CAMPAIGN

Project Lead: Emilie Taylor, advising professor Project Team: Baha Javardi, Jose Cotto, Alison Rodberg, Emily Green

Consultants: Candy Chang, Christine Gaspar of the Center for Urban Pedagogy Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Pyramid Resources Wellness Institute Website: www.pyramidnola.org/1-in-6/

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The Grow Dat Youth Farm’s mission is to nurture a diverse group of young leaders through the meaningful work of growing food. On the farm, work is done collaboratively to produce healthy food for local residents and to inspire youth and adults to create personal, social and environmental change in their own communities. Grow Dat is a place where people from different backgrounds and disciplines come together in research and practice to support public health, local economies and a sustainable food system in South Louisiana.

The Grow Dat Youth Farm project has grown out of the strong partnership between the Tulane City Center, the New Orleans Food and Farm Network, and City Park. The Tulane City Center lead site planning and design development and incubated Grow Dat as a non-profit organization. Grow Dat’s pilot year was launched at Hollygrove Market and Farm in January 2011. In the Spring of 2012, farming at the permanent site at City Park began, and the Grow Dat Organization moved into their seven acre City Park campus in the Fall of 2012.

Building on the existing K-8th grade food education programs in New Orleans, most notably the Edible Schoolyard, Grow Dat Youth Farm creates job opportunities for high school students in the field of urban agriculture. The farm provides a space for students outside the classroom to apply the interests and skills they have developed in cooking and gardening classes. It also creates a healthy and supportive work environment for high school-aged youth from New Orleans who face limited job opportunities. With a focus on developing a sense of responsibility, community, environmental stewardship, and service among participants, the farm enhances leadership and teamwork abilities through the collaborative work of growing food.

The farm works with several high schools and youth organizations throughout New Orleans to recruit a diverse and committed group of youth who develop leadership and life skills during their intensive, hands-on work experience. Programmatic success is defined by students’ consistent participation in the program, their increased ability to communicate effectively with other students and staff, and their ability to achieve production goals on the farm.

GROW DAT YOUTH FARM

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GROW DAT YOUTH FARM

Location: 150 Zachary Taylor Drive, New Orleans City Park

Program Team: Johanna Gilligan, Leo Gorman, Jabari Brown, Jeanne Firth, Macon Fry

Project Leads: Scott Bernhard, Dan Etheridge, Abigail Feldman, Zach Lamb, Sam Richards, Emilie Taylor, Seth Welty, advising faculty and staffProject Team: Mira Asher, Zin Min Aye, Steven Baker, Hee Cho, Sophie Dardant, Matt Decotiis, Rachel Finkelstein, Sean Fisher, Patrick Franke, Marianne Graffam, Seneca Gray, Ellen Hailey, Katie Healey, Natalia Hidalgo, Jade Jiambutr, Lindsey Kiefer, Mike Landry, Emile LeJeune, Vicky Leung, Sam Levin, Jason Levy, Marda Lugar, Mary Beth Luster, Jeremy Maloney, Rebecca Miller, Oren Mitzner, Ian O’Cain, Ellanny Page, Justin Park, Robert Pekara, Fernando Polo, Allison Powell, Cameron Ringness, Julie Sanders, Allison Schiller, Justin Siragusa, Christopher Tellone, Ana Lucia Teran, William Trakas, Claire Tritschler, Erin Vaughn, Nichole Woggon, Brad Watson, Michael Welsh, Jen Wickham

Project Partners: Tulane City Center, City Park New Orleans, New Orleans Food and Farm Network, Johanna Gilligan: Clean Plate Projects, Tulane Social Entrepreneurship Initiative

Special Thanks to: John and Anne Mullen, Maziar Behrooz, Stephanie and David Barksdale, Dash Lumber, Walter Zehner, Big Ass Fans

Awards: 2012 SEED Award for Excellence in Public Interest Design, AIA Honor AwardPublished: Architectural Record, Times-Picayune, Grist, ArchDailyWebsite: http://www.growdatyouthfarm.org/

Grow Dat Design:The Grow Dat Youth Farm’s seven acre site was designed and built by a team of architecture students over the course of three semesters. The Grow Dat campus includes a classroom space, offices, a kitchen, cold storage, food prep, and additional support spaces. These spaces are created with and defined by repurposed shipping containers, a common industrial product in our port city. The campus is designed to have minimal impact on the site, and there is a comprehensive water management plan which includes a large swale, grey water filtration tanks, and composting toilets.

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fenced storage

rain garden

OLIVE ST

Hollygrove Market & Farm

s

FORSHEY ST

MONROE

ST

32 -

Leon

idas

LEONID

AS ST

stairsdown

ramp

down

rain garden

bioswale

bioswaledemonstration gardens

path to NORA lot

concrete ribbon driveconcrete ribbon drive

gravel path

grass gathering area

grass

grass

grass

concrete ribbon drive

gravel pathgravel path

gravel pathdemonstration gardens

grass16” retaining wall

16“ retaining wall

ramp down

stairs down

grass gathering area

6’ fence

16” bench and signage

6’ fence

16” bench and signage

street paint

street paint

Greenline Master PlanPhase 1Draft July 31, 2013

N

The Hollygrove Greenline is an initiative of the Carrollton-Hollygrove Community Development Corporation (CHCDC) to convert the vacant diagonal lots of a former rail line cutting through the Hollygrove neighborhood to a public amenity.The CHCDC is currently raising funds to implement the design vision completed by the Tulane City Center in partnership with the neighborhood. Students of the Tulane School of Architecture conducted design analysis at the Greenline site and created a diverse series of designs that investigated the history of the site and the community’s desire for active, programmed open space, and introduced landscaping to help make the site a pleasant, occupiable public space to be enjoyed by Hollygrove residents and adjacent neighborhoods. Final designs are undergoing detailed cost analysis and construction on Phase 1 begins in 2014.

The CHCDC strives to provide educational programming as part of its mission to develop the Greenline site. The City Center has contributed to this process in several ways, including installation of demonstration rain gardens at five locations throughout the neighborhood. The CHCDC has engaged with the Greenline owner, the Sewerage & Water Board, and will maintain a close working relationship to meet the goals of providing educational programming with water management,

urban agriculture, and other related topics.

Location: Hollygrove Neighborhood

Project Leads: Judith Kinnard, FAIA, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, Nick Jenisch, TCC leadsProject Team: Dorothy Shepard, Zachary Gong, Michael Cohen, Scott Mikawa, TCC Interns

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Carrollton-Hollygrove Community Development Corporation, New Orleans Food and Farm Network, Hollygrove Market & Farm, AARP, Hollygrove Neighborhood Association, Trinity Christian Community, Engineers Without Borders, Longue-Vue House & Gardens, Dana Brown & Associates, Surdna Foundation

HOLLYGROVE GREENLINE

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HOLLYGROVE GREENLINEThe German Schoolhouse redevelopment project is a vision of the Gulf Coast Housing Partnership

and Demetri Melekos, founder of US Heritage Powersports (US-HP), a motorcycle production and

export company.The renovation of the German Schoolhouse into a facility for the assembly of Von

Dutch Custom Choppers brings jobs, education and industry into the city of New Orleans. Located

at 1831 Polymnia Street in the Central City neighborhood, the German Schoolhouse is a three story

brick warehouse with high ceilings, cast iron columns, and an open floor plan. Beautifully detailed

but long abandoned, the building is one of several local remnants of the bustling commercial

corridor that once defined this historic neighborhood along Oretha Castle Haley Boulevard,

formerly Dryades Street.

As a registered Benefit Corporation (B Corp), US-HP is held to high standards of social

responsibility.The Tulane City Center worked with US-HP to produce a feasibility study for the

German Schoolhouse renovation project and a visioning document to help Melekos share his

vision for this new addition to the Central City neighborhood. In addition to housing the US-HP

production floor, the German Schoolhouse has ample room to accommodate a variety of uses,

including a storefront retail space, administration offices, research and development, and a flexible

third floor for potential small business incubation in related fields.

GERMAN SCHOOLHOUSE REDEVELOPMENT

Location: Polymnia St. and OC Haley Blvd.

Project Leads: Giovana Galfione, advising professor; Maurice Cox, TCC leadProject Team: Elizabeth Himmel, TCC Intern

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, US Heritage Powersports, Gulf Coast Housing Partnership

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Parisite Skatepark (named after its proximity to Paris Ave.) was started by a group of skaters who

took advantage of the vacant, under-utilized space beneath the I-610 overpass as a makeshift

skatepark. With growing popularity, this informal public space drew the attention of city officials

who questioned the legal implications of operating such a recreational space. The skaters formed a

Louisiana nonprofit corporation, called Transitional Spaces, and began negotiations with City Hall

to save the park. Since then, Parisite Skatepark has been officially recognized by the City, which

designated the area under I-610 between Paris and Hamburg Street as a “Skatepark Recreation

Area.” Transitional Spaces is dedicated to designing and implementing quality public skate parks

that focus on safe recreation and educational opportunities for youth.

Parisite is now the first official skatepark in the City of New Orleans. The Tulane City Center is

working with the Transitional Spaces team to expand and improve the skatepark. In addition to

creating a masterplan for growth, as well as a plan for capacity building of the non-profit, TCC is

helping Parisite connect to legal, engineering, and other professional support neccessary to grow

Parisite into a fully operational public space. An Engage.Design.Build studio is masterplanning and

building components of the park in the spring semester of 2014. This project is made possible by a

grant from the Surdna Foundation and Johnson Controls, Inc.

Location: Paris Avenue at Interstate 610

Project Leads: Doug Harmon, Matt Decotiis, advising professors; Emilie Taylor, TCC lead Project Team: Carly Epler, Tara Jean, Colleen Loughlin, Tatyana Moraczewski, Matt Ngo, Caitlin Parker, Ian Rosenfield, Sanaa Shaikh, Alfia White, Grant Whittaker, Emily Youngblood

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Transitional Spaces, the City of New Orleans, New Orleans Recreation DepartmentSpecial Thanks to: Anne Frederick of Hester Street Collaborative

PARISITE SKATEPARK

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Food gotta be fresh. Nothing is fried except the plantains. Everything is cut by hand... and grilled, stewed, or baked.

-Pam “Mother Nature” Thompson, Coco Hut

After Katrina, people encouraged me to go somewhere else, but I said I’ve got a good location. Bavyou Road has always been known for Reggae... I can’t see the club being anywhere else but here.

-Al Reece, Club Carribean

I’m four generations of the Mardi Gras Indian... I am a cultural ambassador... I’m a story teller. I can tell you stories about stuff in this city.

- Big Chief David Montana

We are more than just a cultural store, we’re a catalyst for social change. We convey a message to the people... we represent change by standing there and being there.

- Sula Janet Evans, King & Queen Emporium

We are more than just a cultural store, we’re a catalyst for social change. We convey a message to the people... we represent change by standing there and being there.

- Sula Janet Evans, King & Queen Emporium

2563 Bayou Road (downstairs) | 504.942.717214 Nail Studio

1474 N Broad St | 504.947.303215 Petiquette

2306 Esplanade Avenue | 504. 821.500928 Degas House

2513 Bayou Road | 504.606.267021 REDSTAR Galerie

23 Big Chief David Montana’s House

2275 Bayou Road | 504.940.250026 Joan Mitchell Center

2525 DeSoto Street | 504.810.139922 Katrina National Memorial Museum

Sculpture by Robert Tannen24 Kruttschnett Place - ‘Shotgun Temple’

2401 Esplanade Ave.| 504.947.170025 American Federation of Musicians

2326 Esplanade Avenue | 504.822.828127 Art House

2563 Bayou Road (upstairs) | 504.948.040613 The Aftermath Barber and Beauty Salon

Shirley Honore’s Love Center Learning Academy2519 Bayou Road | 504.943.1221

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2565 Bayou Road | 504.944.334317 World Deli

1468 N Broad St | 504.944.300116 Broadview Seafood

2514 Bayou Road | 504.945.151519 Cajun King

1458 N Broad St | 504.949.000018 McHardy’s Chicken & Fixin’

2520 Bayou Road | 504. 301.0525Poche Construction10

2511 Bayou Road | 504.218.331112 Look At Me Now Hair Studio

2511 Bayou Road | 504.875.4018 11 Bayou Equity Mortgage

1430 N Dorgenois St | 504.XXX.XXXX20 Washboard Coffee

The Bayou Road neighborhood is known by many for its unique collection of small businesses, its fascinating history, and most importantly, for the sense of community, the culture, and the food. Although a small corridor, there is plenty to do when taking a stroll through Bayou Road – take in some world class art, get your hair styled or cut, enjoy some great music, or eat some of the most authentic Caribbean food in the city! Come on by and check out the many businesses and cultural establishments that we have listed and visit our website for the latest information and upcoming events.

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take a strollTHROUGH

a short history ofBAYOU ROAD

for details on events and visiting

BAYOU ROAD visit us at www.bayouroadnola.com

Guide created in collaboration with:

- Matt Knowles, Domino Sound Record Shack

By 2000, a significant group of African-American women owned property and businesses along the corridor, establishing a community of women entrepreneurs.

Bayou Road was laid along the historic portage route from Bayou Saint John to the Mississippi River. The portage permitted travelers to land up river of New Orleans along the bayou and then journey down to the river for trade. The route was shown to European settlers by Native Americans who had established a trading ground at the location of the historic LeBreton Market - halfway between the bayou and the French Quarter.

As plantations were divided anddeveloped in the area, much of the historic road was incorporatedinto other streets, but the distinctive diagonal section of the brick road survived. Cutting across the regular street grid, Bayou Road connects several neighborhoods – Treme, the Seventh Ward, Bayou Saint John, and the Fairgrounds.

After Hurricane Katrina struck in 2005, music and art gained a stronger foothold in the area through shops, artist support programs, and the presence of culture bearers. Several notable rehabilitation projectsare currently in the works to revive this historic section of New Orleans.

Bayou Road was one of the first brick roads laid down in New Orleans.

Urban out-migration and disinvestment in the mid-20th century plagued Bay-ou Road — St Rose de Lima School

closed, the market shut down, and many shops went out of business. In the 1980s and ‘90s, Reggae music filled in some of the empty space along Bayou Road and a few street vendors catering to the Reggae crowddecided to lease or buy their own storefronts in the area. The neighborhood naturally took on an Afro-Caribbean vibe and has been on the rise since.

Beauty on De BayouAs Dwana Makeba prepared to open her all-natural beauty salon, Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans. She was committed to being in the Bayou Road area because of its history, the character of the old buildings, and the collection of successful women-run businesses on the corridor. Opened in 2006, the salon now has clients that drive from hours away for braiding, cuts, styling services, and Dwana’s own line of all-natural hair products.

62521 Bayou Road | 504.942.5625

Club Carribean7 In ‘99, after Club Oasis closed, Al Reece continued the tradition of a reggae venue

on Bayou Rd and opened Club Carribean, across the street from Shotgun Park. It is the only venue in New Orleans dedicated to reggae music - entertaining the city with its dj and live shows, ranging from roots to dance hall reggae.

2443 Bayou Road | 504.949.9246

5 Le Musée de f.p.c., a historic house museum, is one of the country’s few attractions dedicated exclusively to preserving the material culture of and telling to the story of free people of color. The founders of this repository strive through their collection of documents, paintings and decorative artsto present, interpret and preserve the history and culture shared by so many free people of African descent in New Orleans and throughout the country.

Le Musee de f.p.c. 2336 Esplanade Ave. | 504.233.0384Community Book CenterIn 1983 Vera Warren-Williams started Community Book Center (CBC), with a $300.00 investment and a dream, from her parents’ home in the Lower Ninth Ward. As a substitute teacher, Vera shared books by and about people of African descent from her personal library with interested students and teachers. Since its inception, “Community” is (has been) “more than a book store”… Mama Jennifer has a wealth of knowledge and will welcome you along with the “unusual” cast of characters. A literary hub and cultural resource center for locals and visitors alike; where Black History is proudly celebrated 365 days a year! Come by and help them celebrate their 30th Anniversary and chart the course for the next generation.

12523 Bayou Road | 504.948.7323

King and Queen EmporiumSula Janet Evans and Andaiyé Alimayu occupy a sacred site on Bayou Road; the grounds where their business stands served as a Native American trading center. The open air LeBreton Market was built on the site in 1867 and the market structure was improved and enclosed as part of a WPA project in the 1930s. One of the building’s many incarnations since being a market was the Church of I Am that I Am. Their space is now a laboratory and shop for their homemade oils, candles, soaps, and incense varieties.

22500 Bayou Road | 504.317.7570

Domino Sound Record Shack“Domino Sound” is how some reggae lovers know Matt Knowles, owner of Domino Sound Record Shack. The record store is a tangible mark of his evolution from a reggae DJ and vinyl collector to a business owner. Drawn to the Caribbeanfeel of Bayou Road, Matt opened his record (and cassette tape) shop on the corridor in 2007. The store has been recognized as one of the top record stores in the U.S. and is a charming, intimate space to browse through the built-in record bins and listen to the eclectic tunes spun by DJ Matt and his staff.

42557 Bayou Road | 504.309.0871

Duchesne Volunteer HouseIn 2007, the Sisters of the Sacred Heart, a service missionary order of the Catholic Church, established a presence in New Orleans and took over the rectory of the former Saint Rose de Lima Church. The Sisters of the Sacred Heart were called to help New Orleans rebuild after Hurricane Katrina, and, in particular, to provide a place for rebuilding volunteers to stay. The half dozen sisters who live in the large historic house on Bayou Road provide lodging, as well as counsel to volunteer groups, and they continue to serve in this unique capacity for the area and for New Orleans.

32545 Bayou Road

Coco HutBefore Pam “Mother Nature” Thompson opened up Coco Hut in 2000, she sold jerk chicken, fried plantains, beans and Jamaican rice at ShotgunPark. Although she has gone from cooking on a smoker she built herself tocooking in her own restaurant, her menu and prices have changed littlesince she opened the doors. The food is a Caribbean/Latin mix and the atmosphere is, like Pam’s food, evokes the Caribbean – colorful and spicy.

82515 Bayou Road | 504.945.8788

The Bayou Road Commercial Corridor Initiative is a study to better understand the potential for

investment in the commercial buildings of historic Bayou Road and to help sustain this vibrant

community. One of the first brick roads laid down in New Orleans, today Bayou Road connects

several historic neighborhoods. Since the 1980s, this small commercial corridor has become

known for its distinctly Afro-Caribbean culture and women owned businesses. A significant group

of African-American women business and property owners along the corridor have established a

community of women entrepreneurs. TCC was approached by Vera Warren-Williams, owner of the

Community Book Center, and Beverly McKenna, founder of the New Orleans Tribune and owner

of several Bayou Road properties, to develop a historical narrative of Bayou Road, provide basic

design services, and create a graphic identity for the neighborhood.

TCC has begun the process by conducting a series of interviews with merchants and community

members to gather their memories of Bayou Road, and their vision for the future.These interviews

have served as the basis for a neighborhood brochure that introduces the merchants and history

of the corridor to visitors. TCC has also been working with Broad Community Connections to

establish a web presence for Bayou Road as well as a merchants association.The next steps

include working with merchants to draft potential strategies for redevelopment and investment in

the neighborhood. This project is made possible by a grant from the Surdna Foundation.

Location: Bayou Road, between Broad and Esplanade

Project Leads: Scott Ruff, Amber Wiley, advising professors; Dan Etheridge, Maurice Cox, Nick Jenisch, TCC leads; Bethany Rogers, Cornerstones DirectorProject Team: Jose Cotto,TCC Intern, Sarah Satterlee, graduate research assistant

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Cornerstones, Broad Community Connections, Bayou Road Merchants, Neighborhood Story Project

BAYOU ROAD

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The Lower Ninth Ward Food Access Coalition is a group of Lower Ninth Ward community leaders

and residents committed to addressing the food access issues of the Lower Ninth Ward, which is

considered a “food desert” by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). The Coalition

formed in 2012 from the Food Action Planning Initiative, led by the Center for Sustainable

Engagement and Development in an effort to organize Lower 9th Ward residents to create a plan

and advocate for access to quality food in their own community.

Tulane City Center supported the Coalition’s “Grocery Store For A Day” project in October 2012 – a

one day pop-up grocery store set up in the parking lot of a neighborhood church. The purpose of

this project was to draw attention to the issue of poor food access in the Lower Ninth Ward, getting

more residents involved, as well as the media and government officials. TCC students designed

and built temporary walls for the grocery store, developed and printed site maps, and created

large-scale signage for the event. When the Food Action Plan document (www.sustainthenine.

org/foodactionplan) was completed, TCC helped the Coalition to present the Plan at a roundtable

discussion with councilmembers Stacy Head and James Gray, along with several grocery store

operators and community leaders.

LNW FOOD ACTION PLAN

Location: Lower Ninth Ward

Project Leads: Maurice Cox, advising professor; Jenga Mwendo, TCC leadProject Team: Evan Morris, Natan Diacon-Furtado, TCC Interns Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Lower Ninth Ward Food Access Coalition, Center for

Sustainable Engagement and Development

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LNW FOOD ACTION PLANThe Columbus Greenway Initiative (CGI) is a project led by a diverse coalition of 7th Ward residents

and organizations, including the New Orleans Food and Farm Network and the Neighborhood

Story Project. The CGI specifically grew out of a partnership between Ms. Pat O’Brian, who owns

some vacant parcels along Columbus Street, and a group of men who have been using one of the

lots as an informal gathering space. This partnership has demonstrated how neighbors can come

together to create vibrant and high functioning green space in a neighborhood where the city does

not provide adequate space.

Out of this initial partnership, the Tulane City Center has supported the design and installation

of the Columbus Street Orchard, added “The Clubhouse” seating/storage/shade structure at the

original corner lot, and is developing a series of proposals to support the continued improvement

of Columbus Street as a model greenway through bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure

enhancements.

COLUMBUS GREENWAY INITIATIVE

Location: Columbus Street, Lakeside of Claiborne (7th Ward)

Project Lead: Seth Welty, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: Jess O’Dell, Sarah Satterlee, Alyssa KingsleyJohn Dwyer of the University of Minnesota College of Design Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Neighborhood Story Project, Kids Walk Coalition, New Orleans Food and Farm Network

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Home by Hand is a new take on the self-help housing model path to homeownership aimed at populations who are currently underserved by affordable housing programs in the City of New Orleans. Project Home Again (PHA) has built over 150 three-bedroom two-bath affordable houses in the Gentilly neighborhood since the storm, but has realized that some community members are not reached by typical non-profit organizations and their rebuilding models. In 2013, PHA reached out to the Tulane City Center through the Request for Proposals process* with a request to reimagine housing prototypes aimed at people interested in a hands-on path to homeownership with adaptable housing models.

The project involves two phases: research on the history of modernism in Gentilly and self-help housing models across the country, followed by a spring 2014 design phase. The outcome of phase 2 is Schematic Design for four housing prototypes that respond to the program/performative criteria generated by the Project Home Again team. The housing prototypes and PHA’s plans for kicking off their self-help housing program should begin in the spring of 2014.

Location: Gentilly (multiple locations)

Project Leads: Andrew Liles, Kentaro Tsubaki, advising professors; Emilie Taylor, TCC leadProject Team: Vincent Baudoin, Amy Ferguson, Andrew Graham, Sam Naylor, Caitlin Sheehan, Gavin West

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Project Home Again

*For more information about the Request for Proposals process, visit: www.tulanecitycenter.org

PROJECT HOME BY HAND

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PROJECT HOME BY HANDThe Tulane City Center worked with Hagar’s House and the First Grace Community Alliance to design and build an outdoor enrichment room for the children living at Hagar’s House. The space, known as Project Ish, includes a playroom and educational space for children transitioning from homelessness to a stable living situation. The project involves converting the existing back deck of the shelter into an enclosed, safe, multifunctional space, which is an extension of the house, situated between the home and the community garden.

Fifteen students worked collaboratively on the design of the project with continual input from the residents and staff of Hagar’s House. The compact (400 s.f.) and expressive scheme includes a linear storage wall, a loft playspace, and a butterfly roof which collects rainwater to be used in the adjacent community garden. The project was designed and built in the fall of 2010 over the course of a 13-week studio.

Project Ish at Hagar’s House is one of several projects that the Tulane City Center initiated in 2010 with the help of an anonymous donor. First Grace Community Alliance was one of many non-profit organizations in the New Orleans area who responded to our annual Request for Proposals.*

Location: Restricted

Project Lead: Emilie Taylor, advising professorProject Team: Cristina Alvarado, Laura Casaccio, Veronica Cordova, Daniel Demeules, Laura DiIorio, Joshua Frederick, Cassandra Gibbs, Ross Kelley, Oren Mitzner, Samantha Nourse, Justin Park, J. Cameron Ringness, Justin Siragusa, Eric Sullivan, Michael Visintainer

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Hagar’s House, First Grace Community Alliance Website: www.hagarshousenola.org

*For more information about the Request for Proposals process, visit: www.tulanecitycenter.org

HAGAR’S HOUSE PROJECT ISH

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LOOP PavilionMagellan Street Garden Guardians InstituteSt. Claude Pocket ParkPyramid Wellness InstituteGrow Dat Youth FarmHollygrove GreenlineGerman Schoolhouse RedevelopmentParisite SkateparkBayou RoadLower Ninth Ward Food Action PlanColumbus Greenway InitiativeProject Home by Hand [multiple locations]Hagar’s House Project Ish [location restricted]MAPJane Place N.S.I. RNO Transit Advocacy [multiple locations]Lusher Playground ImprovementsVacant Land Management [multiple locations]Greenbuild 1Eco Pavillion Sustainable ExhibitionLower Nine Visioning CoalitionFacade Renew [multiple locations]Mardi Gras Indian CouncilAL Davis ParkHollygrove Market and Farm + PavilionHope Haven and Cafe HopeCityBuild Consortium of Schools [multiple locations]Cornerstones: Candlelight LoungeBackstreet Cultural MuseumCircle Food StoreTCC Satellite OfficeTCC New Office Site

see www.tulanecitycenter.org for other project desciptions and locations

PROJECT LOCATIONSpage

numberproject name

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Established as a non-profit housing and community development organization in 2008, Jane Place

Neighborhood Sustainability Initiative (JPNSI) is committed to creating sustainable, democratic,

and economically just neighborhoods and communities. Utilizing the Community Land Trust (CLT)

model of land stewardship and shared equity, JPNSI works to increase the range of affordable

housing options available to low and moderate income residents by encouraging resident

controlled development; providing shared-equity models of homeownership, cooperative

housing, and rental opportunities; and promoting community-building initiatives that advance

equitable housing patterns, neighborhood stability, and community driven land-use planning.

The Tulane City Center and the Tulane School of Architecture Master of Sustainable Real Estate

Development program worked with JPNSI to understand the housing options in the two JPNSI-

owned buildings. A large part of the project involved understanding the legal complexities

of cooperative housing and making decisions for the non-profit’s future based on examples

of cooperative housing in other cities. The project team traveled to New York City to research

precedents. JPNSI is one of many non-profits in the New Orleans area who responded to our

annual Request for Proposals.* Alembic Community Development is working with JPNSI to

identify funding for the redevelopment of the building.

JANE PLACE NSI

Location: Jane Place Street at Palmyra Street (Mid City)

Project Leads: Cordula Roser Gray, Casius Pealer, advising professors; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: John Nelson, Evan Amato, Brian Sulley, Andrew Mayronne Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Jane Place Neighborhood Sustainability Initiative, Tulane School of Architecture Masters of Sustainable Real Estate Development Program

*For more information about the Request for Proposals process, visit: www.tulanecitycenter.org

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JANE PLACE NSIThis project involved the development of proposals to assist Ride New Orleans, a transit advocacy group, in addressing two issues prominent in the city: the need for a transit hub in the Central Business District (CBD) and the design of transit-centric public space at critical intersections. For the hub, graphic material was developed to illuminate total transit usage in the city, the prominence of specific transportation routes, and the critical interchange between these vital lines in the CBD. Scenarios illustrating the complexity of transfers and the confusion of stops in the area were illustrated to support the argument for aggregating these disparate connection points in a central location. Along with rider survey results conducted by the project sponsor, best practice studies and historic precedents were assembled in a graphically descriptive format to serve as primary material to advocate for a new transit hub in the CBD. Additionally, key intersections were investigated where transfers between multiple routes or modes of transit occur. The work described numerous hazards presented by these transfers and created by the overlap of pedestrian traffic in areas spatially oriented to vehicular modes of travel. Multiple scenarios were developed using transit-centric urban design to reimagine these intersections, from tactical manipulations to intensive realignments of the existing streetscape. The proposals serve as potentials for the chosen intersections but are also strategic designs intended to adapt to

similar conditions throughout the city, a model for more transit use within urban space.

Project Leads: Jonathan Tate, Cordula Roser Gray advising professors; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: Michelle Carroll, Kathy Mu, Robert Mosby, TCC Interns; Kristian Mizes, Office of Jonathan Tate

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Ride NOLA , RNO Transit AdvocacyWebsite: www.rideneworleans.org

RNO TRANSIT ADVOCACY

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The Lusher Elementary School Willow Street Campus is located Uptown, in the University

neighborhood. The pressures of a growing student body, new buildings added over the years

to accommodate this growth, and an aging infrastructure have put a strain on the diminished

exterior spaces to the point that safety and usability are compromised. While looking to solve

the immediate safety and conflicting use concerns, a further discussion was initiated through the

Tulane City Center to provide a long term vision for the campus.

Through extensive research on best practices and a series of presentations and collaborative

meetings with key stakeholders (including neighbors, parents, administrators, and teachers), a

plan was devised to guide the long-term reconfiguration of the campus exterior spaces to reflect

the School’s mission and accommodate the community needs to provide an inviting, supportive

and safe environment. The design of the campus is conceived as two primary outdoor rooms

connected by a Linear Central Spine element. The two outdoor rooms wrap the main building and

provide dynamic, sunny, informal space for the Lusher community. Other previously considered

“left over” spaces around the edges of the campus have also been reclaimed in the design to

accommodate new recreational, educational and environmental uses that strengthen connections

to both the interior of the school and the wider neighborhood.

LUSHER PLAYGROUND IMPROVEMENTS

Location: Lusher Charter Elementary School, 7315 Willow Street (Uptown)

Project Leads: Marilyn Feldmeier, AIA, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: Ian O’Cain, Cameron Ringness and Katherine DeLacy

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Lusher Charter School, Community Partners(Kathleen Riedlinger, CEO; Sheila Nelson, Principal; Wellness Committee)

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LUSHER PLAYGROUND IMPROVEMENTSBlighted structures and empty lots are scattered about thousands of properties in New Orleans’

neighborhoods. Jericho Road and the Tulane City Center teamed up to investigate patterns of

vacancy that have emerged and design solutions that might be employed to curb the tide of

abandonment. The team analyzed the social, economic, environmental, and organizational value

of various programming strategies and crafted proposals that create permanent value out of a

transitional use.

The team then chose a vacant lot owned by Jericho Road to build a prototypical scheme. The

scheme seeks to rebuild the urban tree canopy and uses a simple, modular fencing system that

can be disassembled and reassembled. The prototypical site was presented at the 2012 Reclaiming

Vacant Properties Conference. The prototypical schemes will be implemented on additional Jericho

Road properties.

VACANT LAND MANAGEMENT

Location: Multiple locations in Central City

Project Leads: Seth Welty, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: Evan Amato, Arthur Ostrowski, Sarah Satterlee, Dave Fruzynski

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Jericho Road

Presented: Reclaiming Vacant Properties Conference, New Orleans 2012

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Greenbuild 1, designed and built by a studio of thesis students, is a prototype focused on modular

construction and the prefabrication process, with an emphasis on eco-friendly building materials

and methods. Working as individuals, in small groups, and as an entire studio team, students spent

weeks designing affordable, eco-friendly, modular 1200 square foot homes. In the final scheme as

built, the modules’ roofs were initally built flat for transport and were hinged into position on site

to provide clerestory lighting. Additionally, the three modules can be reconfigured to fit different

site conditions and provide varied outdoor porch spaces. The design involves green building

techniques and modularity that can be adapted to different sites and neighborhoods with ease of

construction at an affordable rate.

The studio’s strongest emphasis was on environmentally friendly approaches to building, and how

those specific conditions impact the larger environment over time. The aim of this research was to

develop an appropriate climatic and cultural prototype that could be produced and developed by

the prefabrication industry for New Orleans.

TULANE GREENBUILD 1

Location: 1939 Seventh Street (Seventh Street at Daneel Street)

Project Leads: Coleman Coker, advising professor; Fritz Bader, project manager; Jonathan TateProject Team: Tim Adams Jr., Rebecca Bortolin, Rob Cogliandro, Nick Crowley, Jason Heinze, Mike Kazanzis, Sean Kirkland, Joseph Lai, Andrea Martin, Reade Nossoman, Adam Porter, Jonathan Reyes, Daren Sadowski, Ashley Sparks, David Siegel, Maggie Van Dusen, Jared Watson, Daniel Zangara

Awards: Honorable Mention, Champions of Sustainability in Community Award, Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Neighborhood Housing Services

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The Tulane City Center and New Orleans City Park developed an Eco Pavilion to showcase

environmentally sensitive building strategies and technologies. Under the guidance of Coleman

Coker, the Tulane City Center team built the pavilion for the Fall Home and Garden Show in

2008. City Park’s Botanical Gardens use the Green Pavilion to provide the public with a full-scale

educational model of how sustainable technologies can be employed.

The pavilion includes a rain water-catching roof, indigenous plants, salvaged materials, and

rainwater filtration systems. The intention of this approachable and informative exhibition is to

make these alternative building methods accessible to the public with the hope that individuals

might choose to rebuild their homes and gardens in a more sustainable way. The Eco Pavilion is

one project in a larger ongoing partnership between City Park and the Tulane City Center.

ECO PAVILION SUSTAINABLE EXHIBITION

Location: City Park Botanical Gardens

Project Lead: Coleman Coker, BuildingstudioProject Team: Dan Etheridge, Emilie Taylor, Seth Welty, Zach Lamb, of the Tulane City CenterDavid Dieckhoff, Tom Holloman, Jon Tate, of Buildingstudio Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, New Orleans City Park

Selected Publications: Ready Made Magazine, The Times-Picayune

TULANE GREENBUILD 1

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In the summer of 2013, the Holy Cross Neighborhood Association approached the Tulane City

Center to bring together various community groups in the formation of the L9 Vision Coalition

(L9VC). The group was formed to create community-driven development plans for the former Holy

Cross School site, one of the largest undeveloped parcels in the city and likely to have a major

impact on the entire Lower Ninth Ward. Using comprehensive outreach and five public meetings

in two months, the L9VC and TCC worked to create three planning schemes that represent the

wishes of the whole neighborhood, bringing urban design, preservation, development financing,

and landscape design expertise to ensure realistic and financially feasible plans for the community.

By providing this support, TCC has enabled neighborhood leaders to promote their community

vision for the site and worked with the current developer to ensure that community needs were

considered. The planning process and capacity building lead by the TCC team will enable the

community to confront development challenges as their community grows. This project was

funded by a gift from Johnson Controls, Inc.*

LOWER 9TH WARD VISION COALITION

Location: Historic Holy Cross Campus, Lower Ninth Ward

Project Leads: Maurice Cox, Chris Calott, John Stubbs, advising professors Nick Jenisch, Jenga Mwendo, TCC leadsProject Team Jose Cotto, Shuang Ding, Vincent Baudoin, student internsElizabeth Mossop of Spackman Mossop Michaels, Stephanie McKee of Junebug Productions, consultants

Published In: The New Orleans Advocate, The Times-Picayunewebsite: www.facebook.com/lower9vc

*For more information about the Request for Proposals process, visit: www.tulanecitycenter.org

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LOWER 9TH WARD VISION COALITIONFaçade Renew is program launched in January 2014 to give incentives for redevelopment along

three historic commercial corridors in New Orleans. The initial phase, a 3:1 matching grant

program for façade improvement projects, represents a $1 million investment over two years

within the following target areas:

· Bayou Road between North Broad Street and Esplanade Avenue

· Oretha Castle Haley Boulevard between Calliope Street and Jackson Avenue

· St. Claude Avenue (2 zones) between Mandeville Street and Franklin Avenue, and between

Congress Street and Poland Avenue

Working in partnership with the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority (NORA), Tulane City Center

will be providing technical design assistance for each of the grant applicants. Other program

partners include the Main Street organizations that support each of the corridors: Broad Community

Connections, the O.C. Haley Merchants and Business Association, and St. Claude Main Street. A

separate component of Façade Renew focusing on placemaking will be launched at a later date.

FAÇADE RENEW

Location: multiple corridors

Project Leads: Beth Jacob, Clio Associates, LLC; Dan Etheridge, TCC lead

Project Team: Jose Cotto, Rena Foster, Emma Jasinski, Sonya Savchenko, Edith Ware

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, New Orleans Redevelopment Authority

Published In: The Times-Picayune, New Orleans City Business

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The first thing I thought after Katrina was, “What’s going to happen to the Indians?”

- Reuben Williams, musician

CONFLICT between Indian tribes and the New

Orleans police came to a head in 2005 when the St.

Joseph’s Night celebration was violently broken up by

NOPD officers. Considerable community protest by Allison

‘Tootie’ Montana and others led to a community-wide focus

on Indian-police relations.

As a result, the historic state of conflict and occasional overt

violence between Mardi Gras Indians and the New Orleans

police has improved since 2005. This new spirit of peace can

be seen today in the improved communication between the

Mardi Gras Indian Council, individual chiefs and the police.

21ST CENTURY HISTORY “This tradition, it has to be taken up by the next generation. Otherwise it will die with us.”

- Big Chief Howard Miller, Creole Wild West

YOU CAN’T CAGE A BIRD

MARDI GRAS, SUPER SUNDAY, AND ST. JOSEPH’S NIGHT

THE NEW ORLEANS MARDI GRAS INDIAN COUNCIL

MASKING, though it maintains its vibrancy, is not an organic

process. It must be taught, just as it was learned by those who practice

it today. Recognizing this, the Council is looking to cement this

expression in New Orleans culture and ensure its life beyond the time of

its originators. Many chiefs, including Howard Miller of the Creole Wild

West, host sewing classes to directly engage youth in Indian traditions

and offer valuable mentorship and guidance.

The Council has also focused in recent years on in-depth analysis

and explanation of the forces that shaped Mardi Gras Indian tradition,

hoping to spread understanding of their culture more broadly. It also

promotes ways for Indians to benefit financially from their culture, such

as exhibitions and performances.

IN the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in August 2005, much of the

black population of New Orleans was left homeless and stranded in

unfamilar places like Dallas, Houston and Atlanta. Homes destroyed,

lives upended, the Indians among them were simiarly scattered

with little to no knowledge of what had become of their friends and

neighbors.

Despite it all, Indians focused as intently as ever on their traditions.

Sewing continued unabated across the nation, and to New Orleanians

across the class and race spectrums, the presence of Indians on the

streets on Mardi Gras 2006 was a vital sign of the city’s continued life.

The Mardi Gras Indian Council and Social Aid and Pleasure Clubs are partnering with the Tulane

City Center to create a community-driven development plan for a new and innovative cultural

corridor that grows from historic New Orleans neighborhoods and the culture bearers who live

there. The plan aspires to guide future economic development decisions to embody the rich

artistic and spiritual traditions and deeply ingrained community values of the Mardi Gras Indians

and Social Aid and Pleasure Club organizations. The project explores strategies for equitable

economic development on multiple infill sites and includes the feasibility of property and land

acquisition, appropriate and respectful cultural tourism anchors, affordable housing opportunities,

small business incubation, wholesale business opportunities, and public realm and infrastructure

improvements. The project area stretches from Louisiana Avenue, with the LaSalle Street Corridor

as its nucleus, to North Claiborne Avenue, with Congo Square as its nucleus.

The visioning document seeks to capture the authentic desires of the council and their coalition of

public and private sector supporters and translate those goals into an action plan for community

development with real estate analysis for multiple sites, as well as identified funding strategies for

implementation.

MGI CULTURAL ARTS PLAN

Location: LaSalle Street Corridor

Project Leads: Wendy Redfield, Marianne Desmarais, Scott Ruff, Andrew Liles, Charles Jones, advising professors; Maurice Cox, TCC lead

Project Team: All of Tulane School of Architecture’s class of 2017 (all second year studios)

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MGI CULTURAL ARTS PLANA.L. Davis Park, formerly known as Shakespeare Park, is located at the corner of Washington Avenue

and LaSalle Street in Central City, New Orleans. Directly across the street from the former Magnolia/

C.J. Peete Public Housing Development, the park holds extensive historical and cultural significance

within the context of the neighborhood and the city. In recent years, the park has lost value as a

community amenity due to lack of funding and maintenance and an associated growth in crime.

The majority of the current A.L.Davis Park is an unprogrammed open grass field. In order to support

the comprehensive neighborhood development surrounding the park, infrastructure improvements

allow for and invite specific recreational and civic functions. The goal is to make the park user-

friendly, accessible to the surrounding community, and aesthetically pleasing in order to divert

crime and violence. This comprehensive effort is being led by longtime neighborhood residents

who hope to build on the park’s important history in the neighborhood. The design process has

included numerous community meetings and outreach efforts, and the program incorporates many

requests and suggestions made by the community in regards to activities and infrastructure for the

park. This project was funded by a gift from Johnson Controls, Inc.*

A.L. DAVIS PARK

Location: Corner of LaSalle Street and Washington (Central City)

Project Leads: Cordula Roser Gray, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: John Nelson, Allison Powell, Guan Wang

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Harmony Oaks Neighborhood Association, New Orleans Neighborhood Development Collaborative, Urban Strategies Inc.

Awards: AIA New Orleans Merit Award, Master Planning 2011

*For more information about the Request for Proposals process, visit: www.tulanecitycenter.org

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Located in the heart of New Orleans, the Carrollton-Hollygrove neighborhood is in desperate

need of extensive re-development in the post-Katrina era. One urgent issue is the development of

infrastructure and resources that support a healthy food system and benefit the community through

the availability of fresh foods, beautiful neighborhoods, and the promotion of a vibrant local

economy. To implement some of these important incentives, the Carrollton-Hollygrove Community

Development Corporation (CHCDC) and the New Orleans Food and Farm Network (FFN) partnered

with the Tulane City Center to create the Hollygrove Growers Market & Farm (HGM&F), a storefront

retail center in Hollygrove offering locally-grown, affordable fresh produce as well as “green jobs”

certification programs in urban agriculture.

The market and farm have been in operation since 2009, providing fresh local food to the New

Orleans community and the Hollygrove neighborhood. Due to customer demand, the market and

farm has expanded operating hours to include Sundays and has increased its reach to restaurant

sales. The TCC team has been working with the HGM&F to propose expansion of its fields and

greenhouses to an adjacent property owned by the US Postal Service.

Location: 8301 Olive Street (Hollygrove)

Project Leads: Cordula Roser Gray, Sam Richards, Emilie Taylor, advising professors; Dan Ether-idge, TCC leadProject Team: Nels Erickson, Ian Daniels, Joseph Kimbrell, Dominic Lang, Kimberly Lewis, John Nelson, Joe Rodriguez, Jeff Schwartz, Mike Visintainer, Guan Wang, Seth Welty

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, New Orleans Food and Farm Network, Carrollton-Hollygrove Community Development Corporation

Awards: AIA New Orleans Award of Merit, Master Planning 2011Website: http://hollygrovemarket.com

HOLLYGROVE MARKET & FARM

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HOLLYGROVE MARKET & FARMThe Tulane City Center partnered with Catholic Charities to develop a programmatic strategy for

the Madonna Manor building located at the Hope Haven Campus. The project integrates three

community-based programs (Jefferson Parish Care Center, Café Hope and Hope Haven Farm) in

one cohesive plan to revitalize and reactivate the campus.

Jefferson Care Center will provide temporary shelter for homeless people and programs to

reintegrate families in the community. Café Hope will be a fully operational restaurant and will run

as a social entrepreneurship business model that will offer job skills for at-risk youth. Hope Haven

Farm will develop a sustainable biodiversity farming model for the café and will promote initiatives

to produce local products. The farm and café will act as a collaborative platform for the community

to help revitalize an iconic Westbank architectural landmark. The Tulane City Center is involved in

the schematic design of Café Hope and is working with all of the project’s collaborators to devise a

site strategy and strategic goals for the project’s realization.

HOPE HAVEN & CAFÉ HOPE

Location: 1108 Barataria Boulevard (Marrero)

Project Leads: Marcella del Signore, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: Kristian Mizes, Jason Liu, Thomas J. Bogan

Tulane City Center consultants: Pierre Stouse, Structural Consultant; Mike Ducote, Electrical Consultant; Chuck Sardi, Mechanical Consultant

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Catholic Charities Archdiocese New Orleans

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Through the planning and building processes, CITYbuild works for social equity by partnering directly

with local community groups to address their immediate and long-term sustainable needs. The idea

for CITYbuild Consortium of Schools developed in the fall of 2005 to address the unprecedented

design and rebuilding needs in New Orleans. The CITYbuild Consortium was initiated in January

2006, starting with 10 schools representing the fields of architecture, landscape architecture, urban

design, planning and policy, real estate development, historic preservation, and environmental

studies. The role of host and first-year supporter was assumed by the Tulane City Center and the

Tulane School of Architecture.

By the end of the first year, CITYbuild involved 30 national and international design-based programs,

representing 60 faculty and more than 600 students, while partnering with 20 local community-

based organizations. The results of these partnerships included approximately 16 structures (from

urban furniture to housing) built or rehabilitated, and more than 200 design and project proposals.

CITYBUILD CONSORTIUM OF SCHOOLS

Project Leads: Doug Harmon, Director of CITYbuild; Jared Hueter, Sarah Gamble, Coordinators; Dan Etheridge, TCC lead

Participating Schools: University of Arkansas, Boston Architectural College, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Kansas, University of Kentucky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Minnesota, University of Montana, University of Southern California, University of Texas at Arlington, University of Texas at Austin, Tulane University, Washington University, Wentworth Institute of Technology

Selected Publications: Domus, Architectural Record, ID, Cite, CNN, NPR, New York Times, New Yorker

Exhibited in: Venice Biennale, Cooper-Hewitt, Designery, Ogden Museum of Southern Art

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CITYBUILD CONSORTIUM OF SCHOOLSThe Candlelight Lounge is the only long-time live music venue in historic Treme, a community

acclaimed for its jazz and performance culture. When Mrs. Leona Grandison, known to her friends

and family as “Ms. Chine,” opened the Candlelight Lounge in 1985, there were over 30 other barrooms

operating in the Treme. Many of those barrooms featured live music, and most of the musicians

were from the neighborhood. Today, the Candlelight Lounge is one of only six open barrooms in

Treme and the only one in the community with live music. Our research shows that Mrs. Grandison,

the musicians who play at her bar, barroom “regulars,” and some of her neighbors feel a way of

life and their community are threatened. TCC and the Cornerstones project published a booklet that

shares the story of the Candlelight’s struggles to sustain community and live music in Treme.

The story of the Candlelight also speaks to issues relevant to the rest of the city and other urban

communities. As different communities deal with the tensions that arise between transition and

tradition as part of gentrification or neighborhood improvement, the booklet speaks pointedly to the

importance of unique spaces and places for sustaining community and culture. Cornerstones is a

documentary initiative teamed with the Tulane City Center on various outreach projects throughout

the city. The project both documents and promotes sites that store, facilitate, or perpetuate New

Orleans’ history, culture, and sense of place. Cornerstones shares the lived experience of New

Orleans local landmarks and explores how they anchor, inspire, and restore the lives of individuals

and communities.

CORNERSTONES: CANDLELIGHT LOUNGE

Location: 1925 N. Robertson (Treme)

Project Leads: Bethany Rogers, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, TCC leadProject Team: Cameron Ringness

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Cornerstones, Candlelight Lounge

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BACKSTREET CULTURAL MUSEUMLocated in the historic Faubourg Treme neighborhood, the Backstreet Cultural Museum preserves

and perpetuates New Orleans’ African American parading traditions through collections,

exhibitions and publications, public programs, and performances. These cultural traditions include

Mardi Gras Indians, Skull and Bone gangs, Baby Dolls, jazz funerals, social aid and pleasure clubs,

and other related rituals.

Housed in an altered residence and former funeral home dating from the 1930s, the museum

requires significant renovation and modernization to support its growing collection and alleviate the

general disrepair of its facilities. The proposed modifications realign the museum entry sequence,

expand and update its main gallery, add accessible restrooms, and provide environmental

improvements such as a central mechanical system, weatherization and building insulation.

To assist a growing local need, the proposal also includes a community space. With the construction

of this facility, general improvements will be made to the exterior of the entire building, and a new

courtyard entrance will connect the street to the community space.

Location: 1116 Saint Claude Avenue (Treme)

Project Leads: Jonathan Tate, advising professor; Dan Etheridge, TCC lead

Project Team: Allison Popper, Kristian Mizes, Whitney Huver, Adriana Camacho

Partnering Organizations: Tulane City Center, Backstreet Cultural Museum

Published In: The Times-Picayune

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Circle Food Store, a historic locally owned grocery in New Orleans’ 7th Ward has re-opened as the

community’s beloved hub and fresh food market. Over the past five years, a team of Tulane School

of Architecture students and alumni have been involved in the store’s extensive comeback efforts.

The store first opened in 1938 as the city’s first African American owned grocery store, but closed

in 2005 when Hurricane Katrina caused significant flooding to the historic building. The Tulane City

Center worked with store owner Dwayne Boudreaux and the local community on a vision for

bringing the store back. Over the fall of 2009, the TCC studio team produced a pre-design booklet

that the store owner used as a tool to build support, awareness, and funding for the project.

The 30,000 sf Circle Food Store was an 8 million dollar project for which Mr. Boudreaux relied on

architect John Williams, the McDonnel Group as General Contractor, and the Berger Company, a

real estate development firm. John Williams (TSA ’78) and his associate, project architect Joel Ross

(TSA ’06) performed a full set of architectural services and worked to obtain federal landmark status

for the building along with a number of state and federal tax credits. The grand re-opening was

celebrated in January of 2014 and featured hundreds of community members, a choir, marching

band, and mayor Mitch Landrieu. Circle Food’s renovation includes the return of historic skylights,

which had been covered for decades but now allow natural light to flood the store aisles, and new

product additions such as Circle Food Store hot sauces and coffee. 66 local jobs have been created

with the re-opening.

CIRCLE FOOD STORE

Project Lead: Emilie Taylor, advising professorProject Team: Danielle Abelow, Ryan Anderson, Ben Flatau, Matt Fox, Jennifer Gaugler, Meghan Hartney, Whitney Huver, Garrett Jacobs, Ana Jimenez, Jason Liu, Lauren Martino, Frederica Merkel, Marian Prado, Sarah Rinehart, Karla Valdivia

Partners: Tulane City Center, Circle Food Store, Seventh Ward Neighborhood Center, Tulane Freeman School of Business

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TCC: How did the idea for the project begin?

Tony Lee: My wife and I had talked about some things we wanted to build in a garden. We knew we wanted space to do classes; we knew we wanted an accessible and easy to maintain planning space. And, we wanted a water component. We had been talking with fellow local gardeners who wanted to teach people about produce, about food, about nutritional eating. This all came after Katrina when there were no grocery stores open for two years, especially on the Westbank, which still remains a food desert... .We wanted to push food clusters, to have everyone understand and know where to go for fresh produce.

At that time, we were volunteering with New Orleans Food and Farm Network and Sanjay (Kharod) told us about the Tulane City Center grant... so, my wife and I, we sat down and wrote up a proposal and submitted it, and it was well received. And that’s when the work began.

Shortly after, my wife passed away. This project seemed like fate for me because I was at an all time low. When I started working with Tulane, I was able to, you know, become stronger.

TONY LEE | MAGELLAN STREET GARDENCOMMUNITY PARTNER PERSPECTIVES:

TONY LEE, OPERATOR OF MAGELLAN STREET GARDEN

“I WAS SO IMPRESSED WITH EVERYONE, THEY HAD THESE WONDERFUL IDEAS. IT CAME AT A TIME WHEN I NEEDED TO TALK TO PEOPLE, I NEEDED TO BE AROUND PEOPLE. SO ALL THE ENTHUSIAM I WAS GETTING, AND THE IDEAS, IT WAS JUST IGNITING.”

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COMMUNITY PARTNER PERSPECTIVES:

It set me on fire, and I really became committed to making this project- which was really my wife’s idea- just take over and go.

It was no 5 minute planning session. We had many meetings with me and the team, and we talked about what they wanted and what I wanted. I’m the type, I love letting people go. I tell you what my requirements are, then I get out of your way. They gave me enough ideas where I was able to select from each; really, I think I selected a little bit from each one and came up with what we have now. And then the building began.

TCC: What are your plans now that everything is up and running?

Right now, I’m sitting back a little and talking to people, trying to find out what they want to do, letting people know that the site is available for any type of neighborhood function. We’ve had two parties out there, a Halloween party and a birthday party. Everybody comes out, and we just take over!

I’ve sold to several local restaurants and markets, and I’m looking to sell to more. One of the whole things behind me getting into this, was not to make money. I have fun doing it, but it wasn’t that. I really wanted to get involved to create a forum, a place for people to discuss nutritional food values. I feel that because my generation is the root of the problem, that our generation has to solve it. Fast food came in on our watch. I feel that fast food was never intended to replace meals, but in the community that I live in, I see that all the time.

I’m going to introduce my site to the MOVE program, a program designed to help veterans walk, exercise, and participate to improve their health. I’m looking for any Westbank veterans who are interested in growing, or just hanging out. ‘Cause I tell people all the time, you don’t have to come in here to work - just come talk, hang out. That’s why I love where I’m at, because I get a lot of neighbors. I tell them all the time, “You don’t have to do anything.” But if you hang around long enough, I’m gonna tell you, “Hey! Reach and hand me that shovel!”

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Tulane City Center opened our first satellite office in Spring 2012 on OC Haley Blvd in Central City.

The new location provided much needed off-campus space to meet with community partners, as

well as collaboration space for staff and interns. We also host events there, including pecha kucha

nights where students and colleagues could learn more about our projects.

In Fall 2013, Tulane City Center teamed up with developer Gulf Coast Housing Partnerships to

begin construction on our new permanent facility on Baronne Street in Central City. This location

will provide ample workspace for staff, fellows, and interns as we expand our team, as well as

community-based studio space for courses such as the Engage.Design.Build studios. The building

will also house community events and resource space and a fully outfitted shop for fabrication and

staging of built projects. Most importantly, this new office helps to bring TCC geographically closer

to our project sites and partners as we seek to strengthen our existing relationships and forge new

relationships with community members, non profit organizations, and government agencies.

In addition to the new office, TCC will soon expand our personnel by creating a series of fellowship

opportunities for emerging professionals looking to be involved in the public interest design field.

These year long positions will allow the fellow to gain project management experience through

involvement in community-focused projects and will also benefit TCC by bringing new skills,

perspectives, and person power to our team.

WHAT’S NEXT

Current 300s.f. community basedhome of the Tulane City Center

Future 7,000 s.f. community basedhome of the Tulane City Center

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CONTACT // GET INVOLVED

As an outreach organization devoted to creative investigation of complex urban issues, we are

committed to a wide range of relationships and are eager to facilitate connections between those

with skills and support to offer and those who can make use of such help. We do not compete for

work with professional architectural or design firms. Instead, we endeavor to demonstrate the value

of good design in venues not often touched by standard models of professional practice and, in so

doing, support the growth of the design sector in our communities. Functioning as a not-for-profit

organization, the TCC maintains the complimentary goals of progressive design, applied research

excellence, and advocacy for a better quality of life for all people.

Please do not hesitate to contact us if you are interested in any of the work we have completed, or

to discuss possible collaboration on future projects. As a grant funded center, we also welcome the

opportunity to speak with any persons or organizations interested in supporting our work.

WEBSITE: www.tulanecitycenter.org

EMAIL: Maurice Cox: [email protected]

Nick Jenisch: [email protected]

Dozenia Marshall: [email protected]

Emilie Taylor: [email protected]

Booklet Team: Kenneth Schwartz, Sarah Satterlee, Christy Crosby, Daisy Dodge, TCC Staff

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