Quantcast

North Charlotte Today

Saturday, November 16, 2024

Congress for the New Urbanism Hosts Neighborhood Charrettes

11

Mayor Vi Lyles | Mayor Vi Lyles Official Website

Mayor Vi Lyles | Mayor Vi Lyles Official Website

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (June 2, 2023) - Within a span of 11 days, three charrettes – intense periods of collaborative design and planning – were held to focus on accomplishing three legacy projects in the Charlotte community.

With Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU)’s annual Congress held in Charlotte from May 31 through June 3, the charrettes were hosted by CNU in the leadup to the event to implement New Urbanist design principles in the host region. CNU is a nonprofit with clear goals in mind: diversifying neighborhoods, designing for climate change and legalizing walkable places. In short, building places people love.

The idea of a charrette is to bring a diverse group of professionals into the heart of the community where the work will actually take place, pool resources and talents, and develop a cohesive design proposal, while also welcoming community feedback. The workshops were hosted for projects in the Gastonia, University City and West Boulevard areas.

“It's truly a meritocracy, where we all realize and recognize that we all have skills, but we also recognize that the best idea comes from togetherness and being able to debate ideas off of one another,” said Detroit-based urban design architect Marques King about the charrette process. King was the team lead for the Gastonia charrette, known as the Healthy Highland project.

The vision for the primarily Black community was to design a development that would address the food scarcity issue, offer commercial space for significant businesses, and create rental housing opportunities. From March 20-22, King allied with other designers from around the country, Kintegra Health, CNU support staff and community stakeholders to improve the social, economic, health and educational conditions in Highland.

“There’s a group of people in the community who are really on fire to make change,” said architect Terry Shook, of architecture firm Shook Kelley that was also involved in the Gastonia charrette. “Something tangible is going to come from this.”

Another proposal that was awarded legacy project status by CNU and had resources devoted toward it was in University City. Spearheaded by nonprofit organization University City Partners, CNU was enlisted to help tackle scars left by suburban policies by creating a main street to serve as the center of the community that is home to UNC Charlotte and is the city’s second largest employment center. The charrette took place on March 27-29. 

“Over the course of these three days, we kicked off with a site tour, and from there, [we brought] in stakeholders from the community – the people who use the site most regularly – and from there, it’s heads down,” said Tobe Holmes, executive director of University City Partners.

The final charrette, held March 28-30, focused on a proposal submitted by the West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition, a grouping of 19 communities that comprise the life fabric of the West Boulevard corridor. This project had the key themes of health equity and neighborhood development, with specific strategies like adding affordable housing and providing safe links to transit.

For Rickey Hall, board chair for the West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition and born-and-raised Charlotte resident, applying to be a CNU legacy project was a great opportunity, and he was excited to have had their proposal selected. 

Murphy Antoine, a planner and principal architect for the DC-based firm that took part in the charrette, offered his expertise and outlook.

“We’re trying to use our design skills and other experiences to make a difference and push the revitalization forward for West Boulevard,” said Antoine.

Charlotte was excited to welcome the 31st annual Congress for the New Urbanism to the Queen City from May 31 through June 3. It is through CNU 31 that these charrettes came to fruition and three neighborhoods took strides toward becoming people-centered places.

Learn more about CNU 31 and the work that is being done in cities around the country, including right here at home.

Original source can be found here

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate

MORE NEWS