Buy Land for a Dollar! Converting Chicago?s 15,000 Vacant Lots Into Booming Public Space
At the Chicago Architecture Biennale, David Brown?s project ?The Available City? addressed the fact that Chicago currently owns 15,000 vacant lots, many of which have become ?havens for illegal dumping, weeds, rodents and street crime.? In this article, originally published on Autodesk?s Line//Shape//Space publication, Jeff Link takes a look at Brown?s project, examining its unique approach to developing the empty lots and converting them into public space.Â
The?Available?City?exhibition?at?the?Chicago?Architecture?Biennial.?Courtesy David Schalliol
At the Chicago Architecture Biennale, David Brown?s project ?The Available City? addressed the fact that Chicago currently owns 15,000 vacant lots, many of which have become ?havens for illegal dumping, weeds, rodents and street crime.? In this article, originally published on Autodesk?s Line//Shape//Space publication, Jeff Link takes a look at Brown?s project, examining its unique approach to developing the empty lots and converting them into public space. David Brown?s Chicago Architecture Biennial project, The Available City, responds to a striking fact: Chicago, in an exodus story echoed across the rust belt, owns 15,000 vacant lots.The parcels, many of them on the South and West Sides, don?t generate tax revenue, but the city is obliged to maintain them. Outside the watch of homeowners, many are havens for illegal dumping, weeds, rodents, and street crime.Chicago hasn?t exactly turned a blind eye, says Br...
The?Available?City?exhibition?at?the?Chicago?Architecture?Biennial.?Courtesy David Schalliol
At the Chicago Architecture Biennale, David Brown?s project ?The Available City? addressed the fact that Chicago currently owns 15,000 vacant lots, many of which have become ?havens for illegal dumping, weeds, rodents and street crime.? In this article, originally published on Autodesk?s Line//Shape//Space publication, Jeff Link takes a look at Brown?s project, examining its unique approach to developing the empty lots and converting them into public space. David Brown?s Chicago Architecture Biennial project, The Available City, responds to a striking fact: Chicago, in an exodus story echoed across the rust belt, owns 15,000 vacant lots.The parcels, many of them on the South and West Sides, don?t generate tax revenue, but the city is obliged to maintain them. Outside the watch of homeowners, many are havens for illegal dumping, weeds, rodents, and street crime.Chicago hasn?t exactly turned a blind eye, says Br...
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