Scarsdale Students Study Urban Planning in Real Time and Place
- Category: Schools
- Published: Tuesday, 16 February 2016 08:46
- Melissa Hellman
Tisnue Jean-Baptiste, Samantha Seltzer and Anny Shan holding the poster boards East Village residents used to write their words of greeting.Scarsdale High School teachers Maggie Favretti's and Fallon Plunkett's City 2.0 class gathered on the evening of February 11 to pitch to a live audience on their Super Design Challenge solutions for urban neighborhoods. Students in this class apply a range of disciplines to an exploration of New York City and design real, viable improvements to an aspect of urban life that interests them. Four student teams presented the results of their challenge to create implementable solutions that will have a positive impact on a New York City community. In each case students faced the joys and trials of pounding the pavement in New York City, making contact with relevant community organizations, identifying neighborhood needs, coming up with workable solutions and taking the opportunity to listen to residents to determine practical rather than ideological answers. This class is only open to seniors so any juniors out there who are looking for a unique, hands on urban studies experience should sign up for next year. Enjoy highlights from the evening below:
The public art project the East Village team hopes to display in various neighborhood spots to promote cohesiveness in the area.
The next three groups all studied Harlem neighborhoods. One group is deeply involved with the Luis Munoz Rivera School located on 109th Street in East Harlem and is working with the school to establish a big/little mentoring system similar to what many students fondly remembered from their own Scarsdale elementary school experience.
Another student team is working with small businesses in Harlem to develop a web directory. This group discussed the The East Harlem team presents a mentoring program at a neighborhood elementary school.
The largest student group has taken on the challenge of rehabilitating a community play area on 144th Street with a jazz themed community garden and other enhancements. The group presented a number of improvement ideas for the park This team carefully studied the demographics of the school as part of the research for this project. Isaak Greene, Joseph Marques and Ethan Raff discuss working with small businesses in the area of 125th Street and already have a number of restaurants and shops that are excited to have them help promote their businesses. The Harlem Renaissance Jazz Garden project group Students from this team play basketball in the park with a neighborhood resident A proposed mural for the park highlighting the jazz garden theme.