University of Oklahoma Faculty Awarded $500,000 EPA Grant
NORMAN, OKLA. 鈥听, a non-profit organization founded by Gibbs College Professors听听and听, was recently awarded an听听from the Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA鈥檚 EJG2G program funds community-based organizations to support government activities that involve environmental or public health issues.
Open Design Collective is the first and only Black and women-led, non-profit design firm in the state of Oklahoma that works to support the social and spatial needs of Black communities. As built environment and social impact practitioners, Open Design utilizes the technical tools of Urban Planning, Architecture, design, cultural preservation and storytelling to collaborate with community members in addressing built environment inequities and advancing neighborhoods towards liberatory futures.
Open Design will receive $500,000 to engage, support and strengthen community-led efforts in the historically Black John F. Kennedy Neighborhood in Northeast Oklahoma City. In collaboration with the JFK Neighborhood Association, the听,听, the听, the听听and the University of Oklahoma, Open Design will address air quality issues in the region through an environmental placemaking and restoration project.听For the project, Open Design will design and build a park called Culture Park.
鈥淚t鈥檚 validating to have national recognition and financial support to do these projects. This amount of funding is transformative for projects and helps them come to life in communities that are limited in resources, and in some cases, financial support,鈥 said Morrison. 鈥淭his is a project that鈥檚 connected to multiple efforts that we鈥檝e led in this area with community members, and we鈥檙e just excited to see it all come together in a tangible way while addressing needs.鈥
Members of Open Design began working with residents in NE OKC in 2016, and more recently, completed the听听(So8th). The goal was to collaborate and engage with community members to cast a new vision for a thriving community and repair the cultural erasure, disinvestment and loss of Black wealth caused by decades of urban renewal and highway development in the region.
The main community priorities discovered through the So8th project were the need to address environmental inequities and to have more communal spaces to strengthen social connections. The Culture Park project has been designed to directly address these issues.
In the past several years, Morrison and Richards have initiated several other community engagement events and restoration efforts. Notable projects include the 2018听听as well as the听, where they secured a $1 million grant from the听听to save Oklahoma City鈥檚 last surviving, historic Black theater.
鈥淥ur work is really dedicated to supporting the social and spatial needs of Black and marginalized communities,鈥 said Morrison. 鈥淲e hope that as we successfully complete these projects, we will continue to get more opportunities to serve communities that are oftentimes overlooked.鈥
The inspiration for Open Design鈥檚 recently funded project was sparked by the popular Black-owned coffee shop听, who had the initial vision to transform a nearby听-owned lot into an outdoor expansion for their business. Additionally, the project was inspired by the environmental justice organizing work led by the JFK Neighborhood Association in the past several years.
Open Design saw the opportunity to bring in resources through this EPA project, not only to support these existing efforts, but also to address the need for safer and more connected neighborhood green spaces. Through this project, the lot will be transformed into a park with space for a Culture Coffee food truck.
Alongside the Culture Coffee food truck, the park will feature pavilion structures for community gatherings as well as greenery and native plants. Open Design will also monitor the local air quality, which has been a longstanding environmental issue in the region.
鈥淭he air quality issue has been one that Denyvetta Davis, who is the president of the听听and JFK Neighborhood Association, has been working on for a long time alongside the community,鈥 said Richards. 鈥淭his project is creating awareness about environmental justice issues in Northeast OKC and making demonstrations on how to resolve those.鈥
Both Morrison and Richards emphasized the importance of elevating local voices and building trust within these communities. 鈥淭he only reason we are able to go after these grants is because of the trust that we have built up in the community,鈥 said Richards.
鈥淭here鈥檚 already been so much foundational work and organizing done by this neighborhood association,鈥 said Morrison. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very strong and high-capacity neighborhood that does a lot to protect and support neighbors in this community. We鈥檙e just happy to be able to bring in this resource to support and strengthen the work that鈥檚 already being done.鈥
This project is still in the early stages of development, but Open Design hopes to begin the community engagement and design phase in the coming months. Morrison and Richards have already been working with the project team to discuss their vision for the park and plan community events.