Author: Jayoung Koo
Planning Unit: Landscape Architecture
Major Program: Community Design/Creative Placemaking
Outcome: Initial Outcome
In Fall 2018, University of Kentucky, Department of Landscape Architecture (UKLA) students enrolled in LA 324, partnered on a project with Why Whitley, a group of concerned volunteers represented by local leaders and residents who live and/or work in Whitley County. Why Whitley once again envisions revitalizing downtown Williamsburg to become the heart of their community. The community is a partner in the Promise Zone Downtown Revitalization program which was awarded an Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) Partnerships for Opportunity and Workforce and Economic Revitalization (POWER) initiative grant (2017-2019) to address economic development needs in distressed communities in the Appalachian Region of southeast Kentucky.
During a 15-week period, UKLA students researched, analyzed, planned, designed, and presented service-learning design proposals focused on Williamsburg. The students also formally assessed engagement techniques and organized and facilitated a design workshop with stakeholders from Williamsburg during the information gathering process. Based on research and community voices, UKLA supported and complemented Why Whitley’s revitalization efforts to enhance Williamsburg’s built environment and quality of life. Students developed and presented four proposals which included a city-wide conceptual plan with focus area designs to Why Whitley members, professionals, and Williamsburg community stakeholders. Their proposals addressed small to large-scale and short to long-term goals and objectives such as ways to enhance streetscapes, improve river access, and increase social gathering opportunities near the downtown as part of a strong network of corridors in and around Williamsburg and Whitley County. In the short-term, the outcomes from this service-learning project will be utilized for applications for mini-grants from the Promise Zone Downtown Revitalization program along with future implementation of the public space design projects in town and the county. In the long-term, the UKLA design proposals will help support downtown revitalization and further community engagement efforts to enhance Williamsburg’s built environment. UKLA deliverables have the potential to further support the development of physical planning and design projects that expand and/or connect with the regional revitalization vision.
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Leslie County is part of the Kentucky River Area Development District (KRADD) and is associated with... Read More
According to the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), creative placemaking refers to integrating a... Read More
Leslie County is part of the Kentucky River Area Development District (KRADD) and is associated with... Read More