
Downtown Kent and Seattle’s Chinatown-International District–like other community examples that are part of the Main Streets exhibition–show clearly how it only takes the passion and dedication of a small group of changemakers to preserve and revitalize places which are important to the fabric of our daily lives.
The identity of urban places is bound up both in their design and in the people who live in them. Part of the Main Streets exhibition’s goal is to encourage Seattleites to imagine their role in the future of local urban main streets.
Faced with a period of growth on a scale not seen since the Boeing Boom of mid-century, Seattle’s neighborhoods have been struggling to maintain a sense of identity. On June 1st, local urban diarist Chuck Wolfe is inviting Main Streets visitors to join him in using visual expression to get to the heart of what matters to them in changing local neighborhoods.
In his new book, Seeing the Better City, Wolfe details his urban diary technique, using close looking and photography from Seattle and international venues to see and understand our urban environment and how human experience intersects with the built world. Tonight, June 1st, Wolfe will present a brief talk at the Center for Architecture & Design, based on his book, followed by a walk through the surrounding neighborhood, demonstrating his urban diary techniques and inviting participants to begin their process to envisioning a better Seattle.
Community by Design: Main Streets in a Changing America is on view until June 10th at the Center for Architecture & Design, 1010 Western Avenue. Free and open to the public, Tuesday-Friday, 10am to 6pm; Saturday 1pm to 5pm. Visit: cfadseattle.org.
Kathryn Higgins is the Program Director for the Seattle Architecture Foundation (SAF), where she leads youth architecture workshops, creates community programming, and coordinates SAF’s exhibition program. She has lived in Seattle since 2005 and her favorite piece of local architecture is the KIRO 7 building.