Amidst news of Target’s interest in building a store on the former site of the Cabrini-Green housing project, the Chicago Tribune reports that there is a special light installation at the last building to be demolished (and whose last resident left several months ago):
Marked for demolition beginning Wednesday is the last-standing building of the infamous Cabrini-Green public housing complex. But thanks to a light installation orchestrated by artist Jan Tichy, the structure at 1230 N. Burling St. will remain aglow with 134 white LED lights — one installed in each of its vacated apartments — for the four-week duration of its razing. The light installation was completed Monday, in time for Tichy and the Chicago Housing Authority to flip the “on” switch at 7 p.m.
Here is more information on the project from the gallery that represents Tichy:
From January to March 2011, together with over 20 students from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Tichy held two and three-day workshops with local youth at Cabrini Connections, Marwen, After School Matters Creative Writing Program at Gallery 37 and ThaBrigade Stamps – Cabrini Green Marching Band. In the workshops, students were introduced to public art and light art, and brainstorming sessions and group activities were held on the concepts of Home, Public Housing, Community and Demolition. The youth were then charged with the task of writing poems or texts that addressed the concepts above. Employing a computer program developed by SAIC students that translates sound into light, the youth performed their texts for recording, creating unique light patterns. These light patterns define each of the 134 LED lights at the high-rise. Thus, the youth’s voices literally “tell” their stories through light.
As a component of Project Cabrini Green, live-feed footage from the site will be projected at the Museum of Contemporary Art at street-level, on the corner of Pearson and Mies Van der Rohe streets behind the museum’s glass façade, thereby rendering it visible at night. A voice/light-activated model of the high-rise will accompany the installation, and the youth participant’s written texts and audio content will be available. Tricia Van Eck, Associate Curator, is the organizing curator of the installation at the Museum of Contemporary Art.
The youth’s texts, the audio content, and the live-feed video will also be available on the project website.
Read more about the project in the New York Times or at Project Cabrini Green.
I wonder if there are plans for a more permanent exhibit or marker of the public housing project.
Pingback: A slowed-down Plan for Transformation in Chicago | Legally Sociable
Pingback: Explaining opposition to new development | Legally Sociable
Pingback: Update on public housing residents in Chicago mixed-income developments | Legally Sociable
Pingback: Does demolishing buildings in Chicago actually reduce crime rates? | Legally Sociable
Pingback: Putting together plans for the final redevelopment of Cabrini-Green | Legally Sociable
Pingback: CHA takes care of its own finances, waiting list grows | Legally Sociable
Pingback: A new account of the rise and fall of Cabrini-Green | Legally Sociable
Pingback: Do not forget the thousands of public housing units lost | Legally Sociable