From Deseret News archives:

Museums amid mall projects?

Published: Wednesday, June 20, 2007 2:58 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
For the past 20 years, as an urban planning gadfly, Goldsmith has talked about concepts like "pedestrian friendly" and "mixed use" — concepts that, at first, were revolutionary and now fall easily off the lips of developers. For years, he talked about the mistake the city made by letting developers build the Crossroads Plaza with blank, fortress-like walls.

All over the country, once-state-of-the-art shopping malls are now "gray fields," nearly deserted or totally abandoned, as planners and developers try to re-envision what makes a city vibrant.

Recently, Goldsmith — who is also a sculptor — has been working with the national Center for the Living City to help rethink New Orleans post-hurricane, including a re-employment effort called The Katrina Furniture Project, which helps residents build step stools and church pews out of the miles of flood debris.

In the Salt Lake Valley, he says, people are hungry for a chance to be spontaneous and creative — just look at the success this spring of Project 337, the old apartment house turned into a temporary art installation that drew thousands of curious people. In the Salt Lake Valley, he says, "kids are dying to find alternatives to the homogeneity of their lives."

Story continues below
To talk with Goldsmith for an hour is to come away dizzy with possibilities. Maybe he gets a little carried away (the Temporary Museum of Permanent Change might include "the world's smallest Nordstrom," he says; this turns out to be a computer where shoppers can order merchandise on the Internet). But it's hard not to get excited by the idea of a downtown energized in the process of being rebuilt — not just waiting for the city to be "finished," but coming downtown to celebrate the present moment, to watch the city tumble and then watch it rise again.


E-mail: jarvik@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Stephen Goldsmith, John Schaefer and Gilberto Schaefer stand in front of a walkway window at a downtown demolition site, where they would like to turn the demolition of the malls into a museum.

previousnext

Latest comments

2 citations issued at Y.-U. game

Someone will recognize the guy in those pictures. He should be found and...

BYU says Hall incident resolved

I don't agree with what Max said and I don't think he should have said it,...

I'm a BYU alum and am currently studying at Penn State. After Hall's...

Hearts and prayers go to the family.

What if someone said, on the news.......... "I don't like mormons. In...

2 citations issued at Y.-U. game

What a bunch of babies.

Max Hall: a fixture in rivalry lore

He was definitely out of line. The funny thing, though, is how he's been...

"A Church rule school that tolerates talk like that is not a school I would...

Jazz win 6th in 7 games

Okur is the worst Jazz player making big money. He always looks like he is...

Presidents, particularly presidents that have never done anything but...

Advertisements