Showing posts with label East Austin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label East Austin. Show all posts

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Mid Tex Mod Tour Day Recap

      photography credit: Brent Humphreys

The 2013 Docomomo Mid Tex Mod Tour Day was a great success and was an informative and enjoyable way to learn more about John Chase's work in East Austin. We were especially fortunate to have the super talented photographer Brent Humphreys document Chase's work for a pop up exhibit at the Carver Center. We were also thrilled to have speakers Fred McGhee and Stephen Fox talk about Chase's work in Austin and Houston respectively. 

Thanks to all of the people who attended the event and our group of volunteers. Special appreciation goes to Rick Black, Betsy Frederick-Rothwell, and Charles Peveto for organizing the programming and content of the 2013 Tour Day. Please check the Mid Tex Mod blog and Facebook page for future events.


  

Sunday, April 15, 2012

East Austin History Walk and Talk

Thanks to all who joined us on the East Austin History Walk and Talk tour (aka Jane's Walk Tour). There was an excellent turn out, even with the mid-day thunderstorm. The tour was an epic 6 hours with a delicious stop at Casa Colombia.

Our tour guides were Dr. Eliot Tretter and Dr. Fred McGhee. We benefited from their deep knowledge, including Dr. McGhee's expertise as an anthropologist and historian of public housing and Dr. Tretter's research on the history and geography of segregation and neighborhood change. They shared important insights into the history of East Austin, from its early development to the public housing, urban renewal, and planning initiatives that shaped it at the mid-twentieth century and into the recent past. Here is a link to the hefty and in-depth tour packet [pdf] provided by Dr. Tretter. This is the tour map [jpg], which shows stops along our walking route.

The tour was in conjunction with the national network of tours that honor the memory of Jane Jacobs and her fight to preserve the vital neighborhoods of New York City from the ravages of planning efforts that failed to take into account the real lives of the people they claimed to help. On our tour we learned about the complex history of planning in Austin, from progressive efforts to genuinely help low income communities to blatant acts of racism and segregation.

Thank you to Dr. Eliot Tretter, Dr. Fred McGhee, Andrea Roberts (lead tour organizer), Josh Conrad (tour cartographer), and everyone who came on the tour for making this tour a success.

One of the attendees beat us to posting a blog entry. See more on Ryan Pollack's blog entry and Andrea Robert's blog.