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Box
City is a tribute to low-tech visualization techniques that don't depend
upon fancy computer programs or expensive consultant fees. In some settings
and for some community members, sophisticated technologies can be alienating.
Box City provides a low-tech introduction to neighborhood planning that
instantly involves people of all ages.
Box City, offered by the Center for Understanding the Built Environment
(CUBE) in Kansas, is a visioning and learning exercise for communities
wanting to build consensus around planning and development efforts and
envision new possibilities for their community. Using cardboard boxes,
construction paper, scissors and glue, participants construct 3-dimensional
models of selected sections of their neighborhoods and, with help from
CUBE facilitators, go through a visioning process on potential neighborhood
improvements. Because Box City uses universally familiar kindergarten-type
art supplies in the visioning process, people, young and old, feel more
comfortable expressing themselves, identifying what they would like to
keep and what they would like to change in their community. The process
gets people talking to each other, empowering participants to get involved
in implementing their newly created community vision.
Here, roughly 100 Washington Wheatley residents in Kansas City used discarded
cardboard and paper to construct tiny buildings, buses, and streetlights.
They built a miniature model of a new Prospect Avenue -- their dreams
glued into cardboard. The Box City was photographed and documented and
translated into a plan for the city to implement.
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