Leafing through the November issue of Providence Monthly, I was dismayed to stumble across a short piece, “Gateway to Change,” by Elyse Major, illustrating a gaudy new portal and visitors center planned for the Broad Street entrance to the city’s lovely Roger Williams Park.
Thankfully, the idea is not to displace the current Broad Street entrance or its elegant Gilded Age set of wrought-iron gates matching those at Elmwood Avenue’s primary park entrance. So it’s really not a new entrance at all (at least not for cars) but a new welcome center with a plaza near the existing entrance. You go in on foot beneath a ridiculous “gateway” of 40 thin, parallel trapezoids of bright coloration – a huge xylophone that plucks its palette, or so it is alleged, from the ethnic Latino shopfronts of Broad Street.
The connection is amplified by Cory Lavigne, of INFORM Studio (a woman-owned firm based in Detroit and Chicago):
Borrowing from the diverse cultural vibrancy of the city, color represents the people of Provi- dence. It symbolizes the heritage portrayed through a collection of restaurants, businesses, and homes in the surrounding neighborhoods. It represents families, students, and children; future leaders of Providence. Color stimulates and captivates, drawing residents and visitors alike to the grounds while increasing patronage to local businesses along Broad Street.
Well, no it doesn’t. Maybe it “represents” children, but it infantilizes the city and its citizens. “Symbolizes the heritage”? Rather, it rejects the heritage, and was probably designed to do so. That’s where our culture is headed. Five firms competed for this job, and all but one decided against submitting an entry that sought to fit into either the park or the neighborhood, or any facet thereof.
All but the Union Studio entry, whose visitors center design actually featured the vague suggestion that it was a sort of a building. Who would want anything to do with that? Clearly not goofy enough! So its entry wasn’t chosen. But at least Union Studio is a local firm. For a city that prides itself on being “the creative capital,” Providence seems to have a hard time finding local talent for its building projects.
One of the few silver linings of the pandemic is that cities can no longer afford to throw their citizens’ money at bad ideas that are not needed, like the Roger Williams Park Gateway and Visitors Center. The city’s planning department may already have selected this peacock waste of money, but we can hope that the natural selection of civic survival will render it extinct before it struts off the drawing board and into construction on Broad Street.
You’ve got a rebranding problem. Roger Williams Park?
Naaah…too old, too dead, too white male Protestant.
Needs something more Current Year to go with the new trade dress…
Ibraihim X. Kendi Park
Ta-dah!
Don’t thank me.
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Not to be cynical or anything, but some connected modernist architect’s kid probably needs braces.
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Beyond obvious rainbow symbolism, (an A+ for a third grader), please show me one iota of true cultural connectivity in this design; architectural symbolism that actually connects this gateway to the rich myriad of ethnicities that weave our communities peoples and pasts. That said, it would have been perfect addition to Rocky Point in 1955!
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There is none, David, but these days it is sufficient to assert a thing in order to prove it, so that even the most ridiculous of assertions bring no pushback. If built, this “gateway” will be a painful insult to the eyes of every passerby.
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