Remaining Connected

For a year spent locking down, there’s been an awful lot of talk about moving. New Yorkers are supposedly fleeing the city in droves (or so the story goes). The flipside of this narrative, of course, is forced removal: a looming eviction crisis that is set to disproportionately impact the city’s most vulnerable. Amid the upheaval, a long-standing arts organization is settling into a new space in Bedford-Stuyvesant — and engaging directly with what it means to put down roots in a neighborhood undergoing contentious changes.

The Laundromat Project may have started as an itinerant endeavor, but it’s always been anchored in the city’s communities of color. Through fellowships, residencies, and place-based art projects (many hosted by actual laundromats), The Laundromat Project has been supporting artists whose work deals with site-specific issues impacting the city’s Black and brown residents: gentrification and displacement; policing and community safety; climate change and food injustice. For the last five years, the organization been sharing space in a two-bedroom-apartment-turned-community-hub in the South Bronx; but when it came time to find a more permanent home, they looked to their own history. Founded 15 years ago in Bed-Stuy, The Laundromat Project is returning to set up shop in a storefront on Fulton Street. We hear from the LP’s Hatuey Ramos-Fermín, Cievel Xicohtencatl and Erica Rawles about the challenges of moving in and meeting the neighbors in the short term, and how they are working to build a shared vision with their community for the next ten years.

Animated renderings of The Laundromat Project’s new community space and office on Fulton Street. Images by Bagchee Architects, courtesy of The Laundromat Project.

The Laundromat Project is an arts organization that advances artists and neighbors as change agents in their own communities. Hatuey Ramos-Fermín is the Director of Programs at The Laundromat Project. Cievel Xicohtencatl is the Community Engagement Manager at The Laundromat Project. Erica Rawles is a Programs Fellow at The Laundromat Project.

The views expressed here are those of the authors only and do not reflect the position of The Architectural League of New York.

Series

Dispatches

In short audio features, we check in with urbanists of various stripes to hear what they are doing and how they are learning from the entangled crises of 2020.