Sketching Kaleidoscope Across Dallas

Anita Martinez Recreation Center

“We shape our buildings; thereafter, they shape us.”

-   Winston Churchill 

If Winston Churchill’s quote resonates with you, then do our environments have some relevance within the milieu of protests, awareness, and call for social justice after the death of George Floyd and others? One of the most potent characteristics of inequity is erasure. The history of how our neighborhoods, parks, and civic spaces were designed has marginalized people of color and this is often overlooked. Some of the stories are buoyant and positive, but have been erased. Others are dark with long, sad neglect or oppression. But whatever those stories are, understanding these layers of history will empower us to avoid repeating these mistakes and be more inclusive.

Photo by Elizabeth Jones

As a beta test that visiting places can change our understanding and perceptions, I led a mini-series of visits at the end of last summer to relevant places within Dallas for the AIA Communities by Design in order to more deeply understand the experience and history of peoples of color through sketching. Sketching slows us down and allows us to soak in the details of space – its scale, dynamics, and temporal rhythms. Architects, landscape architects, and designers are trained to draw on location, but few use the skill past college. It is often an act of courageous vulnerability to sketch since we cannot control how well a sketch will turn out. Those summer adventures are described here.

 

Trinity River Audubon Center

Virginia Savage McAlester House

The idea sparked interest for the Architecture and Design Exchange (AD/EX) to sponsor a spring and summer event series open to the whole of AIA and the public to visit and sketch spaces that are often missed and misunderstood. The diverse committee that AD/EX thoughtfully convened took the idea and made it their own with the series name of Sketching Kaleidoscope. This committee included Alexander Quintanilla, Andrew Wallace, Brien Graham, Lisa Casey, Miguel Mendez, and Rachel Hardaway with AIA staff Elizabeth Jones and Jessica Boldt. Each month had a different group theme: women, environmental justice, Latinx, and blacks. Each month, we visited a different place, learned more about the issue, and shared a mutual experience through sketching together. We often went to lunch afterward to discuss what we had seen. At the end of the series, the AD/EX and AIA staff took submissions of sketches and shared them with the broader community in a three-week exhibit. You can see a link to it here or watch below.

There is a world all around us with a simplified narrative that might not be  true. There might be another richer and more diverse narrative if you question what you hear and look with a deeper understanding. We would love to hear what you discover as you make that journey, hopefully with a pencil and sketchbook in hand. 

Virginia Savage McAlester House

Studio Outside Hikes

As landscape architects, we are inspired by the place that we live and work. The popular image of Dallas is a highway-centric city, but we know that it is a much more layered place. At Studio Outside, we are interested in exploring the city we inhabit and finding new and exciting places to discover. As a former Outsider used to say – "Get Outside Now!" To experience the city, we meet after work or on the weekend and go for short hikes in and around Dallas. We do this not only to share time outside together but also to celebrate that there is nature worth visiting and exploring in the city that is so often overlooked. 

We started close to our office and met on a Friday afternoon (our office closes at noon on Fridays!) at the Piedmont Ridge Trail in Pleasant Grove. This trail follows the White Rock escarpment and is said to be the remnant of a trading and traveling route used by the Comanche people before European settlement in the area. Due to the unique topography and geology, the trail has many interesting plants and great views of the city beyond the sprawling Great Trinity Forest, one of the largest urban bottomland hardwood forests in the US at over 6,000 acres. It was a great hike, and we even saw a coyote! 

Several of our next hikes were further afield. We traveled down to the John Bunker Sands Wetland Center on a cold, blustery morning to try to see a baby Bald Eagle! While we failed in spotting the eaglet, we did see its parents, many other waterfowl, and various other flora and fauna. The wetland center is an example of a constructed water cleansing system that is doing amazing work and modeling an alternative approach to sustainable water management in Texas. 

Another memorable hike was at the Goat Island Nature Preserve in southern Dallas Country. The loop trails in the preserve offer the opportunity to follow the Trinity River, explore floodplain forests, look out from the old farm levee, and even get down to river level and see the remnant dam structure from when it was decided that the Trinity River should be navigable from Houston to Dallas….it didn't work. Listen to this great episode of 99% INVISIBLE to learn more about the proposed Port of Dallas. https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/port-of-dallas/

Other hikes and outings have included: 

• Downtown Dallas New Urban Parks – Pacific Plaza, AT&T Discovery District, and West End Square.
• Texas Buckeye Trail to see the rare Texas Buckeye in bloom on the banks of the Trinity River.  
• Studio Outside's landscape at the New Parkland Hospital and the UT Southwestern Medical Center Rockery to see the recently hatched herons and egrets! 

Future Hikes and Outside Adventures planned for this fall:

• Grapevine Lake Day, Cedar Hill Preserve, & a Studio Outside Camping trip in October!

Where else should we hike in and around DFW?
Interested in joining one of our hikes? Apply for one of our open positions today! careers@studiooutside.us