Latest news with #ArchitectsatPlay


Winnipeg Free Press
02-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Winnipeg Free Press
It takes a village…
Northwest Winnipeg 'Mabuhay' is a Filipino greeting that primarily translates to 'long live,' which makes it a fitting namesake for the local project beginning to turn heads in Manitoba — and far beyond. On June 21, the Province of Manitoba pledged $300,000 over the next three years in support of Mabuhay District Inc., a local non-profit with a mission to establish a district in Winnipeg which celebrates Filipino Canadians and their art, businesses, families and community. The seed was planted in 2019 and has since snowballed in a way that president Joseph Orobia cannot believe, he said. In fact, he was still processing the funding announcement four days later, during an interview at Architects at Play, an architecture firm he co-owns with Grant Labossiere. Supplied image Mabuhay District Inc. is a local non-profit which has set out to create a space in the city celebrating Filipino Canadian culture and heritage. Orobia, who is Filipino, wouldn't describe the plans as a 'Little Manilla,' but rather a celebration of the Filipino Canadian culture itself: 'A culture that exists here, now, that's very different from the culture that came here.' The final product, which is being developed through a partnership with the Manitoba Filipino Business Council, Kultivation Festival, and Mabuhay District Inc., is always changing, but Orobia hopes to include a performing arts centre, a Filipino Canadian museum, local businesses — from startups to established organizations — and recreation opportunities such as a sheltered basketball court. It's tentatively planned for northwest Winnipeg. Orobia was a driving force in getting the Kultivation Festival — which will take place Aug. 18 to 24 this year — going. The idea was to introduce a modern take on Filipino arts and culture — a concept which was brought up to what was, at the time, a group of about 10 to 11 people, who 'jumped all over it.' ''This is exactly what we need right now,'' he recalled someone say. 'It basically snowballed from there, and we grew to over 200 people in five months.' There were a few setbacks caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, but the festival now brings in thousands of attendees each year. 'It was incredible,' Orobio said, adding that the success has introduced him to Filipino professionals from basically every line of work. 'I was like, 'where have you guys been?'' 'It's shone a light on what Filipinos can do … and the district is meant to be a physical manifestation of what the festival represents,' he said. Once a solid idea for the district was established through a think tank in 2023, a regular committee was formed in January of 2024 and the group officially became a non-profit the following June. 'The stuff we've been able to do over the past year is mind-blowing,' Orobio said. 'It's an investment in every Filipino Manitoban,' he added, of the recent announcement. 'It's huge for our community, it's huge for Winnipeg, it's huge for Manitoba.' The Filipino community isn't necessarily known for working together, which isn't a detriment, he said, but this also 'throws all that into contrast,' creating a collaborative environment for Filipino Winnipeggers to learn from each other, as well as surrounding people such as the local Jewish and Italian communities in the city — both of which have been extremely supportive. Mondays A weekly look at news and events that matter in your communities. The new funding will also get things moving quicker than originally thought, which is optimistic for older community members who want to see things happen in their lifetimes. 'There is a sense of urgency, but we want to do it right,' the architect said. Plans for the near future include a feasibility study — pooling resources and figuring out how to continue in a sustainable way — developing institutional capacity, and working on fundraising efforts. Currently, ways people can help include becoming a member, using specific skills on a certain committee, volunteering at future events, and donating — which can currently be done through a campaign in which you can purchase metal pins depicting the district's logo. For more information, visit or @mabuhaydistrict on Instagram and Facebook. Emma Honeybun Emma Honeybun is a reporter/photographer for the Free Press Community Review. She graduated RRC Polytech's creative communications program, with a specialization in journalism, in 2023. Email her at Read full biography Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Winnipeg Free Press
27-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Winnipeg Free Press
Massive murals won't just brighten Winnipeg's Graham Avenue, they will make it safer
Murals, not buses, will soon running be up and down Graham Avenue. Winnipeg is one of only 10 cities in North America — and just two in Canada, the other being Ottawa — selected for the US$100,000 Asphalt Art Initiative launched by Bloomberg Philanthropies. The project turns the formerly transit-heavy corridor into a whimsical urban canvas. Beginning Monday, local artists will cover the asphalt with large-scale, street-level murals. Asphalt Art Initiative projects include Billings, Mont. The public art initiative is part of the broader Reimagining Graham Avenue, which is seeing the four-block zone from Carlton to Garry Street transformed into a pedestrian-first corridor. 'It's not often where that scale of a (mural) project can happen this fast,' says project lead Stéphane Dorge, an organizer with CoolStreetsWPG, which specializes in transforming community spaces through art. 'This is kind of like an arts festival, where we're going to be up to 10 artists on site, plus helpers and volunteers bringing to life about 18,000 square feet of murals to animate the Graham Avenue space, so it's a bit overwhelming.' Muralists include Marc Kuegle, Alex Plante, Kal Barteski, Kale Sheppard, Laura Lee Harasym, Mike Zastre, James Culleton, Architects at Play and lead artist Takashi Iwasaki. Like a cinematically colour-graded street scene, the project will have a rich, overarching palette, but each of the artists was given near carte blanche to create, with an emphasis on play and interactivity. Dorge describes Architects at Play's 13,000-square-foot piece as a 'playable mural where you can bring your own pocket dice or use a dice app on your phone to play.' Varna, Bulgaria, was one of the cities that completed an Asphalt Art initiative in 2023 'I can't wait to unveil it.' Reimagining Graham Avenue dovetails with the city's new spine-and-feeder transit model launching Sunday. Known as Primary Transit Network (PTN), the new system is a historic transformation that will shift transit's focal points away from the downtown core towards other major corridors in the city, prioritizing bus frequency and greater neighbourhood-to-neighbourhood access across Winnipeg. But rather than diminish downtown's place in the city's civic culture, projects such as the PTN and Reimagining Graham Avenue — which coincide with the intersection of Portage Avenue and Main Street opening to pedestrian traffic — aim to transform the heart of the city into a more walkable social hub. Look up from the asphalt tableaus, and rather than buses you'll soon see a public plaza, including street plants, picnic tables, furniture, benches, ping-pong tables and access ramps. Car traffic will be allowed along other stretches of Graham, where protected bike lanes are also being added. 'When these changes are in place, Graham will be more colourful, more dynamic, more pedestrian-friendly. One more reason for people to visit, explore and enjoy our downtown,' said Mayor Scott Gillingham. The application to Bloomberg Philanthropies, a charitable organization in New York, for the Asphalt Art Initiative was submitted by Public Works and the Planning, Property and Development departments at the City of Winnipeg. 'It was just a really well-thought-out, really inspired application,' says Nicholas Mosquera, one of the program leads at Bloomberg Philanthropies for the Asphalt Art Initiative. 'It reminded us a lot of work that we'd been doing (in New York City's Times Square). We saw a lot of similarities in the Winnipeg project, and we're happy to be a part of that effort.' Studies consistently show that pedestrian-friendly design makes neighbourhoods feel more connected. For example, research from a University of British Columbia review found walkable neighbourhoods build civic trust and spark friendlier interactions, while a U.K. study showed that quieter, low-traffic streets made people more neighbourly and less lonely. That same study also found that low-traffic, pedestrian-centric neighbourhoods can create public health gains up to 100 times greater than the costs of those plans. SUPPLIED East Providence, Rhode Island Asphalt Art Initiative drone image. And while public arts and beautification projects are sometimes criticized as a superficial fix to the social problems undergirding urban distress, a growing body of literature shows the social benefits run deeper than fleeting eye candy. The Asphalt Art Safety Study, conducted by Sam Schwartz Consulting in partnership with Bloomberg Philanthropies, analyzed 17 asphalt art sites across the United States. Among the outcomes reassuring them of their good work, they found that crashes involving pedestrians or cyclists were halved, while crashes resulting in injuries decreased by 37 per cent, along with a 27 per cent increase in drivers yielding to pedestrians with the right-of-way. 'They're really striking results. We're really proud of that — (it's) some of the first research, certainly to our knowledge, to look at multiple arts-driven street-design projects,' says Mosquera. A number of independent studies, mostly focusing on green projects, illuminate the effects of community beautification on improving mental health and community connectivity. 'It's incredible when we can see that the street is actually going to turn into a large piece of art,' said Kate Fenske, Downtown Winnipeg BIZ's chief executive officer, of Reimagining Graham Avenue. Birmingham, Alabama Asphalt Art Initiative 'I hope this isn't the full catalyst, though,' says Dorge. 'We still need development of the surface lots and Graham. We need more housing downtown. But I hope this draws attention to that need and, hopefully, spurs prioritization from developers to focus on rebuilding that area and making it more vibrant.' From July 5 to Sept. 28, Graham Avenue will host four art installations by designers from New York, Halifax and Winnipeg — including a bike-powered giant fan and a coastal-themed landscape — along with projects by Art City (opens July 11) and the Manitoba Métis Federation. This other wave of installations is part of Storefront Manitoba's Cool Gardens, a landscape art and design festival, now in its 10th edition, similar to the Warming Huts competition. (The event is not to be confused with CoolStreetsWpg, which leads the mural initiative on Graham; cool people abound in Winnipeg's public art field.) This year, Cool Gardens also plans vibrant installations at Assiniboine Park, Osborne Village, St. Boniface and The Forks. Conrad SweatmanReporter Conrad Sweatman is an arts reporter and feature writer. Before joining the Free Press full-time in 2024, he worked in the U.K. and Canadian cultural sectors, freelanced for outlets including The Walrus, VICE and Prairie Fire. Read more about Conrad. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.