Columbus Neighborhood Collection

By Ris Twigg

A photographic look at the socioeconomics of five neighborhoods within Columbus, Ohio.

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Finding outdoor public art in downtown Columbus can be difficult — and deceptive. What appears to be art from a distance is actually an ad promoting the latest iPhone’s camera quality.
 
ABANDONED BUILDING MURAL
A family. Trees. Birds. Music and dancing. An old abandoned building. Located on Cleveland Avenue.
 
MANDY MANGINI and CHARLIE THE GOLDEN RETRIEVER
“I’ve lived in Clintonville my whole life. It’s a very friendly community. It’s a very walkable community. That’s how we like it. We’re on the bus line, so we get downtown quickly. Our neighbors are wonderful, very helpful,” said Mandy Mangini as she brushed her golden retriever, Charlie, on a yoga mat outside her home.

 

“It’s diverse, a lot of diversity. My kids go to school at the top of the street. I feel like they’re in a safe neighborhood to walk around and explore without me having to hold their hand. It’s a friendly place and it’s diverse.”

 

Of the 3,122 residents in Mandy’s neighborhood, 2,962 are white, 73 are black, and zero are hispanic, according to 2016 Census Bureau data.
 
Franklinton Housing
To the left, a family home. To the right, a boarded-up, abandoned building. According to Real estate website, Zillow, the median property value of a home in Franklinton is $59,600. In 2010, there were approximately 815 vacant properties in the area.
 
Franklinton Economic Opportunity
The Gravity Project is a mixed-use development effort currently under construction on the corner of W. Broad Street and Anson Street. “A live + work + learn + impact community” space with over 50,000 square feet of “creative” office space. In the background lies the Columbus skyline.

The average income of residents in Franklinton is $21,602, and approximately 34% of residents are unemployed. The poverty rate (above: below poverty) fluctuates between 0:1 to 2:1.
 
North Linden Housing
The median value of a residential property in North Linden is $71,500. In 2010, there were at least 758 vacant properties in the neighborhood.
 
North Linden Economic Opportunity
The average income of a North Linden resident is $33,619.30, and approximately 12% of residents are unemployed. The poverty rate (above: below poverty)

 

K.G.
“It’s hard living downtown without a car, you know. There aren’t any grocery stores, and COTA doesn’t really take you anywhere. And nobody wants to carry armfuls of groceries onto the bus, it’s way too inconvenient.”

 

Disabled, without a car, and constantly relying on public transportation. I met K.G. at a bus stop in Linden on his way to purchase a pair of work boots. He said downtown is a nice place to live, but doesn’t have much to do and lacks a grocery store.

 

“I’m disabled, so I’m subsidized, but I still work when I can. My buddy owns a Mexican food truck and he calls me in to help sometimes. The extra money helps me put food on the table.”

 

Lawn Art Zine

by Maria Fredericks

Mapping Social Inequalities

Team: Florence and Sarah

Project Statement: Visual exploration of intersecting social inequalities (health, housing, and education + demographics: income, race and ethnicity) at various scales (Columbus/census blocks, US/counties, World/countries).

 

Spatial Segregation in Columbus

Our exhibits highlights how disadvantage is concentrated in certain areas of Columbus. The photo and objects were taken from either side of the line between Bexley and Columbus.  We seek to highlight the stark difference between neighborhoods that are only a block or even a street apart.

 

Your Party is Trash

 

A visual art piece based around getting people to think about beverage container (primarily cans) recycling at parties. We are hoping to visually impact people at the art show enough to consider where they choose to place their drinking container after use. This could include planning with the host ahead of time and understanding the negative community connotation when the trash ends up the yard and street.