Tiffany Brown, Assoc. AIA, who along with Michael Ford and Eryk Christian co-founded the nonprofit Urban Arts Collective (UAC) in 2017, wants underserved and underrepresented kids to know that the design profession needs their skills and talent. “I’m not working in a field that looks like me,” Brown says. “It’s time for me to go back and seek out those kids who need to be designing those spaces.”
Like Ford and Christian, Brown grew up in Detroit in the 1980s and ’90s, in unsafe neighborhoods and public housing complexes. She studied architecture at Lawrence Technological University, in Michigan, and now works at SmithGroupJJR in Detroit. Last fall, she won a Knight Foundation grant for “400 Forward,” a series of camps, workshops, and school events she’s creating to teach African-American girls, in particular, about art, architecture, and planning. Rosa Sheng, FAIA, of SmithGroupJJR, says that Brown’s work is crucial because it is “spreading awareness about the lack of licensed architects who are black women and championing that future for black girls.”
Ford and Christian, a professional DJ, both studied architecture at the University of Detroit Mercy. Ford has earned a measure of fame as the creator of the Hip Hop Architecture Camp: weeklong sessions that teach design through hip-hop culture and music—which, as Ford notes, was created in public housing. (He sardonically calls Le Corbusier “the real father of hip-hop.”) Now based in Madison, Wis., Ford is helping that city’s planning department make its work more inclusive and is running an after-school version of his camp for at-risk youth in public schools.
Brown, who loved to draw as a kid and dreamed about working for Disney, never thought about a career in design until a recruiter came to her high school and encouraged her study architecture. She believes it’s essential for kids to see people who look like them working to change their homes and neighborhoods. “I want to give everything I have learned to girls who are walking my path,” she says. “I want to make sure they know it’s up to them to advocate for our communities.”
Tiffany Brown discusses the 400 Forward program
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