HOTSEAT- Designing woman: Katie Swenson's big ideas
Published November 24, 2005, in issue 0447 of The Hook
BY DAVE MCNAIR DAVE@READTHEHOOK.COM
Katie Swenson wanted to be a dancer. She
spent six years auditioning (and waitressing) in the Big Apple, where
she collaborated with the Blue Man Group and Twyla Tharp's dancers,
eventually working with Tharp herself during a summer program.
But the dancing life took its toll, and
nearing 30, she found herself wondering what she wanted to be. "I would
be an architect," Swenson recalls. "But it didn't seem realistic to
me-- it was too late."
Soon enough, however, she found herself
accepted to architecture programs at both Columbia and UVA. "I really
wanted to stay in New York," she says, "but I also wanted to start a
family." She and her husband moved to Charlottesville in 1996.
In 2001, Swenson won a prestigious
Frederick P. Rose Fellowship, given to the "brightest stars in the
constellation of American architects" for designing for low-income
neighborhoods. The fellowship gave Swenson a $40,000 stipend for three
years.
As a Rose Fellow, Swenson initiated the
10th and Page Street Neighborhood Revitalization Project with the
Piedmont Housing Alliance (PHA). The project will include 30 affordable
homes and a much-anticipated community center.
"The Rose Fellowship changed
everything," says Swenson. "It allowed me to become a 'community based'
architect, one who brings big ideas to the local level and works with
the city and community to make things happen."
Indeed, that would be the blueprint for
Swenson's brainchild, the Charlottesville Community Design Center,
which she founded when her Rose Fellowship ended.
Swenson's idea for the Center grew
naturally out of her work with the PHA, but she's a bit surprised by
how quickly it happened. "I sat down for coffee with architect Jim
Kovach to discuss the idea," she says. "A few phone calls were made,
and suddenly we've been offered the old bakery space on the Downtown
Mall."
With $30,000 in Alliance seed money, the
Design Center was born. "I would not say we have a particularly savvy
long-term business plan," admits Swenson, "but we're making it work."
Recently, the Center partnered with
Habitat for Humanity and the residents of Sunrise Trailer Court to turn
the trailer park into a mixed-income neighborhood without displacing
the current residents.
"It's important to understand not just the site," explains Swenson, "but the neighborhood and people who live there."
Although Swenson's dancing days are behind
her, the dancer is still evident. The mother of three sports a
teen-like bare midriff and wishes she had time to dance again.
Her job as director of the CCDC requires
her to be a choreographer of sorts, working simultaneously with
designers, builders, city officials, and the community to keep the
Center's projects on track.
"I'm also good at 'scale jumping,'" she
says, referring to her ability to move easily from focusing on a poor
caulking job around a window frame to discussing the "social
implications of architecture."
"You have to talk about things and do
things at the same time," she says about how she balances intellectual
interests with practical duties.
"I'm also a really good delegator," she adds with a smile.
Age: 37, but I still get carded  at Harris Teeter at least.
Why here? My husband I moved here in 1996. I started grad school, and he moved his young business here. Three years has become nearly 10.
What's worst about living here? It's too far from the ocean or other major body of water.
Favorite hangout? McGuffey Park
Most overrated virtue? Patience
People would be surprised to know: I was a modern dancer.
What would you change about yourself? I'd learn the virtue of patience.
Proudest accomplishment? Three beautiful babies becoming awesome young girls
People find most annoying about you: My over enthusiasm
Whom do you admire? The recently
deceased Samuel "Sambo" Mockbee for giving great artistic vision to the
practice of a socially responsible, spiritually uplifting,
aesthetically inspired architecture and to all those out there working
every day toward these goals
Favorite book? Hopscotch by Julio Cortazar
Subject that causes you to rant? Lately,
I'm ranting an awful lot about energy consumption. While making our
existing buildings more efficient is so simple, and would save so much
energy and money, it makes me especially crazy that all of our new
construction is not built to at least Energy Star standards. There's an
enormous amount of money and energy to harness by conserving energy and
spending that money on much more important things, like affordable
housing!
Biggest 21st-century thrill? Building technology
Biggest 21st-century creep-out? The state of the environment
What do you drive? Minivan
In your car CD player right now: Dan Zanes
Next journey? San Francisco in March for "Structures for Inclusion," an inspiring Community Design Conference
Most trouble you've ever gotten in? Getting
arrested for civic protest while a student at UC Berkeley. That part
wasn't bad, but my grandmother happened to see it on CNN.
Regret: Not being able to keep dancing, but perhaps I'll get back to that one day
Favorite comfort food: Mint chocolate chip ice cream
Always in your refrigerator: Sadly, not much. Grocery shopping is one of my biggest working-mother failures.
Most-see TV: No time for TV
Favorite cartoon: Winnie-the-Pooh has been big in our house lately.
Describe a perfect day: Thanksgiving
Walter Mitty fantasy: My biggest fantasy right now is to have a few more hours in the day.
Who'd play you in the movie? Jody Foster
Most embarrassing moment? I'm beyond embarrassable.
Best advice you ever got? Half of life is showing up.
Favorite bumper sticker I love "Dude, where's my country?" Someday, we'll have a CCDC bumper sticker: "Design Matters: You can shape your world."
Katie Swenson
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO