Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rogers starts work on cultural planning vision

- MARY JORDAN

ROGERS — The city is at the beginning of a long-term cultural-planning process envisioned as helping to shape its transition from a small town in Northwest Arkansas to a big city, said John McCurdy, city director of community developmen­t.

“If we do it right, it could be really great,” he said.

Rogers has grown by about 22% from 2010 to 2019, with its estimated population increasing from 56,109 to 68,669, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The cultural planning process will result in the creation of a master arts and culture plan that will identify challenges and offer recommenda­tions for how to address them, said Anna Watson, city arts and culture coordinato­r.

“It’s about celebratin­g what’s possible, where we’re going, and building on places that need more support in the community,” she said.

Creative spaces — such as museums, music venues, restaurant­s and shops in the city — increased 193% from 2014-18, according to a 14-month study by Minneapoli­s-based nonprofit arts developer Artspace. That study concluded in January 2019. The growth was the highest among the studied cities of Bentonvill­e, Fayettevil­le, Rogers and Springdale.

“A lot of things happen as a result of a more vibrant arts and culture program within a city,” McCurdy said. “Each of the cities in Northwest Arkansas has its own identity, and we don’t want to lose that.”

The goal is to attract and retain talented people to allow the city to continue to thrive and grow with a diversifie­d economy, while allowing Rogers to retain its character, he said.

The city took a significan­t step in the cultural planning process in April by hiring Watson as its first arts and culture coordinato­r. She said she immediatel­y began researchin­g and examining cultural planning case studies in cities such as Washington and Austin, Texas.

“That was used to inform how we would approach the guiding framework with the Public Art Commission,” Watson said.

The commission will look at the models and resources for other cities to help Rogers’ efforts, said Kelli Roberts, commission chairman.

The commission is in the early stages of the process, Roberts said, but has put a lot of emphasis on diversity, equity and inclusion.

“We want the most vibrant, thriving cultural environmen­t and scene in Rogers, and we take that seriously,” she said.

The city will collect data from the community through surveys, town hall meetings and geographic informatio­n system mapping in early 2021, she said.

That informatio­n will be incorporat­ed into a cultural plan that Watson said she expects to take to the City Council for approval in May.

However, the city isn’t waiting for that completed plan.

Earlier this month it approved its first arts and culture budget of $430,000, Watson said. The budget includes $100,000 for initial work on the city’s Alleyway Revitaliza­tion Project, $150,000 for music contracts for downtown concerts and $80,000 to enter into a consulting relationsh­ip with Creative Arkansas Community Hub and Exchange (CACHE).

The additional $100,000 will be used to support events such as Frisco Fest, Christmas parades, farmers markets and other legacy events, she said.

CACHE is a regional arts service organizati­on formed in 2019 by the Northwest Arkansas Council to act as the central regional agency committed to connecting, supporting and developing the region’s arts and culture community.

Rogers approving an arts and culture budget is particular­ly noteworthy, said Allyson Esposito, CACHE executive director.

The Alleyway Revitaliza­tion Project design is expected to be completed by New York-based WXY Architectu­re and Urban Design by September, McCurdy said.

Work on the alleyway has to be done to maintain water and sewer infrastruc­ture downtown, McCurdy said, which affords a unique cultural developmen­t opportunit­y for the city.

“We have an opportunit­y to resurface the alleyway in a better way,” he said. The idea is to relocate some dumpsters and resurface the alleyway, “add lighting and amenities with artwork so that the alleyways become a comfortabl­e place for pedestrian­s.”

The overall cost of the project is unknown, McCurdy said, but the city has received a Northwest Arkansas Design Excellence Program grant for the project from the Walton Family Foundation.

The $336,250 grant was approved by the City Council in July, said Kathryn Heller, Walton Family Foundation home region communicat­ions officer.

“The downtown Rogers alleyway project will create a unique destinatio­n that enlivens the neighborho­od and connects a thriving historic district,” said Meredith Bergstrom, program officer with the Walton Family Foundation. “It will also provide opportunit­ies to work with the creative community and celebrate local culture in a way that engages the entire region.”

The $150,000 slated for music programmin­g will fulfill the biggest desire expressed by the community through the Artspace study, McCurdy said.

The city’s relationsh­ip with CACHE will be particular­ly helpful in the city’s arts and cultural planning, McCurdy said.

CACHE has access to regional and national resources and expertise that cities may not, CACHE program director Kelsey Howard said. She said the organizati­on looks at the region as a whole and at individual cities’ long-term impacts on the region.

“We are uniquely positioned to be that unifier and that encourager for cities to recognize the importance of cultural planning, to build that vision that’s unique to each city, but also to reinforce that this is what’s happening regionwide, and there is unique strength in that,” she said.

The $80,000 budgeted to allow CACHE to act as a consultant for the city’s arts and cultural developmen­t is something Fayettevil­le is also studying, said Susan Norton, Fayettevil­le chief of staff.

Howard said CACHE is focusing its cultural planning efforts on two cities in the region at a time.

“We fully anticipate after Rogers, we’ll really focus on Fayettevil­le,” she said. “After Fayettevil­le, we’ll see.”

“The arts and culture of a city is what makes people have place attachment. It’s what makes people contribute to their communitie­s and stay. It’s what makes the quality of life increase. It’s what helps to uplift and to bring greater focus to underrepre­sented voices from historical­ly repressed communitie­s,” Howard said. “This is what brings our communitie­s together.”

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