Austin American-Statesman

HOPE Outdoor Gallery intent to overcome latest setback

- Bridget Grumet Austin American-Statesman

Andi Scull wanted nothing more than to have the new HOPE Outdoor Gallery open by now.

That goal seemed on track a year ago, as constructi­on crews were busily building the new graffiti park in southeaste­rn Travis County, and organizers were assembling an artists’ showcase for an anticipate­d January 2024 grand opening.

Crews had even brought over a “tribute wall” from the original graffiti park site on Baylor Street, an iconic piece of weird Austin that drew hundreds of visitors a day before it closed in 2019 to make way for luxury condos.

The new HOPE Outdoor Gallery, rising from a pasture near Austin-Bergstrom Internatio­nal Airport, promises massive new graffiti walls plus murals, meeting spaces and a food truck park. The outline of the structures, visible to anyone flying in or out of Austin, spells H-O-P-E in 180-foot-long letters.

“Anticipati­on was palpable as we prepared to reintroduc­e the art park to our community,” said Scull, the founder and creative director of HOPE Outdoor Gallery.

Then everything came to a halt last October.

The gallery organizers discovered “substantia­l constructi­on issues,” Scull said. Among them: A notice from the Austin permitting department cited “many issues” with the stormwater drainage and erosion control plans.

Scull said those and other constructi­on issues were serious enough for the gallery to part ways with its contractor, hire a new general contractor and reexamine the work done so far.

The January grand opening was nixed. It’s unclear when the new target opening date will be – but Scull and the gallery team are determined to get there.

“Every effort is being made to

expedite the process and overcome the obstacles we've encountere­d,” Scull recently told me. “We're driven by the knowledge that the end result will be immensely rewarding – bringing the Austin community together once again and transformi­ng our blank walls into stunning masterpiec­es of artwork.”

I had reached out to Scull to ask about the status of the new graffiti park, as I'm among the many Austinites who are eager for it to open. It's hard to believe it has been five years since the original location closed. Scull often described the old graffiti park as a “visual open mic” where anyone could experiment and express themselves.

“Part of that love of creative energy, and sharing it, and trying and doing new things is just part of the spark that makes Austin special,” she said.

People often forget that the original graffiti park on Baylor Street, which started as a pop-up installati­on during the 2010 South by Southwest festival, was intended to be temporary. But it was so popular that it thrived (with the property owner's blessing) for nearly a decade, until the gallery organizers found the site near Southeast Austin for a permanent outdoor art park.

The original graffiti park was a beloved spot for artists, amateurs, tourists, and people photograph­ing milestones and everyday life. The everchangi­ng walls became a canvas for everyone.

“It showed us the need for safe places for creativity, outdoor spaces for public art and expression, but especially places where people in Austin felt that they could go and feel inspired and come up with their own ideas, or try different things, or see different things,” Scull said.

While the temporary site seemed to emerge with ease, however, the permanent location near the airport ran into a series of complicati­ons. The COVID-19 pandemic caused delays. A fence line dispute with a neighbor triggered a 2021 lawsuit that was later dropped.

The permitting process proved more time-consuming than organizers hoped. They're dealing with both Austin and Travis County regulators, as the site is just outside the city limits, but within the extra-territoria­l jurisdicti­on where Austin still has some oversight.

Then came the constructi­on issues that emerged last fall.

“It's been a setback that we were not anticipati­ng and no one was prepared for,” Scull told me.

But the HOPE Outdoor Gallery is the brightly colored embodiment of resourcefu­lness and improvisat­ion. Organizers turned those delays into opportunit­ies to improve their design.

They added creative spaces and expanded their plans for rooftop solar panels that can provide energy to the grid and some revenue for the facility. They sold about 8 acres to the owners of the neighborin­g Carson Creek Ranch, providing room for overflow parking for that venue while also raising money for the now-9-acre art park.

The rest of the constructi­on costs have been covered by investors and lenders, Scull said. Once it opens, the new HOPE Outdoor Gallery will be free to visit, with revenue coming from the sales of food, beverages, art supplies and merchandis­e.

The wait is proving longer than anyone hoped, but I will happily celebrate the opening of the new HOPE Outdoor Gallery whenever it finally happens. The graffiti on the walls will still change by the moment. But the platform for everyone will be here to stay.

 ?? PROVIDED BY ANDI SCULL ?? A piece of wall from the original HOPE Outdoor Gallery site on Baylor Street was installed in May 2023 at the gallery’s new site.
PROVIDED BY ANDI SCULL A piece of wall from the original HOPE Outdoor Gallery site on Baylor Street was installed in May 2023 at the gallery’s new site.
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 ?? BRIDGET GRUMET/AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? The new site of HOPE Outdoor Gallery in southeast Austin remains under constructi­on and closed to the public, though organizers are eager to open once everything is ready.
BRIDGET GRUMET/AMERICAN-STATESMAN The new site of HOPE Outdoor Gallery in southeast Austin remains under constructi­on and closed to the public, though organizers are eager to open once everything is ready.

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