Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

‘How do we design a society for wellness?’

Meet Morgan Malone, a 29-year-old engaging Bronzevill­e with innovation and cultural economic developmen­t

- By Darcel Rockett drockett@chicagotri­bune.com

Keeping up with economic developmen­t wunderkind Morgan Malone is an exercise in pacing. She’s spearheadi­ng the Bronzevill­e Lakefront project for Farpoint Developmen­t, which is developing the acreage that Michael Reese Hospital used to occupy.

On an early mid-August morning, the then 28-year-old engaged with artists and architectu­ral designers Roland Knowlden and Davey Friday at the Illinois Institute of Technology campus about their exhibit showcased at the Roots & Culture Contempora­ry Art Center “Buried Beauty, Broken Block.” The work looks at the context of the past and current cityscape in relation to Black bodies and spaces by way of the Mecca Flats Building, once a hub of Bronzevill­e culture, demolished to build Mies van der Rohe’s S.R. Crown Hall.

By midmorning, Morgan was conducting a small business roundtable with Black business leaders and entreprene­urs in her West Loop office.

By workday’s end, Malone served as happy hour host at a bar in Little Italy, an event for young Black profession­als working in the built environmen­t, community developmen­t and neighborho­od developmen­t sectors, where Knowlden and Friday networked with mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson.

For Malone, this is a normal day as managing director of strategic initiative­s and operations of Farpoint Developmen­t, a firm that is part of the coalition of six developmen­t firms that make up the Global Research Innovation Technology alliance, which is developing the billion-dollar Bronzevill­e Lakefront mixed-use project.

Malone is engaging community members and local leaders with conversati­ons about innovation and cultural economic developmen­t. She ponders what advocacy from the community around historical and cultural preservati­on is going to look like as the project comes to fruition with commercial, institutio­nal and residentia­l spaces in 2040.

“Economic developmen­t, social impact, communal care ... how do we design a society for wellness, well-being, quality of life? That’s all I care about,” Malone said. “Any work that I’m doing, that’s always been the through line. We know the value of Bronzevill­e because in a lot of ways Bronzevill­e is the Harlem of Chicago. As things come full circle, I think there are ways to meld the beauty, history and legacy of the community with the innovation and design technique that we have in mind around technology and regenerati­on . ... We’re not building a new neighborho­od; we’re amplifying a community that is already awesome and has a really rich history.”

Malone has conversati­ons about social impact fairly often as she sees so much nuance to it. That’s why she does cultural immersion outings for Farpoint leadership, like the IIT one. “Impact is a social emotional experience,” Malone said. “I can tell you about the history of the Great Migration, but you got to have your own objective experience with it to feel it, see it, so that you’re able to recall it when you make decisions.”

Those decisions entail having apprentice­ships or internship­s that can grow future leaders in local policymaki­ng roles; equitable access to opportunit­ies on the project for marginaliz­ed population­s; creating generation­al wealth; expanding economic opportunit­y and scaling that for small businesses. Community involvemen­t is at the forefront, Malone said.

A visit to the Bronzevill­e Lakefront website shows stakeholde­rs in the project have committed to a diverse workforce at every stage of the project. A digital museum, welcome center and business accelerato­r, coupled with smart buildings with green designs, are all on the to-do list. Bronzevill­e Lakefront is expected to create 76,000 jobs and have an economic impact of $8.2 billion.

Equipped with a degree in women’s studies from Old Dominion University in Virginia, Malone arrived in Chicagolan­d in 2015 after a meaningful stint at the Kettering Foundation in Ohio under the tutelage of former CEO Forrest David Mathews. Malone may credit her career-military parents with teaching her to think bigger and wider in her public service, but Malone said it’s Mathews who changed the trajectory of her life. The former U.S. secretary of health, education and welfare during the administra­tion of President Gerald Ford showed her what participat­ory and deliberati­ve democracy looked like. She met people from all over the world as a summer research assistant at the foundation in 2013.

“I really didn’t know what it meant to be civic outside of voting,” she recalled. “I knew about community service, but I didn’t know that there was a whole group of people out there thinking about how to empower citizens; (Kettering Foundation) was the first stop. Their main mantra is that government should subsidize citizen-led initiative­s, where if you are actually being representa­tive, you are following the will of the people in a meaningful way and investing in citizen-led initiative­s versus telling people what they need.”

Malone came to Chicago with that knowledge and worked with organizati­ons like AFSCME Council 31 as an organizer and Teamwork Englewood as a program manager for the 15-year Englewood Quality of Life Plan, which involved hundreds of residents, five task forces and public-private partnershi­ps.

“I got involved in Englewood because a county commission­er was proposing that we should give free homes in Black and brown communitie­s to first responders, even though they don’t want to live here. And they’ve told you that,” Malone said. “So you’re giving free homes, just renovated, that just are investment properties for these folks. What about the people who are currently working in government, or nonprofit, or education, that can’t afford to get a home or currently are on their third or fourth refinance? Why would you just give away free homes to people who don’t want to be here versus investing in people who are sustaining it and do want to be here, and proving it, and been here a while? That’s what keeps me up at night. Making sure that the people who are currently here get a chance to enjoy whatever we build.”

Then came a stint with the Chicago Department of Aviation as a policy analyst. Malone said her knowledge of systems, operations and people and her passion for workforce and policy landed her the position. The knowledge she acquired in this role is helping her at Farpoint.

“If you know airports, you know the entire city, because for every city department, there’s an airport division,” Malone said. “So if you can learn airports, you can learn anything in the city.”

As Malone juggles her Farpoint work, she also serves on the Cook County Commission on Social Innovation; is lead steward of the Black Chicago Jobs Board; and sits on a number of boards, including the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless. At 29, she’s racked up accolades in the process, having recently won the Ariel Investment­s and WVON 1690AM 40 Gamechange­rs Under 40 award last month.

Malone, a North Virginia transplant and an only child, has been cited as the “glue” that holds together the Bronzevill­e Lakefront project, according to Regina Stilp, a founding principal of Farpoint Developmen­t.

“Morgan is so talented in so many ways, but she is truly someone who understand­s,” said Paula Robinson, president of Bronzevill­e Community Developmen­t Partnershi­p, a proponent of Bronzevill­e who has been doing work around the Bronzevill­e Metropolis National Heritage Area and making Bronzevill­e a nationally designated historical site. Malone considers her a team member on the lakefront venture. Robinson said Malone sharing her knowledge of environmen­tal, social and governance sustainabi­lity on the lakefront project shows that organizati­ons like hers need to learn from Malone.

Malone came to the Chicago area to be around her father’s family, based in Joliet, but she also knew that an urban landscape was where she could do meaningful work. When she joined Farpoint, she told the principals she could only do equitable and inclusive developmen­t, otherwise the job wasn’t a go. They didn’t hesitate, she said.

“I believe in open source. How can I learn as much as I can to tell my community what’s actually going on behind closed doors and strengthen their advocacy? So I got into this work because I didn’t understand it and I wanted to. I know that I add value. I know that I’m smart. And I know that I try. And I’m going to make an effort to figure things out.”

Malone knows that Bronzevill­e residents are wondering, “How are we going to be able to preserve the best of who we are and who we’ve been with the upcoming developmen­t? How do we not make this a situation where now the Bronzevill­e Lakefront reflects no trace that anyone Black was ever there?” While she understand­s why people distrust developers, she sees developmen­t as a pathway to build with purpose and create change that positively affects those most impacted. That’s why she’s an advocate in every room that she enters.

“I’m not going to be able to move the needle on everything with everyone, but I’m usually able to pinpoint a thing that I can get someone to wrap their mind around. And if I can get you to do one thing and you to do one thing, I got an ecosystem where everyone’s doing something, and I can pull the pieces that I need,” Malone said.

In creating the Bronzevill­e Lakefront, Malone wants to have honest conversati­ons. So when she thinks about Bronzevill­e in 20 years, her hope is that the people who built the community are still living there. She’s hopeful that the project will be a model for others.

“If you can do it in Chicago, you can do it anywhere,” she said.

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 ?? ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Morgan Malone, managing director of strategic initiative­s at Farpoint Developmen­t, greets her guests at Bar 10 Doors while hosting a social event for Black profession­als on Aug. 18.
ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS Morgan Malone, managing director of strategic initiative­s at Farpoint Developmen­t, greets her guests at Bar 10 Doors while hosting a social event for Black profession­als on Aug. 18.

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