澳门天天好彩

Mississippi State University research center receives national American Planning Association award

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has been awarded the 2016 American Planning Association (APA) Small Town and Rural (STaR) James A. Segedy Award for Outstanding Student Project for its planning work for the community of Houston, Miss.

The Mississippi State University research center hosted a workshop in February 2014 as part of the Citizen鈥檚 Institute on Rural Design (CIRD), which served to gather ideas from the Houston community and its leaders about the Tanglefoot Trailhead庐 in Houston. Houston is the southernmost community along the 44-mile-long Tanglefoot Trail庐, a cycling/pedestrian pathway that runs from New Albany south through Pontotoc and Chickasaw Counties. Students helped prepare interactive activities, plans and maps and facilitated group table discussions at the three-day CIRD workshop.

A main goal of the workshop was to create a plan to designate a new pavilion location at the trailhead, as well as lead visitors from the trailhead to Houston鈥檚 downtown area and also to connect the trail to the nearby Natchez Trace Parkway.

The planning workshop was themed: 鈥淪tart Dreaming, Houston鈥︹ The result was a swell of momentum to capitalize on the new trail and all its potential for the community.

鈥淥ur students gained immeasurable experience in community engagement and developing leadership skills while helping facilitate the design workshop,鈥 said Assistant Director of the Carl Small Town Center Leah Kemp. They also gained exposure to national experts and worked alongside them, which they really enjoyed.鈥

The center has since designed a pavilion for the site, which is scheduled to be constructed in spring 2016.

鈥淭he people of Houston are making big strides to put the workshop plans into action, and we have enjoyed working with them to make it happen,鈥 said Kemp.

The workshop was funded by a 2014 CIRD Award funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, and Houston was one of just four communities nationwide to receive the funding.

The James A. Segedy Award is given annually to recognize an outstanding project by a graduate or undergraduate class or individual that addresses a planning issue facing small town or rural areas.

鈥淭his award is one of many recent awards that recognizes the work of the Carl Small Town Center to develop and implement design projects for small towns and communities in Mississippi,鈥 said 澳门天天好彩, Art and Design Associate Dean Greg聽G.聽Hall,聽Ph.D., AIA, NCARB. 鈥淭he Houston planning workshop serves as an example of ways in which the center supports the mission of the university to serve the development of the state through teaching, research and service.鈥

The award will be presented at the STaR Business Meeting on Sun., April 3 during the National Planning Conference in Phoenix, Ariz. The Houston Trailhead project will be highlighted at the meeting and featured in a STaR newsletter article.

The Carl Small Town Center is a nonprofit community design and outreach component of the 澳门天天好彩, Art and Design and its School of Architecture. The research center works to help improve the quality of life and create economic opportunity in small towns by improving their physical environments. For more information on the center, visit carlsmalltowncenter.org.

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