04/25/2025
Did you know Charlotte’s Cultural Arts Campus wasn’t always a sure thing?
Years ago, while co-hosting the Civic By Design Forum with Dr. Tom Hanchett at the Levine Museum, I was asked by a local leader to weigh in on a bold idea circulating among city leaders—a new cultural arts center for the heart of the city.
They were exploring models like L.A.’s sprawling Center for Modern Art. But we discussed something different: instead of one massive building, why not weave a series of smaller, civic buildings and gathering spaces into the district? A walkable cultural network—activating the urban fabric rather than concentrating energy in a single isolated building.
Charlotte doesn’t have a traditional town square, but Tryon Street acts as our Main Street—a kind of outdoor civic room. And think of civic uses seamlessly connecting to this public realm like the grand staircase of the Art Institute of Chicago: a place not just to enter a building, but to gather, connect, and people-watch.
The city embraced the vision. Today, that idea lives on through the Mint Museum Uptown, the Harvey B. Gantt Center, and the Bechtler Museum— designed by recommended architects who truly understand how buildings can shape public life. These included Mario Botta and Machado Silvetti.
The cultural campus is tied together by the urban plaza and the monumental staircase outside the Mint—a civic icon in its own right, carved with stepped seating, lighting, and words of inspiration.
📍Next time you’re Uptown, take a minute to sit on the steps. Watch the world go by.
Prismacolor pencil on toned Strathmore 9”x12”