Sound design is more than just a tool for films or songs-- sound can be a powerful tool for social activism, and can help define the spaces it flows through. By creating a soundscape that utilizes found sounds from and about specific places, I hope to contextualize the issue of gentrification in “revitalized” cities and downtown areas and to bring those issues to the foreground, instead of relegating them to background noise. The outcome is an installation piece consisting of a semi-packed suitcase that “plays” the soundscape.
The soundscape focuses on two different cities, both of which underwent revitalization efforts in both their downtown and their main water feature. Greenville, South Carolina plays first, and a recording of The Falls on the Reedy River weaves through different narratives about both the restoration effort and the resulting displacement of lower-income residents. While some narratives tout the awards the revitalized city has received for its design, others disclose the rapidly rising real estate prices and displacement in the surrounding areas. Providence, Rhode Island follows with much the same narrative-- overlapping recordings of Providence River’s Waterplace Park with interviews with concerned residents and recordings of news broadcasts that discuss the revitalization of the downtown area. The audio is then played from inside of a suitcase, which reinforces the repeated mention of relocation as a result of rising housing costs. By unifying the suitcase and the audio, it contextualizes the effects of revitalization and connects the discussion of city improvements to the people it will affect.
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