NEW YORK
On the southern edge of East Harlem sits an abandoned school building in the shadows of glimmering high-rise apartments.
Residents of the surrounding El Barrio neighborhood have long worried about the building's fate. With development pressures creeping into the area, Public School 109 could have been demolished or converted into expensive housing.
Instead, it's being sold to Artspace, a Twin Cities nonprofit that transforms neglected buildings and litter-strewn lots into affordable housing for artists. In the wake of the Great Recession, demand for such projects has never been stronger. Cities across the country are reaching out to the group, hoping that artists, musicians and performers will be a catalyst for growth in their languishing neighborhoods.
"Communities across the U.S. are just looking for hope and a sense of rebirth," Artspace President Kelley Lindquist said.
During the next five years, the group expects to double the number of projects it owns and manages. Work is underway in New Orleans, Los Angeles and more than a dozen cities across the country. In Dearborn, Mich., city leaders have called on Artspace to buy its stately but woefully obsolete City Hall.
"We want a place where artists can have affordable living space and do their art," said Dearborn Mayor Jack O'Reilly, who has already seen the positive impact artists and musicians can have on a community.
The city recently built a performing arts center that has been a major draw for people who might not otherwise visit downtown. "Hotels and restaurants have definitely seen the benefit," he said.