Vacant land tells the story of a city; in
Buffalo, New York this story is one of loss. Over the past 60 years the
population has gone from an all time high of over 580,000 to about 261,000.
This has left the city littered with vacant lots and properties. Buffalo is now
ranked third in the nation for vacant land as a portion of total area (15.7%).
Vacancy has fractured once strong and vibrant neighborhoods and is a huge
obstacle for the city to overcome.
This 15.7% breaks down to around 16,000 vacant
lots or over 8 square miles of the city. Between 5,000 and 7,500 of these lots
are owned by the City. These scars on the landscape cast a forlorn look across
much of the city’s East Side where the vacancy is most prolific. Blight spreads
like a cancer there, lowering surrounding property value, fracturing
neighborhoods and draining city resources.
I intend to visualize this problem. I will map
each City-owned vacant lot and then travel to photograph it. The images will be taken with a wide angle to
encompass as much of the lot and it’s surroundings as possible. The photos
would be shot from eye level so the viewers may easily place themselves in the
location. The resulting photographs would appear interchangeable; the
differences between each one would only be detectable in the details.
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