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Meet the Design Ideas Lab Teams

Join us for a panel with the three teams selected from the Reimagining Design Ideas Competition to envision future memorial in the Bronx
Reimagining the Enslaved African Burial Ground at Van Cortlandt Park is hosting a special panel conversation in partnership with Lehman College at CUNY, Campus Honors & Scholar Engagement.
Led by Van Cortlandt Park Alliance, Design Trust for Public Space, and Immanuel Oni of Liminal sp, Reimagining has selected three design teams through its Bronx community-engagement-informed Design Ideas Competition, aiming to generate new visions for a memorial honoring the site. Reimagining is honored to announce the Design Ideas Lab cohort:
- Rodney Leon/ Leon Pinkster Azalea Collaborative: Leon “Pinkster Azalea Collaborative” is a collaboration between Rodney Leon, Elgin Cleckley(_mpathic design), and Creative Urban Alchemy established for the Reimagining of Van Cortlandt Park’s Enslaved African Burial Ground. The Collaborative’s founder Rodney Leon, is the designer of the African Burial Ground Memorial in New York City, which is the first National Monument in the United States dedicated to the contributions of people of African descent. Mr. Leon is also the Architect and Designer of the United Nations Permanent Memorial to the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade. His practice Rodney Leon Architect has a unique expertise focusing on the design of sacred, cultural and public spaces over the last 30 years. Ifeoma Ebo: Nigerian-American, Brooklyn-based public artist, educator at the Spitzer School of Architecture at City College and Principal of Creative Urban Alchemy (CUA) – an award-winning design studio working at the intersection of art, architecture, urban design & planning. With a career spanning two decades, she is renowned for her transformative work in urban landscapes, with a keen focus on equity and design excellence. She has significantly impacted urban design and development projects, partnering with prestigious institutions like the United Nations, FIFA, and the NYC Mayor’s Office. She is joined by Ximena Diaz Velasco, a Community Designer at CUA trained in landscape architecture and international development. Elgin Cleckley is an award-winning Architect, Civic designer, and Associate Professor at the University of Virginia, where he leads the internationally recognized _mpathic design initiative, pedagogy, and design practice. He has collaborated on major civic and cultural projects across North America over three decades and helped realize the groundbreaking Weston Family Innovation Centre at the Ontario Science Centre (Toronto). Current design projects include Brookes (Revisited) installation at the Beck Center in Knoxville (Tennessee), Royal Museum Greenwich (UK), and the Charles Wright African American Museum (Detroit), and a public space at Kindlewood (Charlottesville).
- Ujijji Davis Williams/ JIMA studio: A landscape architectural design and urban planning studio that collaborates with community groups, organizations, and builders committed to culturally relevant placemaking and strategic implementation. JIMA Studio contributed to a conceptual design investigation interpreting the history of the Forrest Slave Mart, a holding facility for enslaved Africans and African Americans owned and operated by Nathan Bedford Forrest in the midst of Downtown Memphis.
- Sunsum Collective: a collaboration between Wil Jones, founding principal of NYC-based urban practice GROUND3D, architect Deena Darby, cultural preservationist and placemaker Talisha Ward, landscape architectural designer and herbalist Simone Delaney, and urban planner Nolen Scruggs. The interdisciplinary team has expertise in community engagement, historic preservation, landscape design, and public programming. Team members have contributed to community-engaged planning and design efforts related to the Flatbush African Burial Ground, advancing heritage corridor strategies, participatory design processes, ecological design interventions, and collaborative approaches to cultural preservation and public memory.
Join us for a talk and reception at Lehman College to celebrate and meet the design teams, learn more about the hidden histories of the Enslaved African Burial Ground in Van Cortlandt Park, and explore how the design ideas lab will lay down a blueprint vision for a future permanent memorial—one that connects Bronx residents and visitors to the site’s history, acknowledges its painful legacy, and creates space for gathering, education, and healing. Moderated by Jeremiah Olayinka Ojo, Artist, Educator & Preservationist.
This panel discussion is part of Van Cortlandt Park Alliance’s REIMAGINING initiative. In partnership with the Design Trust for Public Space and Immanuel Oni, Liminal Sp, VCPA invites the community to reimagine the park’s Enslaved African Burial Ground site as a memorial space that fosters long-term healing and restoration. This project is supported by a generous grant from the Mellon Foundation.
This event will be held in B39 Carman Hall at Lehman College.