The Living Lane and Economic Justice in Regent Park

The Artists’ podcast can be accessed here.


A Cold Winter’s Day 

On a cold winter’s day, wind whips through the avenues of Toronto’s Regent Park. The neighbourhood’s newly built towers tunnel frigid wind at highway speeds, and like the rest of downtown Toronto, there is little incentive for a wanderer to leave their house at this time of year. 

Photo Credits: Connor Broughton

However, the frigid conditions slow upon entering one of the small laneways that branch off the neighbourhood’s arteries. For our wanderer, these paths are a safe place of refuge.  

Specifically, Ratna Lane feels the safest of them all. 

In this passage, quick winds and quicker vehicles are stalled at the entrance, where the built form denies their access. On Ratna Lane, this wanderer will find a collection of placemaking artwork, including benches, tables, and shelters, which have been designed to emulate significant structures of Regent Park’s past. However, due to the pedestrian-only nature of this lane, they will not find vehicles. 

Despite its short length, Ratna Lane is significant to the Regent Park community. It was named in honour of Ismathara Ratna, who was a mother, aunt, and a dedicated community member that was tragically killed by a vehicle, and her laneway is designed to welcome community members and visitors. The space is highlighted by its artistic features, which foster connections and creativity.  

Alongside public art, the creativity continues within the storefronts that line Ratna Lane’s south side. Two art studios stake claim to its at-grade level, housing the studios of Benny Bing and Komi Olafimihan. Alongside them are Melissa Falconer and Morgan-Paige Melbourne, who work and live on neighbouring Tubman Avenue. These studios make up the Living Lane, which seeks to formally establish Regent Park as Toronto’s creative centre. 

Despite the significance of art and culture in Regent, creativity hasn’t historically been a defining feature of the neighbourhood. The wanderer is more likely to remember pre-revitalization media coverage, which painted the community as a cold and isolated place, riddled with gun violence and drug trade.  

Articles about Regent Park are more likely to begin with “a spray of bullets fired” than a spray of colour on a canvas. 

A Cold and Isolated Place? 

Situated east of Downtown Toronto, bordered on the west by Parliament Street to the Don River, Regent Park holds a unique piece of Canada’s history as its first public housing project. Once heralded as a community for morally upright families, the neighbourhood transformed throughout the latter half of the 20th century. Within 15 years of the project’s completion in 1957, opinions changed on its built form, from promoting safety and community to fostering isolation, fragmentation, and criminal activity (1). 

By 1968, Regent’s developers claimed that the neighbourhood was a failure. Interviews from this time described Regent Park as “an oversized, poorly planned, criminogenic haven of single mothers, welfare families, and deviants” (2). Over the next four decades, responsibility for this failure was never taken and the problems caused by continued neglect and marginalization snowballed.  

As the 20th century came to a close, the perception of Regent Park couldn’t have been different to its initial expectations. Buildings sat aging and grass grew long, both of which were unkempt by Toronto Community Housing, who themselves were severely underfunded. The local and national media told stories of drugs and murder, describing Regent Park as one of, if not the most, dangerous neighbourhoods in the city (2).  

The New Regent Park (Photo Credits: Connor Broughton)

In 2002, change was finally slated for Regent Park. The neighbourhood was set to be completely razed and rebuilt by Daniels Corporation alongside the City of Toronto who sought to address the issues that plagued the neighbourhood. Over the next couple of decades, community members would have to say farewell to Oak Street and River Street, set to be replaced by something completely new. 

Through the revitalization, Daniels Co. have prioritized community building by investing in the development of amenities that commit to the safety of the neighbourhood. This is highlighted in the president of Daniels, Mitchell Cohen’s, book that accompanies the Regent Park revitalization: Rhythms of Change, where he describes community building as the most important aspect of the project (3). Continuing this point, Fatima Saya, who leads the Social Impact team at Daniels, describes how much detail was put into guaranteeing neighbourhood safety by highlighting the specific challenge that service lanes presented to developers. 

Photo Credits: Sandesh Basnet

“Service corridors are crucial to [condo building operations] ...but when they’re not being used, they’re potentially dark and dingy,” Saya says. She emphasizes that this darkness fosters crime, meaning that service lanes became one of the most crucial safety-related issues the Regent Park revitalization faced.  

To solve this problem, Saya’s team brainstormed alternative methods to “facilitate safety…and social cohesion through the design of [the service laneway].” She describes the eventual decision on the use of the space as a reflection on creative exercises and community engagement.  

“We really wanted to try some new things,” claims Saya.  

One of these new ideas became the Living Lane, which encompasses Ratna Lane and Tubman Avenue, and has become a monumental component of the new Regent Park. It was envisioned as a community gathering space that seeks to bring attention to the value of arts and culture in the neighbourhood. Practical art and sculptures, including benches, tables, and canopies, line the way – inviting the wanderer to sit and take a moment

 During that moment, they might be confused to find the storefronts on this lane look…different. No clear advertisement of what’s on sale or what goes on in these spaces, just the 10 feet tall windows and subtle branding.  

Four art studios fill the storefronts of Ratna Lane and Tubman Avenue, housing exceptional black artists of diverse backgrounds and art styles. They were strategically chosen to occupy these spaces by the Black North Initiative, who collaborated with Daniels Co. on the Living Lane Project. The goal of which is to “celebrate the existing arts community in Toronto and provide a unique opportunity [to] support Black artists and creatives in developing their practice, showcasing their work, and building relationships in the community” (4). From east to west there are Benny Bing Studio, Studio-Olaf, Studio Melissa Falconer, and Studio Morgan-Paige. The artists work in these studios during the day and live upstairs in the attached condos during the night.  

Photo Credits: Connor Broughton

Beyond being a space for community gathering, the Living Lane provides economic justice for the artists who call it home. Springboard For The Arts (an independent non-profit who supports artist-led community development work) states there is little to no safety net for most individual artists, especially for black and marginalized artists (5). The four artists back this by describing how institutional pressures and pressures from family prevent the exploration of a career in the arts. With the opportunity for them to work out of a subsidized-rate studio, they are assured equity in economic opportunity – which allows them to pursue their creative careers (6).  

Living and Working in Regent Park’s Living Lane 

Benny Bing was the first to move into his studio over two years ago. As an artist from Regent Park and being on the board of Artscape, Benny believed the Living Lane opportunity was a perfect fit for him. He saw the opportunity to work out of his own dedicated studio as the next step in his art career.  

 “Two of the major concurrent [challenges that artists were facing] were funding and space,” Benny says. He believes that by developing dedicated studios for emerging artists, the Regent Park neighbourhood can strive toward economic justice. “Environment is key in changing the way one feels in how they look toward the future,” Benny says.  

He exclaims that this environmental alteration has changed the way he creates, giving him the opportunity to feel like a business owner and an artist. By operating out of the Benny Bing Studio space rather than his home, he feels like clients are more inclined to come to his space and buy his work.  

 Komi Olafimihan, the second artist to move into the Living Lane, echoes some of the same experiences as Benny when reflecting on this new space. His journey as an artist began later than most, where he only began to create art in his mid-twenties. Originally an architect, Komi was never satisfied with the corporate world – his true passion involved working on his art at home deep into the night. Now a career artist, he says the Living Lane studio space gives him the drive to create bigger and better pieces. Since moving in, he has explored his art using scales that wouldn’t have been possible without his dedicated studio space.  

Despite being a creative kid, Melissa Falconer didn’t have a traditional upbringing in the art world either. She was encouraged to get a “normal job”, and her good grades made her feel like a career in accounting or finance would provide her with a stable future.  

 “In the traditional art world…you have to go through these institutions and systems in order to be successful…and the percentage of artists who actually make it through that system is so small,” she claims.  

Without the belief that she could pursue art as a career, Melissa went to Laurier University and began making portraits as a passion project and side hustle in her dorm room. She says that it took her reaching her mental rock bottom as a student to truly understand that her future lay as an artist. Now, with a university-level background in economics and finance, she sees art as a business. 

 Since moving into the Living Lane, Melissa has been commissioned to make portraits of black Canadian heroes, including Fergie Jenkins.  

Finally, the nonbinary artist, Morgan-Paige Melbourne moved into the Living Lane to pursue their music career. Their use of the space as a recording studio has allowed them to fit three pianos, including a grand piano – giving them the ability to compose, record, and master their work in one space.  

Even though they were consistently one of the most talented classical pianists in Ontario through their childhood and adolescence, Morgan-Paige never felt like the classical music system encouraged them to pursue their passion as a career. Morgan-Paige recalls working out of their family home – having to be mindful of the noise they were creating. Throughout the early part of their journey into a career in music, the space they had to work in was a massive detriment to the quality of music they produced. Like many other emerging artists without proper studio spaces, their ability to practice and record on their own terms was limited. They felt that their ability to pursue a career in music was abruptly halted by a glass ceiling represented by access to a studio space. 

Now, with reliable access to instruments, recording tools, and noise-cancellation so good that their neighbours can’t hear a peep, Morgan-Paige can work any time they please.  

Experiencing Economic (In)justice as a Marginalized Artist 

For the Living Lane artists, navigating through an art career was close to impossible before earning the opportunity to work out of their own studio. Despite coming from different backgrounds and creating different styles of art, the four artists echo each other’s explanation of how they were held back as emerging artists.  

First, the two non-male artists highlight how there is no representation of female and non-binary black artists in traditional art spaces. Growing up, Morgan-Paige was told by other pianists and adjudicators that they shouldn’t pursue the classical field. Throughout their adolescence, they were told that they should get into jazz rather than classical piano because of its historical role as a black space.  

As another talented artist in her youth, Melissa feels she faced the same kind of barriers. She believes “[there’s] a lack of representation…and despite how creative I was, it never crossed my mind that I should go be an artist.”  

Their stories are true and highlighted by the fact that women artists of colour account for less than 1% of the art held at major US art museums (7). 

For Benny, the challenges he described were not directly from a lack of representation, rather the limited opportunities offered for artists as a whole. 

“There is a lack of funds in the grant and gallery systems,” says Benny. His point is built on by Komi, who says that other artists “can’t believe a space like [the Living Lane] exists.”  

Benny advocates for an increase in funding source diversity. Specifically encouraging the government and private sector to find alternative avenues for emerging career artists.  

“One way to make sure artists' needs are met is to give them the opportunity to be in boardrooms and connect with [the private sector],” Benny claims.   

He believes that the funding provided to emerging artists from traditional art and governmental institutions is limited and brings up how the private sector can introduce programs for emerging artists to fill those gaps. He concludes that, if art institutions, government, and the private sector can develop creative spaces and provide funding, then there is a future in which artists can thrive.   

Fatima from Daniels Co. and the artists praise the Living Lane as a trailblazing case of dedicated studio space for emerging creatives. They exclaim how these units have changed the way they create their work and conduct their business.  

These stories emphasize the role of the Living Lane in providing economic justice for emerging artists. Notably, the studio spaces have given their tenants the ability to grow themselves, their art, and their careers.  

Photo Credits: Gayathri Siva

Photo Credits: Sandesh Basnet

 Benny proclaims that, “when you change the way you create, you are able to create better…tell your story better.” And, by telling their stories “better”, the artists have been able to build their personal brands and business endeavours. They describe how bigger pieces of art sell for greater prices and are more likely to be displayed in galleries. The increasing profitability of their new pieces also encourages the artists to take greater risks through the exploration of themselves and their art.  

Representing Regent Park 

As someone from Regent Park, Benny describes how important this opportunity has been for the entire community. He believes the development of the Living Lane studio spaces reflects the positive steps Regent Park is making to foster an economically just neighbourhood revitalization.  

“When you bring like-minded people together and think about how to grow a community…magic happens,” Benny says. To him, the group are “not only artists, but change-makers.” 

This is reflected by the efforts the artists are taking to give the program exposure to Regent Park. Specifically, each artist either is currently or planning to use their studio space as a platform for other aspiring artists. Benny and Melissa host art classes for the public that reserve seats for Regent Park residents, giving them an opportunity to pick up a paint brush for the first time. Meanwhile, Komi has been hosting a mix of interdisciplinary artists in his space, including podcasters, writers, and other artists. Finally, Morgan-Paige plans to share their studio with other emerging artists on the margins. As someone who has been through the experience themselves, they can relate to how difficult it can be to feel welcomed in creative spaces and recording studios. 

Now, as change-makers, the artists understand that role within this community. In which, their platform provides aspiring Regent Park artists with the belief that it is possible to pursue their passion full time. Thus, fostering change in Regent Park becomes a challenge the artists are willing to take head on as they have become the representation they needed growing up.  

“Now I can be the representation that [aspiring Regent Park artists] need,” states Melissa. She is excited about her future in the community because “for those folks to see successful black artists in their own space, it opens the world of possibility to them.” 

This past summer, as she was walking through the neighbourhood, she saw a group of black girls who had set up their own art supplies to create outside together. Recognizing how much inviting them into her studio would mean to their future in the art world, she took them to explore her studio and use the supplies she has. Clearly, “the need [for artistic representation] is here,” she says.  

Komi also expresses his excitement for the location of his platform since, “for me now, [Regent Park] is home”.   

He relishes in the opportunity to be community leader by describing the Nigerian metaphor, “it’s the person wearing the shoe that will tell you where it’s pinching them.” He explains that as he learns how to find comfort in the shoe that is the professional art world, he can reflect on his experiences and help community members find comfort in their own pair. 

The Living Lane and the future of Regent Park 

Whether it's the placemaking artwork or the absence of cars, the nature of Ratna Lane draws people in – making them feel comfortable. And, as our wanderer meets the Living Lane’s exit, they take a moment to reflect on its presence – the story of Ratna Lane may not be present in media channels or Google maps, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t there.  

For Regent Park, the emphasis of art in this space is a clear example of the changing nature of the neighbourhood. Finally, Regent is able to express itself – proven by the people who work in the Living Lane studios. 

“I see Regent Park as becoming a hub for the arts…over the years I think it’s going to progress and become world renowned for that. There are a lot of creatives in this area and I feel like it will continue to attract more creatives,” Komi proclaims. 

Photo Credits: Benny Bing

Now, as the first collection of Living Lane artists, this group has the platform to be the representation this community needs. Proving that no matter where you’re from, there is always an avenue in the arts. 


References

(1)  James, R. K. (2010). From ‘slum clearance’to ‘revitalisation’: planning, expertise and moral regulation in Toronto’s Regent Park: [This is a developed version of the paper that received the IPHS Postgraduate Student Prize for the best postgraduate paper at the 2008 IPHS conference in Chicago - Editor]. Planning Perspectives, 25(1), 69-86. 

(2) Purdy, S. (2005). Framing Regent Park: The National Film Board of Canada and the construction of ‘outcast spaces’ in the inner city, 1953 and 1994. Media, Culture & Society, 27(4), 523-549

(3) Cohen, M. (2024). Rhythms of Change: Reflections on the Regent Park Revitilization. Page 2.

(4) BlackNorth Initiative. (2022). Work-Live Opportunity: Empowering Black Artists.

(5) Springboard for the Arts. (2023). The Art of Economic Justice

(6) Mercer, K. (1990). Black art and the burden of representation. Third Text, 4(10), 61-78.

(7) Greenland, F., & Banks, P. (2021). Race and Sociology of Art, American Sociological Association Culture Section. 







The Bulk of Our Interview Process

Research Question: How do programs offered to artists in Regent Park create a more economically just community and what is the role of artists in the local economy of Regent Park?

Research and Interview Process

 

Updated interview contact and status list

 

This Week’s Interviews

Our group was able to conduct three interviews this week – with Morgan-Paige Melbourne and Komi Olafimihan, who are two of the artists who work in the Living Lane, and Murshida Samsun Mueen, who is a Regent Park resident. Unfortunately, none of our four interviews so far have featured the entire group, but that has not been a detriment to any of them. There has still been a great conversation with each interviewee, despite one or two voices being missed. This is why it was crucial that we were able to collaborate on the interview protocol, because each of us knows the planned questions, and can sub in as the speaker at any time. 

Our interview with Morgan-Paige Melbourne took place early this week and gave us the perspective of someone who was using the space to create music rather than visual art. They spoke in depth about the opportunities that the space had given them to create bigger and better music, expressed by the three pianos they had in the space. What stood out to our group in the interview with Morgan-Paige was how much freedom they felt they had in this studio. They told us that freedom of expression is suppressed in the classical music world, and Morgan-Paige feels like the Living Lane has given them the opportunity to use the space to explore themselves and their art. In the recording, a snippet of our interview with Morgan, they talked about the challenges they faced breaking into the art space as a Black and queer artist, citing challenges and bias despite having the necessary skills and accolades. “How do you break through that?” they said:

Morgan-Paige Melbourne in her studio

Morgan also talked about giving back to the Regent Park community with the opportunity they’ve been given in the Living Lane, including through planning regular open mic nights at their studio and allowing community members to use the space to practice their music, just as their friends had done for them.

Komi Olafimihan in his studio

Komi Olafimihan’s interview was another success because his story continued to intensify the answer we have for our research question. He informed us about how welcomed he has felt as an outsider who has moved into the neighbourhood by describing the opportunities he has had to connect with the community. He also told us about how happy he was to be one of the first people to be involved in the Living Lane program because he wishes to use his experience to inform future Living Lane artists and similar future developments. He strongly believes that programs like this are the future for artistic professionals in urban spaces.

Developing Team Connections

As we have progressed throughout this project, we have gotten to know one another better as teammates. Our team includes diverse perspectives, with Sandesh and Kabir having immigrated from Nepal and Bangladesh respectively, while Connor and Gayathri have lived in Canada all their lives. Sandesh and Kabir also bring their lived experiences as Regent Park residents, which has been instrumental in evaluating the significance of the BNI initiative and art in the Regent Park community. Sandesh even secured an interview with a Regent Park resident, Murshida Samsun Mueen. Being able to work with a diverse range of perspectives, including those based in Regent Park, allows our team to be inclusive of and respectful to the Regent Park community we are exploring in this course.

 Kabir in the sun outside Daniels Spectrum.

On another note, our team has also reached a point where we can talk to one another in a more casual and friendly sense, with Kabir sending the following photo outside “getting vitamin D”.

Answering Our Research Question

In our meeting in-class on Thursday, we began to discuss the results of our interview process and the story we wanted to tell began to take shape. Although each interviewee has answered the questions differently, recurring themes about their experience in the Living Lane studios are taking shape. These themes include the artists’ ability to create bigger and better art, the freedom they have to use the space on their own terms, and the opportunity it gives them to have a public-facing storefront for their art.

We also discussed micro and macro storytelling narratives to factor into our projects in class last week. Reflecting on this, our micro narratives would be the findings from our interviews, specifically the story of each artist, while the macro narrative would be the history and rationale of the Living Lane initiative. This macro-narrative seeks to address the absence or underrepresentation of art in highly racialized neighbourhoods, and the lack of creative spaces for their artists.

The Artists team members are Connor, Gayathri, Kabir, and Sandesh

Ongoing Research & Production

Our group has begun reaching out to interviewees for our podcast. We have contacted the following artists, professionals, and community members:

 
 

On Friday, March 14 at 10:00am, Connor, Kabir, and Sandesh made their way back to Benny Bing’s studio for a formal interview to add to our podcast. Through Bing, we also got the contacts of other local artists to contact for an interview, two of whom accepted. We will be conducting interviews with Morgan Paige and Komi Olafimihan this coming week. Through Benny, we have also been in contact with representatives from Daniels Co. (the developer of the studios) and the Black North Initiative (an organization that works to support black entrepreneurs in Canada), who collaborated to make the Living Lane project possible. 

The Interview with Benny Bing went very well and we were able to learn more about the Living Lane program from the perspective of one of the artists involved. For him specifically, the opportunity to have a subsidized studio has contributed towards economic justice because it gives him the opportunity to have space to create and use for business. He explained to us that the main thing lacking for artists is the availability of creative spaces. Now that he has a storefront studio, he is able to work on bigger projects, have formal meetings, and host art lessons, which he wasn’t able to do in his at-home studio. What really stood out to us was that he believed having a studio gave him the opportunity to show the community that there is space for creativity, and if you want to make a career as an artist, it is possible.

Goals for the Article & Podcast

During our meeting in class on Thursday we spent time brainstorming the structure of our podcast. We knew that we wanted our podcast to stand out and serve as a compliment to the long-form journalism piece we will be writing as our final assignment. We decided that the best way to do this was to tell the story of our project through the voices and sounds of the people we spent time interviewing. Inspired by the example podcast audios that used noises like footsteps and car horns, we plan on using clips of audio to immerse the listeners in the feeling of each art studio we were welcomed into. Our audio-visual component attached is a representation of the sights and sounds from Benny Bing’s studio that we will be capturing in the podcast. Included will be the noise of us walking into his studio, the jazz playing in the background, a dog’s footsteps, and paint brushes along canvas. We expect that there will be a different audio vibe from each of the four studios and plan on recreating them to add an element of differentiation between each artist. 

AV content: https://youtu.be/trIaKTpzMHs

Through our article and podcast, we aim to define economic justice within the context of art and artists in Regent Park, as well as the role of art and relevant programming in creating an economically just community in Regent Park. Going back to our definition of economic justice, we believe it to be the creation of conditions that allow individuals to pursue self-expression and cultivate their passions, free from the constraints of financial limitations. Through this, we would also spotlight local artists in Regent Park and their experiences, while encouraging community engagement with art and artists in Regent Park.

Target Audience

Our target audience for the article and podcast include: existing and aspiring artists, Regent Park residents, public and private institutions that have the means through funding or space creation to provide artists with avenues to thrive, as well as anyone who is broadly interested in art, Regent Park, and/or the revitalization project. Regent Park artists and the spaces in which they practice their craft are rarely discussed in common discourse about Regent Park and its real estate. Our project aims to shed light on these artistic practices and implications for the Regent Park community and economic justice.

The Artists group members are Gayathri, Connor, Sandesh, and Kabir

Preparing Our Interviews and Building Our Network

 

The Artists (from left to right): Sandesh, Connor, Kabir, Gayathri

 

Preparing our Interviews

After our eye-opening conversation with the artist Benny Bing, our group had the ability to make significant progress on planning our project during the meeting on Thursday. We took time to create a list of potential interviewees, including artists, developers, and community members (some of whom are more likely to respond to our emails than others…why not email the Chancellor of U of T!). After coming up with a list of people and contacting them to set up interviews next week, we began to create questions for each individual. Sandesh took charge with this component of the meeting and came up with many of the questions we plan on asking during the interviews. Our goal with the interviews is to dig deeper into our research question and find a compelling story to tell in our final written piece. 

First, we hope to speak with the four artists that have studios on the Regent Park Living Lane. We know that Benny Bing is one of those artists, alongside Komi Olaf, whom we haven’t had the chance to speak with yet, as well as two more artists. The artist interviews are the most important part of our project because we seek to learn how their lives and the community have been impacted by the Living Lane project. We then seek to interview a representative from Daniels and a representative from Black North Initiative. Benny mentioned he would be able to get us in contact with these people, and we are hoping to have these interviews conducted this week. Interviewing people who worked on creating the idea for the Living Lane will be tremendously important to us because we will be able to ask them about the reasoning for the project and then relate it to economic justice. Finally, we are going to use Sandesh and Kabir’s connections in the community to find and interview at least one long-term resident who has an interest in art. The interviews with residents will give us background on the importance that art has to Regent Park, and potentially explain how the Living Lane has positively impacted the community.

Pictured above: Rhythms of Change - Mitchell Cohen

In preparation for our interviews, Connor is currently reading Rhythms of Change by Mitchell Cohen, which describes the Regent Park redevelopment in-depth from the perspective of Daniels Co. He hopes that there may be a passage that focuses on the role of art in the community, which will help the team dive deeper into conversations with interviewees. All interviews are expected to be conducted within the next two weeks, guaranteeing that there is enough time for the group to analyze the data and write our story.

Project Format and Implementation Plan

Our group has done our due diligence to stay organized in our project. We made the following Gantt Chart (see below) to track our progress. After project teams were first formed on February 13, 2025, we had our first official team meeting over Reading Week on February 20, 2025. We started discussing topics we could pursue in relation to economic justice per the course theme and also made sure to set up weekly group meetings, every Monday from 3:00pm to 4:00pm, in order to have an avenue to meet and discuss project updates and challenges together. During our first weekly meeting on March 3, 2025, we started our project research, going on a walk around the neighbourhood and getting to speak with Benny. This conversation inspired our finalized topic, looking at the role of artists in Regent Park’s economy and how programs offered to artists facilitate economic justice in the community. Going forward, our ongoing project research will include conducting interviews, studying the neighbourhood through our own walking tours (public life study), as well as through media scans and academic literature. We will be regularly updating this Gantt Chart in case there are some changes in team roles and deadlines. Our chart can be accessed via this link.

Gantt Chart - Long-Form Journalism and Podcast Project Deliverables

The Artists team members are Connor, Gayathri, Sandesh, and Kabir

Introductions

Our team name is The Artists, representing our aim to define the role of art in facilitating economic justice in Regent Park.

Connor is a fourth-year Urban Studies student at the University of Toronto. He believes that recorded history is just a small component of studying urban space, and this project will give him the opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of Regent Park. Connor’s objective for this project is to learn how to develop effective community engagement methods and how to apply them to his work as a planner. He hopes that the work that is done in this course can inspire other organizations, developers, and planners to take civic engagement beyond tokenism. 

Syed H. Kabir arrived in Canada in 2018. He has worked as an equipment engineer and materialman in several countries, including Iraq, Qatar, Libya, Oman, and the U.A.E. From 2016-2018 he ran his own business managing a garments factory warehouse. In Canada, he has been focused on establishing his own renovation business as well as being involved in community services. Through his work with various community organizations across Toronto, he was awarded the Platinum Jubilee Award. He is passionate about giving back to the community, especially helping newcomers to Canada by introducing them to local support services and resources. 

Sandesh is a new resident to Regent Park, having moved from St. Jamestown just a couple of months ago. He works at St. Michael’s Hospital Academic Family Health Team as a Social Prescribing Link Worker where he supports community residents who are isolated by navigating resources that will give them an opportunity to increase their social engagement.

Gayathri is a fourth-year City Studies student at the University of Toronto. Gayathri was drawn to take this course due to its immersive nature, visiting Regent Park and getting to know the community first-hand rather than solely relying on academic literature to equip greater understanding. In this project, Gayathri hopes to contribute positively to the Regent Park community as well as her own understanding of it.


Neighbourhood Issue to be Addressed

Our group was created because of a shared interest in the creative component of community alongside the role creativity can play in an economy. Despite this shared interest, early discussions held by our group boxed ourselves into the theme of the economy and business too strictly. We first wanted to look at local trade and commerce, specifically profiling Regent Park’s small ethnic businesses, explaining how their operations facilitate economic justice in light of revitalization. However, we realized that our group was not deeply passionate about this topic. So, we retraced our steps in the course and studied the ways in which classmates defined economic justice, especially struck by the (rephrased) definition of “the creation of conditions that allow individuals to pursue self-expression and cultivate their passions, free from the constraints of financial limitations”. Thus, a new research idea was born; an investigation into the creative economy of Regent Park, dissecting the intersection between art and the economy within its borders.

Benny Bing Studio, 35 Tubman Ave Suite 103, Toronto, ON M5A 0T1

On March 3, our group decided to meet at Daniel’s Spectrum to workshop this new idea, which aligned with all of our passions. On the hunt for art exhibits and studios in the neighbourhood, our group took a walk around the neighbourhood and stumbled across the Benny Bing Studio located on Ratna Lane. We were able to meet with the owner, Benny, and talk about Regent Park, his work in the art space, and the role of art in the neighbourhood’s formal economy. Benny initially worked a corporate job, before leaving to pursue his art full-time and we were left in awe of his story. He spoke of the power that art plays in a community, as well as describing the program that has given the opportunity for him and three other artists to establish studio spaces in at-grade Regent Park storefronts. Before we left the studio, Benny made sure to tell us that it was by a gift of God that we wandered into his studio because he passionately believes the stories of the neighbourhood’s artists deserve to be told.

Through our conversation with Benny, we were able to focus our future research, specifically seeking to answer, how do programs offered to artists in Regent Park create a more economically just community and what is the role of artists in the local economy of Regent Park? 

The Artists team members are Connor, Gayathri, Sandesh, and Kabir