Showing posts with label activist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label activist. Show all posts

Saturday, July 26, 2025

VENTANITAS -- STORIES ABOUT AND FROM LITTLE HAVANA

I WILL BE FEATURED IN THIS DOCUMENTARY PREMIERING THIS FALL


I can't wait for the fall premiere of Ventanitas -- Stories About and from Little by award-winning Miami documentarian Joe Cardona. 

I will appear on camara as a 20+ year LH resident, storyteller, activist & aplatanado.

Ventanitas are the windows where you buy Cuban coffee. 

But they are much more than a place to sip cafe Cubano con mucho azucar. 

There used to be dozens of ventanitas on Calle Ocho -- but the commercial success of a main street with upwards of four million visitors has reduced their numbers.

I’ve admired Joe’s work for years and it was a pleasure to show off my 100-year-old Shenandoah home (purchased from Santeros) and walk around my adopted hometown for half a day.

I told my stories from the heart.

Hopefully, I will come off as a protagonist when the film debuts in Little Havana.

Joe Cardona was honored with a National Emmy for his 2014 historic documentary “The day it snowed in Miami”, a film that he wrote, produced and directed for PBS national network.

He has made dozens of films covering culture, politics and the essence of 21st century Miami.



Saturday, February 24, 2024

CELEBRATING MORE THAN 550,000 READERS

MORE THAN HALF A MILLION UNIQUE VISITS TO THIS BLOG


Thanks to readers around the world who have followed this blog for more than a decade.

Cumulatively, its content could fill the pages of five full-length books.

Topics focus on urban design, planning, architecture and transportation – most often in the context of creating a better built environment for people with disabilities.

Sometimes my fine art photography, which is earning places in respected galleries, is featured. Or there might just be a travel pic, cat foto or joke shared.

In the past 12 months, I have posted news of my work (and excerpts of my published work), including:

1 School of architecture guest lecture

2 Acclaimed photography exhibits

3 PBS documentaries on camera

4 TV appearances as an expert

5 Keynote speeches

6 Photos from the road during international consulting

7 Global radio broadcasts

8 Universal design workshops

9  New design inclusion clients

10 Daily social media posts on design and DEI

11 Podcasts on planning

12 Published cover articles








Friday, February 16, 2024

MEET STEVE WRIGHT

STORYTELLER AND ADVOCATE

If there was one thing you could change, address, etc. about Miami, what would it be?

All politicians would be in it for the little guy, not themselves. 

Elected officials would make decisions based on creating a legacy of inclusion.

What are you looking forward to in 2023?

World travel and more work being an evangelist for Universal Design and a barrier-free built environment.

Thursday, February 15, 2024

MEET STEVE WRIGHT

STORYTELLER AND ADVOCATE

What’s your favorite local social media account and why?

@BecauseMiami, because it’s snarky, sardonic and cynical.

If you could give any one piece of advice to locals, what would it be?

Love people who are different than you. Learn from them; drink in their culture.

How does Miami help you do what you do or influence your work?

I’m from Ohio. It’s sure nice to have warm, sunny winters. 

That gets me going when I’m having trouble writing or launching a big project.

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

MEET STEVE WRIGHT

STORYTELLER AND ADVOCATE

Share your other top three destinations for where you’d go on your perfect Miami day.

(1) Miami Beach at 5:00 a.m. to run on the sand till the sun rises.

(2) Ball and Chain in the heart of Calle Ocho for great music, drink, and vibes any time — day or night.

(3) Play on the grass at William Jennings Bryan Park, because I live on it and spent more than two years protecting the one acre of greenspace from being paved over.

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

MEET STEVE WRIGHT

STORYTELLER AND ADVOCATE

What’s your favorite Miami memory?

Getting to create, from scratch, a revolutionary course on Universal Design.

I taught it to graduate and undergraduate architecture and urban design students at the University of Miami School of Architecture.

If you could eat only one meal from a local restaurant for the rest of your life, what would it be?

A BBQ steak sub, well done, on wheat, no cheese, black olives as the only condiment, and hot cherry peppers on the side.

From Super Subs, an institution on Bird Road in South Miami.

(I eat less than half the sub bun and have no fries or chips to keep it healthy!)

Monday, February 12, 2024

MEET STEVE WRIGHT

STORYTELLER AND ADVOCATE



What brings you most alive about the 305?

Walking for entertainment and exercise.

I lost 125 pounds eating healthier and walking from my home in Shenandoah to the Miami River and throughout Little Havana.

I documented the Art Deco, Spanish Mission, Mediterranean, and other 1920s to 1940s classic apartment, commercial, spiritual, and single-family homes.

My images were part of a six month, one-man Local Artist exhibition at the Art Deco Welcome Center in Miami Beach

It ran through mid-February 2024. 

Sunday, February 11, 2024

MEET STEVE WRIGHT

STORYTELLER AND ADVOCATE

 

Howdy, Steve! Who are you? What do you do?

I am a writer, visual artist, keynote speaker, planner, educator, and advocate.

I work for myself, creating content about Universal Design and a better built environment for people with disabilities.

My clients include the National Association of REALTORS, the United Spinal Association, the American Planning Association, Global Disability Inclusion Inc., and many others.

I also create workshops and speeches about how to make cities more inclusive for all.

Friday, September 22, 2023

SAVE MY LITTLE HAVANA

A STORY IN ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY


Steve Wright's photography effectively emphasized the need to preserve Little Havana's cultural and architectural treasures from the influence of modernization.

His images will serve as a reminder of their timeless beauty and the crucial significance of protecting them for future generations to possibly and really Save My Little Havana.

 

 

Thursday, September 21, 2023

SAVE MY LITTLE HAVANA

A STORY IN ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY


Next to the Save My Little Havana art display, the gift shop exhibited Steve Wright's photographs that could be bought.

The exhibit also had artworks for sale, and half of the profits went towards supporting the Miami Design Preservation League's cause. 

The exhibit runs through Thanksgiving and is on display 9 AM to 5 PM at the art deco welcome center seven days a week and the center is free to Miami-Dade residents

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

SAVE MY LITTLE HAVANA

A STORY IN ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY

Steve Wright noted, "My photos are not the most technically perfect, but they are filled with passion." 

He compared the efforts to preserve historic buildings in Miami Beach to the importance of safeguarding the architectural treasures of Art Deco, the Mediterranean, and Old Florida styles found in Little Havana.

The event, held on August 24, provided attendees the opportunity to immerse themselves in the captivating imagery that depicted the heart and soul of Little Havana. 

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

SAVE MY LITTLE HAVANA

SAVE MY LITTLE HAVANA


Steve Wright's photographs may not be flawlessly polished, but they are filled with a clear sense of dedication that shows his strong attachment to Little Havana.

As a respected public speaker, organizer, and journalist committed to improving access to urban areas for individuals with disabilities, Wright's display demonstrated his identity as both an artist and a supporter.


Monday, September 18, 2023

SAVE MY LITTLE HAVANA

A STORY IN ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY


In the late 1990s, Ohioan Steve Wright moved to Little Havana in Miami to escape harsh Ohio winters.

He found solace in the historic Bryan Park area and made his home in a classic 100-year-old residence.

He found inspiration in his new surroundings and started taking long walks to take pictures.

With his camera, he was able to capture the true essence of the community, exploring beyond the popular areas and discovering hidden treasures in the neighborhoods, businesses, churches, and homes of La Pequeña Habana.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

SAVE MY LITTLE HAVANA

A STORY IN ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY


Miami Beach witnessed a remarkable celebration of culture, history, and architectural heritage.

Steve Wright, an accomplished Artist, Activist, Writer, and Planner, unveiled his captivating photography exhibit titled "Save My Little Havana."

The MDPL's Local Artist Program hosted this exhibition at the Art Deco Welcome Center, showcasing lesser-known aspects of Little Havana through the lens of Wright.

Thursday, April 2, 2015

THE VIEW FROM THE BACK OF THE TROLLEY




ISOLATIONIST POLITICS

By Heidi Johnson-Wright

Trolleys are making a comeback. Not the trolleys on tracks like you see in old black and white photos of American cities from the early 20th century. You know, the ones bought up by the American car companies after World War II in order to increase dependency on the automobile.
 

No, I'm talking about small circulator buses designed to look like classic trolleys, right down to the uncomfortable wooden bench seats. They make frequent stops along short routes to give folks more transportation options. 

I'm all for options, as many as possible. Choice is good. But if you're a wheelchair user and you want to hop the sort of trolley I'm referring to, well, your options are fewer. As in, only one. There's only one spot onboard where you can sit, and that's at the back. Behind the last row of seats. And it gets worse. 

You see, I thought that 25 years after the passage of the ADA, we had worked out some of the issues. It appeared that newer buses were being designed to let people in chairs board in front via a ramp. And the driver could easily deploy the ramp at the touch of a switch without having to exit the bus. This is not true for the new trolleys.   

No, the trolleys require the driver to exit the vehicle, manually open a rear door, deploy a lift (not a ramp that remains stationary while you're on it), get the chair user on the lift, raise the lift up, manually close the rear door, board the trolley, walk all the way to the back, tie down your wheelchair, then return to his/her seat. All while your fellow passengers look at their watches and sigh.

But it doesn't end there. Once the trolley starts up again and hits the first small bump or pothole, you realize that the wheelchair seating is located behind the trolley's rear wheels. You know, the bounciest part of the vehicle: the spot that whips riders up and down. And on hot days -- and we have a lot of them in Miami -- the rear A/C unit mounted on the ceiling drips, drips, drips big drops of unpotable water down onto the wheelchair-using trolley rider.

After taking a ride on one of these trolleys, I wasn't sure which part of the ride motivated me the most to never want to ride one again. Was it the discomfort I felt at inconveniencing the driver or delaying my fellow passengers? Was it the slight vertigo from riding on a lift instead of a stationary ramp? Was it the big wet spot on my dry-clean only dress, courtesy of the A/C unit? Was it the bouncing that imperiled my tail bone?

No, it wasn't these things. It was sitting dead last behind everyone else onboard. Not because I think I'm better than anyone and should sit up front. But because of the way it made me isolated. And those of us who are disabled already get a bellyful of isolation, day in, day out.

Invitations to the homes of friends and family that have to be turned down because houses are rarely built without steps. Entering buildings at the side or the rear because even newly built facilities often have steps at the main entrance. Sitting in the "special wheelchair section" behind the last row of seating at a concert. Happy hours spent sitting three feet below and out of earshot of your friends because all of the seating at the bar is on stools at raised tables. And on and on...

A quarter century has passed since George H.W. Bush signed the ADA. Yet society still insists on constructing minimally inclusive, isolating built environments. On denying that disability is part and parcel of the human experience. On looking the other way when the largest minority group is told -- in so many words -- to either pass as non-disabled, or go sit in the corner.

It's time to come out of the corner and plant ourselves in the middle of the room.

http://earthboundtomboy.blogspot.com/2015/04/isolationist-politics-view-from-back-of.html