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Smart Growth America is excited to announce the recipients of the Healing Our Highways grant program. With support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Kresge Foundation, Healing Our Highways will support creative ideas and activities that build knowledge, connection, and power within disadvantaged communities harmed by transportation systems and climate change.
Beginning this month, participants will participate in a series of virtual sessions led by SGA staff and partners in preparation for community-facing activities from June to September 2024. In addition to the virtual sessions, participants will gather in Atlanta in May for an in-person convening. Read below to learn about the Healing Our Highways grant recipients, and stay tuned for updates on the program!
“We are grateful and excited to support these cultural workers and advocates in building power through arts and culture to meet community needs and advance more just outcomes,” said Marian Liou, Director of Arts & Culture at Smart Growth America. “Through Healing Our Highways, we look forward to amplifying their efforts to redress systems of harm through creativity, culture, and community.”
Conscious Community Connectors, Tampa Heights, FL

Rooted in the Boyle Heights neighborhood in Los Angeles, this project will co-create new, shared language around mobility resilience through community co-design informed by communal knowledge, collective memory, and cultural traditions.
The team is led by Lakshmy Narayanan, an artist, researcher, and mobility designer who focuses on design research, critical thinking, and strategic planning, focusing on the intersection of socio-cultural and political urban systems. Lakshmy is collaborating with Boyle Heights Arts Conservatory, a nonprofit organization that supports and advocates for diversity in the creative arts, media, and technology industries to create workforces that are inclusive and reflective of Los Angeles.
Buford Highway People’s Hub, Doraville, GA

Traffic Cams envisions a more comprehensive public transportation system for the future of Atlanta. A web-based application using traffic camera data will help community members facing transportation challenges and harms visualize and reflect on a future public transit system with more climate-friendly options.
Emma Chammah and Eddie Farr are two artists who met via a mutual friend and quickly realized they had many shared interests and skills that complemented each other’s individual practice areas. They have collaborated together on a number of projects that utilize Emma’s skills as an architect/designer/and fabric specialist and Eddie’s skills as a software developer and fabricator. Located in Atlanta, Georgia, they are both committed to building a happier, healthier, and more connected community through their work as artists.
About Healing our Highways
Smart Growth America believes unreservedly in the power arts and culture can wield to reimagine and transform our transportation, land use, and climate systems. The Healing Our Highways grant is a program that will support artists and culture bearers to use creativity and collaboration to upend existing car-centric transportation systems and advance climate action.
Learn more >>