logo
Google Play App Store
  • News
    • Northside Community Meetings
    • Community Calendar
    • Elected Officials
    • Features
    • Local Business
    • Public Safety
    • Sports
  • Arts + Culture
  • Real Estate
  • Classifieds
  • Marketplace
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
    • News
      • Northside Community Meetings
      • Community Calendar
      • Elected Officials
      • Features
      • Local Business
      • Public Safety
      • Sports
    • Arts + Culture
    • Real Estate
    • Classifieds
    • Marketplace
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Join The Northside Chronicle's weekly newsletter for the latest Northside news, developments, and more. Delivered right to your inbox every Thursday evening.

* indicates required
News
NSC Editor on
September 15, 2022
Northsider on the Move: Corey Carrington takes on new job managing art, culture in Pittsburgh’s Hill District

Photo by Corey Carrington

*Editor’s note: This interview has been edited for brevity

By Diya Singh | Chronicle Intern

“Northsider on the move” is a column that seeks to follow and highlight the accomplishments of Northsiders. The Northside Chronicle recently spoke with Corey Carrington, a northsider who was recently hired by Hill Community Development Corporation as their Cultural and Main Street Manager.

Corey Carrington is an artist from the Northside. He’s an accomplished poet, collagist, journalist and is the creative director of his own company, Deeper Than Grits Studios. Corey cares deeply about social change, and integrates this passion into much of his work. The Chronicle talked to him about his new role, and asked about where he sees the city in the future, as he is now responsible for elevating culture and artistic endeavors in a major part of Pittsburgh.

NSC: Congratulations on your new job! Could you tell us a little bit about your job, as well as what you will do in your new role?

Corey Carrington: Of course. My new job title is cultural and main street manager, and basically what that means is that I will be in charge of managing the artistic and cultural initiatives in the Hill District, more specifically Centre Avenue…Basically I’m doing art-based community development in the central Centre Avenue corridor. That means anything arts and culture related that’s happening on CentreAvenue. I have something to do with managing it and also, anything business wise. You know, talking to businesses and helping them get resources, I’m doing that… So basically, the Hill District is a historically Black community in Pittsburgh and in, I believe in the 1950s, the Penguins, the hockey team, came into the community and what we know where the Civic Arena and the parking lots are now, that used to be housing for not only African American people, but also Eastern European people, and immigrants who were coming from other places. So when the highway came and the Civic Arena also came, thousands of African Americans were displaced to other parts of the city of Pittsburgh… And so this, what I’m doing now, is part of an initiative to bring arts and culture back to the community and basically a redevelopment and a reinvestment of resources into the community.

NSC: What made this job appeal to you?

Corey Carrington: This job appealed to me because I have always been interested in community development and politics. And I saw that this was a way that I could channel my artistic talents into something that was bigger than art. So, in more recent years, I’ve been interested in things like city planning and urban planning, city design, things like that. I was wondering, how would I be able to take what I know artistically and filter it into something that’s bigger than what I do. I was looking at jobs and a friend had tagged me to the opportunity. And I looked at the job description and I was like, well, this is everything that I’ve been doing on my own, through my own company… And also, it gives me an opportunity to learn more about community development, and small businesses. So this position allows me to be kind of like a connector of resources and opportunities for different people in the community.

NSC: This question is more about the big picture. Where do you see Pittsburgh in 10 years?

Corey Carrington: I see Pittsburgh as a city that will truly live up to its name as being the most livable city, because I believe that African Americans specifically, but people of color generally, will be more appreciated in terms of establishing small businesses, being influential voices in politics in arts and culture. That we will be able to connect the resources and the opportunities that so many people in the city benefit from to the people who really need the resources and the opportunities. So I think the city will be doing a very drastic change culturally. Because in order to move forward, we have to understand that Pittsburgh is not just a white city; that it’s a city for immigrants, BIPOC people, LGBTQIA people, Black people. If we embrace the diversity that is in Pittsburgh and we give the resources to the right people and connect people to the right opportunities, I believe that Pittsburgh can and will be truly a city that’s livable for all people.

Donate today to help support the Northside community newspaper's mission to provide hyperlocal coverage for our neighborhoods, neighbors, and their future.

Related Posts
e-Edition
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Northside Neighborhoods
Northside Guides
FORMS + SUBMISSIONS
Events Letters to the Editor News Tips
POLL
MOST READ
Northside Community Briefs: May 2023
Allegheny West, Brighton Heights...
Northside Community Briefs: May 2023
May 24, 2023
Christ Our Savior Parish holds cross walk Christ Our Savior Parish held a Stations of the Cross walk on Good Friday, April 7, through the Brighton Hei...
this is a test
Bike on down! Big wheel of a weekend at Bicycle Heaven
Arts + Culture, Chateau...
Bike on down! Big wheel of a weekend at Bicycle Heaven
By Lauren 
May 23, 2023
Bicycle Heaven announces Biannual Bicycle Show & Swap Meet, begins this Saturday, May 27 through Sunday, May 28, 2023. Photos by Lauren Stauffer Cycli...
this is a test
Real Estate Transfers May 14 to May 20
Features, Real Estate...
Real Estate Transfers May 14 to May 20
May 23, 2023
Allegheny City Central Michael Ledgard to Ethan Fassezke at 400 Alpine Ave. for $340,000. Allegheny West George Whitmer to Kunal and Yulia Bhonsle at ...
this is a test
The Garden Café community fridge one year later
Business, East Deutschtown and Spring Garden...
The Garden Café community fridge one year later
May 22, 2023
By Sean P. Ray | Managing Editor EAST DEUTSCHTOWN — In the spring of last year, The Garden Café owner Gayle McGarril got the idea to add a free commun...
this is a test
PHOTO GALLERY: Northside in bloom: Springtime views from around the neighborhood
Editor Picks, Photo Gallery
PHOTO GALLERY: Northside in bloom: Springtime views from around the neighborhood
May 20, 2023
this is a test
Neighborhood Community Development Fund
Northside Leadership Conference
Donate

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

* indicates required

The Northside Chronicle

thenorthsidechronicle.com
Phone: (412) 321-3919
Email: editor@thenorthsidechronicle.com

About Us

Stay tuned with us

Copyright Northside Chronicle. All rights reserved.