With NEA grant, UC researcher looks at public art in different light

Urban design researcher to study whether public art enhances a city’s vitality and commerce

University of Cincinnati urban design researcher Hyesun Jeong has received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) to determine how public art relates to street vitality and the growth of commercial business in multiple U.S. cities.

Researchers will be looking at the relationship between the arts and commerce using data analysis of five U.S cities, including Cincinnati, says Jeong, an assistant professor in UC’s School of Planning within the College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning (DAAP), who is leading the project as a principal investigator.

researcher Jeong standing on steps in Toyoko

Hyesun Jeong on the steps next to Palais de Tokyo museum in Paris, France where she conducted research and worked in the architectural profession. Photo/provided.

This NEA project expands the boundary of a prior study on public murals and foot traffic in Cincinnati, which received the Faculty Scholars Research Award by UC’s University Research Council in 2023.

Using pedestrian database StreetLight Data as well as socioeconomics and spatial data, the study found that the quality of the urban context of murals, such as the density of housing and retail, is significantly associated with foot traffic. Jeong found that the average weekend foot traffic in the areas having murals is 30% higher than the city’s average weekend foot traffic.

“Certain types (and numbers) of commercial amenities synergize more with murals on bringing in foot traffic,” Jeong explains. “For example, when these murals are surrounded by 10 different food-serving amenities in the same area, such as restaurants, bars and cafes, the weekend foot traffic becomes even higher, nearly five times greater than the city average.”

Further, Jeong notes that while crime has increased between 2010 and 2020 in most areas of Cincinnati, violent crime has decreased 28% in the areas, including the Over-the-Rhine, where murals are surrounded by mixed-use properties and a housing density at 10 units per acre or more.

Colorful downtown mural of Neil Armstrong in space suit

Photo/J. Miles Wolf courtesy of ArtWorks

As part of Jeong’s team, second-year graduate student Yajie Hu adds, “Public art is receiving more and more attention on the urban planning agenda, and I am curious about the interaction of street art types with community commerce models.” Hu says the experience as a research assistant on a prestigious NEA grant is a prime example of how DAAP provides graduate students with hands-on learning experiences.

The new study, Jeong says, will seek to find the economic impact of the arts on different types of commercial business and pedestrian traffic. Her hypothesis, based on the mural research and prior urban design research, is that public art — which includes murals, sculptures, museums, performing theaters and the like — enhances both vitality and commerce where it is located.

I am truly honored and grateful to get this national research award

Hyesun Jeong Assistant professor in UC’s School of Planning

Mural on side of downtown building featuring UC alumni

2023 UC alumni mural in Over-the-Rhine. Photo/UC Alumni Association

For example, one of Jeong’s earlier research projects was the impact of cafe culture. That research found that if cafes and coffee shops are surrounded by a specific cultural setting of the neighborhood, such as bohemian amenities like tattoo parlors, performing theaters or used bookstores, they tend to attract more artists compared to cafes downtown. Her other studies also found that these arts and bohemian cultural amenities significantly relate to cycling in multiple U.S. cities, all else being equal. 

The NEA grant will also allow the author to collaborate with an architect (Hammersley Architecture of Chicago) and an art organization (ArtWorks Cincinnati) on creating a design proposal that incorporates adaptive reuse of retail space for accommodating art and cultural activities to help grow local businesses.  

“I am truly honored and grateful to get this national research award from NEA,” Jeong says.  

“[This award] provides an opportunity for not only studying the socioeconomic impact of the arts but also creating a meaningful platform where I can work with the arts organizations, architects, planners and policymakers to draw local and national impacts through joining research and design,” she says. 

Featured image at top: Mural in downtown Cincinnati featuring Hasbro toys. Photo/Jay Yocis/UC Marketing + Brand

Art
Blink, Lookin' Good mural

Photo of mural in Covington, Kentucky/Lisa Britton/UC Marketing + Brand

Impact Lives Here

The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next Lives Here.

Related Stories

18035 Results
1

Put down that beer; it's not a tanning lotion

July 1, 2024

The University of Cincinnati's Kelly Dobos joined WVXU's Cincinnati Edition to discuss what's fact and what's myth when it comes to sunscreen use, different kinds of sunscreen and a social media recommendation to use beer on your skin to help get a tan.

2

Meet UC’s Miss Ohio

July 1, 2024

UC biomedical science student Stephanie Finoti credits UC for helping to prepare her for the Miss Ohio Scholarship Pageant. She will represent Ohio in the national competition in January.

3

Bridging creativity and commerce

July 1, 2024

At the University of Cincinnati’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business, Victoria Mrofchak stands out not just for her academic excellence but for her remarkable blend of creativity and business acumen. A fourth-year marketing major with a minor in management and fine arts, scholarships help Mrofchak shape her future at the intersection of art and commerce.

4

UC alum visits campus to teach students about footwear design

June 28, 2024

A 2011 graduate of design, UC alum Charley Hudak has seen his career trajectory go from intern to creative director for Tiger Woods' new athletic footwear brand, Sun Day Red. While he may run with the biggest cat in golf, Hudak doesn't forget his Bearcat roots and comes back each summer to teach youth about footwear design at DAAP Camps.

5

Cincinnati researchers want to know if MRIs can work better

June 28, 2024

WVXU and the Cincinnati Business Courier highlighted a new collaboration between the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, UC Health GE HealthCare, JobsOhio, REDI Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children’s to create an MRI Research and Development Center of Excellence located on UC’s medical campus.

7

UC opens Blood Cancer Healing Center

June 28, 2024

Media outlets including WLWT, Local 12, Spectrum News, the Cincinnati Enquirer and Cleveland.com highlighted the opening of the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center's Blood Cancer Healing Center.

8

Financial factors to consider when moving

June 27, 2024

Moving can be a stressful and expensive endeavor. When it comes time to move, there are important financial implications to consider, Gary Painter, PhD, the academic director of the University of Cincinnati’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business real estate program and a professor of real estate, told USA Today.

10

UC Nursing alum continues to further advocacy efforts for LGBTQ+ community

June 27, 2024

University of Cincinnati alum Cole Williams, BSN ’23, has continued to stay busy post-graduation. In addition to working at the med-surg floor at Tufts Medical Center, in Boston, he continues to make strides at Pride and Plasma, a group he founded in 2022 to advocate for revising blood and tissue donation guidelines.