Q House Looks For Models

Zak Stone Photo

It’s fitting on a cold Monday that we came to Christ Chapel New Testament Church,” James L. Muhammad declared. Because we intend to bring a new House” to New Haven.

Muhammad (pictured), vice-president of The Concerned Citizens for the Greater New Haven Dixwell Community Q House (CCGNHDCH), was addressing 100 neighbors Monday night at the latest meeting called to try to save Dixwell’s symbolic community center.

The group is not only raising money. It’s traveling to other cities for inspiration.

The CCGNHDCH has been working for years to reopen the Dixwell Community Q” House, which shut its doors in 2003 after more than 75 years of service. After purchasing the empty 179 Dixwell Ave. building this summer, the city offered the CCGNHDCH six months to plan for the Q House’s reopening. The Board of Aldermen since pushed that deadline back to June. Muhammad assured the community that the board intends to have a plan ready before summer. (Click here for a related story.)

The Men of Valor choir performed Monday Night.

Attendees Monday night received a short questionnaire asking for suggestions for potential programming and activities. Another question on the survey asked, Are you willing to make an annual financial contribution to support the Q House?”

Central to the meeting’s agenda was the problem of how to make the Q‑House relevant and up-to-date in the 21st Century. While no one offered concrete programming ideas at this stage, the general sense in the room was that a new Q House would need to provide services to train young people in technology and the arts, while not sacrificing its traditional community-building mission.

Hillhouse student Ronald Huggins envisioned a place where teens from different neighborhoods could unite on neutral ground” to exchange ideas and computer skills.

Possible institutional role models exist in Pittsburgh and Manhattan. In August, members of the committee visited Pittsburgh’s Manchester Bidwell Corporation, an organization that provides business, arts, and technical training skills to urban teens. The organization is the brainchild of MacArthur Foundation Genius” Bill Strickland, who submitted a proposal for potential programming plans in a new Q house. Strickland visited New Haven in 2008 as a consultant for the Community Foundation for Greater New Haven’s plan to build a New Haven Center for the Arts & Technology”).
 
In addition to the project in Pittsburgh, Board President Jacqueline Bracey said committee members hope to visit the Harlem Children’s Zone (HCZ) in New York City this spring. HCZ, cited as an innovative nonprofit by President Obama, takes a holistic approach” to community building, by working to keep kids on the right track from cradle to college” through the creation of a neighborhood wide safety net and the implementation of a variety of extracurricular programs.

Members of the board exuded confidence in the feasibility of their plans, especially after overcoming the hurdle of working with the city to extricate the building from bankruptcy court. Mohammad used a chess metaphor to characterize the current state of events: This is called the endgame in chess. This is where you do all you can to protect the geographical territory you have acquired throughout the game.”
 
The board provided few concrete details on where it will come up with the money required to reopen the Q House. Bracey said that while the city pledged to offer resources throughout the planning process, like free consulting services from an engineer, it is certainly not talking money. We haven’t asked them for anything yet, because we’re not sure what we need,” explained Bracey.

Yul Watley (pictured below), a public housing tenant-turned general contractor, was one of many people at the meeting to express the integral role the Q House played in his character formation and professional success. In fact, the Q house is so important to him that he kept having dreams about buying the Q House and rebuilding it myself,” he said. There is no need for Watley to take such a drastic step now that the city took ownership of the building, he said, but he pledges to donate whatever time and money it takes to reopen the Q House. If the CCGNHDCH could have its way, Watley will not be the only community member to do so.

Yul Watley and Jacqueline Bracey.

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