Tamika Camille Gauvin
Tamika Camille Gauvin is a candidate for the Master of City Planning from the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at M.I.T.
Contributed 9 posts
Tamika Camille Gauvin is a candidate for the Master of City Planning from the
Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Tamika holds a B.A. in Economics from the University of Chicago
and worked in Information Technology Training at Morgan Stanley. She is making
a career change into urban planning where she is interested in doing work
related to maintaining and promoting affordable housing in urban
revitalizations.
The Baltimore Red Line: Maximizing Benefits and Minimizing Impact
An account of planning for the Red Line Project in Baltimore.
Doing the Conference Circuit
<!--StartFragment--><p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: Arial">The semester has kicked into high gear and I am drowning in a sea of reading, written assignments,map-making, and special projects.<span> </span>Once in a while, I manage to emerge and dock (I know, enough of the nautical metaphors) at a lecture – or as in the last couple of weeks – at aconference.<span> </span>It is great to stepout of academia once in a while and hear what is going on in the realworld.<span> </span>I had the opportunity to attend two conferences over the past month.<span> </span>One of them – <a href="http://cityfrombelow.org/main">The City from Below</a> Conference – I attended this weekend when I returned home to Baltimore for spring break.</span></p>
Plugging into Planning: Baltimore and New Orleans
<!--StartFragment--><p class="MsoNormal">I am enjoying the last day of my Independent Activities Period (IAP) – the period after winter break in which all students at MIT can take one of many non-credit or for-credit course offerings at MIT, set up a winter externship, or just do nothing.<span> This amounts to six weeks of bliss!
A Semester in Review, New Year Resolutions, Building Blocks and Toy Cars
<p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> In the dawn of the New Year, I cannot help but reflect on my pivotal moments in 2008, and look forward to 2009. I wrapped up – no, survived – my first semester in the Master of City Planning program at MIT. I am being a little dramatic here, but the program is really very rigorous. One thing I learned was that with such a rigorous program there is no need to make it unnecessarily more challenging. When I arrived in Cambridge, I was very excited to be in school again – I graduated from college ten years ago – and I registered for five and a half classes. Three and a half of the classes were required and two were electives. It was recommended that we take only one elective, but I was psyched and I was going to take MIT by storm!
This Couldn’t Have Happened at a Better Time
<p class="MsoNormal"> The United States has been reborn.<span> </span>The election of Barack Obama has put – or reintroduced – the United States to the world stage as a beacon of hope for all people.<span> </span>We have proven that we believe and embody the ideals of equality and equal opportunity and that these ideals are the right of every citizen and not just a few.<span> </span>More importantly, this election is a ray of hope for our nation.<span> </span>We advanced the fight against racism to elect the first black president of the United States.<span> </span>Barack Obama’s election also gives hope to Americans as we witness and feel the stinging affects of the economic and housing crises, the energy crisis and two wars. </p>