About Us
The Engaged City is a joint project led by the Center for the Humanities (College of Arts & Sciences), the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity, and the Office for Socially Engaged Practice (Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts) at Washington University in St. Louis. This initiative aims to showcase the cultural vibrancy of St. Louis and foster stronger partnerships and investments in our neighborhoods, helping to build a more inclusive and thriving St. Louis for everyone. To do that, we will co-create publicly accessible cultural asset maps of St. Louis that spatialize the individual and collective cultural knowledge bearers, organizations, and community members in STL.
MEET OUR TEAM
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Senior Associate Director of the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity
Tila leads the CRE2 operations infrastructure, ongoing programming and Funding Opportunities, and leads the Center’s communication and engagement strategies. Prior to CRE2, Tila was at the Center for the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis where she served as the project coordinator for the Divided City initiative, a multi-disciplinary project examining race, cities and urban segregation. Prior to joining the Center for the Humanities, Tila worked at Friends Committee on National Legislation (FCNL) in Washington, D.C., as the lead lobbyist on domestic policy issues. There, she lobbied Congress on federal budget spending priorities and criminal justice reform. Tila is a poet and skilled community building strategist, policy analyst, and activist. She holds an MFA in Poetry from the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College.
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Assistant Director for Research and Public Engagement at the Center for the Humanities, Washington University in St. Louis
Her work engages with campus-community partnerships, environmental justice, and digital publishing. She supports the humanities center’s key initiatives and collaborates with the broader St. Louis humanities community to develop programming. She also co-organizes the Sumner StudioLab with Matthew Bernstine, a community-engaged hub located at historic Sumner High School that launched in 2022 and is supported by the Mellon Foundation as well as WashU’s Office of the Provost. She earned her PhD in English from University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Director of the Sam Fox School’s Office for Socially Engaged Practice
He leads socially engaged design initiatives and supports practices and scholarship for the College of Art, Architecture, and Kemper Museum.
He is passionate about working at the intersections of creative practice and rooted processes that demonstrate how designers can serve as powerful voices for social justice on global and local stages. As an educator at the Sam Fox School, he teaches core courses in the Urban Design graduate program and interdisciplinary seminars where he develops creative pedagogy that integrates participatory design with applied creative and humanist practices. He previously served as the senior urban designer and planner for WashU at the Office’s of the University Architect & Real Estate. Prior to St. Louis, Matt worked for over a decade in the private sector as an urban designer and planner on large-scale infrastructure and city-building initiatives. Matt holds a Master in Urban Design from WashU and a Masters in Urban and Environmental Planning from the University of Virginia.
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Project Coordinator for the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity at Washington University in St. Louis
She previously worked as an administrative assistant in University Advancement at WashU and is currently pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Integrated Studies in Social Sciences from the School of Continuing & Professional Studies.
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Bruce Lindsey, a licensed architect, is the E. Desmond Lee Professor for Community Collaboration in the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis. He served as dean of the College & Graduate School of Architecture & Urban Design from 2006-2017. He was the head of the School of Architecture at Auburn University from 2001-2006, also serving as the co-director of the Rural Studio and Paul Rudolph professor. Lindsey was a member of the faculty in the School of Architecture at Carnegie Mellon University from 1987-2001. He served as associate head of the School of Architecture from 1994-2001, and held a joint appointment in the school of art.
Lindsey served as president of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture in 2015 and served as Co-PI of the Mellon funded Divided City project from 2014-2023. A native of Idaho, Lindsey holds a bachelor’s and master’s degree in art from the University of Utah and a master’s degree in architecture from Yale University.