Arkansas
Creative Placemaking: A New Approach to Arkansas Real Estate Development
The Momentary and Crystal Bridges art museums are quintessential examples of creative placemaking. The “You Belong Here” exhibit at The Momentary in Bentonville creates a warm connection with guests. (The Momentary)
Creativity and commerciality don’t make for the most obvious bedfellows, but developers across the state are realizing the two concepts can, and should, go hand-in-hand.
Placemaking is an approach to development, design and architecture that seeks to emphasize the natural, historic or potential character of the development’s location.
“The world is full of space, but not all the space is a place. Place has to do with human beings, things that accommodate human beings. Places are spaces that encourage human activity,” said Dayton Castleman, director of creative placemaking at Rogers-based Verdant Studio.
Castleman, since 2022, has led a program called Art in Place, originally a grant-funded Urban Land Institute initiative. Aimed at facilitating creative placemaking within commercial developments, the program is now being continued through ULI’s Northwest Arkansas district council.
“Creative placemaking is where you build placemaking strategies on the backbone of arts and culture, with art and design at the forefront,” he said. “It’s a strategy that places arts and culture at the vanguard of decision-making when it comes to ‘how are we going to get people here.’”
Public art installations, thoughtful design and a community-centered approach to development are the cornerstones of creative placemaking, Castleman said. Crystal Bridges and The Momentary in Bentonville, he said, are some of Arkansas’ most conspicuous examples of developments that put arts at the forefront during the design process.
“With Crystal Bridges, it was a facelift of the entire region that’s extraordinary and highly uncommon, and because of it, I think … developers recognized that this was an effective strategy for absorption, figuring out how to make people actually want to be there,” Castleman said. “It went beyond the practical into something that felt like an opportunity to improve quality of life.”
Through Art in Place, Castleman works with commercial real estate professionals – from developers and architects to brokers and investors – to demonstrate the importance and feasibility of creative placemaking. He is the intermediary between the industry and artists trying to break into the commercial sphere.
“I look at how we can give developers better tools to connect with artists, and for artists, to better understand what the potential outlets are for their creative processes,” he said.
The Art in Place program provides workshops and networking opportunities to artists and real estate developers, providing expert perspectives and connecting these two disparate communities.
“In 2025, we’ll be hosting and producing a series of gatherings that will have content shaped around addressing some of the things we’re discovering about what are sticking points for real estate developers and what are the sticking points for artists, as well as some professional practices specific to real estate artists,” Castleman said.
Castleman said he hopes art in public and commercial space catches on, and that artists can keep up.
“The way an object in the middle of an open space does something to that space – it can turn it into something closer to circulation, create a center; all kinds of things happen when objects are introduced into the space,” Castleman said. “Developers have to stop wondering if it’s going to help and start hoping and swinging the bat, because there’s a reason why we’re having the conversation, and there’s a reason it costs money.”
“For artists, if you can empower the developer – well, you have a very powerful relationship at your disposal.”
Arkansas
Kingston author’s new book debunks Arkansas’ graveyard myths | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Bill Bowden
Bill Bowden covers a variety of news for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, primarily in Northwest Arkansas. He has worked at the newspaper for 16 years and previously worked for both the Arkansas Democrat and Arkansas Gazette.
Arkansas
Arkansas Razorbacks vs. Texas Tech Red Raiders odds, picks and predictions
The No. 17 Arkansas Razorbacks (7-2) and No. 16 Texas Tech Red Raiders (7-2) meet Saturday at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas. Tip-off is set for noon ET (ESPN2). Let’s analyze BetMGM Sportsbook’s NCAA basketball odds around the Arkansas vs. Texas Tech odds and make our expert college basketball picks and predictions for the best bets.
Arkansas earned its second straight win last Saturday, rolling past the Fresno State Bulldogs 82-58. It covered as a 20-point home favorite, and the Under (160.5) hit. Arkansas controlled the game defensively, forcing 17 turnovers and holding the Bulldogs to 15% (4-for-26) shooting from 3-point range. G Darius Acuff Jr. led the way with 18 points, 8 assists, 5 rebounds and a steal.
Texas Tech extended its winning streak to 3 games Sunday with an 82-58 win over the LSU Tigers. The Red Raiders covered as 5.5-point home favorites, and the Under (153.5) cashed. Texas Tech locked in defensively, holding LSU to 17% (4-for-24) shooting from 3-point range. G Christian Anderson led all players with 27 points, 8 assists, 5 rebounds and 2 steals. F LeJuan Watts provided a double-double (15 points and 10 rebounds) off the bench.
Texas Tech and Arkansas last met March 27 in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16. The Red Raiders survived an 85-83 OT win, while Arkansas covered as a 5.5-point underdog. The total pushed past the number, cashing the Over.
– Rankings: USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll
Watch NCAA basketball on Fubo!
Arkansas vs. Texas Tech odds
Provided by BetMGM Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated at 9:49 a.m. ET.
- Moneyline (ML): Arkansas -102 (bet $102 to win $100) | Texas Tech -118 (bet $118 to win $100)
- Against the spread (ATS): Arkansas +1.5 (-115) | Texas Tech -1.5 (-105)
- Over/Under (O/U): 157.5 (O: -105 | U: -115)
Arkansas vs. Texas Tech picks and predictions
Prediction
Arkansas 76, Texas Tech 73
BET ARKANSAS (-102).
This is a rematch the Razorbacks haven’t forgotten. They had Texas Tech on the ropes in the Sweet 16 last March before watching it slip away late, and this feels like a clear revenge spot on a neutral floor in Dallas.
What I like most is Arkansas’ backcourt. The Razorbacks are quicker, more dynamic and better equipped to control tempo, especially with Acuff starting to look more comfortable running the offense. When Arkansas is at its best, the ball is in its guards’ hands, pushing pace and creating pressure, and that’s an area where Texas Tech can struggle.
The Razorbacks’ losses this season have come against strong competition, and they were competitive in each one. Texas Tech, meanwhile, has been more uneven. The Red Raiders handled LSU, but they’ve also been blown out and pushed around by other quality opponents.
In a tight, high-energy matchup, I’ll trust the deeper roster, the fresher legs in the backcourt and the team with something to prove. Arkansas is the side for me.
PASS.
No need to play around with the spread when you can get the Razorback at plus odds on the moneyline.
BET UNDER 157.5 (-115).
Texas Tech leans on physical half-court defense, while Arkansas defends cleanly without sending teams to the line and ranks 28th nationally in 3-point defense. The Under has hit in 6 of Texas Tech’s last 7 games and 6 of Arkansas’ last 8, making this a strong trend-based spot.
For more sports betting picks and tips, check out SportsbookWire.com and BetFTW.
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College sports coverage from USA TODAY Sports Media Group:
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Arkansas
Arkansas’ U.S. senators talk with farmers, map out timeline for assistance | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Cristina LaRue
Cristina LaRue covers agriculture for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. She started her career as a journalist in 2017, covering business and education for the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, later covering the crime and courts beats near the U.S.-Mexico border for the USA Today network, and education for the El Paso Times. She is a graduate of Texas State University.
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