Legacy Center Projects for Teens
Refurbished Community Room Serves West End Teens
Local residents join effort to spruce up an important resource for the community. Hard work by volunteers from as far away as Florida brought a new sparkle to the inside of one of Duke’s partner community centers this past weekend. In two and half days, more than 50 people stripped away the boring interior of a former law office that is now the Juanita McNeil-Joseph Alston Community Center and replaced it with bright turquoise and green paint and striped window shades reminiscent of a tropical scene.
About 75 people — black, white, young and old — attended the Sunday dedication of the refurbished center on Kent Street.
“It’s one of the greatest feelings we’ve had in a long time. It almost produces tears,” said Juanita McNeil, who used to bring neighborhood children into her home before there was a facility. “Thank you for all the work you put in. I didn’t think it could be done.”
Thirty-two participants in a leadership training seminar offered by The Legacy Center in Morrisville chose to spearhead the renovation of the center’s community room as their required community service project. They worked alongside residents and teens who are served by the center, which is located in Durham’s West End and is a part of the Duke-Durham Neighborhood Partnership.
The goal of the Neighborhood Partnership is to improve the quality of life in the 12 neighborhoods near campus and to boost student achievement in the seven public schools that serve those neighborhoods. The nonprofit West End Community Center purchased the center in 2000 with $195,000 from the university. Duke also provides annual operating support with help from The Duke Endowment.
Percy Covington, a member of the Legacy Center team who is a resident of Southwest Central Durham, convinced his team to “adopt” the center. Covington’s aunt, Mary Davis, is the director of the teen center. “I watched the center and always told myself it was holding on by grace,” said Covington, who works at Measurement Inc. “It’s important for any kid to have an environment that is safe and suitable and to have a space to keep them off the streets.”
The tan rooms needed a major face-lift, especially the community service room, which serves as an after-school classroom for students and a meeting place for parents and community members.
The Legacy Center team solicited chairs, tables and bookcases and artwork from Duke’s Community Affairs Office, as well as numerous other sources. Duke Dining Services, Guglhupf and Fosters provided free food for the volunteers. A local interior designer donated her services. Triangle Residential Options for Substance Abusers helped with moving services, lights and ovens for the center’s kitchen. Mr. Maid, owned by Glenister Franklin, made the rooms and furniture smell fresh.
“I thought it was particularly fitting that this project took place on the weekend of the annual Martin Luther King Jr. celebration,” said Diana Bello, one of the Legacy participants. “What we did together as a community exemplified what this wonderful man fought and died for.”
SeeSaw Studio, a training center in Durham enabling disadvantaged teens to
develop professional skills in art and design, is awarded a state-of-the art
computer laboratory.
DURHAM – At SeeSaw Studio disadvantaged teens, some referred by the court
system, have the opportunity to turn their lives around by preparing
themselves for careers in the art and design professions. SeeSaw Studio’s
new computer laboratory and state-of-the art design software will be
inaugurated Monday, October 16 at a ribbon cutting ceremony at 6:00 pm at
SeeSaw Studio, 326 W. Geer Street, Durham, NC. Students will display their
portfolios and speak to the public about how SeeSaw Studio training has
turned their lives around.
The $15,000 donation for the computer laboratory was raised over a
three-week period of time by a group of people from across the US enrolled
in leadership trainings at the Legacy Center in Morrisville, NC.
SeeSaw Studio’s mission is to teach design, entrepreneurship, and life
skills to inner city youth and providing a safe haven and business and
educational opportunities. SeeSaw Studio holds public workshops and an
apprenticeship programs for more than 300 pre-teen and teenage youth each
year. These workshops address the lack of opportunities for career training
in art and design for low-income youth and the chronically high number of
teen dropouts from Durham schools.
SeeSaw Studio is the only design and entrepreneurship program in North
Carolina that makes available opportunities and training traditionally not
found in public school curricula. The program offers opportunities for young
designers to create and sell their own work and empowers them to dream big
and take personal responsibility for their success. Young designers receive
training and experience in a variety of skills including graphic design, Web
design, silk screen-printing, welding, and illustration, as well as
portfolio preparation, technical writing, and marketing and sales. Students
practice interview skills where they dress in business attire, fill out
applications, solicit references and apply for jobs.
The new computers, printers and design software were donated by a leadership
team from The Legacy Center in Morrisville, NC that chose SeeSaw Studio for
their community service project to promote teen empowerment. Legacy Center
is a coaching company that provides personal effectiveness and leadership
workshops for people to live extraordinary lives.