A young man stands in the center of a colorful park smiling and holding a camera while he speaks to another person. He has a tattoo on his forearm that reads Waukegan, Illinois. The wall on the right has flower art and a sign for the Art Park. A row of string lights held up by wooden pillars moves down the pathway and people are scattered in the background.

EMILY WHANG / NEXTGENRADIO

What is the meaning of

Home?
This Next Generation Radio project is a five-day multimedia project highlighting the experiences of people in the Chicago area.

Andrea Flores speaks with Austin Cantú, who took it upon himself to reclaim the abandoned Art Park across the street from where his father grew up after hearing stories about his dad’s upbringing in a once bustling downtown Waukegan, Illinois. The space has not only been Austin’s passion project for the last seven years, it has been a glue to his family and has become an extension of what he considers home.

Finding home in an abandoned art park in Waukegan

by | Jun 22, 2023

Finding home in an abandoned art park in Waukegan

by Andrea Flores | Next Generation Radio, Chicago | June 2023

Click here for audio transcript

The art speaks to all, and it’s all generations. We’re providing all different types of art, so it’s just something that brings people together, brings community together.

(Sound of people walking on wood chips) 

My name is Austin Cantú. I am from Waukegan, Illinois, born and raised, so home for me has to do mostly with family. And it’s not always just blood related.

(Sound of beeping truck) 

Waukegan is my big home because I have my blood relatives here, but then I also have this community that’s become my family, whether it’s through art relations, community relations, or just exploring different events. Home is just family for me. Me and my dad built a bigger relationship because he would tell me his stories about him growing up in Waukegan, and that’s when it kind of started hitting me that we didn’t have the same experience growing up.

My grandparents, they immigrated to Waukegan in the fifties, and this is where they decided to settle and grow their family. So the Stern’s Building, it was a clothing store, there was a meat market, and there was apartments up above, in the seventies and eighties, they had started living in that building in a two bedroom apartment.

With their 10 kids and their numerous different pets, birds, dogs. So I didn’t really know too much history about that until I started talking to my dad and he would tell me how he’d go outside, sit on the curb and watch the parade, or they would run around on top of the little courtyard of the apartment building all the little kids, or they’d go play in the big snow piles behind the building during the blizzards.

I had that connection cause I felt like it was part of my family because they had so much history there. After they demolished Stern’s, it was just an empty plot of land, which we have a lot of in Waukegan, and I wanted to make a plaza there for the artists during Art Walk, which is Waukegan’s monthly art event in downtown Waukegan.

So I wanted to make a plaza that had a stage and had spaces for young artists like me to come out that was easy for them and really accessible to set up their art, sell their art, and also just create community. But being in eighth grade, I didn’t have much luck with knowing how to plan a event or a space like that and develop anything like that.

So I kind of just got turned away right away. I saw the park across the street from the old Stern’s building where my dad grew up, so it’s kind of like I passed it every day, but I didn’t really think about it. No one was really taking care of the property and then my dad and I kind of just went for it.

(Sound of chirping birds) 

We came out here, pulled weeds, painted, put some mulch down and my cousin actually came out and cut the grass for us, and this is really what brought us together. When I was younger, I wasn’t too close with my dad. I was always closer with my mom. So doing all this different stuff, coming to events and doing landscape work with my dad, it was like really building our connection.

(Sound of car engine) 

And I just always wanted to learn more about his history, the family’s history, and just learning more about what he thought about Waukegan. 

(Sudden thud sound) 

And now, seven years later, we get a lot of support, whether it’s just donations or bands wanting to perform for free and experience the park or create a different event for the community.

(Sound of music playing and people talking during an ArtPark event)

So that, that tells me that the space is starting to grow more than just growing me. It’s growing the community and building these connections. I often live by, um, don’t ask for permission, ask for forgiveness, and you just go ahead and rip the bandaid off and do the project. Um, and that’s really how you get started.

I’m still proud of what we do on a day-to-day basis because I know we’re stepping into the, the right direction and I, I want more generations and more cultures to witness that here for our community. That was a good time though. Yeah, man. I look forward to, yeah. (Sound of Austin talking to a man)

Austin Cantú never pictured himself as a community activist, art curator, or planner, but now he cannot go a day without thinking about his beloved “ArtPark” in downtown Waukegan. 

“It’s that other half of me that I can’t go without. I can’t go a day without thinking of it. I can’t stop thinking about what is the next project,” Cantú said.

And it’s not just the ArtPark, Cantú’s love for his community is so strong he tattooed “Waukegan, Illinois” on his left arm.

“I’m gonna have to look at my arm and always be reminded of what I did in Waukegan, what I started and the whole impact that it’s had on me,” Cantú said.

Growing up, Cantú would often go with his dad to the town’s Art Wauks during the weekends, visiting various art galleries. As they walked around downtown, his dad would share stories about his upbringing as one of 10 siblings living in the old Stern’s department store building. He would recall how the town’s center was filled with storefronts and parades during his childhood.

Yet, Cantú could not relate. Neglected and abandoned lots in the once bustling downtown area were all he knew, and the activities that once colored the streets no longer existed. 

“He experienced the big businesses in downtown Waukegan. He experienced Belvedere Mall and Lakehurst Mall. And when I was growing up, it’s just like a whole different side that you would never even know. I would’ve never known if I wasn’t told,” Cantú said.

In 8th grade, Cantú wanted to beautify the area where the Stern’s building once stood. So he did what he thought any teenager would do: reached out to local officials on social media to get permission to use the space. He was persistent, but his plans went nowhere.

However, that didn’t stop Cantú from pursuing his vision of creating a community space. He looked to the small abandoned art park across the street.

The ArtPark was established in 1997 by Jim Harrington as a way to bring joy, life and art to a de-industrializing community. But Harrington died three years later, leading to inconsistent upkeep and overgrown grass that took over the site for more than a decade until Cantú and his family went on to reclaim this space. 

A smiling young man shows a tattoo on his left arm that reads “Waukegan, Illinois.”

“Waukegan has had a big impact on me,” says Austin Cantú, who decided to get his first tattoo after turning 18. “I was willing to get it tattooed on myself forever.” 
ANDREA FLORES / NEXTGENRADIO

“Don’t ask for permission. Ask for forgiveness.”

Austin Cantú

Cantú was just 14 years old at the time. He initially hoped to have help from volunteers to clean up the park, but no one showed up.

Instead, his family stepped up to beautify the place they all called home.

“We came out here, pulled weeds, painted, put some mulch down, and my cousin actually came out and cut the grass for us. [My dad] still works with us to this day, whether it’s putting up the letters on the wall, putting up the murals, or doing some landscaping work,” Cantú said.

Two women and one man sitting on lawn chairs, one man kneeling down holding a drink and a young man smiling and holding a camera.

Austin Cantú poses for a picture in 2018 with his dad Oscar, mom Olga, grandmother “Wuela” Martha, and grandfather “Wuelo” Rogelio. Cantú says his family’s memories of old Waukegan inspired him to revitalize ArtPark. “Home was just family for me,” he says.

PHOTO COURTESY OF AUSTIN CANTÚ / NEXTGENRADIO

His motto was “Don’t ask for permission. Ask for forgiveness.” 

Cantú said embarking on this journey brought him closer to his family, especially with his dad. The man who helped inform Cantú’s understanding of Waukegan’s history was now a vital part of his son’s legacy. 

Over the last few years, the ArtPark has become what he refers to as his “baby.”

“Hosting the events, getting new artists to come out here and just getting people in Waukegan interested in something a little different that they’ve never really experienced before,” Cantú said.

The ArtPark has gone through various changes over the span of its 26 years. 

And under Cantú’s care, the ArtPark underwent a significant transformation. In November 2020, the demolition of the building located next door interrupted all of the ArtPark activities. But that meant the park more than doubled in size. 

Cantú resumed event planning in July 2021, but didn’t officially reopen the ArtPark until May 2023 with many musical acts and community vendors. 

LEFT: ArtPark officially reopened to the public at this May 2023 ceremony. Pictured are ArtPark artists, local vendors and supporters including Sue Harrington White and Dylan Harrington, Jim Harrington’s widow and grandson, and Waukegan Mayor Ann Taylor. RIGHT: Waukegan indie/punk rock band DESTRUCTION BABY performs on May 20, 2023. More than 300 people attended the opening event, with more than 100 staying for the performances. “It’s just something that brings people together, brings community together,” Cantú says.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF AUSTIN CANTÚ / NEXTGENRADIO

“We just had a whole variety of performances with rap music, indie music, punk music, rock music. And we even had some traditional Hispanic music that was modernized a little bit. So it’s just something that brings people together, brings community together,” Cantú said.

Cantú hopes to continue to bring life into the space and create opportunities for people in Waukegan while building a legacy and a sense of home intertwined with the city’s history.

w b e z chicago logo

Chicago Public Media

Navy Pier
848 East Grand Ave.
Chicago, Ill., 60611

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:

The Next Generation Radio Project is a week-long digital journalism training project designed to give competitively selected participants, who are interested in radio and journalism, the skills and opportunity to report and produce their own multimedia story. Those chosen for the project are paired with a professional journalist who serves as their mentor.

This edition of the #NPRNextGenRadio project was funded by Chicago Public Media.

Our staff: Managing Editors – Michelle Faust Raghavan, independent editor, Portland, and Gabriela Saldivia, editor and producer, freelance journalist, Seville, Spain

  • Digital Editors – Lita Beck. Senior Politics Editor, Philadelphia Inquirer;

    Ariel Van Cleave, Managing Editor, Audio News, Chicago Public Radio/WBEZ;

  • Audio Tech/Engineers –  Patrice Mondragon, tech producer, Colorado Public Radio, Denver; Tina Tobey Mack, freelance, Boston
  • Illustrators – Emily Whang, freelance, Baltimore; EeJoon Choi, freelance, Los Angeles; Lauren Ibañez, freelance, Houston
  • Visuals – Corinne Chin, Director, News Talent AP, Chicago
  • Website developer — Robert Boos, Saint Paul, MN
    •  

Our journalist/mentors for this project are:

  • Elizabeth Gabriel, Education Reporter, WFYI, Indianapolis

  • Indira Khera, Metro Reporter, Chicago Public Media/WBEZ

  • Alyssa Mendez Batista, Digital/Social Media Producer\\Telemundo, Chicago

  • Monica Ortiz Uribe, freelance reporter/podcast host, El Paso, Texas

  • Lisa Philip, Higher Education Reporter, Chicago Public Media/WBEZ

NPR’s Next Generation Radio program is directed by its founder, Doug Mitchell.

 

Creative Commons photo credits: Gus via Flickr; Sound Wave Vectors by Vecteezy