
Underscore 102 • ERIC HOTCHKISS
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Mar 16, 2026 Eric Hotchkiss, interdisciplinary designer, engineer, and founder of Made in Englewood, builds community-shaped spaces. He recalls DIY childhood making and explains designing with neighborhoods, youth-led projects like a miniature golf course, and creating lasting artifacts and an Afro-diasporic outdoor kitchen. He discusses relinquishing control, documenting local stories, and why now feels like the right time to make things.
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Branding Workshops To Fund Neighborhood Employment
- Made in Englewood began as a small exhibition where Eric and Andre sold objects branded Made in Englewood to fund teach‑back workshops.
- They shifted from chairs and skateboards to larger one‑off projects so they could train neighbors on the job and create employment margins.
Participation Isn't Enough For True Design Power
- Eric criticizes participatory/co‑design when it only solicits attendance without redistributing agency, calling for deeper empowerment he terms transformative design.
- He documents failures intentionally and iterates projects to move beyond token participation.
Youth‑Led Miniature Golf Was Prototyped With Pool Noodles
- Douglas 18 (a miniature golf in Douglas Park) was designed and run by youth who prototyped with pool noodles, postal boxes and mobile courses at block parties.
- Students redlined professional drawings, ran the Instagram, and maintained community buy‑in over a four‑year build.

