MAKE NOISE
The Marketplace of Ideas
ABOUT
The International Free Expression Project (IFEP) plans to transform a historic pressroom in downtown Pittsburgh into the “Marketplace of Ideas.”
Originally constructed in 1927 for the Pittsburgh Press, the building later became home to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, which dates back to 1786 and was among the original publishers of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
This dynamic reimagined space will be a center for all of the art and innovation in Pittsburgh. It will feature stage sets, art installations, food stalls, artisan booths, maker spaces, and more. We aim to create an environment where creative expression can flourish. The pressroom’s distinctive industrial features, including robust I-beams and an extensive rail system, provide the flexibility for ever-changing configurations to accommodate a wide range of events and activities.
PROJECT LOCATION
CONTACT
Have questions or want to learn more about the project, contact us below:
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Name: Greg Victor, Executive Director
Email: gvictor@ifep.io
Learn about the Marketplace of Ideas with this 48 second video:
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The cavernous, ink-stained pressroom exudes industry and history and is uniquely equipped to create an ever-changing “Marketplace of Ideas.” Three pairs of I-beams that can bear 20 tons run along the ceiling and a rail system runs throughout the floor 40 feet below. Stage sets, art installations, food stalls, artisan booths, video screens, maker machines, modular rooms — almost anything — can be moved in and out of the space to accommodate activities or events or just to change things up.
Think of the entire Marketplace as a theater, a stage set, with new productions launching continually. People, organizations and institutions from the grassroots to the international level will be invited to install exhibits, put on performances, conduct educational activities or otherwise program spaces.
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Pittsburgh has evolved from a smoky, industrial, steel-making titan of the 19th and 20th centuries into a world-class, 21st-century center of higher education, robotics, artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, bioengineering, medicine and culture.
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The city’s history of speaking out and being heard is storied. It’s home to the first commercial radio station in the world, KDKA; one of the most influential Black newspapers in the United States, the Pittsburgh Courier; the first community-sponsored public television station, WQED; world-renowned jazz musicians such as Billy Strayhorn; groundbreaking Black playwright August Wilson; environmental revolutionary Rachel Carson; baseball star and social activist Roberto Clemente; celebrated investigative reporter Nellie Bly; dance pioneer Martha Graham; and cultural giants such as Andy Warhol.
Pittsburgh also has been at the forefront of free-expression rights. It is home to City of Asylum, the U.S. headquarters for the International Cities of Refuge network, which takes in exiled writers who have been persecuted in their own countries so their artistry can continue to flourish. The city also recently hosted two national First Amendment Conferences.