City of Gary and Notre Dame’s Housing and Community Regeneration Initiative announce vision and action plan for downtown Gary

The City of Gary and the University of Notre Dame School of Architecture’s Housing and Community Regeneration Initiative announced a “Vision and Action Plan” for downtown Gary during a news conference Tuesday (May 27).
The final report serves as a roadmap for Gary’s leadership to follow to reestablish the city’s building culture.
“Gary is a resilient city, and we are writing our comeback story,” Mayor Eddie Melton said. “The team from the University of Notre Dame School of Architecture has listened to and learned from our community and produced a vision that feels like home. We are looking forward to beginning the plan’s implementation as soon as possible, and reigniting a culture of thoughtful building and investment in downtown Gary.”
The plan builds upon a charrette conducted in August 2024. It presents a strategy for physical, economic and place-based regeneration in response to community members’ input, and it unfolded in four stages:
Stage 1: Analysis and community engagement — A study of existing conditions, considerations regarding the historic nature of the city, and meetings with local stakeholders and members of the community helped the team identify aspirations, hopes and needs.
Stage 2: Dean’s Charrette — Conducted in August 2024, this interactive design workshop uncovered concepts that were presented for immediate feedback. Designs were adjusted and presented again, and then edited further in response to community input.
Stage 3: Charrette follow-up — The team prioritized critical items such as preservation assessment, zoning code review and design template plans, and then created a strategy for immediate next steps, followed by the final report.
Stage 4: Implementation — This step includes reestablishing a historic preservation board, prioritizing the preservation of historic structures through blight reversal, identifying and supporting medium-scale mixed-use catalytic projects and establishing an infill housing strategy.
“The ultimate goal of this work is to reestablish a culture of city-building in Gary which heals the community, is sustainable over time and delivers long-term value for residents and investors. These efforts both draw expertise from and provide knowledge to a regional coalition of cities confronting shared challenges,” said Marianne Cusato, director of the Housing and Community Regeneration Initiative.
“The pride the residents of Gary take in their city is an inspiration, and we are honored to work with the community to develop a vision that is reflective of the city’s real needs, mindful of barriers and limitations and respectful of its culture and character,” she said.
The city didn’t get into its current state overnight and it won’t be healed and repaired overnight, said Christopher Harris, executive director of the Gary Redevelopment Department.
Because downtowns are typically the primary source of a municipality’s tax base, reinvigorating Gary’s core with dense mixed-use development while honoring Gary’s architectural aesthetic is absolutely necessary for strengthening the city’s financial picture, Harris said.
“A vibrant, attractive and walkable downtown is essential to positioning Gary — and Northwest Indiana more broadly — as an attractive destination for talent and investment,” Harris said.
“This plan will take time to implement, but the final report and the development strategy that it proposes are foundational first steps to community regeneration and a reigniting of the culture of city building in Downtown Gary,” he said.
Media contact: Carrie Gates, associate director of media relations, c.gates@nd.edu, 574-993-9220
Latest ND NewsWire
- Notre Dame Executive MBA offers scholarships to area leadersMichiana Forty under 40 honorees can receive $30,000 toward tuition for the Notre Dame EMBA program.
- In memoriam: Alasdair MacIntyre, the Rev. John A. O’Brien senior research professor of philosophy emeritusAlasdair MacIntyre, the Rev. John A. O’Brien senior research professor of philosophy emeritus and a permanent senior distinguished research fellow at the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture, died on May 21, 2025. He was 96.
- Santiago Schnell, dean of Notre Dame’s College of Science, appointed as provost of DartmouthSantiago Schnell, the William K. Warren Foundation Dean of the College of Science at the University of Notre Dame, has accepted an appointment as provost at Dartmouth College. He will depart Notre Dame at the end of June and begin his new role in July.
- The Commencement of the class of 2025The University of Notre Dame celebrated its 180th Commencement Ceremony on Sunday (May 18) at Notre Dame Stadium. An audience of some 20,000 graduates, family members, friends and faculty attended, and 2,084 degrees were conferred on undergraduate students, with a total of 3,099 degrees being conferred over the course of Commencement Weekend activities.
- The Commencement of the Graduate School class of 2025Teresa Lambe, a world-renowned vaccine scientist who played a critical role in the fight against COVID-19, delivered the keynote address Saturday (May 17) during the Graduate School’s annual commencement ceremony.
- World’s biggest polluters are least affected by environmental damage and conflict, new research warnsThe world's largest polluters are also the safest from the environmental damage they help create — while the countries least to blame face the greatest threats, including the increased possibility of violent conflict. These findings, from a new study co-authored by a University of Notre Dame researcher, highlight inequalities that harm the Global South.