Jewish architect’s memorial gifts benefit Oakland ‘Design Justice’ firm J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on June 4, 2022

Architect Eric Salitsky was deeply invested in architectural design that brought together people from different walks of life. That commitment led him to research multifaith worship spaces in hospitals, universities and airports across North America and Europe. Its also what attracted him to the architecture and design firm Designing Justice + Designing Spaces.

The Oakland-based nonprofit firm specializes in buildings that promote restorative justice, from mobile refuge rooms, where formerly incarcerated people live while transitioning back into their communities, to co-working spaces for social activist organizations. In 2019, the firm opened the nations first center for restorative justice and restorative economics, in East Oakland, according to its website.

Im a big fan of Designing Justice + Designing Spaces, Salitsky wrote in a September 2020 email to friends from Camp Ramah in New England, during a Rosh Hashanah discussion about organizations deserving of tzedakah. They use architecture, planning, and development to fight mass incarceration.

On May 5, Salitsky was tragically struck and killed by a truck while riding his bicycle near his Brooklyn home. He was 35 and eagerly anticipating the arrival of his first child with his wife, Tamara Cohen, according to his online obituary. (The 62-year-old driver of the private sanitation truck drove off, possibly unaware that he had hit Salitsky; the New York Daily News reported that police issued the driver summonses for equipment violations but have not charged him with a crime.)

In the days after Salitskys death, his mother, Barbara, reached out to Designing Justice + Designing Spaces staff and informed them that the family had decided to direct memorial contributions to the firm. (Click here to make a donation in Salitskys memory.)

We know Eric devoted his work to spaces that bring people together to resolve conflict, so theres a strong connection between his work and our mission, firm spokesman Jean Paul Zapata said.

A native of Worcester, Massachusetts, Salitsky lived in Berkeley during the summer of 2008 while doing an internship at Tikkun magazine. He and Cohen made aliyah in 2010, and they returned to the U.S. in 2013 so he could study architecture at Pratt Institute. After earning his masters degree, he did consulting work on a multifaith space at Gallaudet University, the Washington, D.C., liberal arts university for the deaf and hard of hearing. He also recorded a 12-part webinar series about how to design and operate effective multifaith spaces.

In August 2020, Salitsky joined ESKW/Architects, a midsize Manhattan firm that specializes in institutions that enrich communities, including schools and health care facilities. He felt really proud to have found a place at ESKW/Architects because in a city of luxury real estate development, there arent a ton of options for folks who want to do community-focused design, said Cohen, the executive director of Remix Market NYC, a creative reuse center.

Outside of work, Salitsky designed laser-cut ketubahs for friends. He was traditional in his practice of Judaism one of his friends described him as a neo-Chassid but also as egalitarian and feminist as they come, Cohen said, noting that he enjoyed lighting Shabbat candles.

In an interview on the ESKW/Architects website, Salitsky spoke about his fascination with multifaith spaces.

[T]hey are direct representations of our society at its best aspiring toward multiculturalism and unity within diversity and rejecting tribalism and us vs. them, he said. At their most basic definitions, theyre equitable accommodations for religious minorities, since they are decidedly not Christian-centric. But on the other hand, they create a place for spiritual meaning-making that is also inherently social. By sharing a space of prayer or meditation with other groups, you recognize each others humanity.

Reporters note: Salitsky, Cohen and I met in 2012 when we all lived in Tel Aviv. We became friends and regularly prayed and celebrated Shabbat together. Eric was intelligent, curious, cheerful and a true mensch. May his memory be a blessing.

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Jewish architect's memorial gifts benefit Oakland 'Design Justice' firm J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

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