Photographer Ghuncha Shaheed Turns Her Camera to West 72nd Street
The Architect, Photographer, and Placemaker Reveals how “Humanness” Persists on a Street Made for Cars.
Ghuncha Shaheed’s photographs of West 72nd Street show intimately familiar, almost banal, scenes of public space: a man resting his arm on a fence at a stoplight; two people facing opposite directions staring at their phones; a woman and child walking down the sidewalk holding hands. The alchemy of these images is their subtle invitation to look closer at what seems unremarkable so that we might see what’s missing. What are the subjects of these photographs trying to tell us about inhabiting public space?
The combination of a placemaker’s sensibility and a photographer’s eye is a rare gift and public service. These images cut through the petty turf wars, reflexive NIMBYism, and political inertia that too often defines urban planning policy. They invite us instead to consider, in our minds and hearts, who and what public space is for, and who gets to decide. Shaheed’s photographs make a strong case that equitable placemaking requires, above all, space to be human—to rest when we’re tired, gawk at beauty, linger in community with strangers. Who deserves to experience these basic gestures of our shared “humanness”? Shaheed offers a compelling answer: we all do.
Captions and commentary have been edited for length and clarity.
Ghuncha Shaheed is Pakistani architect, photographer and student in Urban Placemaking at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. She is a member of Open Plans’ 2024 Summer Internship cohort.