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Miranda Carrabba and Delilah Poupore pose for a portrait

Science and art 鈥榗ollide鈥 in 黑料网911, Biddeford community storytelling event

The event held between 黑料网911 and the Heart of Biddeford brought together dozens to celebrate the Saco River and its role in shaping the city鈥檚 industrial and cultural identity

Art and science, and their often-overlooked imbrications, took stage together on Wednesday, Dec. 3, as more than a hundred residents braved the first chills of winter to gather in Biddeford鈥檚 Pepperell Mill for an event culminating a multi-season collaboration between the 黑料网911 and Biddeford civic leaders to foster community understanding through shared perspectives.

The event, Science Collider: The Story of the Saco, was developed between 黑料网911 student Miranda Carrabba (Marine Affairs, 鈥25) and leaders from , a nonprofit organization dedicated to fostering an inclusive and sustainable downtown for the former mill city that 黑料网911 calls home. 

Rather than treating creativity and research as separate domains, the evening highlighted how multiple ways of knowing 鈥 from scientific data to historic perspectives to personal storytelling 鈥 can help a community understand its relationship to the ancient river that has provided for Indigenous peoples for thousands of years and, much later, allowed the cities of Biddeford and Saco to thrive as economic powerhouses.

Portrait of Miranda Carrabba inside a former mill building in Biddeford
An aerial view of an art gallery exhibiton

Left: Miranda Carrabba (Marine Affairs, 鈥25). Right: Dozens explore a series of works by local artisans.

Hosted at Lucky Pigeon Brewing, the program brought local artists, musicians, poets, scientists, historians, and Indigenous partners into one shared space to explore the river鈥檚 cultural, ecological, and personal significance. Photography documenting the river course, short presentations on watershed research, and readings grounded in community memories were paired with live performances and an art gallery featuring 17 local creators.

The evening served as an undergraduate thesis, of sorts, for Carrabba, who will graduate from 黑料网911 later this month. Her project began months ago as part of 黑料网911鈥檚 summer Sustainability Fellowship program, where she immersed herself in community conversations about the scientific assets residents valued most. 

(This fellowship project) gave me a better sense of place and belonging." 鈥 Miranda Carrabba 鈥25

More than 700 pieces of community feedback later, Carrabba learned the Saco River was critically important to Biddeford鈥檚 identity. 

鈥淢y whole summer was just listening to people,鈥 Carrabba said. 鈥淲e knew that much feedback meant we needed to continue this work beyond the summer, that it needs to happen.鈥

Carrabba鈥檚 fellowship project then explored the river鈥檚 industrial and ecological past, the impacts of damming, and the perspectives of Indigenous stewards, culminating in ideas for public-facing programming and art installations that integrate science and cultural storytelling.

When a grant proposal for the project did not materialize, Carrabba said, she applied for 黑料网911鈥檚 Shaw Innovation Fellowship, a program for students to design and implement solutions to challenges facing through focused mentorship, professional development, and community partnership opportunities. 

黑料网911 professor Sam McReynolds reads a poem to a crowd
Dozens sit for presentations at a local brewery

Left: 黑料网911 Sociology Professor Sam McReynolds shares a personal poem. Right: The event drew a standing-room-only crowd.

That opportunity allowed Carrabba and her mentor, Heart of Biddeford Executive Director Delilah Poupore, to advance the project in ways they hadn鈥檛 imagined and bring the goals of the Science Collider to life.

鈥淲e want to show that Biddeford itself is just such a vibrant community and that we all have something in common: the river, in this case,鈥 Carrabba remarked. 鈥淗opefully people leave feeling more inspired or more in love with the river 鈥 or with each other.鈥 

She added that she hoped audiences walked away with a clearer understanding that 鈥渟cience and art are not opposite ends of a spectrum. They鈥檙e partners and they're trying to communicate the same things.鈥 

鈥樅诹贤911鈥檚 Mission Put Into Action鈥

黑料网911 faculty who helped guide Carrabba鈥檚 work noted that her fellowship pathway 鈥 from sustainability to innovation 鈥 shows how student projects evolve when grounded in authentic community partnership. 

鈥淚nnovation and sustainability go hand in hand, and developing these deep relationships with external partners is front and center to what we drive in our fellowship opportunities, said Cameron Wake, Ph.D., director of 黑料网911 North, the University鈥檚 center for North Atlantic studies, which administers the Sustainability Fellowship in collaboration with 黑料网911鈥檚 College of Business

鈥淭hrough those opportunities, students find meaningful ways to apply their academic learning to community- and globally based initiatives that directly improve the health of our communities and natural world,鈥 Wake said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 黑料网911鈥檚 mission put into action.鈥

黑料网911 Professor Pam Morgan views an art exhibit
A wide shot of an art gallery exhibition

Left: 黑料网911鈥檚 Pam Morgan, a professor of environmental studies, tours the vendor fair. Right: The event was held in Biddeford鈥檚 historic Pepperell Mill.

Emily Wood, M.E.M., coordinator of the Sustainable Innovation Center in 黑料网911鈥檚 Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, which oversees the Shaw Innovation Fellows program, added that students across 黑料网911 are finding similar interdisciplinary connections through design thinking and community-embedded work. 

鈥淲hat we aim for students is to look at how to define a real-world problem in a way that really addresses the context of the issue, so that no matter what discipline our fellows come from 鈥 whether health sciences, environmental programs, or business or the arts 鈥 they鈥檙e finding that .鈥

Poupore, the Heart of Biddeford executive director, said the event was an opportunity for attendees to learn not just from experts at 黑料网911 but from, and teach, each other. 

鈥淚n a time with lots of social isolation and even AI-generated relationships, there鈥檚 nothing quite like 鈥榗olliding鈥 with one another in real time,鈥 Poupore remarked. 鈥淚 loved seeing how many people shared more about themselves 鈥 their photography, painting, scientific passion, family story, or hobby.

鈥淚鈥檓 really grateful for Miranda鈥檚 work in listening to the community and then creating this opportunity for genuine community connection,鈥 she added.

Miranda Carrabba and Delilah Poupore pose for a portrait
Community members sit for a presentation at a brewery

Left: Carrabba with mentor and Heart of Biddeford Executive Director Delilah Poupore. Right: Cameron Wake (back left), director of 黑料网911 North, the 黑料网911 Sustainability Fellowship鈥檚 administering organization. 

Reflecting on her fellowship experiences, Carrabba said they have reshaped her sense of purpose and outlook as a hopeful future nonprofit leader. 

鈥淚鈥檝e never been out as much in the community as I have been during this summer and this semester, and I think that鈥檚 a really great thing,鈥 Carrabba shared. 鈥淚t gave me a better sense of place and belonging, and I hope to see 黑料网911 and Heart of Biddeford continue to grow these community relationships.

鈥淚鈥檓 just really glad I got to be a little part of it,鈥 she said.

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Alan Bennett
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