What We Do:
Honeycomb Arts and Wellness Collective is a gathering place, a practice, and a belief made physical: that art is medicine, that wellness is something we build together, and that a community which creates together grows stronger than one that simply coexists.
Located in the Coy Cornelius and Judy Rodgers Studios at 1931 Belmont Ave on Youngstown's North Side, Honeycomb brings together local artists, healers, musicians, and movers under one roof, as a living collective with a shared conviction. Self-expression is a human right.
The Spaces:
Every corner of Honeycomb is designed to do something specific, and every space does more than one thing.
The Gallery is the heart of the building's public face: a premier showcase for local visual art and a gathering space for the community events that surround it. It is where Youngstown's artists are seen, and where the act of seeing together becomes its own kind of nourishment.
The Red Room is for music, movement, and connection. Live performances by local musicians fill it on a rolling schedule. On the first and third Tuesdays of every month, Breanna leads a restorative yoga flow, a full-body practice open to all, offered on a $10 suggested donation so that the barrier to entry stays as low as possible.
The Garden reaches beyond the walls entirely. A city-sponsored pollinator initiative, it cultivates flowering gardens for bees, birds, bats, and the broader North Side ecosystem. It is Honeycomb's reminder that wellness is personal and communal at once, extending into the soil, the air, and the neighborhood block by block.
What Honeycomb Is:
Honeycomb is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit rooted in Youngstown's particular spirit, a city that has survived more than most, and that continues to generate culture, resilience, and beauty in direct proportion to the difficulty it has endured. Honeycomb treats that history as foundation.
The collective was built by local art, health, and wellness professionals who understood that the things their community needed most, creative space, healing practice, spiritual grounding, human connection, deserved a dedicated home. So they built the house themselves.
What happens inside it is life, structured just enough to keep the doors open and the calendar full. Music and yoga and gallery openings and garden workdays, held together by the same underlying premise: when people gather to share, nurture, and grow, the entire community flourishes. At Honeycomb, that is the operating principle.
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