Montgomery, Alabama, USA
Designed by MASS Design Group, The National Memorial for Peace and Justice is sited on six acres of land in Montgomery, Alabama, and is the first national memorial to victims of lynching in the US.
The United States has done very little to recognize the lasting societal damage perpetuated by our long history of slavery.
The last century brought decades of racial terror, lynching, and segregation.
Lynching profoundly impacted race relations in the United States, fueling mass migration out of the South and maintaining a fearful environment where racial subordination and segregation were enforced for decades.
The discussion about lynching and its legacy has been sorely inadequate, which has contributed to ongoing struggle, exclusion, and discrimination.
The Equal Justice Initiative documented more than 4,000 racial terror lynchings in twelve Southern states between Reconstruction and World War II, in one of the most comprehensive investigations to date.
This work recognized the need for a memorial space that embraces this truth and inspires reflection and change.


In the City of Montgomery, where markers commemorating the Confederate South still abound and markers to the Civil Rights Movement and slavery are few, the memorial provides the necessary space for truth-telling, hope, healing, and reconciliation.
In an effort to connect this research back to the communities impacted most, MASS collaborated with the Equal Justice Initiative in developing a process where soil was collected from the sites where each of these lynchings took place.
The community remembrance process allows communities to confront history by becoming active participants in the commemoration of lives unjustly taken. Strongly rooted in place, the soil collection process served as a prelude to the memorial.

Project: The National Memorial for Peace and Justice
Architects: MASS Design Group
Design Team: Alicia Ajayi, Caroline Alsup, Sierra Bainbridge, Justin Brown,
Ola Doeskun, Emily Goldenberg, Whitney Hansley, Kordae Henry, Chieh Chih Chiang, Michael Murphy, Martin Pavlinic, and Adam Saltzmn
Client: The Equal Justice Initiative



















