Arts & Entertainment
St. Pete Woman Transforms Tropicana Field's Hurricane Roof Debris Into Art
After Hurricane Milton tore the roof off Tropicana Field, a St. Pete woman turned the debris into wall art.
ST. PETERSBURG, FL β About four years, St. Petersburg veterinarian Dee Sheppard voiced her frustrations about the amount of garbage there is in the world and wastefulness during a conversation with her niece.
βThereβs so much trash and that disposable type of lifestyle, and it was like, you know what? Letβs see if I can do something about it,β she told Patch.
So, she started turning trash into art, and now, sheβs focused on creating works from the roofing materials that were torn off Tropicana Field during Hurricane Milton in 2024.
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βIt started with pallets and old furniture and evolved into anything I could come across that I might be able to make into something,β Sheppard said. βDuring storms, trees would fall and there was this unlimited wood, and Iβd think, βSurely, I can make this into something.β Wall art, little animals, things like that, plates. A little bit of everything.β
Anything can be turned into art, she added. βI feel like I look around and see art in just about everything, every dumpster I come across.β
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Initially, Sheppard found a home for her pieces by gifting them to family and friends.
βThen, they hit the point where they couldnβt take anymore,β she said.
She launched a business, Pelican Upcycle, selling her art through an Etsy shop and at local markets, including Shopapalooza and Localtopia.
βThatβs when I evolved from wall art and got into cutting boards and picture frames, spatulas,β she said. βBut goofy, silly stuff.β
When Tropicana Fieldβs roof was destroyed during Milton, the debris βfell into place with what I do,β Sheppard said.
A friend who lived downtown collected pieces from the stadium immediately after the storm and offered them to her with the stipulation that any money she earns gets donated to charity.
She agreed, choosing Girls on the Run Greater Tampa Bay, where her niece, Lauren Leavine, serves as executive director. The organization hosts events and programming to inspire and empower girls. So far, sheβs raised about $6,000 for the nonprofit.
The roofing debris is made mostly from fiberglass and teflon, Sheppard said. βItβs difficult to work with. Nothing sticks to it. You canβt glue it. You canβt stick anything to it. But Iβve tried different things to see what I can do with it.β
She landed on cutting out various designs that she turned into wall art and people canβt get enough of them.
βThe Tropicana Field stuff has been incredible in terms of sales,β she said. βPeople might have gotten squares of the roof, but this is a piece of art, something you can hang up and have displayed, and thatβs what makes it special.β
She hopes the popularity of these works helps to elevate her mission.
βThe big thing is to cut down on waste,β Sheppard said. βI just feel like thereβs so many ways to do it. This is my way, but I know there are other ways.β
As she runs out of roofing material, sheβs already thinking about her next focus: plastics.
βThat might be my thing for next year,β she said.
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