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Ideas Floated for South State Corridor

An informal session with University of Michigan urban planning students gave Ann Arbor planning commissioners more ideas for possible changes to the South State Street corridor.

Danielle Thoe, Ann Arbor planning commission, The Ann Arbor Chronicle, South State Street corridor, University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture  Urban Planning

Danielle Thoe, a University of Michigan graduate student in urban planning, explains a concept for creating a boulevard for pedestrians and bicyclists to navigate better the I-94 overpass along South State Street. (Photos by the writer.)

The Nov. 27 meeting included a presentation by four graduate students in urban and regional planning. They had analyzed the corridor between Ellsworth and Stimson, which the city has also been studying. The presentation came in the context of a draft report currently under review by planning commissioners, with more than 40 recommendations to improve the corridor. [.pdf of draft report]

The students approached their work by identifying changes that could have an immediate impact on the corridor, while also looking at more visionary, long-term goals. Shorter-term suggestions included replacing and widening sidewalks, and adding new sidewalks in sections where there are none.

A more ambitious idea is to transform the broad center turn lanes on the I-94 overpass into a protected bicycle/pedestrian median. Currently, navigating the freeway interchange on foot or by bike is daunting. The approach could serve multiple purposes. If bioswales and landscaping were in place along the outer edges, it would help with stormwater management and provide a physical barrier between vehicles and pedestrians/cyclists. The greenery would also have visual impact for people exiting the freeway, indicating that you’re entering a city that values the environment and alternative transportation, according to the students.

Creating a sense of identity along the corridor was a common theme, with an additional focus on safety issues, stormwater management, and functionality/aesthetics.

The meeting was attended by four of the eight current planning commissioners, as well as planning manager Wendy Rampson. The commission is expected to make a recommendation on the city’s draft corridor plan at either its Dec. 18 or Jan. 3 meeting. The Ann Arbor city council would need to approve the plan before any action is taken toward implementing its recommendations.

State Street Background: Ongoing Study

The city planning commission and staff have been discussing improvements on South State for years. It was brought up more than two years ago at the commission’s April 2010 retreat, as one of the priorities that the body hoped to address as part of a broader effort to look at all of the city’s major gateway corridors, including Washtenaw Avenue to the east, Plymouth Road to the northeast, and North Main Street.

A year later, at an April 2011 work session, planning commissioners and staff talked about issuing a request for proposals (RFP) for a consultant to take on the work. About $150,000 had been set aside for a consultant’s study. But when the project moved to the city council for approval, a majority of councilmembers at that time were reluctant to make the expenditure, and the funding was not approved.

Planning staff took on the task instead, and planning commissioners were briefed on progress at an October 2011 work session. The work included interviews with businesses, residents and other stakeholders, public forums, and online feedback through the A2 Open City Hall site. For more detailed background, see Chronicle coverage: “South State Corridor Gets Closer Look.”

The area of study has focused on a roughly 2-mile stretch between Stimson Street at the north end down to Ellsworth in the south, and includes: a major intersection with I-94; Briarwood Mall; the large Hidden Valley Club apartment complex; acres of land owned by the University of Michigan, including its golf course and a sports complex; large office buildings, including 777 Eisenhower and UM’s Wolverine Tower; several hotels near Victors Way and Broadway; and a research park development near the corridor’s south end.

A draft report – including more than 40 overall recommendations for improving the corridor – was presented to commissioners at their Sept. 18, 2012 meeting. [.pdf of draft report]

Recommendations in that report are organized into categories of the city’s recently adopted sustainability framework: Land use and access, community, climate and energy, and resource management. Among the recommendations are: (1) Evaluate use of vacant parcels for alternative energy generation; (2) Evaluate integrating public art along the corridor; (3) Evaluate use of open land for community gardens; (4) Assess and improve high crash areas along the corridor; (5) create boulevard on State Street between Eisenhower and I‐94 to enable safer automobile, bicycle, and pedestrian movement; (6) Consider utilizing vacant parcels for athletic fields and recreation facilities; (7) Develop a pedestrian and bicycle path along the Ann Arbor railroad that will connect the planned Allen Creek bikeway to Pittsfield Township through the corridor; and (8) Resurface roads in the corridor.

Each recommendation includes several related action items. The report also provides a section that organizes the recommendations into each of three distinct sections of the corridor: (1) from Stimson on the north to Eisenhower Parkway; (2) from Eisenhower south to the I-94 interchange; and (3) from I-94 to Ellsworth.

UM Urban Planning Charrette

On Nov. 27, four University of Michigan graduate students in urban planning met with planning commissioners and staff to present ideas for transforming the South State corridor. Christian Roadman, Katy Ryan, Liz Treutel and Danielle Thoe – studying for master of urban planning degrees at UM’s Taubman College of Architecture Urban Planning – spent about an hour explaining their proposals and talking to commissioners about the area.

Christian Roadman began the presentation by saying the group tried to strike a balance between identifying low-hanging fruit that would have an immediate impact on the corridor, while also looking at more visionary, long-term goals. Their suggestions primarily focused on safety, stormwater management, and functional aesthetics – not beauty for beauty’s sake, he said, but rather how to incorporate public art into functional things like signs or fences.

Christian Roadman, Ann Arbor planning commission, The Ann Arbor Chronicle, South State corridor, University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture  Urban Planning

Christian Roadman, a University of Michigan graduate student in urban planning.

Overall, the students felt that the corridor lacked a sense of place, Roadman said. They wanted to develop that sense of place immediately when people enter the corridor off of I-94, and from there to build a feeling that “I’m coming into a unique city.”

Danielle Thoe highlighted the existing sidewalks, which she described as dilapidated and “disappearing.” In some stretches, there are no sidewalks at all, and in many spots they are narrow and very near the street, close to fast-moving vehicles. She noted that one easy solution would simply be to install new sidewalks, which would make pedestrians feel safer and make it viable to walk down the street.

Creating wider sidewalks would also be a benefit, Thoe said. Although there are bike lanes along parts of South State, the motorized vehicles travel fast and don’t always respect those bike lanes. Nor are the bike lanes welcoming for all types of bicyclists, she noted. It’s not likely a family would feel safe riding bikes along South State to the mall or restaurants there. Widening sidewalks would address this by creating multi-use paths for pedestrians, runners and cyclists.

Continuing south, Thoe pointed out that the intersection of I-94 creates an even greater problem for pedestrians and bicyclists trying to safely navigate across the bridge through heavy traffic and turning vehicles. The UM students suggested transforming the broad center turn lanes into a protected bicycle/pedestrian median over the freeway. Wide green stripes could be painted on the streets to indicate a crossing that would lead to the median.

Katy Ryan told commissioners that such an approach could serve multiple purposes. If bioswales and landscaping were in place along the outer edges, it would help with stormwater management and provide a physical barrier between vehicles and pedestrians/cyclists. The greenery would also have visual impact for people exiting the freeway, indicating that you’re entering a city that values the environment and alternative transportation. After going over the I-94 interchange via this center path, the cyclists and pedestrians would cross back into regular bike lanes and sidewalks on the other side.

Liz Treutel then highlighted other medians along South State, which are concrete but poorly maintained, with weeds growing through cracks. The suggestion is to change those medians into functional spaces for stormwater management with native plantings, and perhaps incorporate public art there as well. Vegetation in the center medians would make the road seem narrower and more inviting.

Treutel described some ideas for public art, with the goal of providing a cohesive identity for the entire corridor. Artwork displays could be changed biannually or quarterly, to bring change and excitement to the area. Public art could be incorporated into bus stops, signs and fences, such as the one along the UM golf course at the corridor’s north end. Other examples include a pedestrian bridge that could be designed in a creative way, or having a community contest to create different kinds of Ann Arbor wolverine sculptures, akin to the fiberglass cows exhibits in New York, Chicago and other cities. Also mentioned were tree sculptures, like the metal works designed by the artist Roxy Paine. [There is precedent for metal tree sculptures in Ann Arbor – as two are installed in West Park, funded by the city’s Percent for Art program.]

The goals for the corridor should be to increase development with the goal of placemaking, Thoe said – reflecting the identity of Ann Arbor. Longer term, changes in zoning code could encourage a reduction in setbacks, with new buildings constructed closer to the street and parking in the rear. Ultimately, the hope is to create a true corridor, she added, that draws and guides people into the city while simultaneously introducing them to the city’s values and culture.

To describe why change is needed, Roadman described his own experience on his first trip to Ann Arbor. He traveled here on the Megabus, and disembarked at a South State Street park-and-ride lot. There was no sense of being in a special place – the location and first impression didn’t get him as excited about the city as it potentially might have, he said.

Thoe listed some possible next steps, prioritized by the ease of implementation – from installing sidewalks and bike/pedestrian paths to road resurfacing, zoning changes, and development of a bus rapid transit (BRT) system.

Ryan wrapped up the presentation by saying they had a great time with the project, and became really invested in the ideas.

UM Urban Planning Charrette: Commission Discussion

Planning manager Wendy Rampson asked about the issue of identity. When the students talked about Ann Arbor’s identity, did they mean the city or the University of Michigan? Danielle Thoe replied that they hadn’t been envisioning a UM-centric identity, but certainly the university would be part of it, especially since UM owned so much property along the corridor. Thoe  described the city’s identity as intellectual and innovative – a place where people would want to stay, whether or not they had attended UM.

South State Street, University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Ann Arbor planning commission, The Ann Arbor Chronicle

Drawings by UM urban planning students of possible changes to South State Street in Ann Arbor.

Planning commissioner Bonnie Bona said she sensed that the students had been a little restrained in their approach. She encouraged them to push their ideas even further. For example, she suggested putting in a center-lane pedestrian/cycling boulevard along the entire stretch, from the planned roundabout at State and Ellsworth all the way north, perhaps to another roundabout that would bookend the corridor at Stimson.

Katy Ryan replied that they were concerned about presenting ideas that might seem too much like a pipe dream.

Commissioner Ken Clein mentioned the idea of having a version of New York City’s High Line, an elevated park. Christian Roadman said the students had talked about the need to improve bus routes. He liked the notion of vertical integration, like creating an elevated pedestrian/cycling path built over a lane dedicated to bus rapid transit. Rampson observed that traffic engineers can come up with some innovative ideas, if they’re prompted to think creatively.

Rampson liked the idea of viewing the medians as pallets for other purposes, like rain gardens and public art. She also said she was fascinated by the idea of sculptural signage. David Diephuis, a resident who attended the session, floated the idea of using large sculptures to evoke specific destinations, like a huge bed to point the way to hotels along the corridor.

There was some discussion of using tree sculptures to create a canopy along a central pedestrian/bike median. That prompted Diephuis to look up the Roxy Paine sculptures on his iPad – he noted that they cost a minimum of $1 million each. Jennifer Olmstead, the Taubman College’s career services and alumni network coordinator who had facilitated this project, wondered whether Briarwood Mall might view the idea as a branding opportunity – with trees emphasizing Briarwood.

Clein joked about a tie-in with local history. Harry Bennett, the head of security for Henry Ford, lived in the Ann Arbor area along the Huron River, in an estate called Bennett’s Castle. Bennett built realistic-looking concrete trees that were designed so that his gunmen could stand inside the trunk and shoot through slots, Clein said. So there’s precedent, he said, adding “not that we should have any shooting.”

Referring to sculptures and other possible artwork, Roadman observed that there’s a fine line between just putting something there for art’s sake, versus using artwork to create a cohesive sense of identity.

Clein noted that the city has been struggling with the identity of South State for a long time. Many people see it as just a drive-through area between destinations, but clearly there are a lot of people who view it as more than that, he said. The ideas presented by the students have addressed this issue, bringing in the concepts of sustainability and the “tree town” reputation of Ann Arbor. The ideas have real viability, he said.

Next Steps

The city’s draft South State corridor report is being reviewed by planning commissioners, who are expected to vote on it at their Dec. 18 or Jan. 3 meeting. Their recommendation would be sent to the Ann Arbor city council, who would be asked to authorize the plan formally to be distributed to adjoining jurisdictions – including Pittsfield Township, which the corridor abuts.

At that point, there would be a formal 42-day comment period before the plan’s formal approval process. The city would hold another public meeting on the plan during that 42-day period, according to planning manager Wendy Rampson.

When the plan is approved, city staff would begin identifying ways to implement the recommended actions, including identifying funding sources.

Next regular meeting: Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012 at 7 p.m. in the second-floor council chambers at city hall, 301 E. Huron St., Ann Arbor. [Check Chronicle event listings to confirm date]

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Haggenbottom still enjoying success in sprint cars

The first time I wrote about Mike Haggenbottom and his racing, he was 17. That was 26 years ago.


Mike reminded me of that fact the other day as we spoke on the telephone. He is still racing, and I am still writing about racing.

The Levittown resident just finished a successful season of sprint car racing. He won the Hillborn Fuel Injection Tri-State Race Savers championship. That is an organization that sanctions 305 sprint car racing and is run by Southampton’s Joe Grandinetti.

It is a labor of love for both, as winning a feature race with the 305 sprints pays $125 and, if you finish last, you also receive $125. Haggenbottom certainly is not in it for the money. And Grandinetti, who is also a sprint car owner, receives nothing for running the organization.

“The idea of racing for such a small amount of money is to keep racers from overspending,” said Haggenbottom. “We can put together an engine for racing for about $10,000.

“I just spoke with a friend who races sprint cars with another organization, and he just paid $37,000 for a new engine.”

A couple Saturdays back, the self-employed landscaper was honored as the TSRS champion after winning four feature races during the season and having 14 top five finishes.

“Consistency earned us the title,” said the 43-year-old racer. “It also helped that I have years of experience, and I am able to handle just about any situation that may arise.

“I have been racing longer than some of my competition has been alive. Often times, that works in our favor.”

Crew help is much easier to come by when there is not a lot of travel involved, according to Haggenbottom, and most of the 305 sprint car events are close to home.

A lot of friends show up to help, including Tony, Jesse, Ethan, Brett and a host of others. His girlfriend, Tracy Page, is new to the sport, but she enjoys the racing and keeps busy with the T-shirt sales.

Plant Preservation of Morrisville is an important sponsor for the team along with Harris Blacktopping, WDB Landscaping, Kashady Automation, Speed Equipment Corp., ISC Racers Tape, Valley Forge Inc. and ASI Racewear. Also important to the success of the race team is the effort put forth by the auto body shop at the Bucks County Tech School.

Twelve years ago, the veteran sprint car racer had ideas of going on to the big leagues of motorsports, perhaps even NASCAR. He had won a United Racing Club sprint title and tallied 11 feature wins. He was considered one of the best sprint talents in the area.

He even ran some events, about a dozen, with the nationally recognized World of Outlaw sprint cars including races on the big and fast Syracuse dirt mile. However, he felt it was time to move on.

With race cars from Langhorne’s Andy Belmont and using his own finances, Haggenbottom took a crack at ARCA racing. It was one step away from NASCAR Camping World Trucks and Nationwide cars.

He ran about eight events during 2003 and 2004. It was all out of his own wallet. He managed an impressive 14th-place finish on the one-mile dirt track at Springfield, Ill., after starting ninth, and had a strong run at Pocono to show for his efforts.

Efforts to secure sponsorship to finance a full season of racing in the ARCA series fell short and Mike was forced to give up his dreams of NASCAR and the big leagues.

He did get away from driving race cars for a few years as he had some changes in his personal life and built up his landscape business and that is thriving these days. He continues to work with ASI Racewear selling T-shirts at race events.

He will be at Tony Stewart’s big racing equipment show in Indianapolis in a couple weeks and then will be part of the very popular Motorsports 2013 Race Car and Trade Show in Oaks from Jan. 18-20 to represent ASI.

Come the 2013 racing season, Mike and his crew chief/car owner John Haggenbottom, his brother, will be back to try for a second straight title. There are about a dozen TSRS sprint car races planned for nearby New Egypt, N.J., Speedway, a few at Bridgeport, N.J., Speedway, and a few others yet to be announced.

The veteran racer is content with his racing efforts for now, but would consider an opportunity to return to the traveling sprint car wars with the United Racing Club. Though he does not like the travel, the expense of the travel, he does welcome the challenges of the more powerful 360 sprint cars.

There are plans in place with the TSRS sprints to improve the money being paid to the racers and making some other changes. However, the concept of keeping the costs under control will not change, and that is one of the reason Haggenbottom and the other racers competing on the 305 sprint circuit seem to enjoy it despite basically racing for a trophy.

And Southampton’s Joe Grandinetti works 24/7 at making racing better for the 305 sprint group, and that makes Mike happy to be a part of it … for now.

Main Street committee: ‘Now the fun really will begin’

As Concord’s Main Street redesign project moves forward, members of the city’s advisory committee envision a bold new streetscape with public art, landscaping, fountains, historical displays or statues. But their report includes general ideas rather than specific designs, and four committee members told the Monitor’s editorial board yesterday that they left it open-ended on purpose.

“Now the challenge is to put it all together,” City Engineer Ed Roberge told the editorial board yesterday morning. “And while (the report) is generally vague, we’re certainly excited about it because it gives us a lot of direction; it gives us a lot of flexibility, and we’re not just limited to option A, B and C. We’re going to go A through G now and really see what . . . this downtown can be, what can we turn it into without being overly restrictive in terms of the direction.”

The committee’s report recommends a two-lane Main Street with a crossable median, wider sidewalks and parallel parking along one side or sections of Main Street as long as the loss of parking spaces between Centre and Pleasant streets is limited. The Concord City Council voted to accept the report Monday night, but is not bound by the recommendations. The city has hired CMA Engineers and consulting firm McFarland-Johnson, Inc. to work with its own engineers and planners and develop final design options for the $7.85 million project.

“The real tension that we ran into is you want to make sure that there’s enough room to do bold things on the sidewalk and have public space that creates a sense of community,” said developer Steve Duprey, the committee’s chairman. “And if you don’t consider the possibility of parallel parking, if we just rule that out right at the outset, you’re basically tying the designers’ hands.”

Duprey and committee members Rich Woodfin, Jay Surdukowski and Sue McCoo said yesterday that their lengthy debates about parking, sidewalk width, traffic flow and bicycle lanes set the stage for building an attractive streetscape.

Main Street shouldn’t look like a long, straight bowling alley, Woodfin said, and design elements would break up the space.

“Here’s a Main Street . . . that’s well-lit at night so people feel safe, there aren’t any dark shadows,” Duprey said, describing a possible vision for Main Street. “That there are some buildings that are lit up and have colored lights or whatever depending on the theme. That we have lots of colorful banners that change, so we don’t have banners that hang out there for eight months a year like we do now.”

“Maybe it’s in front of the State House plaza where there are four or five Abbot-Downing coaches for the history fans. Maybe it’s a little farther down that there are the bronze statues of everybody who’s been president who’s won the New Hampshire primary. That farther down . . . there’s the fountain area where mothers or fathers like to take their children to play. If you combine that, and then you were ever fortunate enough to get heated streets, which everybody agrees is the single most transformative piece, can you see the advertising campaign? ‘Why go to the mall and fight your way across a slippery, snowy parking lot?’ ”

Other ideas the committee members brainstormed during their meetings and highlighted yesterday morning include developing a smart phone application to guide visitors around downtown, plants, flowers, high-speed internet and uniform newspaper boxes. The city council will eventually determine which streetscape elements are affordable, but Duprey said the city could also find other grants to fund public art displays and innovative ideas.

McCoo said the committee members didn’t believe when they began meeting in September that they’d develop an open-ended report. A presentation by City Planner Gloria McPherson with photos of other cities’ streetscape details began to change their goals, she said.

“That’s when all of us decided that it was not our job to make the final decisions,” McCoo said. “Because once she showed you all of those things you were like, the possibilities . . . we didn’t need to micromanage anymore.”

The 17-member committee was appointed in September to develop recommendations for the project, for which the city received a $4.71 million grant in June.

Surdukowski said the committee’s report isn’t vague because it provides parameters for important issues like parking.

“I think what we were trying to do was create the staging for that kind of detail work,” Surdukowski said. “And I think we’ve got the staging now. Now the fun really will begin.”

The city has March 28 and June 28 deadlines to submit plans for the federal grant. Roberge said final designs will go before the city council for approval, and the process will include other opportunities for public input.

“All of our projects are kind of community-based,” Roberge said. “We don’t do anything in a vacuum anymore. Ten, 15 years ago, all the sudden you’d see a major project crop up and nobody would’ve known about it. That’s not the way we do business now.”

The advisory committee’s report asked that the committee remain in place to review design options.

“We just want them to think big on the streetscape and as the designs evolve whether its through the city council, whether its through meeting with individual stakeholder groups, whether its our committee, just run those by, because everybody’s going to have an opinion,” Duprey said.

The creativity should include a marketing campaign to encourage support for Main Street businesses during construction, Duprey said. The committee’s report asks the city to hire a local marketing firm for that purpose, which Duprey estimated would cost between $50,000 and $100,000. Construction is scheduled to begin next September and be complete by 2015. Downtown business owners have told the advisory committee that they fear shoppers won’t want to visit Main Street while it’s under construction.

“That’s what sort of keeps me awake when I think about this, that if we don’t execute that well and also improve the perception that you can park downtown, people go, ‘I don’t like to go to the mall but I’m going to go there because it’s easier right now than going downtown,’ ” Duprey said. “That’s really my only substantive fear. And I think we can handle that.”

McCoo, who owns Capitol Craftsman Romance Jewelers on North Main Street, said business owners must remain optimistic through the construction.

“We just have to stay positive and say, ‘Okay, how can we go through a challenge?’ ” she said. “Because we know in five years we’re all going to go, ‘Well, what took us so long, why didn’t we do this?’ But we have to get from here to there.”

(Laura McCrystal can be reached at 369-3312 or lmccrystal@cmonitor.com or on Twitter @lmccrystal.)

McKinney home takes on new look for annual Christmas Holiday Tour

pStaci and Toby Hiatt decorate the entrance of their home on Red Brush Road. The couple and their families worked on the restoration project for nine months./p

Staci and Toby Hiatt decorate the entrance of their home on Red Brush Road. The couple and their families worked on the restoration project for nine months.

slideshow

pToby and Staci Hiatt have renovated the former McKinney home on Red Brush Road. The home is included on the Christmas Tour of Homes Dec. 1 and 2./p

Toby and Staci Hiatt have renovated the former McKinney home on Red Brush Road. The home is included on the Christmas Tour of Homes Dec. 1 and 2.

slideshow

Toby and Staci Hiatt were planning to build a new home, but when a For Sale sign popped up in the yard of the McKinney House on Red Brush Road, the young couple decided to take a look.

Located near his family, the house is in a great location and they loved the mountain views, so that was a plus. For 25 years the house had been empty and the lawn was overgrown. Deciding that the house had great potential, the couple purchased it in March 2011 and began the nine-month process of renovating and updating the house and making it their home.

To say the renovation was a family affair is an understatement, said the pair.

Built in 1901 with hand-made brick, the structure features a broad front porch with a wide central hall leading to the back porch. The bedrooms were at the front of the house, and the living room and dining room behind with a kitchen just off the back porch. The home had broad heartpine floors and bead-board on the 12-foot ceilings. Materials from the renovation were saved and reused or repurposed.

Toby Hiatt’s uncle, Todd Tucker, worked with the couple to discuss their ideas, and he then “ran with it” to help make the renovations for the home. They stated that “Todd was the mastermind behind the project.”

Hiatt’s grandfather, Fred Hiatt, worked every day doing everything from laying brick to trim work, Toby Hiatt said.

The original granite steps to the front porch were salvaged and placed at the rebuilt front porch and the original floors, doors, door hardware, and bead-board ceilings were saved. Handrails for the staircase were built by Hiatt’s dad, Chuck Hiatt, who used old timbers from the home. The staircase leads to the former attic, now turned into a spacious great room/ game room with a beautiful view.

The kitchen and bathrooms were family projects with granite counter tops being built by uncle Mark Hiatt of MM Granite. Toby Hiatt did much of the tile work, while his dad did the cabinets, incorporating glass work from windows from the property. The kitchen island includes a post from the original front porch. A bedroom window is now the kitchen door. The view from the kitchen sink is of Pilot Mountain.

The master bedroom, formerly the dining room, has the original hearth and built-in shelves. The former kitchen is now the grand master bath, with walk-in closet and laundry that wraps to the new tiled sun room, which was formerly the back porch. The original brick wall is now exposed in the bathroom, as are the wide timbers at the bathroom windows.

The landscaping plan and installation was completed by Hiatt’s mother, Tonya Hiatt. They used low shrubs as would be period appropriate for this home with a wide front porch and new back deck with views of Pilot Mountain.

Staci Hiatt’s dad, Tim Welch, and mother, Lou Anne White, were on site with the new homeowners especially during the final crunch time completing many of the final touches.

The Hiatts said that they couldn’t have done it without the help, knowledge and skill of their families.

Their home will be open for the Mount Airy Restoration Foundation’s Tour of Homes on Dec. 1 (11 a.m. – 5 p.m.) and Dec. 2 (1 p.m. – 5 p.m.). Tickets are $15 each and are available at the Chamber of Commerce, Main Street, Mount Airy 336-786-6116. Tickets may be used on both days of the tour.

Contact Eleanor Powell at epowell@heartlandpublications.com or call 719-1933.

£500k landscaping project starts

11:00 am, November 27, 2012

A Truro-based landscape architect will see plans for a £500k scheme turned into reality over the next two months as work starts on the project.

Michael Hawes (left) from Mei Loci has started work on landscaping the £6.2m St Austell Business Park for St Austell Print Company’s MD, Peter Moody (r)

Michael Hawes, who runs Mei Loci in Lemon Street with his wife, Trish, will oversee the external landscaping work at the £6.2m St Austell Business Park in Carclaze.

Michael Hawes, who started Mei Loci with Trish Hawes in March, said: “This has been a fantastic project for us to work on over the last seven months as we have a client who believes in the best for the project and his team.

“It’s traditionally difficult as a landscape architect to keep the initial ideas in place through to completion generally due to budgetary constraints.”

The development of the business park is being driven by Peter Moody, managing director of St Austell Printing Company. He is creating a new home for the company, as well as providing 22 units for other businesses.

“Credit to Peter for pushing forward with this,” Hawes added.

“Peter is adamant that the external works are just as important as the building itself in creating a fantastic working environment.”

Mei Loci together with the site’s architects, ALA Architects, and construction company, Dawnus, is working towards a BREEAM Excellent rating.

As well as covering excavations, roads, surfacing and lighting, the scheme will also include planting, landscaping and pools.

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His driving passion: Butcher loves cars, loves guiding students more

His driving passion: Butcher loves cars, loves guiding students more

Published 12:01am Monday, November 26, 2012

FERRIDAY — Most people know Fred Butcher as the athletic director at Natchez High School and, previously, long-time principal at Ferriday High School.

Few know, however, that he has a love for classic cars, and for the longest time wanted to own one.

“Four to five years ago, my wife, mother-in-law and children gave me a gift that would enhance my dream to get a fancy car,” Butcher said.

And he eventually purchased a 1972 Cutlass Oldsmobile, which Butcher said came with original equipment.

“I actually had it in the (NHS homecoming) parade,” Butcher said. “My plan is to have it in a condition to where, when I retire, I can go to car shows.”

His love for the ’72 Cutlass is one of many hats Butcher wears. He is also a member of the Concordia Parish School Board.

Butcher said with the help of mechanics Eric Stewman and George Barber, he’s able to keep the car in good condition.

“Finding parts is not easy,” Butcher said. “I have very good mechanics. With them, we can either figure out the problem or almost make a part.”

Butcher said he tries to rub the car down at least once a week to keep it looking spiffy.

“If the weather is nice and I’m riding around in it, I might rub it down a couple of times a week,” he said.

If Butcher has a first love, though, it’s not his classic car, but the many students he’s been able to impact over the years. A life-long resident of Concordia Parish, Butcher spent 24 years as principal at Ferriday High School before taking over NHS athletics five years ago. During his time in Ferriday, Butcher said several things he did helped prepare him for the job he has now.

“Being principal calls for a high level of organization,” Butcher said. “You’re trying to hire a staff that can take care of all the programs.”

That includes Ferriday athletics, which Butcher said he stressed the importance of while he was over the school.

“When I went to Ferriday High, the athletic program wasn’t very good,” Butcher said. “We hired some good coaches there.”

The biggest thing, though, was instilling discipline in the student body, and Butcher said the key there was being fair and consistent.

“You have to impose discipline to a certain point until they hopefully become self-disciplined,” Butcher said of the students.

And Butcher said one of the most rewarding things was seeing a young student come into high school and leave as a mature young adult with dreams for their lives.

Academics and athletics both provide a means for discipline to be instilled in young people, and Butcher said the two complement each other well when it comes to discipline.

“If you can improve your discipline in the classroom, you can improve it in athletics,” Butcher said. “A lot of people see sports as a strength-and-conditioning game, but a lot of times you have to make decisions in a split second (when you’re playing).”

After so many years in Concordia Parish, Butcher said he was ready for a change when the NHS athletic director position came open.

“I felt I had the background and administrative expertise, because we had some success with athletics and band (at Ferriday High),” Butcher said. “I thought it would be a good fit for me, the students and the coaching staffs.”

NHS’s athletic programs have seen good success under Butcher, but Butcher said the credit doesn’t go to him alone.

“If you’re surrounded by good coaching staffs, it helps with your academic program and with discipline,” Butcher said. “For most good coaches, time on the clock doesn’t mean anything to them, because most are workaholics.”

In addition, the NHS Booster Club also plays a big role in the success of the programs.

“They’ve always been important, but for the last three years since the funds have gotten short, they’ve stepped up and gone above and beyond duty,” Butcher said.

“They’re few in numbers, but they make a bold statement. They always support us and come up with new ideas, and that’s what we need, not only for fundraisers, but discipline- and academic-wise.”

NHS head football coach Lance Reed said Butcher’s been a positive influence in the entire athletic department since taking over.

“He’s done a great job,” Reed said. “He’s the ultimate professional. He’s the kind of guy you can learn a lot from, and he’s all about the kids doing things the right way.”

Reed also said Butcher’s previous administrational experience has been invaluable for the position Butcher is in now.

“He has a wealth of knowledge and experience,” Butcher said. “He knows the best methods to handle certain situations, and he’s really an asset to the program.”

Since Butcher enjoys helping students mature into young adults, Butcher said being over athletics is a good venue for him.

“It helps mold character in young people,” Butcher said. “Good coaches probably do 50 percent coaching and 50 percent counseling. Teaching is an important part of that also. When you combine coaching and teaching, you have the opportunity to mold character.”

Butcher also has the unique perspective of observing both Natchez-Adams and Concordia Parish school districts, since Butcher is a board member in Concordia.

“It’s a challenge,” Butcher admitted. “I can learn from both situations, but the common denominator is the kids are the No. 1 focus in both places.”

The size of the student population and the need to develop character in both student bodies are two major similarities between both districts, Butcher said.

“Character building is something that’s important for all kids in this day and age,” Butcher said. “You also have to work hard to get the parents involved.”

Even with all of his time as an athletic director, school board member and classic car owner, Butcher still has a surprise or two up his sleeve.

“I do landscaping on the side,” Butcher said. “I like playing around in my yard. I do a few jobs in the fall, but I concentrate on it in the spring when the plants are fresh and the weather is warmer.”

Residents to have a say on plans for 80 houses

Residents to have a say on plans for 80 houses

By David Morgan

HOLMES Chapel residents are being urged to have their say on plans to build 80 houses in the village.

Persimmon Homes’ blueprints will be on display in the school room of the Victoria Club in Victoria Avenue between 2pm and 7pm on Friday.

Developers will also be on hand to talk to residents about the proposed site on the north side of Middlewich Road, between the Ravenscroft estate and Cotton Hall.

The scheme has yet to be formally submitted to Cheshire East Council.

Neil Follows, managing director of Persimmon Homes North West, said: “We genuinely want to gauge public opinion to ensure any application proposed by Persimmon Homes has been thoroughly considered by the community it will serve, as well as introducing them to our ideas for the site in terms of highways, ecology and landscaping.

“Our plans for the site include 80 new family homes, of which 30 per cent would be affordable.

“There would be public open space and a new children’s play area within the site and Persimmon Homes would be making contributions towards education provision, open space and sports facilities locally.”

But Stuart Gammon, chairman of Holmes Chapel Partnership, told the Guardian that the community’s initial reaction to the plans has been negative.

He said: “The general feeling is: ‘Why do we need more houses?’ “There are already more than 200 houses set to be built between the former Sanofi Aventis and Fine Decor brownfield sites which have both been given the go ahead.

“People have said we’ve got enough traffic on Middlewich Road without putting another source of traffic there.

“We could have between 80 and 150 extra cars on the road.”

Persimmon estimates that the development would generate more than £115,000 in council tax every year and almost £700,000 from the Government’s New Homes Bonus – to be spent on infrastructure.

Mr Follows said: “We see investment of this type in the north west as vital for economic recovery, creating new jobs both directly at the site and indirectly through the supply chain and within the community.”

Stuart added: “It’s important that people attend the public meeting, see what’s on offer and express their opinion.”

Those unable to attend can email feedback to: consultation.event@persimmonhomes.com

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UNL still looking for master plan ideas

If you don’t like the traffic around the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, blog about it, and the university will listen.

But time is running out. People have until the end of the year to submit comments on the university’s evolving campus and landscape master plan.

More than 1,500 students, faculty and staff have submitted feedback to UNL so far, expressing concerns about traffic and parking, voting on ideas they like and criticizing those they don’t — all on a website created for that purpose.

“I think we’ve had a pretty positive response to the different alternatives we presented,” said Jennifer Dam, assistant director of campus planning.

UNL hired Sasaki Associates of Watertown, Mass., to update its 2006 master plan, which was supposed to be in place until 2016.

Chancellor Harvey Perlman decided to update it because the university has grown. The new plan will be designed to accommodate Perlman’s goal of reaching 30,000 students by 2017.

“There’s been a real desire to strengthen our sense of place as an institution,” Dam said.

Sasaki presented three proposals for the city and east campuses during open houses last month. The proposals ranged from one that would use green spaces to emphasize different land uses to one that would extend malls on campus to create more green space.

Ideas presented include reverting Memorial Mall, now primarily a parking lot east of Memorial Stadium, into a green space. Another involves redesigning 14th Street where it crosses City Campus to include designated bike, shuttle and pedestrian lanes.

Planners also have proposed redesigning the traffic loop on East Campus so it moves traffic east and west instead of in a circle around campus.

“There are a lot of people who found the loop road to be disorienting and confusing,” Dam said.

Sasaki plans to host two more open houses, Monday and Tuesday.

Gina Ford, a principal at Sasaki, said the online feedback tools have been popular. The company launched a mapping tool that allows people to click on specific locations around campus and describe their experience with transportation, aesthetics and other issues in those locations.

It also recently launched a blogging tool created by Lincoln developer MindMixer that allows people to vote on and share ideas.

She said the more than 1,500 people who’ve commented on the master plan represent the most respondents the company has had at the hundreds of universities where it has hosted online feedback forums.

One person even uploaded a circulation scheme that provided Sasaki with some interesting ideas on improving transportation, Ford said.

“We found some good ideas we’ll share next week,” she said.

The company plans to combine the three proposals into one by January and finish the master plan by March. It hopes to gain approval from the University of Nebraska Board of Regents in late spring or early summer.

The drought in Nebraska has had some effect on the planning process, said UNL landscape architect Emily Casper. The university has had to reconsider its landscaping plan to reflect the scarcity of water, she said.

That means fewer plants that require large amounts of water.

“We have to think a lot differently about what kind of landscaping we use,” she said. “We can’t look exactly like all the other Big Ten schools.”

Vikings stadium: Good neighbor or not?

“Developers hate uncertainty, but now we know there will be a stadium on the site,” said Hanson-Willis, “and we’re confident that development will follow.”

Clearly, there’s plenty of room. A scan of the area reveals at least 40 potential building sites — all of them on surface parking lots — within a six-block radius of the new stadium. (Five pivotal blocks are owned by the Star Tribune.)

Even so, the project could falter if conflicts persist among the Vikings and their government partners. The dustup over seat licenses is just one example.

Consider the budget as a whole. By NFL standards, $975 million is not a lot of money for a covered stadium. The 49ers new open-air home in Santa Clara, Calif., is expected to cost $1.2 billion by the time it opens in 2014. Recently built stadiums for the Giants/Jets (open-air) and Cowboys (retractable roof) cost $1.6 billion and $1.2 billion respectively. Apportioning costs between the building itself and its immediate surroundings is another likely point of tension.

Adding to the problem are the state’s overly restrictive rules on urban redevelopment. In most states, Minneapolis could finance new streetscapes, lighting, landscaping and other enhancements near the stadium by borrowing against the expected higher property tax revenues that those enhancements produce. Minnesota law discourages the practice. Moreover, its tax laws may have the perverse effect of making surface parking lots near the stadium more attractive as surface lots than as new homes and offices. If so, legislative attention might be needed for a first-rate project to emerge.

Despite those barriers, the team, the stadium authority and the architects are getting plenty of advice on how to proceed. Aside from ideas gathered from citizens around the state, a talented 25-member implementation committee issued last month an impressive set of guidelines.

“We’re determined not to repeat the Metrodome’s mistake of creating a district that’s a ‘no man’s land’ except on game day,” said the committee’s cochair, Thomas Fisher, dean of the College of Design at the University of Minnesota.

On the committee’s wish list: a bold, transparent building with a “retractable feature” and plenty of windows; entrances that match the current grid of streets; primary orientation toward a plaza and the downtown skyline; a design that attracts a dense, mixed-use development on adjoining blocks; a use of sustainable building materials, and an emphasis on public transit.

“If we do this right, people will want to live and work in this area,” Fisher said. “My personal view is that this should be a dense urban district with development right up to the light-rail station across from the new stadium.”

Fisher and his cochair David Wilson, managing director of Accenture’s Minneapolis office, are on the right track. The key word for a successful stadium is livability. Yes, the building must be functional, perhaps even beautiful. But above all it should express itself on a human scale at street level. It should become a creature of its new surroundings.

The stadium’s plaza, for example, should be modest in size. The three-block expanse depicted in early drawings could easily become desolate and windswept for 330 days a year. Better to encourage clusters of new, mixed-use buildings around a smaller plaza to create a lively stadium district. Tree-lined streets with diagonal parking could be closed off on game day to create a pedestrian zone that accommodates both on-street tailgating and “railgating” (food trucks along 5th Street) for transit riders.

Such a district would attract fans not necessarily attending the game but wanting a game-day experience. “Our biggest competitor is HDTV,” said Lester Bagley, Vikings vice president, who anticipates a festival atmosphere outside the stadium — including, perhaps, a large screen to show the game.

While many fans are hoping for a retractable roof, there may be better (and more artful) ways to spend construction dollars. Movable roofs on football stadiums tend to be more like sunroofs than convertible tops. A better idea is a giant movable window that opens the stadium to a green plaza, a new transit station, a stadium district and the city beyond.

It is, after all, a lively stadium district that holds the key to success. Repeating the Metrodome mistake is not an option.

————-

Steve Berg, author of “Target Field: The New Home of the Minnesota Twins,” writes about urban design issues.

Big truths can be found in the world of microbes – Tribune

Jessica Walliser
Freelance Columnist
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review


Tribune-Review Horticulturist Jessica Walliser co-hosts ‘The Organic Gardeners’ at 7 a.m. Sundays on KDKA Radio. She is the author of several gardening books, including ‘Grow Organic’ and ‘Good Bug, Bad Bug.’

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Take it inside this growing season

garden qa: select lima variety with care

Evergreens are backbone of good winter gardens

garden qa: Grape vines need to be pruned

Holiday tours will visit houses, churches throughout region

Charity Christmas cards offering triple bang for the buck  

Holiday postmarks from certain towns are sought after

Greensburg Garden Center plans annual Xmas sale

Phipps offers a warm, homey look for Winter Flower Show

Wine is providing style season’s newest hue

Lincoln’s vulnerabilities keep his appeal strong even today

By Jessica Walliser

Published: Friday, November 23, 2012, 8:57 p.m.

Updated 5 hours ago

I love to read, but lately it seems the only books I have time to peruse are those related to gardening. Occasionally, I come across a few that are real winners and I feel they should be on every gardener’s bookshelf.

There are three books that are both educating and entertaining and, in my humble opinion, should be read by every gardener. Buy them, take them out of the library, or borrow them from a friend — they’d also make great holiday gifts for the gardener in your life.

Just when you think you have a grasp of “how to garden,â€� someone writes a book that shakes it all up … and the whole thing makes darned good sense. The authors have research to back up their ideas, they speak from experience, and they make a complicated topic easy to understand and incredibly readable.

Enter “Teaming with Microbes: A Gardener’s Guide to the Soil Food Web� by Jeff Lowenfels and Wayne Lewis. We are all taught ad nausea to pay attention to our soil and to spend lots of time amending it properly and working on creating a good base for our plants; but do we really do it, and do we do it right? “Teaming with Microbes� is an inside look at what’s really going on in our dirt and the amazing relationships between soil life and plant life.

Betcha didn’t know that a mere teaspoon of soil contains at least a billion bacteria and several yards of fungal threads (meaning an acre of soil contains over 2,000 pounds of bacteria — staggering!); and I’ll also betcha didn’t know that all this microscopic life is way more important to plant health than most of us ever thought — even us organic gardening junkies (trust me, you’ve got to read it to believe it!). The book’s second half is dedicated to teaching gardeners how to use all this information to care for their soil. You may think you’ve heard everything there is to hear about dirt, but this is pretty “ground-breaking� information and will surprise a lot of long time gardeners.

Another favorite read of the season is Paul Tukey’s “The Organic Lawn Care Manual: A Natural Low-Maintenance System for a Beautiful, Safe Lawn.� Tukey is the founder of safelawns.org and a self-professed “lawn man.� He worked as a professional landscaper for several years until he was diagnosed with acute pesticide poisoning from his use of conventional weed-killers.

“The Organic Lawn Care Manual� is incredibly detailed, covering everything from turf varieties, to organic fertilizers, to how to hire a lawn-care contractor. The book points out some major dangers to ourselves and the environment from the use of synthetic products and, more importantly, it hands you a step-by-step program to avoid them and still have a lush, healthy lawn. A worthwhile read, chock full of sensible information and science to back it up.

“The Elements of Organic Gardening� by Prince Charles and Stephanie Donaldson is not a “down and dirty� how-to gardening book, but it is interesting and deserves a place on the bookshelf (or coffee table!). The book details the prince’s personal philosophy on gardening and offers unique insight into the royal gardens and how they are maintained. The pictures are lush and the text is lighter than you’d expect from such a glossy, high-profile book.

I suspect that Donaldson did most of the writing (purely an assumption on my part), and her style is both beautiful and educational. I did learn some interesting things from “The Elements of Organic Gardening,� in particular about how livestock and poultry play an important role in the royal gardens, about British gardening history, and about some unusual pruning techniques. Not to mention all the great ideas I got from the book’s photographs that will translate surprisingly well into my own small garden.

Cozy up and crack one open (a book, I mean). What a perfect way to spend the coming winter.

Horticulturist Jessica Walliser co-hosts “The Organic Gardeners� at 7 a.m. Sundays on KDKA Radio. She is the author of several gardening books, including “Grow Organic� and “Good Bug, Bad Bug.� Her website is www.jessicawalliser.com.

Send your gardening or landscaping questions to tribliving@tribweb.com or The Good Earth, 503 Martindale St., 3rd Floor, D.L. Clark Building, Pittsburgh, PA 15212.

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