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Reviving a Neighborhood

By now you may have been to — or heard of — the Arcata Playhouse, the cozy theatre on the ground floor of the Ninth Street Creamery building, with its roller-rink floor and rustic charm.

The pothole-spotted streets crisscrossing the neighborhood around the playhouse have long cloaked a concentration of creativity, from potters and stained glass-makers to painters, dancers and kinetic sculpture makers.

While the Arcata Community Recycling Center was a regular draw, and Halloween brought costumed crowds to the Kinetic Lab’s haunted house, it wasn’t until the last six or so years, with the opening of the Arcata Playhouse, that the area began to have a more public face.

The Playhouse reels in an eclectic potpourri of dance troupes, plays, bands and more and — next week — is expanding its scope outside the theater walls for an ambitious three-day festival stretched across several city blocks.

“The festival explores the whole neighborhood and what’s possible here,” said Arcata Playhouse co-owner Jackie Dandeneau. She wants to “blow the doors off a little bit.”

This re-envisioning is intended to put a public face on what’s becoming known as Arcata’s Creamery District, an outwardly industrial gateway to the Bottoms nestled under the asymmetrical creamery. Local artists, property owners and the playhouse owners dreamed up the “Creamery District” name a couple of years ago, to give the neighborhood a stronger identity as they worked with the city to improve it.

The facelift is moving quickly, and a year after receiving a $50,000 National Endowment for the Arts grant, Dandeneau and her husband David Ferney, who co-owns the playhouse, are putting together a summer spectacular.

With a healthy turnout, they expect the broader community can see the first results of a year-and-a-half-long collaboration of business owners, artists, residents and the city.

In the last several years, the district has seen new businesses, landscaping and public art. Small, affordable offices in the Greenway Partners building (formerly Yakima) now house the Northcoast Environmental Center, the Humboldt-Del Norte Film Commission and graphic designers Sideshow Design. Most recently, the playhouse commissioned works ranging from an audio installation to urban-style art on nearby storage units.

Aging industrial areas like the Creamery District can be havens for artists and startup businesses, said 3rd District Supervisor Mark Lovelace. “You start with the areas where there’s a lot of vacant space,” he said. “It doesn’t need to be the most attractive of areas initially because its inward work, it’s not customer-driven work. After a while redevelopment is driven just by the amount of activity going on there.”

Jewelry maker Holly Yashi moved into the Creamery building around 1985. “It was the right place at the right price,” co-owner Paul Lubitz said. When a building across the street went up for sale, Holly Yashi bought it and moved in, eventually adding 10,000 square feet to the facility. Later, in 2010, it opened a retail shop. That had been co-owner Holly Hosterman’s idea, and Lubitz had reservations at first. “We’re hardly on the plaza,” he said. “Even the Arcata Plaza’s not Pier 39. It’s retail. It’s tough out there.”

But Hosterman’s vision turned out to be a success. Tourists and locals alike shop and watch jewelry-making in action in Holly Yashi’s fuschia-hued building. Lubitz credits part of that success to the draw of the playhouse, and he says the neighborhood would be even more successful with more artists and more reasons to stay — like food, beer and wine.

When the drop-off site of the now-defunct recycling center came up for sale, Holly Yashi pounced on it. While the new owners’ plans are “very up in the air,” Lubitz loosely envisions the 12,000-square-foot property as a kind of artists’ courtyard, where visitors can watch crafts being made and get food or a drink after a Playhouse show. They’ll give it a trial run at next week’s festival, with food, art demonstrations and festivities occupying the open air space.

“Everyone wants liveliness, they want art, they want life here,” Lubitz said.

They also welcome other businesses. The Creamery building hosts a solar refrigerator company and a dance studio along with artists’ studios.

What’s next? Ferney and Dandeneau plan to continue working with the city on ways to make the district more accessible from the plaza and beyond. That means better, contiguous lighting, safe crossings at K Street, and a look at traffic, parking, walking and bike paths.

Public Works Director Doby Class said Arcata has applied for a Caltrans grant to fund that development. “It’s a great project,” Class said, adding that the City Council recently designated the playhouse a “Local Arts Agency” to help it to secure more grant funding.

A proposed trail through the district, paralleling the unused rails on L Street, is in the environmental review stage, Class said, and expected to go before the California Transportation Commission in January.

Meanwhile, the neighborhood spirit is blossoming in other ways.

“Renegade gardening” has replaced rocky, weedy roadside grass patches with sunflowers and other colorful flora. After a day of planting earlier this month, three tall paintings appeared overnight at the end of Ninth Street, an uncommissioned gift from a mystery benefactor.

The revival has been driven by a good neighborhood communication, helped along by the liveliness of the playhouse, but its owners don’t want to claim too much credit. “We’re performers. We’re producers. We’re not civic organizers,” Dandeneau said.

Ferney and Dandeneau met in Edmonton, Canada. After traveling internationally for years, they were both hired by Dell’Arte. They opened the Arcata Playhouse together in 2007.

It was those years of travel and networking (“Once a street performer, always a street performer,” Dandeneau said) that gave them the contacts and know-how to attract talent for the playhouse — and for the upcoming festival. “Cross-pollinating” artists in and out of the area makes for a steady supply of talent, Dandeneau said.

Their motto: “Pay artists first,” even if it’s not much. “You’re not going to be able to give them a huge fee — if you can give them a good experience they’ll come back,” Dandeneau said.

They’ve paid out $250,000 to artists since the Playhouse opened in 2007, Ferney said, including $7,200 in commissioned street art this year. The pieces, imagined by five local artists, include sculpture, yarn-wrapped trees and an audio installation that will play during the creamery festival. They’re all outdoors.

Inspired by similar community-spurred neighborhood revitalizations in Portland and Detroit, Ferney and Dandeneau have long seen their neighborhood as ripe for revival. Their grant from the National Endowment of Arts’ helped bring their ideas to the attention of local businesses and governments, Dandeneau said.

“It put a huge stamp of credibility on the organization and the project,” she said. And while the city’s gotten on board, Dandeneau said, she hopes over time the county will do more to fully embrace the idea of the arts as an economic driver, in Arcata and beyond. County supervisors approved a $25,000 Headwaters Fund grant for the playhouse last year, and Dandeneau would like to see arts and culture highlighted in the county’s economic planning.

County Supervisor Lovelace said he’s a fan of the Creamery District revitalization, though its development is completely under the purview of the city.

“I’m all ears if there’s role for the county to play in developing that,” Lovelace said. “I think it’s really prime for a renaissance down there.”

Students soaking up conservation lessons

Counselor Morgan Smith realized Camp Odyssey had a hold on her during her son’s bath time last week.

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Homes & Gardens events in Oregon for Aug. 17-24

Events are free unless noted. Fees usually include materials; call to confirm. All area codes are 503 unless noted.

TOURS

Sabin Bee-friendly Garden
Get ideas for which plants are most attractive to bees and butterflies in these tours of yards in the Sabin neighborhood.
When: Front yard tours are offered daily at any hour through Sept. 2 (front yards are visible from sidewalk with signs posted).
Tickets: Free
Details: sabinpdx.org or info@habitatgardenspdx.com
Sponsor: Portland’s Office of Neighborhood Involvement and the Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods

Multnomah Garden Club
Tour historic Multnomah Village and beyond through private gardens. The seven gardens provide inspiration for native materials, small ponds and fountains and gardens for kids.
When: Noon-4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 17
Tickets: $15
Details: 704-0913

Manzanita Homes
Tour homes in the Manzanita and Neahkahnie beach areas.
When: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 24
Tickets: $10; available on tour day at the Pine Grove Community Club, 225 Laneda Ave., Manzanita
Details: 368-7002
Benefits: Kiwanis Club of Manza-Whee-Lem and Women’s Club of Manzanita North County

EVENTS

SATURDAY, AUG. 17

“Behind the Shoji”: Art and craft show features new artists and new works from longtime favorites. Japanese-inspired original artwork and gifts include handmade ceramics, glass, jewelry, textiles, furniture and more. During garden hours 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday, noon-7 p.m. Monday, through Sept. 8. Japanese Garden, 611 S.W. Kingston Ave.; free with garden admission ($6.75-$9.50); http://japanesegarden.com or 223-1321

Art in the Garden: Monthly rotation of works by local artists inspired by the beauty of Lan Su Chinese Garden. August: Wuon Gean Ho and Ian Boyden. Ends Aug. 31. Lan Su Chinese Garden, Northwest Third Avenue and Everett Street; free with garden admission ($7-$9.50); www.lansugarden.org or 228-8131

TUESDAY, AUG. 20

SATURDAY, AUG. 24

Greater Portland Iris Society: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday-Sunday. Includes demonstrations on how to lift and divide your iris plants. Aug. 24-25 and Sept. 21-22: beardless irises. Portland Nursery, 5050 S.E. Stark St.; greaterportlandirissociety.org or 360-835-1016

Dahlia Festival: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday-Monday, Aug. 24-26 and Aug. 31-Sept. 2. Flowers for sale, food vendors, face-painting and bounce house, live music, demonstrations and more. Swan Island Dahlias, 995 N.W. 22nd Ave., Canby; www.dahlias.com or 266-7711

Jewel Box Plant Sale: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Seven specialty nurseries — members of the Cascade Nursery Trail — get together for this sale. Sebright Gardens, 7185 Lakeside Drive N.E., Salem; cascadenurserytrail.com or 463-9615

CLASSES + DEMONSTRATIONS

SATURDAY, AUG. 17

Summertime Bonsai Maintenance for Beginners: 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Tsugawa staff will share knowledge and advice for keeping your bonsai in top shape during summer and demonstrate what that means. Registration required. Tsugawa Nursery, 410 E. Scott Ave., Woodland, Wash.; http://tsugawanursery.com or 360-225-8750

SUNDAY, AUG. 18

Basics of Bamboo in the Garden: 1 p.m. Portland Nursery, 5050 S.E. Stark St.; www.portlandnursery.com or 231-5050

Fairy Garden: 1 p.m. Plants used are mostly herbs, so they can be grown indoors or out. The Wade Creek House, 664 Wade St., Estacada; $35, includes all materials; thewadecreekhouse.blogspot.com or 630-7556

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 21

Nature Illustration for Children: Ages 9-14 study how flowers, leaves and other things in nature are constructed and create a detailed botanical drawing from life. Supplies provided. Registration required. One-day class offered weekly 9 a.m.-noon. Wednesdays, through Aug. 28. Leach Botanical Garden, 6704 S.E. 122nd Ave.; $13-$15 per class, $42-$50 series; www.leachgarden.org or 823-1671

“Gardens of Eatin’: Edible Landscaping: 5-6 p.m. Learn easy organic care and best varieties of berries, grapes, tree fruits, culinary herbs and more. Hosted by Metro and OSU Extension Service. Moreland Farmers Market, Southeast Bybee Boulevard and 14th Avenue; morelandfarmersmarket.org or 341-9350

FRIDAY, AUG. 23

Botanical Workshop: Three-day botanical watercolor workshop with René Eisenbart. Develop skills for rendering detail, study value and composition, and explore creative use of color. Registration accepted until Aug. 22. Sessions held 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday-Sunday, Aug. 23-25. Oregon Society of Artists, 2185 S.W. Park Place; $275; http://rene-art.com or 890-9668 or rene.art@gmail.com

SATURDAY, AUG. 24

The Many Pleasures of Irises: 1 p.m. Chad Harris, of Mt. Pleasant Iris, president of the Greater Portland Iris Society, talks about irises that can be grown in the Northwest, with their varied cultural needs: wet to dry, sun to shade. Plus demonstration on dividing. Portland Nursery, 5050 S.E. Stark St.; www.portlandnursery.com or 231-5050

Click for public gardens.

Calendar items run on a space-available basis. Please submit notices at least one month before the event to Homes Gardens Listings Desk, The Oregonian, 1320 S.W. Broadway, Portland, OR 97201; or by email (send as a plain text file, with Homes Gardens in the subject line) to listings@oregonian.com. Except for cancellations and corrections, notices cannot be accepted by phone.

Work on developing overlay district in Clemmons advancing – Winston


Posted: Wednesday, August 14, 2013 12:00 am


Work on developing overlay district in Clemmons advancing

Lisa O’Donnell/Winston-Salem Journal

Winston-Salem Journal

CLEMMONS — Plans for a possible makeover in a key business district on Lewisville-Clemmons Road are inching along, with the Village of Clemmons’ council deciding Monday to form an advisory group of property owners that would give input on what the district would look like.


Clemmons officials, acting on a goal spelled out in the village’s comprehensive plan, have had discussions with business and property owners along Lewisville-Clemmons Road for several weeks, explaining the idea behind an overlay district.

Such a district would hold property and business owners to higher zoning standards than are currently in place. The changes could involve such things as the consolidation of some driveways to reduce the number of curb cuts on the road, façade renovations and landscaping improvements, and would likely be incremental.

Money from grants and private-public partnerships could be available to help property owners pay for some of the changes.

The advisory committee, with input from Clemmons officials, will make the final decision.

“ We need to move forward,” Meagan Ledbetter, the village planner, told the council. “We need a committee to look at ideas and put structure in place.”

The goal of the committee is to present something to the council by March when it holds its annual retreat.

Council members agreed that the committee should be made up of property owners, representing a cross-section of businesses along the proposed overlay district, which would be on the south side of Interstate 40, the traditional heart of the village’s business district.

Ledbetter will work with the council members to find potential members for the advisory committee. She said her hope is to have the committee formed by September.

In other news, Village Manager Gary Looper told the council that construction of the roundabout at Peace Haven and Harper roads should begin soon. Utilities are currently being moved at that intersection and construction is impending, he said.

“ They certainly want to get that finished before bad weather sets in,” he said.

Also, construction of a sidewalk in front of Tanglewood should begin in October. The sidewalk is part of a plan that will connect Middlebrook Road with the new Clemmons Medical Center.

lodonnell@wsjournal.com

(336) 727-7420

on

Wednesday, August 14, 2013 12:00 am.

Livingston Manor wins top Sullivan Renaissance award – Times Herald

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LOCH SHELDRAKE — The November 2012 fire that destroyed the landmark Hoos Building devastated Livingston Manor’s business district but not the hamlet’s spirit.

Two months later, a larger-than-expected crowd attended “visioning” workshops to craft new ideas for the hamlet. And this summer, a volunteer army led by Livingston Manor Renaissance undertook one of those ideas: a face-lift for Main Street and the town’s information booth.

Their efforts were rewarded Monday when Sullivan Renaissance named Livingston Manor the winner of the $25,000 “Golden Feather” award, the top prize in Renaissance’s annual contest for community beautification projects.

“It was just a whole town effort — from individuals to organizations,” said Kathy Fries, a member of Livingston Manor Renaissance. “It was a terrific summer.”

Renaissance handed out more than $100,000 in grants and scholarships during a nearly two-hour ceremony at SUNY Sullivan.

Friends of Liberty Library won the $3,000 top prize in “Category A,” the smallest of three categories for community projects, for landscaping around the library. Seeds of Hope/Monticello Rotary claimed the $10,000 first prize in “Category B” for a memorial garden at Town of Thompson Park.

“It’s so nice to have these little gems,” Legislature Chairman Scott Samuelson said. “And it’s nice to see them spreading and spreading.”

Manor won in “Category C,” with volunteers putting in hundreds of hours to refurbish a caboose that doubles as an information booth, install a new business director and repaint trash cans. The hamlet also revived a garden and replaced glass light-fixture globes melted by the Hoos fire.

Livingston Manor Renaissance had “far more support” this year, Fries said.

Sullivan Renaissance also recognized its first “Mitvah” award winner, the Skolya summer camp in South Fallsburg. Skolya was one of five camps competing against each other in what will be an annual contest aimed at drawing camps into beautification efforts.

In addition to planting gardens, Skolya repaired fencing, painted and did general cleanup, said Mendy Reichman, the camp’s manager. “There’s still a lot to do,” Reichman said.

lsparks@th-record.com

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Don Spatz: Day job one thing, night job another

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City Hall’s skeleton staff has left it with plenty of empty offices scattered throughout its four floors.

But one of them is now occupied by Council President Francis Acosta, who uses it several times a week to meet with people and groups who want to talk about city issues.

Acosta is an assistant manager at Fulton Bank’s branch on North Fifth Street.

He said too many visitors with questions or suggestions or complaints about the city were stopping by his bank office, straining the relationship with his bosses.

So he called Mayor Vaughn Spencer last year to ask if he could use one of City Hall’s empty offices instead.

The first two first-floor locations didn’t work for various reasons. Acosta finally got an office on the second floor, not far from City Clerk Linda Kelleher’s office. It’s a spot council uses for committee meetings.

Acosta’s office opened in early July.

He said he’s there two or three evenings a week, after his banker’s job ends.

The city gave the office a new coat of paint, but Acosta said he provided most of the furnishings, such as his desk and the photos and decorations on the walls. It’s not overstuffed; it’s functional.

Other than the paint and the electricity for the lights, it’s not costing the city anything, he said.

But it’s saving his hide at the bank.

???

Reading’s Gateway Initiative is focused on prettying up the “Welcome to Reading” signs at each of the city’s 16 major entrances.

Those entrances range from the Penn and Bingaman and Buttonwood Street bridges to Oak Lane, Kutztown Road and Perkiomen Avenue.

Some of the signs are missing, and some are on the wrong side of the street.

However, Initiative leader Steve Harrity said the group wants to get a common design for more decorative signs, and maybe also landscaping around them.

Good ideas, but council members had other ideas at last week’s update.

Councilman Jeff Waltman said work on the bigger ones first: the Penn Street Bridge and the Lindbergh Viaduct.

He said he’s embarrassed because the recently renovated Lindbergh Viaduct already is covered in weeds.

“If we can’t keep it clean, the signs don’t matter,” he said.

True, true, but this is not a question of which should come first. Both should.

Contact Don Spatz: 610-371-5027 or dspatz@readingeagle.com.

Administration and Public Works Committee

Here’s a recap of our live coverage of this evening’s Evanston City Council Administration and Public Works Committee meeting.

The meeting was scheduled to begin at 5:45 p.m.

A packet with information on tonight’s agenda items is available online.

Meeting called to order at 5:54 p.m.

Public comment

Rubin Aluno of Whole Foods at 1640 Chicago Ave. speaks in favor of the store’s request for a license to expand its liquor sales from beer and wine to include hard liquor.

Junad Rizki expresses concern about electrical safety at the water plant.

Agenda items

Minutes approved.

Payroll approved.

Bills approved.

Water utility electrical study. $73K contract with Greeley and Hansen of Chicago. Dave Stoneback, utilities director, says new OSHA regulations require new labeling of electrical equipment — that will be part of the scope of the study. Says regarding the fire at the water plant, the city’s insurer decided to pay the claim without doing a complete study to determine the exact cause. Contract approved.

Vehicle and equipment purchases … nine items totalling $434K. Approved.

New World Financial System implementation contract amendment with Schaefer Consulting. Assistant City Manager Marty Lyons says that while the city will be paying the contractor more, it will actually save money — because it will cost less than having city staff do the work. (City IT department has lost some staff recently, necessicitating the change.

New TV camera system for council chambers and Room 2404. $97K contract with AVI Systems of Bensenville. Approved.

McDaniel Avenue street lighting project change order $13K. More lights for McDaniel between Crain and Dempster streets. Approved.

Church Street street lighting project change order $80K. More lights near Evanston Township High School. Approved.

Utility easement for Trader Joe’s development. Approved.

Church Street Boat Ramp grant application to the state department of natural resources. Parks Director Doug Gaynor says over 100 boats use the ramp — including the DNR and the Coast Guard. Approved.

Sheridan Road/Chicago Avenue bike path state grant application for federal funds.  Total project cost $1.9 million. Grant might fund nearly $1.5 million. Would be off-road (on parkway) path from Chicago Avenue to Lincoln Street on the east side of the road by the NU campus.

Public Works Director Suzette Robinson says would reduce current sidewalk width from 12 to 8 feet and add a separate 8 foot wide bike path. Says project would also create landscaping to encourage pedestrians to use crosswalks at intersections.

Also have two-way bike path on Chicago Avenue from Davis Street to Sheridan Road.

Says assuming grant is receved there’ll be “a tremendous amount of public input” before final designs are developed for the project.

Alderman Jane Grover says Wilmette did beautiful bike lanes on Sheridan a few years ago — but Evanston at this point has trecherous riding conditions now on Sheridan. Approved.

Bike share system grant application. Related story. Catherine Hurley, sustainable programs coordinator , says the program is idea for short point-to-point trips. Can pick up a bike and drop it off at any station in the system.

Can help people get from transit hubs to their homes or workplaces.

Says there are at least 20 large programs run by city or county governments across the United States.

Says there are a lot of advantages to being part of the Chicago system — because it gives people access to bikes throughout the area.

Says grants will be awarded in January.

Initial proposal is for seven stations with ten bikes at each station. Have tentative ideas for locations.

Alderman Ann Rainey, 8th Ward, objects to the lack of any stations in the proposal on Howard Street.

Public Works Director Suzette Robinson says wanted to get locations that would be most likely to get high density of use — and then building out the system further from there.

Says there will be additional grant funding opportunities each year.

Rainey asks that the proposal should be held. Calls it “a slap in the face.”

City Manager Wally Bobkiewicz says you can have a station. Says could have nine stations — one at Howard and one on Dempster. Would cost about $20K extra for additional stations.

Alderman Delores Holmes, 5th Ward, says its glaring that there’s no locations on the west side.

Hurley says would eventually like to have stations every half mile — but that would take 12 to 15 stations.

Chicago, she says is trying to have stations every quarter mile.

Bobkiewicz says Hurley initially asked for 14 stations. But when looked at match cost and the ongoing operating costs — he thought that was too much.

Says ongoing cost for the city could be $60K to $80K.

Depends on how much city wants to spend.

Rainey says she’s not asking for more stations — just spreading them outl.

Alderman Peter Braithwaite, 2nd Ward, agrees to spread them out.

Rainey says — its about who would ride a bike and you’re saying that we [in South Evanston] wouldn’t.

Committee votes to approve the bike sharing program.

Whole Foods liquor license change. Approved.

Howard-Hartrey TIF district expansion. Proposal designed to add the 222 Hartrey building proposed for new Autobarn location to the tax increment financing district. TIF district had been extablished in 1992 for former Bell and Howell warehouse site. Now contains shopping center with Jewel, Target, Best Buy and OfficeMax. TIF is scheduled to expire in 2015. Proposal at this point just starts the process of expanding the TIF. Further reviews to come. Approved.

Discussion item on Northwestern University bus routes

City Manager Wally Bobkiewicz shows map of routes. Says Alderman Judy Fiske, 1st Ward, says has received complaints from residents about bus service that runs from 6 p.m. to 3 a.m. — serves Tech Institute and library.

Concerned about idling buses, etc.

Bobkiewicz says city staff met with NU offiicals this afternoon. NU said its a loop route and need to be able to make a loop. Considering Central or Foster — but residents there may not be thrilled.

Says NU will look at ending bus service earlier in the evening and urging students to use the “safe ride” service.

Also considering trying to use only hybrid, rather than diesel buses that would reduce fumes.

Bobkiewicz says hopes to be able to come back to the committee at Sept. 9 meeting with proposed agreement with the university.

Fiske says residents on east side of Sherman at Noyes are especially concerned. Says there have two bus stops within about 50 feet of each other. Says get large congregation of people waiting for buses.

Alderman Delores Holmes says if move the stop to the other side of the street then it will be in her ward.

Rainey suggests appointing a subcommittee of Grover Holmes and Fiske to have a public meeting on the issue.

Grover seconds. Approved (with Burrus abstaining.)

Meeting adjourned.

Planning and Development Committee to start at 7:30 p.m.

The inaugural Labatt Blue Wingman Hockey Tournament

A couple of years ago I had an opportunity to chair a sub-committee for the Erie Canal Harbor Development Committee. Our task was to come up with ideas to enhance the summertime experience for guests at Canalside, while at the same time reviewing potential programming submissions by groups and individuals in the community. I distinctly recall that one of the ideas that we came across was that of building a synthetic ice rink so that people could skate outdoors in the middle of the summer season. While that idea never came to fruition, I’m happy to see the initiative take hold at an upcoming event – WingFest (the National Buffalo Wing Festival).

On Saturday, August 31, 2013, WingFest and Labatt will be hosting the inaugural Labatt Blue Wingman Hockey Tournament – a two-on-two, eight team competition that will take place no matter how hot the temperatures reach. There’s no need to worry about melting ice thanks to the synthetic rink. This time pond hockey will be unfettered by almost all of Mother Nature’s curveballs*. The tournament will be held in a parking lot at Coca-Cola field, where a 20 by 40 foot synthetic ice rink will be constructed, courtesy of Pace Landscaping and Ice Rinks.   “Some things just go together, like chicken wings, hockey and Labatt Blue,” said Lisa Texido, brand manager of Labatt Blue. “The Labatt Blue Wingman Hockey Tournament will allow hockey players to put on skates and actually play hockey outside, on ice, in the heat of summer. It doesn’t get much better than that. Synthetic ice is very versatile. In a matter of minutes, you can transform an area, either indoors or outdoors, into an ice skating surface that can be used anytime and in any weather.”

For more information about the ice rink, visit http://www.scan-ice.com/. I still think that the synthetic ice idea would be a great draw to the waterfront on a more permanent basis… in Buffalo there are a lot of people who own a pair of skates who would be psyched to skate outdoors on a sunny day. After watching a video on the synthetic rinks I realized that the process  of construction is a lot easier than I originally assumed (see videos here).

*The 20′x40′ rink will be located near the Labatt Blue tent (Exchange Street parking lot). If thunderstorms occur on Saturday, the tournament will take place on Sunday (if weather permits). The teams are predetermined. Tournament runs from noon to 9pm.

If you’re not familiar with WingFest, then just check out the video below and you will learn everything that you need to know in just a few minutes. Warning: I made it to as far as the Bobbing for Wings (in blue cheese) segment before the video got the best of me… maybe your stomach is tougher than mine?

 

An oasis of lush foliage is Newark’s hidden treasure

The land was cracked, busted up asphalt with weeds and vacant buildings just as desolate.

An abandoned Newark synagogue/church flanked one side. An empty post office and closed meat market was on the other.

It was anybody’s guess what would happen to this neighborhood less than a half-mile from the city’s business district.

Well, if a tree can grow in Brooklyn, then the wellspring of beauty that sprouted from nothing blows your mind today.

Geraniums smell of chocolate, grapefruit and old spice. Flowers are colorful and hard as stone, another soft as lamb’s ear. One plant is so sensitive that its leaves open and close when touched.

Hundreds of flowers and plants live in this urban ecosystem, a habitat crawling with thousands of critters normally found miles away. This place of wonderment was created by the Greater Newark Conservancy, an environmental organization that wants you to sample nature’s abode on 1.5 acres in the Central Ward.

A small stream runs through the Greater Newark Conservancy in Newark 

Bring a bag lunch, said Executive Director Robin L. Dougherty, and walk along the trails of its outdoor learning center that started with plants six inches high in 2004. The thicket is so full, no one can grasp the sprawling splendor by peaking through the fence on Springfield Avenue and Prince Street.

“You’re not going to see anything like this elsewhere in the city,’’ Dougherty said. “It’s a cool place to come and learn.’’


A water lily at the Greater Newark Conservancy in Newark
 

Donna Drew of South Orange heard about it for a while, but didn’t know what to expect the day she popped in.

“It’s like a little oasis in Newark,” Drews said. “The different species and the way that it’s organized and laid out. It’s just so thoughtful.”

The conservancy has made the public think about its surroundings 25 years in Newark, educating visitors about the environment and how its impacts on our health. The group started out creating community gardens at schools and in neighborhoods on empty lots, but it’s influence reaches beyond workshops on gardening.

Now they have a farm with fruits and vegetables that are sold. They expose ex-offenders to jobs like forestry, landscaping and solar installation. Newark high school students are hired in the summer, gaining an appreciation for the community.

Steven Rodriguez loves how the soil feels between his fingers and wants to have his own garden one day.

“I like the feel of making your own food,’’ Rodriguez said.

Remember that old synagogue/church?

The conservancy is turning it into classrooms, a demonstration kitchen/laboratory, galleries and meeting rooms.

And that post office and meat market? They are offices busy with environmental work.

Nestled between the buildings, discovery takes place. The demonstration garden has plants growing on hangers and a clothes line. More plants and flowers take root in beat up shoes and sneakers. Striped tomatoes are on vines, and basil grows in the shape of a tic-tac-toe board. Next to the garden, you can meditate in the sun dial amphitheater. And yes, the sun dial is real.

“We want people to come here and get ideas of what they can do,’’ Dougherty said. “You might see a toilet sometime out in the garden with flowers growing out of it. We like to reuse things.’’

Along the trail, visitors stroll under wooden canopies with plants on top. Mixed within the topiary, there’s colorful pink Hibiscus plants and indigenous species like snap dragons and witch hazel, a plant Lenape Indians picked when they lived in Newark. Underneath a foot bridge lily pads blanket a pond with bullfrogs, sun fish and a turtle. Dragon flies hover above, bees suck the nectar from flowers, butterflies dance about.

If you get tired, sit down on a bench made from mud, clay, and straw. Watch migratory birds swoop in for food and water, while others nest in 20 foot trees. Possums and racoons roam the grounds. Falcons and hawks drop in, like the one eating a rodent in the compost box.

“We’re kind of like a weigh station, a rest stop,” said Chantal Ludder, horticulturist for the conservancy.

Since it opened, 23,000 kids have been here, but many people still don’t know about this peaceful place.

Now you do.

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Mural captures Elkin’s past

The Standard St. mural in downtown Elkin is taking shape and near complete.

“The Main Street Advisory Board decided to include mural grant projects this year along with façade grants for businesses in the downtown area,” said Laura Gaylord, the community manager for the Town of Elkin.

According to Gaylord, the MSAB uses funds from the MSD (Municipal Service District) to pay for projects to enhance downtown such as beautification, landscaping, upgraded benches and trash receptacles, signs and banners, and funding requests for events from non-profits that occur downtown.

“This year the mural grants were especially exciting because Michael Brown, who is an exceptional North Carolina artist, was able to fit us in this summer to paint murals, after making a few visits to Elkin earlier in the year. He was very enthusiastic and inspired by our downtown and he helped the MSAB, and the businesses owners who wanted to participate in the mural grant program, work through ideas about what was important to portray in our community.”

“Its a panoramic view. It’s going to turn out great when done,” said Brown who was seen bouncing in between vehicles that would often pause along Bridge and Standard St. to take a glimpse. “I’ll tell you. There’s a ton of interest in the art piece.”

Gaylord said that Elkin Antiques and Collectibles Mall asked their patrons what they’d most like to see on their wall that runs along side of the building.

After working through many ideas, the group settled on the old Elkin bridge, and they decided to include another building missing in Elkin since the mid-80’s; the Elkin Train Depot.

“Combining the two images into one mural honors the past, and helps us feel connected again to things that we can no longer experience,” said Gaylord. “There is something comforting about seeing the Hugh Chatham Memorial Bridge standing strong again along the wall on Standard Street. The view is close enough in its location, that you almost feel the bridge is still there for a moment.”

Spectators will now see sepia tones incorporated by Brown. The tones give the appearance that you are looking at a historic photograph.

“The artist in me pushed really hard to incorporate the sepia tones,” said Brown. “This mural is magnificent.”

According to the Town of Elkin, business owners pay for the cost of the mural and are reimbursed by the MSAB mural funds, which are a 50/50 matching grant up to $1500.

“The painting project quality on the wall could likely result in being one of the most highly desirable photo op locations for Elkin,” said a tourist who’s in town for a wine festival.

Reach Anthony Gonzalez at 835-1513 or email at agonzalez@civitasmedia.com