Archive for July, 2009

I know Art-He’s such a great guy!

Friday, July 10th, 2009

If you don’t have art on the agenda for this weekend, then you are missing out! There is so much art and culture going on this weekend, that I am having trouble figuring out what to do! First there is the open studios tour at the 78th Street Studios. This is a great building that was converted into galleries and studios. This is there big summer open house. The studios are open from 5:30 to 9pm Friday and 1-5 pm Saturday. Check out this flyer for more info. Also tonight is the Tremont Art Walk. All the galleries and many of the local watering holes will be debuting their new artists for the month. Grab a glass of wine and see some great art!

Of course the big news for the weekend is the Ingenuity Fest. An entire weekend chock full of performance and other arts, this is the place to be this weekend. I meant to go last year, but was unable to attend. This year promises a full calendar of exciting things. Melissa Daubert is going to have her “Urban Trotter” rambling down the streets. This is going to be a great place to hang out. I got my tix online with the promo code STRE for 50% off. I also saw that you can get your tickets at Dave’s Markets for half off as well. This is a great way to support your local merchant as well! Robotics, music, video, opera, singing and who knows what else! The streets, alleys, theaters, and halls of the Theater District will all be transformed into performance art spaces. I can’t wait to see what cool things await…Join me!

Another great event is the Cain Park Arts Festival. The entire park will be transformed into a juried art fair with vendors from all over coming to show and sell their wares. Be sure to bring plenty of water, as I hear this show is worth taking the time to see every little thing! There are something like 150 artists with booths at this show, so if you are in need of art (and who isn’t) this is the place to be! Besides, outdoor art festivals are a great way to get some exercise, spend time with friends or family, and are a great way to work that excess energy off of the kids! So the show is FREE on Friday night and $2 each on Saturday and Sunday. Hours are 3-8, 10-8, and 12-5 respectively.

While you are out and about on Saturday, check out the Cleveland Food Co-op. It is at 117th and Euclid. This weekend is their Summer Social.

Join us to celebrate the season with other community-based groups… food, local artists, farmers, and musicians! There will be raffles, free samples, you name it!
Sarva Soaps will be a vendor, and we look forward to seeing you!

Sounds like fun and it is a great place to shop for healthy foods.

Wrap things up on Sunday with a trip to the Gordon Square Farmers Market and a trip to Reddstone. Reddstone is hosting the anniversary party for Metromix. Called the Get Lei’d Birthday Party, they will have a free pig roast , food and drink specials, and even a sand volleyball tournament. Be sure to check them out, they have a great patio! The festivities start at 1pm. What? Never heard of Metromix? You should definitely check it out. I would call it a Cleveland Interactive Entertainment News and Events Online Magazine. There is so much going on in this town that this is a great way to be connected to the events and happenings in the area. Want to find a new place for dinner? Wondering what is going on when your out of town guests arrive? Want to get reviews of the latest music, TV or movie? Where is the hottest new club? All these questions can be answered in one spot at Metromix!
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So in honor of the Arts this weekend, I am giving away another print. This is an 8×10 Black and White print. Matted and mounted. Simply comment on my blog ( and I am not picky-any post is fine!) before noon on Monday! Good luck! Congrats to RG for the last win!

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Cleveland is the place to be right now!

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

I have to give my shout out to Mark Rabkin who was the first to alert me to this video. Cleveland is truly an awesome place to be right now!

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Spam Comments

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

I guess that I have arrived!  I now officially have spam bots posting hundreds of spam comments to every post I make.  I feel so much a part of the blogosphere now.  Rather than add that box with the weird letters in it that can be a pain in the butt to read and fill in, I added a spam filter that is pretty good at detecting spam comments.  That being said, if you post a comment on my blog and do not see it come up on the site, please contact me and let me know.  I delete literally hundreds of spam comments every couple of days, so I cannot go through them all to make sure the filter is being accurate, but if you let me know I can find it and adjust the filter.  Thanks!

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How much progress is still progress?

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

A friend of mine on Facebook asked the question, what was better about the “good old days?” It started me thinking. How much of the “green” and sustainability movement is really just a return to the old ways of doing things.

We bought a Victorian era building. Much of it was coolled with passive air circulation from the basement, and now architects are trying to build on that design and improve it. Unfortunately in the hundred years in between, we got caught up in the great idea of indoor cooling and central air. This building has a natural high insulation value due to its triple brick construction. Today, Americans are moving back to thick wall construction to make buildings more efficient.

When it comes to food, we are all thrilled with the idea of locally grown food. We pay extra for organics, and go out of our way to find meats and eggs that are free of hormones and antibiotics. We act as though the ideas of eating seasonally, cutting back on meat, and growing our own food is a brand new concept. Truth is, at one time most food was organic. While there has been use of some forms of natural pesticides as far back as the Sumarians, artificial pesticides were not heavily used until the 1940s and 50s. Before the refrigerated rail car, all fresh produce was seasonal. Home canning insured that vegetables were preserved naturally. In Victorian era days, some fruits and vegetable were so exotic that they developed special utensils just for the purpose of serving them. Celery had a special dish, as it was rare to see it at the table. Dairy products, meats, and poultry were farm raised and free range. It wasn’t until we started packing animals in cages so small that they couldn’t move and stacked so tightly together that infections ran so rampant that we began to pump them full of antibiotics. Thus also began the introduction of hormones to increase yields. I won’t even start in on all the genetically modified produce that we unknowingly consume every day. To make fruits look riper we blast them with nitrogen. We even stripped the nutrition away from flour and rice to make it whiter. Then because it had no vitamins, we had to “enrich” it.

Before the rise of the automobile and the suburb, this country was built on cities with walkable neighborhoods. People used streetcars to get into the city centers. Outlying areas were farmlands that sustained themselves. The idea of commutes and driving one person to a car for miles back and forth every day was an idea that couldn’t even be comprehended.

So I am over simplifying things. Things in many ways are much improved. Cities were sooty and foul smelling places where people lived ten to an apartment. But that didn’t even begin to improve until the last few decades-remember our river caught on fire only a few decades ago. It just makes one ponder how much better some things were. People wasted less. We used and reused most everything. Clothes were repaired, not tossed into a landfill. When one ate out, a proper restaurant was the destination. Today, many Americans go through the fast food drive through and eat in their car in the parking lot-generating a ton of wasted paper and garbage. Paper was used to light fires and not tossed. I bought a rotary reel mower, which has been used for years, but paid nearly as much as a gas powered machine, that is likely to last only a single season.

How much have we sacrificed in the name of progress? Isn’t it funny how today progress often means going backward?

Amplify

MVK

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

So Michelle V over at Cleveland Foodie wrote this post. I stole it from her. Blatantly! No rewrite, just copy and paste…but somehow I don’t think that she will mind!

This has nothing to do with food, but everything to do with Cleveland. Jamie and I are both on the board of Most Valuable Kids (MVK), a group that provides underserved children throughout Cleveland the chance to see LeBron dunk, Grady homer (when healthy), Joshua Cribbs do just about everything and see the inside of the beautiful and magnificent Allen Theater or Cleveland Orchestra.
MVK takes unused tickets to any sporting or entertainment event and gives them to local kids so they can experience what many of us take for granted. Often for the very first time.

Think about it – how often do you decide to pass on the Tribe game or let the weekend orchestra tickets go unused? Same with season tickets where you work? This is such an easy way for people to help those less fortunate and it doesn’t cost a dime, which is something we can all appreciate during the current state of things.

So please help us spread the word. We have a lot of children waiting to go to a game, a play or the museum – we just need tickets! If you have tickets, or your company does, please visit the site and learn how to donate. It’s ridiculously easy and you’ll be responsible for some very big smiles throughout our city. Thank you.

Amplify

A day late….but a giveaway all the same…

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

printSo the idea behind the giveaways was to increase the dialogue, but also give people a reason to check in at least once a week and see what is going on at the blog. However this ideas will only work if I manage to be on time and post these giveaways on a regular basis. Last week’s winner was Jessica in Canada! Today I am giving away another 8×10 print. This one is a color print. Matted and mounted for framing. Once again, post a comment on my blog anytime this week and Friday morning I will randomly choose a winner.Okay-go crazy!

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Are we really that lazy?

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

As I sit next to the open window, enjoying the fresh breezes drift in, the quiet of mid afternoon is being shattered once again by the landscapers. Across the street and several doors down is a home that has their lawn managed by a service. Why, in heavens name, I do not know. This is a standard residential lot. The landscapers merely mow and trim the front yard-a small plot of land that would be barely large enough for the truck they use to haul their machinery. I am willing to concede that I am one of the only weirdos left who insists on a reel mower powered by my own strength. I can concede that they may need to use a powered trimmer-after all it is a service, it should be well trimmed. What blows my mind is the size of the riding mower that these guys employ. The first time they rolled up, I was mowing my own lawn. I thought that they were unloading so that they could do several lawns, or at least the front and back. No, just this small postage stamp area. While they pulled out the ramps, figured out the logistics, mounted the mower, unloaded it, gassed it up, and mowed the lawn, I was already finished. I also did not spend a dime on gas, small engine motor oil, or upkeep. I did not haul a 500 pound monster of a machine across town to get the job done. I did not have to use a flatbed truck big enough to service a small farm to get it done. Carbon output=0.

Con we really be so lazy as Americans that we will go this far? I get using a service if you are busy or have a yard the size of a football field, but c’mon! Okay, rant over….. Please resume normal programming…

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Giveaway Chosen

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

By random draw, the winner of the B&W print was chosen. But do not fret. Tomorrow I will be posting the next print to be given away over the weekend. Thanks!

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More layoffs, less plastic bags….Time for a rethink!

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Local architecture firm, KA has had yet another round of layoffs. This time they cut pretty deep, laying off shareholders. Could this spell the end of a Cleveland institution? While I do not know the ins and outs of the company or its financial statements, I am aware that the development and architecture industry in Cleveland has taken a pretty big hit in Cleveland that last few years. It has caused me to think about the future of the city and what we will be doing as we move forward. KA is an architecture firm that has been around for decades. Recently they have received some great awards for their designs by AIA, ICSC, and Cleveland Restoration Society. They should be thriving. So why the deep cuts and desperate lay offs? Is this a sign of the times or simply a bump in the road? Now let’s take a look at the Flats. The project slated for the East Bank of The Flats was the golden ticket to Cleveland’s future. It was going to change the downtown landscape, bring new business, and jump start a new era of prosperity in downtown Cleveland. As I drove by that area the other day, I had to pause. While it is true that the credit crisis is responsible for the slow down of development in this major project, why was so much of the existing building stock simply razed? Our rapid transit to the waterfront has been all but abandoned. Remaining buildings are all but empty and the entire area is a ghost town. If this is Cleveland’s future, then it is a bleak one… As I look at the stock prices of local developers and others in the building trades, I am forced to concede that these are indeed dire times for some of our biggest players.

So what does this mean for Cleveland? I think it is representation of our region as a whole. It has become time for this area, and other major areas to stop the in fighting and start thinking of the future of the city, the region and all our citizens. While we argue about the mall site, or Tower City for the new Convention Center and Medical Mart, similar ideas are being proposed in other cities. While we discuss and debate, New York is looking at their own concept of a medical mart. Other cities are beefing up their convention centers and we rattle on. When the project finally gets built, will it be too late to actually make an impact on Cleveland’s future? What about the responsibilities of Merchandise Mart Properties? Now that we have already allowed Woolstein to raze most of the flats and we are left with a huge mud patch, have we set a precedence for other companies? What if the economy takes another turn, will we have an empty Medical Mart and allow the operators to walk away scot free? It is my humble opinion, that if we have a huge mud pit with ample room, that we could easily build a convention center there. Let us simply get moving and stop the endless babble. Much like our local companies that refuse to change, if we hang on to the way of thinking and do not start to think outside the box, we are in for more rounds of layoffs (we just laid off 2 council members and it looks as if we will be laying off a couple more in a few years…). I look at our history. We tore down a beautiful Hippodrome. We destroyed a host of beautiful buildings in the name of progress. What stands there today? Some of the largest open parking lots I have ever seen. We need to start thinking of our city as a valuable asset. Our downtown real estate is too valuable to allow developers to tear it up and leave it. Are we destined to have a huge Flats Parking? We need to start thinking of Cleveland as a great town, and as such, stop bowing down to the pressures of corporate interests who may do little or nothing in the end for this town. If we want to be a “Green City on a Blue Lake” we need to institute tough legislation on recycling (especially for commercial properties) and stop the lip service. In these tough economic times, those companies who refuse to embrace change and take this opportunity to reinvent themselves risk being left behind while more nimble newcomers take away market share. Cleveland is in the same boat. If we do not take this chance to really make a real change in how we operate, we risk losing the momentum that we have started and will fall back to being the “mistake on the lake.”

What do I propose? While not being an economist or a public official, I am very opinionated. Here are some of my suggestions. I am sure that I am alone on some of them, but at least they represent some “out of the box” thinking that is needed to really get things moving in this town.

Implement a mandatory 5 cent charge on all plastic bags used at retail outlets. According to Supermarket News, Metro Inc (of Montreal) started a 5 cent bag charge in all its outlets and plastic bag use was reduced by 70%.
Immediately begin a comprehensive curbside recycling service to ALL areas of the city and impose fines for those who do not recycle. It works in San Francisco, and even Lakewood, so why not here? The savings in tipping fees will pay for the roll out and the savings in fuel costs for transporting garbage to a landfill some 40 miles away will pay for the ongoing costs. Furthermore, new business opportunities will be available. Resale of of used goods would increase and new shops could be opened.
Mandate deconstruction over demolition of existing buildings. Materials could be reused and new businesses started, like architectural salvage and used building materials. Along with that, mandate that all houses that are abandoned and not up to code must be repaired or become the property of the city. These homes could be deconstructed and the income generated from sale of the materials could stimulate the local economy. The city would then own viable property in landbank that could be sold at auction to developers and private owners for reuse.
Offer true tax incentives that attract new businesses to the city. Make them valuable and real. Furthermore, make them based on job creation and structured so that businesses see the advantages of staying in the region for longer periods (i.e. make them revocable if job creation does not stay at a desired level for 5 or 10 years).
Offer tax incentives for business that reuse large empty buildings inside city limits. The old Hugo Boss factory and Ashbury Court buildings have been empty and an eyesore for at least a decade, with no incentive to have them utilized. The Jay Hotel is sitting empty in a prime Ohio City location waiting for rehab.
Make all real estate transactions with the city transparent and rehab programs public knowledge. No more behind the scenes dealings.
Make developers use the land they buy (yes, the flats) and impose fines for not following through. This will stop things like the flats from being razed and left empty. Furthermore, make parking lots pay extra taxes for their underutilized lots. Any lots in the city limits that is used for paid parking must pay by lot size. This sill ensure dense structure. Parking lot operators will have to build upwards to make their lots more viable and the city will benefit from the taxes imposed. This will also free us from the grip of parking lot operators who refuse to sell or develop the large open lots in valuable areas (like the middle of downtown), by making them build up or lose the profitability of their current location.

While some of these things may seem crazy, I see benefits to all of them. Until we move out of our current comfort zone, we cannot expect real progress and prosperity in this city.

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