Pleasant Ridge / Kennedy Heights

With a combination of niche shops and restaurants as well as strong community roots and a solid housing stock, Pleasant Ridge has come into its own over the past few years as more and more people realize the benefits this diverse gem of a neighborhood can provide. A burgeoning arts district is taking hold with collaboration from neighboring communities and recent business and education development projects.

Grier photos illuminate three decades of ‘White People’

You'll see Jerry Springer the day he was elected mayor. And Pete Rose the day he was banned from baseball. And Morgana the Kissing Bandit, best known for her on-field displays of affection, walking through downtown Cincinnati wearing just a bikini and flanked by security guards.In 33 years of work as a photographer for The Cincinnati Post, Melvin Grier captured images with heart and soul. Beginning April 30, one of the largest collections of his work, "White People: A Retrospective" will be exhibited at the Kennedy Heights Arts Center. Grier, who has often found himself the only black man in the room at Greater Cincinnati events, says the show offers a new perspective on his body of award-winning work.  "Through the years we have seen various studies of black people done by white people, but to my knowledge never the reverse," says Grier, 69, whose photos have been published in Time, Newsweek, Sports Illustrated, US, Ebony, Jet and Advertising Age.  Of the more than 60 images in the show, Grier has a hard time picking favorites. Among the celebrities and politicians, though, he says one of a woman at the Butler County Fair wearing a political statement written on a reconstructed box on her head stands out in his memory. "It's kind of like having a protest sign attached to your head," he says. "It was great because it was something different."Grier's ability to photograph "something different" in a wide range of situations has helped him garner awards from the Associated Press, the Society of Professional Journalists and United Press International. He was the 2004 Robert Duncanson Artist In Residence at the Taft Museum and has had his work displayed at the Arts Consortium of Cincinnati and the Cincinnati Art Museum, among other venues.While this exhibit, and a companion narrative by award-winning author and journalist Kathy Y. Wilson, address race and the politics of being seen, for Grier, each image reflects his passion for his work. Behind the lens, his focus has always been clear. "The only thing I ever thought about was the photograph," he says.Do Good:• Get a sneak peek. Visit Melvin Grier's website for more information about the Cincinnati photographer and his work. • Support the show and the Kennedy Heights Arts Center. Make a donation or volunteer for one of the center's many programs.• See 'White People.' The show runs from April 30 through June 4, 2011.By Elissa YanceyPhoto courtesy of Melvin Grier

Retailers looking to the next Jungle to solve the big box challenge

 As construction of the Jungle Jim's International Market ensues in Union Township, retailers are contacting the development team about space available around and inside the supermarket. Formerly Bigg's Place Mall, the Eastgate site spans 40 acres, of which Jungle Jim's will account for more than 200,000 square feet, according to the team. It will be the second Jungle Jim's in the greater Cincinnati area. The original makes up 6.5 acres in Fairfield. Peter Borchers is a specialist with Midland Retail, the company handling leases at the 40-acre site. He wasn't permitted to comment on specific interested retailers, but he did concede: "We are targeting restaurants … electronics would be another example. We have some specialty retail, and we've located more of the independent variety that we think would be a good mix with Jungle Jim's. I think it's going to be a real dynamic mix." He added: "We're going after some larger tenants for larger spaces. They would be more of the national variety." Eastgate Jungle Jim's construction began last month, not too long after the township agreed to invest $7.5 million in the property, which the store plans to purchase after an eight-year lease. The Jungle Jim's team has been documenting the construction via Facebook, where fans are asking about jobs, beer, wine and more locations - Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton and even China. "The No. 1 question we're getting is, 'When are you going to build a Jungle Jim's in my area?" says development director Phill Adams. Jungle Jim's Fairfield location has been recognized for its international selections and wine collections, as noted in programs such as Good Morning America and the History Channel's Modern Marvels. Union Township officials took note of the supermarket's success. They approached owner Jim Bonaminio and company when bigg's closed its store at the Eastgate site last spring. "By getting Jungle Jim's, we're talking about a facility that has the capability of attracting people from a 150-200 mile radius, which will not only bring business for Jungle Jim's, but for all of the other retailers, restaurants and so forth," says township trustee Tim Donnellon. "We expect the economic impact to be significant for the township and Clermont County." The idea of renovating what is known as a "big box" retail site is trending in the greater Cincinnati region. Columbia Township officials and Neyer Properties recently made advancements to the township's Ridge Pointe development, which includes a 108,000 square-foot building. Kmart closed there in 2003. Tri-State Clinical Laboratory Services is one major tenant moving to the new development. "It's about time (the development) came to fruition," says Susan Hughes, vice president of the township's board of trustees. "We're going to do a lot of things over. The economics and everything will be better." Writer: Rich Shivener

Youth, elders learn through Council for Life Long Engagement

In an elementary school history class studying the Civil War, guest speaker Harriet Krumpleman arrives in full period costume, excited to talk with students about her family's history during the historical period. Another group of young learners gets a hands-on lesson in recycling from retiree David Lowry, whose passion for going green energizes the room. A pilot program of the Episcopal Retirement Homes, the Council for Life Long Engagement aims to eliminate the negative impact of ageism by creating opportunities for residents of their facilities to share their expertise and interests with students at Nativity Elementary School in Pleasant Ridge. "Children will learn first-hand from elders who have lived rich and rewarding lives," says Laura Lamb, vice president of residential housing and healthcare, and a Nativity parent. "They will make history, science and even math come alive through their experience and wisdom." Lamb hopes to create a model program that can be replicated in other communities around the city and around the country in an effort to enrich lives, not only of students, but of older residents. Her ultimate goal: eradicate ageism, which studies have shown can result in shortened not only quality of life, but life itself. Since class visits started last fall, residents have enjoyed the interactions. Corning Benton, a resident at Marjorie P. Lee Retirement Facility in Hyde Park, spoke with a class about one of his passions, space travel. "It has been a joy to have a renewed sense of energy," he says. Do Good: • Visit with Patch Adams. Support CLLE by attending a March 5 benefit dinner with the renowned doctor who inspired the movie. • Call bingo! Volunteer to call a game at St. Paul Village, Canterbury Court or Marjorie P. Lee Retirement Community. • E-communicate. Sign up for e-newsletters to find out more about Episcopal Retirement Homes activities and programs.For Good News Editor: Elissa Yancey (Sonnenberg)

AdRogues.com broadens opportunities for creative class, advertisers

Tom Hagerty has spent much of his professional life in the advertising business.  And while the means of delivering effective advertising continues to evolve, the crux of a good campaign remains the same: creativity and innovation.Today, companies increasingly are turning to the digital world to capture buyers' attention. But Hagerty, a Pleasant Ridge ad consultant, saw an opportunity by using the same technology to link smaller ad agencies or individuals to companies looking for a great advertising campaign."In the ad business, the Web had been nothing more than a revenue source. The technology itself has not been used to create additional opportunities," Hagerty said.That's why he created AdRouges.com, a site that links creative types like writers, graphic designers and producers with advertisers. The site launched in BETA in November.Hagerty, AdRouges founder and CEO, sees the site as a way for smaller agencies and creative individuals can gain access to more marketplace opportunities. "They are people who have big ideas, but no access to brands because they're not big enough to capture brands," Hagerty said. "That doesn't mean they don't have good, creative ideas or don't know how to deal with strategy. It simply means they don't have access."Here's how AdRouges works. Those on the creative side can purchase a membership to AdRouges, the fees range from free to 59.95 a month depending on the level of service and use on which a member decides. Members can then post ideas and pitches through the site in a secure manner which only they and advertisers can access."They're actually pitching their ideas, from briefs to full commercials. It's unrestricted by length or language," Hagerty said.Advertisers, who can sign up for free, can peruse the ideas. If they see a concept or pitch they like, they can get in touch with the creator and pay them for their work. AdRouges is then paid a commission."They shop for the concept they want, and the characteristics they are looking for. They can also create a relationship with the creative by looking at other work after the initial purchase is made," Hagerty said.The site has built-in protection of ideas. Only subscriber advertisers can view them, and the site has strict condition of use terms, an intellectual property protection statement and an FBI-type warning prior to each viewing and posting session. AdRouges also applies watermarks and bars downloading or emailing postings before a sale. The site also tracks URLs.Hagerty says the site has already gotten some positive feedback, and more than 100 members have signed up. Forty percent of site traffic is outside the U.S. and the AdRouges has been viewed in 39 countries.Writer: Feoshia HendersonSource: Tom Hagerty, founder and CEO AdRouges.comYou can follow Feoshia on twitter @feoshiawrites

District ‘A’ festival highlights arts district in two neighborhoods

The District A Festival is a day of art, dance, music and food in Kennedy Heights and Pleasant Ridge that highlights those communities' efforts to band together and brand themselves as a destination arts district."We are doing a progressive party building on our arts assets, moving from Kennedy Heights in the morning to Pleasant Ridge in the afternoon," District A's board chair Maria Kreppel said. "Then we're having a community art party in the middle."Kreppel said the festival, this Saturday, mimics a typical Saturday in "District A" where Kennedy Heights' arts organizations offer programming in the morning and restaurants and shops are open in Pleasant Ridge during the afternoon and evening.At this year's festival, dance classes and art demonstrations begin the day at the Kennedy Heights Arts Center and Arts Innovation Movement (AIM) Cincinnati (formerly Ballet tech.) During the course of the day artists from the neighborhood (of which there are many) will sell works along Montgomery Road while art activities and a book sale will be offered at the Pleasant Ridge Library. Also, AIM will present a dress rehearsal preview of TwiNight, a dance performance premiering next Friday at the Aronoff. The event ends with indoor/outdoor concerts and dinner at the All Saints Episcopal Church in Pleasant Ridge. A non-profit, all-volunteer organization, District A grew out of a years-old effort in the two neighborhoods to keep their business districts vital despite businesses moving out. An arts renaissance in Kennedy Heights was sparked five years ago when community members turned vacant buildings into "arts anchors" like the Kennedy Heights Arts Center and later Ballet Tech Cincinnati (now AIM) and the Green Corner and Giving Garden - a market and garden.Pleasant Ridge, a district with restaurants, bars and shops, joined the effort when its community councils joined with Kennedy Heights' to establish the "Montgomery Road Arts Collaboration." It became "District A" in 2008 with assistance from design agency LPK. Kreppel said the name reflects the effort to be "not your typical arts district." The organization currently works to foster communication between artists, businesses, building owners and neighbors to promote community and economic growth, Kreppel said.District A recently helped Pleasant Perk, a coffee shop, through a change in ownership. They have also placed artwork by local artists in vacant commercial spaces at the corner of Montgomery and Ridge roads. Plans for the next big "arts anchor" in Kennedy Heights - the conversion of an abandoned Kroger's supermarket into the Kennedy Heights Cultural Center - will be unveiled at the event.Information on the festival, including times, can be found here. The festival runs from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.Writer: Henry Sweets Photography by Henry Sweets

Soapicks August 17-23

This week is a sensory experience in Cincinnati. Run a race, sip wine, touch art, see a saucy show and listen to live acoustic music at lunch.

Soapdish: Better School Choices for Urban Dwellers

This week Soapdish columnist Casey Coston goes back to school and dispels the myth that Cincinnati's best educational choices lie outside city limits.  With a wealth of opportunities in Cincinnati's urban core - from nationally ranked high schools to innovative montessori and science and technology programs - Coston finds there's more than meets the eye when considering educational choices in the Queen City.

‘Play Me I’m Yours’ Comes to Cincinnati

This week, Cincinnati welcomes British performance artist Luke Jerram and his brightly colored, outdoor pianos. Brought to the Queen City by Cincinnati Public Radio in celebration of their anniversary, Jerram and a team of talented local artists will paint playable pianos in public spaces over the next month.

Local food blogger launches consulting business Food Speaks

The blogging community knows everywoman restaurant critic Heather Willard best as The Food Hussy. But when she's not talking about her latest eating adventure in Cincinnati or Northern Kentucky, she's working as an experienced internet and advertising professional.At least she was working until two weeks ago when she was laid off, another casualty of the struggling economy. But Willard didn't fret long, and just last week launched Food Speaks.  Food Speaks is a consulting company geared toward independently owned small- to medium-sized restaurants. The company will work with eateries on three fronts, Willard, of Pleasant Ridge, said."I look at 'their voice' how they present themselves, their service, food prices and the entire experience of dining. Then I look at the 'people's voice,' what people are saying about them on sites like Twitter or Facebook and other social media. I also look at their Web site to make sure that its user friendly and can show up higher in search engine results," Willard said.She'd been developing the idea for a few months and has consulted with Café Bella in Mason, but decided to launch the company after losing her job."I've worked for entrepreneurs all of my life. I know restaurants around here need help, and I think I can help them. I look at a lot of their web sites and they're terrible. I want to call them up and say, 'If you do these five things it will be better,'" she said.Willard, a University of Iowa grad, has more than 15 years experience working with local businesses to build and improve their internet presence. She also has radio and television production advertising experience. According to UrbanSpoon.com, a nationwide network of restaurant reviews, The Food Hussy is the most read food blog in Cincinnati.Web and social media is a game changer for restaurants, and can offer smaller ones a competitive advantage if used effectively, Willard said. One the other hand, a few negative online reviews can hurt businesses if not handled properly or ignored, she said."In the old days the only voices were newspaper food critics, and they would review the bigger restaurants maybe once a year. Today everyone with a Twitter or Facebook account is a critic. If they have 500 friends and they have a bad experience at a restaurant everyone sees it," she said. "Most restaurants are in a vacuum and aren't listening to their audience. If they don't listen to their customers they won't have a business."Willard said she'll continue to blog, but will not review places that she takes on as clients.Writer: Feoshia HendersonSource: Heather Willard, founder Food Speaks and The Food HussyYou can follow Feoshia on twitter @feoshiasoapbox 

Kennedy Heights to get green light for new cultural center

The residents of Kennedy Heights are turning their business district into an arts community one vacant building at a time.Three examples now flank the neighborhood's short stretch of Montgomery Road. A one hundred-year-old Victorian mansion vacated by a funeral home is now the Kennedy Heights Arts Center, a former bar is now a dance and music studio operated by Ballet Tech Cincinnati, and an old filling station hosts an art gallery and weekend "green market."Now the most ambitious project - the proposed conversion of a 32,000 sq ft vacant Kroger store into the Kennedy Heights Cultural Center - is expected to get a very important legal green light.Within the next two weeks, representatives from Cincinnati Public Schools, the City of Cincinnati and the Kennedy Heights Development Corporation (KHDC) are expected to sign an option agreement that will legally allow the KHDC to purchase the building from Cincinnati Public Schools, which currently uses it as a warehouse. Once the agreement is signed, the KHDC and the center's three resident organizations will have six months to raise the rest of the money needed to make an offer on the building, KHDC chair Ernie Barbeau said.If the center is built it will be shared by three occupants. The Cincinnati Art Museum will display a collection there that is currently in storage in Columbus, the Kennedy Heights Montessori School will make the building its permanent home and the Kennedy Heights Arts Center, which has more demand for artist studio space than it can provide, will open studios and a theatre there. "From my view the cultural center is going to change people's perceptions about Kennedy Heights and I think it's going to change many Kennedy Heights residents' perceptions about themselves," Barbeau said. "And it is really going to be changing not only the nature of our neighborhood but our business district, and I think we are really going to become a major force within the arts district."The KHDC recently secured a $375,000 grant from the City of Cincinnati to purchase the property, and have been recommended to receive a $300,000 grant from the state for construction costs, Barbeau said. He also said an anonymous donor has pledged a donation that will bring the effort to about 40 percent of its $2.4 million goal, the estimated cost to purchase and renovate the building. If everything goes as planned then construction on the project could begin as early as this fall, Barbeau said.Writer: Henry SweetsPhotography by Scott Beseler

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