Regionalism

Downtown’s 580 Building gets new life

Cincinnati’s 580 Building, located at 580 Walnut Street, was sold at a sheriff’s sale in 2012. Anderson Birkla Investment Partners, LLC acquired the building in 2013, and they have big plans in store.   Prior to the sheriff's sale, the 17-story building had a high vacancy rate. Anderson Birkla is investing $40 million to redevelop it. When construction is complete in 2014, AT580—the building's new name—will house apartments, offices and entertainment. "There aren't many buildings like this in Cincinnati," says Anthony Birkla, principal at Anderson Birkla. "We're trying to take advantage of the good things that are going on in the Central Business District. AT580 will be somewhere you can live, work and play." Last week, Anderson Birkla received a letter of intent for AT580's first restaurant, a steakhouse that will be on street level at the corner of Sixth and Walnut; they've had interest in the other restaurant location, which is at the corner of Sixth and Main, but nothing is set in stone yet. At the plaza level, AT580 will have retail and 26 suites. On top of that, the first six floors of will house 180,000 square feet of office space. The top seven floors of the building will have 140 residential apartments, while the top floor will house 13 penthouses with their own elevator—in all, AT580 will have 179 units, plus one guest suite for residents and their guests.   Renovation will begin this summer, with units available by late 2013.   The City of Cincinnati provided a 12-year tax abatement for the project and partnered with the Cincinnati Development Fund on a Build Cincinnati Development Fund contribution.   By Caitlin Koenig Follow Caitlin on Twitter

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Vintage art, clothing, furniture available at Covington’s District 78

For the past 15 months, District 78 was an online-only business. But on June 1, the vintage clothing, art and furniture store opened a storefront in Covington.   Owner Erikka Gray has always loved vintage, so she started collecting art, clothing and furniture from estate sales and thrifting. After a while, she realized she had too much, and she decided to start a business selling it.   “I started selling at the City Flea last year, and a lot of my customers wanted me to open a storefront,” she says. “I came across a good opportunity and took that leap of faith.”   In December of last year, a fellow Covington shop owner reached out to Gray about doing a pop-up shop for District 78. Soon after, she found a storefront, which is next door to Shrewdness of Apes.   “I wanted to open a space where people can find unique pieces—not just clothing, but art, too,” Gray says. “I want to showcase art, design and furniture from local and up-and-coming artists and designers.”   On July 5, District 78 is hosting a listening release party for Jay-Z’s new album, ‘Magna Carta Holy Grail.’ The event is from 6 to 9 p.m., and there will be giveaways of the new album, plus unique Jay-Z related items.   By Caitlin Koenig Follow Caitlin on Twitter

Design Impact for Change Makers uses design thinking to help nonprofits

Design isn't just about how something—like a mobile phone or a vacuum cleaner—looks, but how it works and how users receive and interact with it. Creative design is most often applied in the consumer marketing world in product development, including packaging and marketing. But a Cincinnati couple is taking design thinking into the nonprofit world through their own nonprofit, Design Impact. The organization works with social change organizations to help address local and global social issues through creative design thinking. Design Impact has applied this concept to organizations both here in Cincinnati and in rural India where the founders first began testing their ideas. Design Impact was founded by husband-and-wife team Kate Hanisian and Ramsey Ford. Hanisian's background is in the nonprofit and education sectors, and Ford is a designer with extensive consumer product experience. Design thinking can help nonprofits meet challenges by giving them a different way to solve, test and measure ideas, says Ford. There are several key aspects to Design thinking: Identify opportunities to innovate Apply empathy and creativity to change problems into breakthroughsUncover hidden insights and unarticulated needs from your customersQuickly and inexpensively prototype new ideasInitiate design thinking in your business, organization or communityDesign Impact is holding a two-day seminar for nonprofits that are interested in learning more about incorporating design thinking in their own solving challenges. Design Impact for Change Makers is Aug. 1 and 2, at the Kaleidoscope building downtown, which is located at 205 W. Fourth St., Suite 1140. Design Impact for Change Makers will be workshop-based and participants are being asked to bring a real challenge they'd like to solve or idea they'd like to explore. It could be anything from offering a new service to better engaging donors, Ford says. "It's about idea generation, and staying in a creative state of mind so you don't always rely on the same old solutions," he says. "We'll be working through the entire creative process from discovery to creation and verification." You can register for the event here, and the cost is $275 for both days. By Feoshia H. Davis Follow Feoshia on Twitter

Cincinnati teen joins JDRF to fund T1D research

For most 13-year-old girls, vacations to the beach are sources of fun and relaxation, but for Abbey Keith, now 15, this was far from the case.   “I felt absolutely terrible within the last couple days, so we went home early,” Keith says. “That morning I woke up at about 8:30, awaiting my doctor’s appointment my mom set up, but I felt absolutely awful. It was like that feeling right before you pass out—but all the time.”   Keith says she doesn’t remember the car ride to the doctor, but when she woke up, she was in his office awaiting what would soon become a life-changing diagnosis.   “He could smell—some people can smell diabetes," Keith says. "It’s a fruitiness on their breath, and he immediately called the ambulance. I had a blood sugar of almost 700.”   The last thing Keith says she remembers was riding in the ambulance and seeing all the cars on the highway split, but after that, she was in a coma.   “It was really—it was stressful because I could hear how scared my mom was in her voice,” Keith says. “I was in the ICU for three days, and it was stressful for my family, especially because my little sister couldn’t see me.”   Keith now manages her Type I diabetes, but life is far from easy. She dances and plays field hockey, but not without struggling to fit her pod into her costume or stopping in the middle of practice because of blood sugar fluctuation.   “I can’t imagine what it would be like without having to deal with—not having to keep my PDM Meter with me all the time—and not having to worry about it every second of every day and managing how I feel and stopping myself in the middle of practice whenever we’re working really hard,” Keith says. “I’m one to always push and go, and when I have to stop and take care of myself and watch everyone else work their butts off, it makes me really—it makes me sad that I can’t do that anymore.”   More than anything, Keith says she wants to do everything she can to help make sure others don’t have to go through what she does on a day-to-day basis. Next month, she’ll join the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation’s Children’s Congress in Washington, D.C., to share her story and try to urge Congress to increase support for diabetes research.   “It’d be nice to not have to wear a pump anymore," Keith says. "It’d be nice that my family doesn’t have to worry about me. It’d be nice that I don’t have to explain why everything happens the way it does to all my friends—make my boyfriend less worried about me all the time. If there was more funding, and we were closer to getting a cure, I feel like we’d have so much more hope for becoming normal again, which I would like because I’d love to get rid of this. My mom has told me a million times—she’s like, ‘You could have mine,’ but it doesn’t work like that. It’s just one burden that I wish I did not have—that I didn’t have to worry everyone around me.”  Do Good:  • If you know anyone with diabetes, provide them with support.  • Get involved with JDRF Advocacy.  • Support the JDRF by donating. By Brittany York Brittany York is a professor of English composition at the University of Cincinnati and a teacher at the Regional Institute of Torah and Secular Studies. She also edits the For Good section of SoapboxMedia. 

Fine Fellows: VFA first-class alum, Dan Bloom

Last year, Dan Bloom moved from the East Coast to Cincinnati to become a Venture for America Fellow. Now he has a full-time gig of his own and plans to soon launch his own startup, a new sandwich shop in OTR.

From Cincinnati to New Orleans, riverboat style

Kyle Rouse and his best friends, Bill and Alex Ross, set out on a river adventure in October 2011 traveling on a pontoon boat named the “Rosemarie.”

Consider the Poor promotes empathy, respect

Sherman Bradley, CEO and founder of Consider the Poor, understands what it means to live in poverty.   “I’m what you would consider the first generation to move from poverty,” Bradley says. “Both my parents grew up in poverty. My grandparents grew up in poverty. My great-grandparents were shipped off as slaves—so I understand a lot about what has been going on in our environment, in our country.”   At the age of 5, Bradley and his parents, who put their money together from years of hard work and the assistance of the G.I. Bill, moved from inner-city Cincinnati to suburbia, which Bradley says enabled him to learn what was possible beyond what most of his family had experienced and been exposed to.   Education and a desire to help others transition out of poverty led Bradley to community-based roles.   For 10 years, he served as vice president of City Gospel Mission, where he oversaw components like the shelter and the recovery program; and in 2011, he started a business called Green Recycling Works, which enabled CGM to employ the men who graduated from its rehab program.   “We prepare them to get back into society as viable tax-paying citizens, as opposed to individuals who find themselves on the wrong side of the law,” Bradley says.   It was six years ago, however, and on the two-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, when Bradley traveled to New Orleans and experienced first-hand the conditions in which the poor were living.   “I was able to learn information that was necessary to educate City Gospel Mission’s volunteer base on how to interact and really understand the poor,” Bradley says. “To build empathy and respect and give them meaning and value, then work with them toward transitioning out of whatever their particular situations are.”   Bradley then founded Consider the Poor—an organization whose mission is to break the cycle of poverty by advocating, consulting, training and serving others.   By hosting elementary and health education events like HopeFest and providing training to businesses and community action agencies, individuals—regardless of their economic situations—come together and see each other as community members, as people who look out for, and who care for, one another.   “We want to educate organizations so that they can create cultures inside their programs, businesses or institutions that would offer people a greater opportunity to succeed,” Bradley says. “But in order to do that, we’ve got to understand where they’re at. Oftentimes, we want to take a lasso and pull them out of their city and put them in a suburban place and say, ‘Now fend for yourself,’ but there’s so much more involved in the process of transformation, and at the very root of it, it requires significant relationships with people who aren’t in that same class with them who can help teach them the hidden rules of the new environment that we’re asking them to succeed in.” Do Good:  • Attend HopeFest on June 29 in Washington Park, and share the event with your friends. • Like Consider the Poor on Facebook, and encourage your business or organization to educate their staff and encourage a more welcoming environment for all individuals.  • Contact Consider the Poor if you'd like to donate or volunteer, and take the time as an individual to learn more about those living in poverty. By Brittany York Brittany York is a professor of English composition at the University of Cincinnati and a teacher at the Regional Institute of Torah and Secular Studies. She also edits the For Good section of SoapboxMedia. 

Blegalbloss takes on clunky office document storage with innovative design

The old cardboard document storage box is getting a makeover, complete with ergonomic design, through the work of a Cincinnati startup. Blegalbloss founder and president Will Scott has created a line of office products that make document storage, organization and use easier. The company's signature product, BOXIE, is an ergonomic, lockable file box. The tough, rip-resistant boxes have a handle that is curved and slanted to make the box easy to pick up and carry. The box also has a locking feature, is made from 65 percent recycled materials, and is 100 percent recyclable. Scott, a Northern Kentuckian, previously owned a record management company, and had worked in the financial service industry in sales and accounting. "When I was in the record management industry, I had some time to think about how people use these storage items, and had a little black book of ideas," Scott says. "Looking at the boxes themselves, I realize they hadn't changed in nearly 100 years." That's when he went to work and began making the boxes better through design. "I went about the task to redesign these sorts of things, and to make them stronger," he says. "It wasn't until I watched someone carrying the box that I realized that had been designed totally wrong." Blegalbloss (pronounced Blee-guhl-bloss) was launched in early 2011, and the BOXIE was first delivered in January. In addition to boxes, the company sells Roo brand document organizers and DominoTwin office supply organizers. The products are sold through 2,700 retailers. The company's goal is to be in 4,000 retail stores by year's end and 10,000 by 2014, Scott says. Blegalbloss is working to expand the brand globally, and launch other products. Among Blegalbloss retailers are GoEvolved.com, Amazon, eBay and Office Depot. Since most of the innovation is in the products' design, their costs are competitive with traditional storage boxes, Scott says. His company currently has about 45 patents pending and 10 already issued. "We've built a better mousetrap," Scott says. "We're selling this at the same pricing (as competitors) in the marketplace, with better value and features." By Feoshia H. Davis

Fuel the Fire funds social impact projects, betters communities

Young professionals are full of ideas, but turning ideas into fruitful startups takes funding, which is not always easy to come by—especially for recent college graduates.   “We have a lot of talent in Cincinnati, and we don’t want that talent to leave this city," says Tangela Edwards, communications chair for FUEL Cincinnati. "We want to keep it here."   FUEL Cincinnati, which is a division of Give Back Cincinnati, is a local micro-grant funder that provides philanthropic entrepreneurs with the ways and means to kick-start an idea that will impact our city for the better.   The nonprofit funds projects year-round, but its second annual fundraising event, Fuel the Fire, takes place June 27. That event enables five projects to not only have the opportunity to receive funding, but also to gain recognition and exposure so that other interested individuals become aware of their concepts.   “Major donors might not want to give initially—they want to see how well you do,” Edwards says. “And sometimes that takes a small amount of money to help a startup get off the ground. Our main focus is to give awareness to five groups—they’ll be able to fundraise outside of this—but this is one thing we’re able to do for them.”    At the event, participants will present their ideas, and the public will vote on its favorite project.   This year’s entries span a wide range of concepts, and cover everything from indoor composting, bike sharing, leadership and training for adolescent males, edible landscaping, and even a series of pop-up biergartens in the intersections of five alleyways in Walnut Hills.   “Community building, education, environment, diversity—the idea is that if they can fit into any of those categories, we want to hear from them,” Edwards says. “If someone has a great idea that they feel will impact Cincinnati in a positive way but they don’t have the funding or need additional ideas and support, then that’s what we’re here for.”  Do Good:  • Purchase a ticket to attend Fuel the Fire.  • Support FUEL Cincinnati by donating. • Spread the word about FUEL, and if you have an idea, apply for funding. By Brittany York Brittany York is a professor of English composition at the University of Cincinnati and a teacher at the Regional Institute of Torah and Secular Studies. She also edits the For Good section of SoapboxMedia. 

Honoring veterans year-round at Arlington

On the day Sue Slusher married her husband, he was drafted.     “He left 16 days later—he had orders for Vietnam, and they were changed at the last minute, so he went to Germany for a year,” Slusher says. “I did join him there, so I feel pretty much like I was drafted. That was 1966, and if you walked and talked, you were drafted.”   Slusher, who serves as a family service advisor at Arlington Memorial Gardens, has a personal connection with many who have served in the Armed Forces. It's a connection that she builds upon at Arlington with the various offerings and opportunities for veterans.   One of those offerings is a seminar that helps veterans learn about and sign up for the Aid and Attendance Pension, which entitles them and their spouses to receive income to cover things like nursing or private home care when they reach the age of 65.   “Very few people know about this benefit,” Slusher says. “And to find out that there’s something out there—that’s most seniors’ big worry. What will happen? How will I pay for this? It can keep them from going on Medicaid, and it’s just a great service to them.”   In addition to helping vets sign up for their pensions, Arlington also hosts Memorial Day and Veterans Day activities, where the organization brings in the Cincinnati VA Medical Center Mobile Unit to provide easier access to benefits and preventive care.   “I had one man a year ago that’s been trying for 16 years to get signed up for his benefits—somehow he could never get signed up,” Slusher says. “He walked in, walked out, and was so happy.”   Sometimes it’s the simple things, like giving veterans the opportunity to open up and share their stories with one another, that leave lasting impacts.   “A lot of the veterans can’t talk about the war for a long, long time,” Slusher says. “So we do other programs where a veteran can tell their story, and we have a historian who will come to our seminars and she writes novels, biographies and does videographies about their lives.”   Slusher says the organization is proactive in helping veterans because they’ve helped us ove the years; it’s just the right thing to do.   “Honoring their service—that’s what we’re here for,” Slusher says.  Do Good:  • Keep up with upcoming events and activities at Arlington.  • Like Arlington's Facebook page, and follow the organization on Twitter. • Attend the next Second Sunday Concert Series on July 14. By Brittany York Brittany York is a professor of English composition at the University of Cincinnati and a teacher at the Regional Institute of Torah and Secular Studies. She also edits the For Good section of SoapboxMedia.   

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