Regionalism

Art Off Pike revitalizes urban arts fair

For this year’s Art Off Pike, a group of about 30 creatives and business professionals will converge to bring artists, musicians and street performers together for the ninth annual urban arts fair.  “It started as this grassroots arts festival, and what has happened is it’s situated on this precipice of needing a little bit of new life and energy breathed into it,” says Cate Yellig, arts director of the City of Covington. “We’re looking at really having a feast for the senses. We’d love to have street performers and dancers and [make it] a little more multidisciplinary so that we can distinguish it from a lot of your other art fairs.”  Yellig says about 50 volunteers from the community run the event each year, so the tight-knit ties are particularly unique and inviting.  “It’s definitely embracing emerging artists and people who live in your urban environment,” Yellig says. “Covington is a city that’s really trying to embrace the arts as economic development. And by showcasing the talent found here locally and providing them the opportunity to sell their work to a crowd where they get 100 percent back for themselves—this is a really great visibility opportunity.”  Hub +Weber Architects’ Jim Guthrie, who served as last year’s chair and who is on the board this year, says he appreciates the diversity of the art, in addition to its accessibility.  “Last year, there was an artist who did sketches and doodles of anything you wanted,” Guthrie says. “It made art very important. If you could have a piece of art reflecting anything you wanted, what would it be? I struggled for hours to come up with something worthy.”  Organizers are currently accepting entries through the Call for Artists, and Yellig says the more varied, the better.  “We want 2D and 3D, mixed media, crafts—we’d love performers and musicians, and if there’s a glassblower that has a mobile truck of some sort—we really want to kind of have this high-level of quality but also affordability with the arts or with the offerings for each artist,” Yellig says. “But we also want to have a really diverse group of artists as well because that makes it more attractive to people coming to the festival.”  Do Good:  • Volunteer at this year's festival. • Submit your work by applying through the Call for Artists. • Like the event on Facebook, and mark your calendar to attend September 29. By Brittany York Brittany York is a professor of English composition at the University of Cincinnati. She also edits the For Good section of SoapboxMedia. 

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TL2 pairs teens with local businesses, teaches economics

Most high school students count down the days until summer vacation, but for those participating in the Economics Center’s summer program—Today’s Learners, Tomorrow’s Leaders—the countdown continues.   TL2 students spent the first month of their summers back in the classroom as they took a microeconomics course and visited local businesses to earn both high school and college credit.  Economics can be an abstract concept, says Daniel Barkley, University of Cincinnati adjunct professor and Economics on the Move founder.  “When I was in undergrad, some of my professors would take us to buildings that were being worked on so you could see how they were being constructed, and I learned a lot that way, so I figured why not do it with economics?” he says.   Rather than simply reading about economics in a textbook, Barkley says it’s important for his TL2 students to see the business side of things as opposed to the consumer side, which everyone is already familiar with.  “A lot of companies will open their doors and show you—it doesn’t matter if it’s baseball or you’re making rubber seals—but it’s similar philosophies," he says. "And they’re at the age when it’ll sink in and do well." Students had the opportunity to experience the inner workings of a variety of places, including Great American Ball Park, Meridian Bioscience, CVG Airport and Sur-Seal—all of which offer different services but operate under similar principles.  “I realized that a lot of these businesses are alike in so many different ways," says Mozika Maloba, who attends Walnut Hills High School and was a participant in this year’s TL2. "They have so many different things that connect them. At first, I think I neglected to see that, but it’s funny how you can connect CVG to the Reds' stadium or Meridian BioScience, and I think that’s one of the main things I learned. Economics is such a broad field that can connect to every business.”  And like most cooperative learning opportunities, students have the chance to not only expand their knowledge, but also their social networks.  “Along with the whole business prospect of it, you are actually getting a group of friends you can stay in contact with for a while, and they all have the same goals and ideas in their heads,” Maloba says. “And after three weeks, there’s so many correlations between you and the 26 others in the same room as you, so it’s really cool how you can befriend people and then later on, after this year, you can talk to them once again.”  Do Good:  • Learn about TL2, and if you're interested in the program, apply next year. • Support the Economics Center to help fund programs for students like TL2. • Like the Economics Center's page on Facebook. By Brittany York Brittany York is a professor of English composition at the University of Cincinnati. She also edits the For Good section of SoapboxMedia. 

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.   

UC makes Travel + Leisure “top beautiful college” list

A decades-long renewal topping $1 billion is paying dividends for Cincy, which has cultivated a strikingly modern look—and proven that “it doesn’t need ivy-covered brick walls” to be beautiful, as UC Magazine put it. Read the full story here.

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Ghettopia offers dorm-style accommodations for travelers in OTR

While travelers are already leaving positive feedback and recommeding the space to their friends, Susan Angel’s Ghettopia will be fully open for business soon. Ghettopia OTR Bunk Haus is a 22-bed, dormitory-style hostel for travelers—there’s a kitchenette, three showers, a common room and steam room.   “I travel a lot—I’ve been to Europe, India, Hawaii—and I always stay at bunkhouses,” says Angel. “I wanted to bring some of that onto Main Street for the travelers that come through here.”   Angel started as a couch surfing host, and she met people from all over the world. After doing that for a while, she began to go through the process of opening a legal bunkhouse in Cincinnati.   And Ghettopia isn’t a ghetto. The name comes from the “ghettos” German immigrants lived in Germany and when they came to the United States. Since Over-the-Rhine (and much of Cincinnati) was founded by Germans, Angel thought the name was perfect.   Angel bought the building at 1424 Main Street in 2005. She applied for a “city beautification” grant, in which she paid 20 percent and the City paid 80 percent for updating the space. She’s done all of the renovations herself, using materials that would normally go to the landfill. For example, the floors are mosaics of mismatched tiles Angel collected from builders, contractors and Ohio Tile and Marble.   “I wanted to create an organic, Earth-friendly atmosphere,” says Angel.   Plus, Angel is an artist—she had a gallery at 1409 Main Street and taught classes at Rothenberg. The walls of her dorms are covered in art, and there’s a mural on one of the outer walls of the building that was done by local artist Douglas Smith.     Not only is Angel opening a bunkhouse in OTR, but part of her business plan includes a bunkhouse route across the U.S. She’s currently looking for a second bunkhouse location in Louisville.   “We’re looking for certain things when we’re looking to open a bunkhouse,” she says. “We want them to be on or near Main Street; we want to support the local arts; we want to renovate the building with materials that normally go to the landfill; and we want to be a green or environmentally conscious place to stay.”   Cincinnati’s Ghettopia is still undergoing renovations, but is already operating at about 30 percent capacity. Angel is currently working on the steam room, and hopes to have the bunkhouse fully operational by the end of the year.   If you’re interested in bunking at Ghettopia, check out the availability at airbnb.com. Beds are $25 per night, $120 per week or $420 per month, with a maximum stay of three months. You can also check out Ghettopia on OTR's Final Friday. There will be live music and movies projected on the walls of the building.   By Caitlin Koenig Follow Caitlin on Twitter

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

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

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