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Archives for October 2009

Ways to help Daybreak

October 6, 2009 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

daybreak_logoDaybreak was established in 1975 in Dayton, Ohio as an emergency shelter for runaway and homeless youth.
Today, Daybreak operates the Miami Valley’s only 24-hour crisis hotline and emergency youth shelter and has grown to include outreach, prevention, transitional housing, life-skills education, and other follow-up services for runaway, throwaway, and homeless youth. Daybreak is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.

Here are current opportunities to help Daybreak:

September til November, Table Captains for Champions for Youth

Become an advocate for Daybreak!  Find 9 friends to come to the free breakfast or lunch to hear testimony from Daybreak youth on how Daybreak has changed their lives and provided them a future.  The breakfast or lunch is free, however, you will be asked to consider making a donation.  This event, held at the Mandalay Banquet Center, is only one hour.

On-going, Residential Aides
Make a positive impact on a kid’s life!  Become a residential aide and help engage residents in positive activities.  Can help with current activities or create a new one.

If you are interested in any of the activities, please respond to this email, call Duanna Osting at 937-395-4600 ext. 114, or check out our website at www.daybreakdayton.org.

Filed Under: Volunteer Opportunities

Urban Excursion-Can you solve the clues?

October 5, 2009 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

TeamBox

Team Box members Megan Cooper and Adrienne Neiss

teamclimbers

Team Climbers captured the costume bonus points!

Friday night 14 teams of four were pioneers in an Urban Excursion. Signing up without much more than a limited description of a hybrid Amazing Race/Scavenger hunt, these teams were up for the challenge. Meeting at Wiley’s Comedy Club, getting brief instructions and then the whistle blew, they were handed their playbook with 12 clues to unknown destinations. Teams began running around downtown. Once they reached the location they had a chance to get bonus points, by singing songs, forming human pyramids, playing air guitar or creating a team self portrait. Teams had a 90 minute time limit to solve the clues, including a 5 minute required pit stop for pizza (donated by The Pizza Factory) and document their bonus points with photo’s or video’s. Winning the challenge, Team Box collected every point except for the bonus for team costume, which was picked up by 2nd place Team Climbers, who came in full regalia including miner’s lights and ropes. Team Fairborn represented the suburbs with it’s third place finish.

Excursioner Rebecca Hartzell of South Park commented, “I would do it again. My whole team had a lot of fun.” Days later we’re still getting emails, texts and facebook posts from people thanking us for a good time.

For those of you who didn’t get to play with us this past Friday, here’s your chance to play along from your computer. Here are the clues- send us the answers and we’ll enter all those with winning answers in a drawing for Dayton Originals t-shirts.

The Clues:

1. It’s a garden, it’s a gallery and the Circus plays here; look for the arch near the overpass and you’ll know you are near.

2. I’m short and stout, have a handle and a spout. I’m east of Wayne, west of London. Find me while you’re out and about.

3. Once a bank, a decade empty, now it’s a Space for creativity.

4. It’s really not muddy between naughty and nice; no drugs or alcohol- music is their vice.

5. Just south of the river on a street named for Thomas, look fro a building with orange that is a place for artists.

6. A one hundred year old watering hole.

7.To “C” my FACE, you’ll find my cool lighted entrance behind the “Space”

8. Only two of these in the world are found in churches

9. Grassroots vision of a greater Dayton hidden in a former Gem

10. This venue sells more Jameson than any other location in the state of Ohio

11. It the Wright place for arrivals and departures.

12. You’ll have reached your goal when you arrive at the Creative Soul.

Email your answers to [email protected] with Excursion in the subject line!

Filed Under: Downtown Dayton

Downtown + Placemaking = Vibrancy

October 3, 2009 By Dayton Most Metro 11 Comments

Placemaking in Dayton“Placemaking is a term that began to be used in the 1970s by architects and planners to describe the process of creating squares, plazas, parks, streets and waterfronts that will attract people because they are pleasurable or interesting.” – Wikipedia

What is missing in this picture?

What is missing in this picture?

According to Project for Public Spaces (the foremost authority on placemaking), “you can tell a city is healthy if it has a vital downtown full of public activity.”  This concept goes against traditional thinking that has typically focused more on individual building design & use while paying little or no attention to the streets, sidewalks and other public spaces.  While iconic buildings, stadiums and convention centers can play a role in a downtown’s identity and economy, by themselves they often do little for increasing the vibrancy of a downtown and in some cases may actually be obstacles to making downtowns lively.  A few local examples would be the Dayton Convention Center, Fifth Third Field and the Schuster Center.  Activity at these venues is very limited, with only a small percentage of the time in a year that something is actually happening in them.  The majority of the time, these massive structures stand empty and do nothing to encourage activity around them.  So while these and other expensive downtown projects held promise of bringing vibrancy back to downtown, none were ever going to do so outside of a few hundred hours out of the year.

Proper Design Element = People & Activity

Proper Design Element = People & Activity

Placemaking takes a different approach to creating a vibrant downtown, as its focus is on public spaces where activity can occur every day of the year, at all hours of the day.  Public parks and plazas play an obvious role as their very purpose is to provide space for the public to congregate, socialize and even just relax.  However, these spaces require proper design and programming in order to become vibrant places.  Downtown Dayton has had some successes with placemaking in recent memory with Courthouse Plaza and especially Riverscape – a very good example of placemaking.  Other public spaces like Cooper Park and Dave Hall Plaza could be vibrant public spaces but because of lack of programming, minimal maintenance and utilitarian design approaches that make them look quite neglected and uninviting, they do not attract people like they should.  A great example of a formerly neglected park transformed into a vibrant public space is Bryant Park in New York.  Here in Dayton, a brand new group has formed and is busy working on transformational plans for Cooper Park.  Named the Cooper Park Alliance and working in conjunction with police representatives, city staff and downtown stakeholders, they are holding their first fund raiser on October 16, 2009 where they will also be presenting plans for the park’s new future.

The newest trend in placemaking goes beyond the public parks, squares and plazas whose primary purpose has always Placemaking Streets & Sidewalksbeen to serve as public gathering places.  Now streets and sidewalks are part of the placemaking equation, and in many respects they serve as the missing link to a completely connected and vibrant downtown.  Ever since the automobile became the main form of transporation in this country, the sole purpose for streets and sidewalks has been movement and transportation.  Utilitarian and automobile-centric design have done little to make these public spaces attractive to pedestrians in downtowns like Dayton, but vibrancy is simply not possible without a critical mass of pedestrians and human activity on our streets and sidewalks.  In order to attract more people to our downtown and create more life and vibrancy on our streets, we must begin implementing (and not just talking about) elements such as those featured in the interactive graphic on GOOD.is Livable Streets.  Things like street ambassadors (which we do have), proper pedestrian lighting, well marked & raised crosswalks, curb extensions, trees & flower planters, and bike lanes & bike parking are important basics.  Uniform yet interesting signage pointing pedestrians to various points of interest can be relatively inexpensive but have a large impact.  Programs that help encourage more outdoor cafes and street-level retail can make a huge difference.  And a concept not yet done in Downtown Dayton that could add much interest to our sidewalks and streets is actual programming.  The street programming concept could include an organized effort to attract street vendors and performers that serve as an attraction in and of themselves.

There are other significant ROI benefits to investing in placemaking that should also be considered.  Safety and parking are almost always near the top of any downtown survey as negatives, and the standard solutions to both (add more police and more parking garages) are extremely expensive with questionable effectiveness.  However, a vibrant downtown full of people everywhere offers a sense of security that is missing when you’re the only person walking down a dark and empty street.  And a vibrant downtown that is full of life and interesting things to see and experience makes a four or five block walk something to actually look forward to – making parking much less of an issue.

Placemaking is being looked at by one of the several sub-committees that make up the Greater Downtown Dayton Plan.  Hopefully this group can make a compelling argument for the importance of pedestrian-friendly streets and beautiful and active public spaces so that funding sources can be identified and these types of projects can go from being just ideas to actually being implemented.  What do you think?

(photo credits: Dayton Convention Center-Flickr/dcbprime; Riverscape-Flickr/ddamredhead )

Other placemaking sources:

Project for Public Spaces

Cool Town Studios

Filed Under: The Featured Articles Tagged With: downtown, Placemaking, Vibrant

Farm Fest features scarecrow contest

October 2, 2009 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

images-24Oct 10th & 11th, Miami County will host it’s first Fall Farm Fest at Lost Creek Reserve. Head north and enjoy this fun family event featuring a 6.2 acre corn maze, food, hayrides, children’s games, entertainment and other fun activities.
You can even enter the Scarecrow Contest.

Scarecrow Guidelines
• Display area will be 5’x 5’ square.
• All scarecrow and display items must fit in this area.
• We will provide a pole or post for you to
secure your scarecrow to.
• Each contest participant is responsible for
putting up their scarecrow by 7 p.m. on
Friday, October 9th.
• Scarecrows will be judged on Saturday
during the festival by public vote and winners will be announced on Sunday at 10 a.m.
Trophy for:
Best of Show
Gift Certificates for:
Director’s Choice
Funniest Scarecrow

a t L o s t C r e e k R es er v e
2 6 4 5 E . St . R t . 4 1 – Tr oy
S a t u r d ay , Oct o b er 1 0
1 0 a . m . – 7 p . m .
S u n d ay , Oct o b er 1 1
1 0 a . m . – 6 p . m .

Scarecrow Contest
For more information
(937) 667-1286
www.miamicountyparks.com

Filed Under: Community

DMF 09 Schedule

October 1, 2009 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

…this Saturday night is one of the biggest nights of the year for Dayton music as the 5th Annual Dayton Music Fest brings together some of the best talent from the Gem City and beyond. Here’s the details on the schedule…

2009 Schedule for DMF

Canal St. Tavern
Jesse Remnant & The Trainwrecks 12:30 – until done
Lab Partners 11:30- 12: 10
Eat Sugar 10:30 – 11:10
The Turkish Delights 9:30 –…

Filed Under: Dayton Music

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