SearchUser loginOffice of CitizenRest in Peace,
Who's new
|
Arts and Crafts MovementSubmitted by lmcshane on Mon, 12/15/2008 - 06:51.
In the images of Frank Giglio's home, I saw a house that had been built with some of the tenets of the Arts and Crafts movement. Sadly, we have no appreciation for fine construction and buildings built to last. I google mapped Frank's house and realize now that Google has provided another way to capture the essence of an area: http://www.panoramio.com/ I plan to add images from my own neighborhood. It may not stop the wholesale destruction, but perhaps it will affect our collective conscience and encourage a better way to reinvent society.
( categories: )
|
Recent commentsPopular contentToday's:All time:Last viewed:
|
had Frank lived in NYC...
His government might have given him a hand up rather than a smack down. In NYC, the NYTimes reports today,
To Avert Blight, City Will Repair and Resell Vacant Homes
Now Frank's home was not "vacant, abandoned", but I wonder if it might not today be a boon to the Tremont neighborhood had he been given a bit of assitance instead of a bulldozer and police presence.
There you go commissioners - spend that $42 million you have collected to renovate and resell homes that have been foreclosed and abandoned. We can compete with New York, but not with a medical mart. We can compete with programs that address social equity and economic development in our neighborhoods.
Last night while walking my dog, I walked around and peered in the windows of a renovated house on the next street. Yes, like several others this house was purchased by an investor and I have been watching the work since the summer. Trees whose roots had invaded the basement came down (the new owner left the wood in hte yard with a sign - free firewood, please help yourself), the front yard was dug up to replace the faulty sewer connection, bricks on the stoop were carefully removed scraped and reused to rebuild the new steps, the inside was beautifully restored and tasteful new kitchen and lighting fixtures were installed, all windows were replaced with new thermal panes, oak floors were refinished and the house got new paint inside and out. The lawn was reseeded and under the snow is a brilliant green lawn. Each time I walked by, a white van with a handpainted sign was in the drive. Local contractors - a family affair (husband, wife and son) were hard at work each day. Last night as I walked around peering in the windows of the lighted rooms, I was struck by the beauty of this lovingly restored colonial home. Another home down the block from me is undergoing the same treatment. I live in the Heights. Why coudn't this happen in the city of Cleveland, too? We have $42 million after all... it won't solve the problem, but it would make a dent. We could begin with a few homes where the folks are still living in them and paying taxes. We could begin by given a hand up rather than a smack down.
Three words - Strategic Investment Initiative
The Cleveland Foundation and their shell non-profits are pursuing and routing all possible state, federal and local funds of any sort to their strategic investment initiatives. They have very specific strategies and target areas and people who will benefit, largely "friends of family" - the opposite of entreprenership, this is Philanthropy For The Rich.
I'm mapping all this out - all you really need to do is list all the non-profits involved in the SIIs and look at their boards and then the funding boards and then follow all the money - it stays within that pool. It is not designed to benefit entrepreneurs or to be entrepreneurial - quite the opposite, it is industrial era economic development, like building a company town around a coal mine... top down planning, largely by people from outside the region.
Disrupt IT
Well in Tremont, Start with
Well in Tremont, Start with Sammy Catania, the Development Director/Project Manager for this great SII plan - and as I understand it he's being paid $50,000/yr to do what? the only thing I've seen is a few slats of prefabed fencing in Thurman Alley that recently went up and as far as I can find there were no permits for those.
BECAUSE THAT WOULD MAKE TOO
BECAUSE THAT WOULD MAKE TOO MUCH SENSE -- AND DON'T YOU KNOW IF ANYTHING MAKES TOO MUCH SENSE IN TREMONT - THEY DIAL 911
Denison Ave Taxes
Susan, your comments remind me of the little yellow house at 3406 Denison, now lovingly renovated by a man who has moved to the neighborhood and is investing his talents--he is an architect, who can actually build things with his hands, because he started as a contractor. We have people in Cleveland with these skills, people who work with their hands and, if given a house, they will give back to the community
In a matter of months, the architect took a house that was on death row and has made it a signature, defining home of the neighborhood. If you look at the taxes on the house, $1,623/year, you see that he is not being gauged or given special treatment. He is contributing to the tax base of the City of Cleveland. Frank Giglio was paying a comparable amount until the City started harassing him. As a matter of fact, I have been watching the auditor's site and it seems to me that numbers keep changing on Frank. I am also finding some people drop off the auditor's list. I also find other Tremont residents with much lower tax assessments.
But, I digress and I know that these inequalities will never be examined by the PD, so my original proposition is this--how do we start a new Arts and Crafts movement in Cleveland from the ground up??
So what can we do?
It is obvious to me, too, that this agenda, if you can call it an agenda...it seems to be heavyhanded, blundering, obvious profiteering, designed to benefit a select group. What do we do? You say:
I'm mapping all this out - all you really need to do is list all the non-profits involved in the SIIs and look at their boards and then the funding boards and then follow all the money - it stays within that pool.
I agree. Now, where do we go from here?
We challenge the strategy
It seems all the industrial leaders hired McKinsey to come up with a plan, like a decade ago, and it isn't working well, and it is the only plan they have. It includes the Fund For Our Economic Future, Voices and Choices, Advance NEO, and it and everything related to it seems a complete waste of money and the time of 10,000s.
SII has different issue, but the same roots.
We just need to keep working through the system, analyzing where the money has come from and flowed to, as ultimately all that matters is stopping the flow of good money to bad people and bad investment initiatives, so it good money may do good.
Now is the crutial time, in all of this, as Obama will send relief and development funds to cities and the industrial leaders want that money for themselves, and their wives and kids. Tell Obama not to send any money to Northeast Ohio without a complete analysis of who will manage it and how it will be spent.. the foundations around here are already claiming $3.3 billion...
Disrupt IT
Washington DC
I know I am meandering, but in the short term, I wonder how Frank Jackson's administration will parlay technology and social networking into the economic recovery. So far, NEO has not shown any real advance in our local economy through one community and social networking.
Meanwhile, DC as an urban center, will benefit enormously with our wonderful nerd-in-chief. Obama's mastery of technology and social networking has the city abuzz with a new-found energy and $$$. The immense orchestration of events and family attractions astounds me. And, his administration wisely invites other cities to capitalize on the moment. How will Cleveland fare on the inauguration day? Will restaurants and businesses see an uptick in activity?
the blessed generation of entitled youth
now grown to adults... with views like this:
" The fact of the matter is that people living in government houses, sending their kids to public school, and receiving TANF, WIC, ODC, and subsidized utility bills, consume from the system without contributing a dime back to it. That burden falls on those of us who are educated and work hard. I'm personally okay with that. I'll pay my taxes to Cuyahoga County if it means that someone else doesn't feel the need to hold me up at BP and rob me of a 'hood tax.'"
are the ones destroying Cleveland through their mere presence in our non-profits and city agencies. They honestly are not capable of understanding an entire society grown out of neglect, coupled with extreme economic and social inequity.
They will continue to sanitize and sweep out whatever and whoever is not pleasing to them. And unfortunately Norm, I think they will do it with government funds - they all were Obama supporters...
I dont know what the answer is, but I believe we can come up something.
Giglio house
Please see this post at Preservation Sans Politics.
Cleveland Foundation gets in line with banks and REITs
Gund Foundation reported their losses and warned that we will all have to tighten our belts - nonprofits seeking their cash that is; Cleveland Foundation said they were OK... for now.
"Earlier this week, the Cleveland Foundation said that it is making changes too in response to increased demand from local agencies supplying food, shelter and medical services.
Spokesman Scott Tennant said the Cleveland Foundation's endowment had assets of $2.2 billion early last year but lost between 10 percent and 15 percent by September. Fourth-quarter losses haven't been totaled yet.
Because of the losses, the foundation will defer issuing capital grants, which typically are given out in the spring, Tennant said. Board members will decide if they can afford to give them out at all this year, he added.
Tennant said the foundation had its best year ever for fund raising last year. A $39 million gift from a Pepper Pike couple's estate boosted donations to $71 million. It's one reason the Cleveland Foundation expects it won't see a major drop in grants in 2009, he said.
But if the economy continues to slide, it could affect the Cleveland Foundation dramatically in coming years, Tennant said."
Looks like that story has changed.
See the report here: THE RECESSIONS IMPACT ON THE SAFETY NET IN OHIO AND PENNSYLVANIA
Folks, when community foundations have their hands out for federal assistance, does this give anyone an indication? It's a depression. Do we have to wait to hear that from the Federal Reserve a year from now? And as we wade into this depression is it the right time to be building convention centers and extra highways and making plans to move the port?
Is it not time to make funds available to put people to work repairing homes and moving families into them? Is it not time to grow food locally and dispense with the crap the city wants to put in the way of getting a lot on which to grow a breakfast lunch or dinner? Is it not time to stop talking about an extended freeway to the CCF's backdoor? Is it not time to admit that no one is going to be able to afford the expense accounts of big convention shindigs and they will learn how to use technology (the internet and videoconferencing) to make their critical purchases? Is it not time for mother's or fathers to be able to return to homemaking, cooking, mending, reading to their children, entertainment that consists of free activities like walks in the woods or a nearby park?
What if the new building projects didn't happen? Could CIA survive a few more years in their current location? Could we do without a convention center? Could the port increase business right where they are? Could doctors learn to take the transit?
Ease on out of your denial... this is gonna be one hell of a rough ride. The only balm is that rich people got swindled, too.
“Just visualize a dining-room table with everything laid out in rows,” Sherman said. “They’ve taken the jewelry out of the safety-deposit box and laid it out—all the earrings, and then come the bracelets and the suites of things that go together.” Often, the house is for sale, too. “Everybody down here has David Webb jewelry,” Sherman said, referring to a company known for its gem-encrusted animals. “And there’s all the inherited jewelry: things from the twenties that are from the great-grandmother. And then the grandmother’s things are from the forties and fifties, and now Mom is selling her things that are from the seventies.” Sherman helps them prioritize: “I always say, ‘Well, now, have you worn any of it? Or is there anything you’re still emotionally tied to?’ ” She does a bit of therapy: “Most of them never thought about having to come up with money to pay regular expenses." Sell-off: FAMILY JEWELS
Special treatment
I spoke with a contractor today, who admitted to me that he has been offered to have back taxes, demo liens, water/sewer liens "waived" for picking up the right project. How does it work? Who are these people?
2000 Denison
Stay tuned for another Denison demo nearby to benefit the NRP scheme--the address plate has been removed from the house. I do have a camera now.
Elitism
Who can we attribute this quote to?:
" The fact of the matter is that people living in government houses, sending their kids to public school, and receiving TANF, WIC, ODC, and subsidized utility bills, consume from the system without contributing a dime back to it. That burden falls on those of us who are educated and work hard. I'm personally okay with that. I'll pay my taxes to Cuyahoga County if it means that someone else doesn't feel the need to hold me up at BP and rob me of a 'hood tax.'"
When does some one wake up and suddenly find themselves one of the elite?
an "elite" blogger
on cleveland.com responding to an article about the Westside Market of all things - I'm not sure how his comments pertained to the subject matter. I use it of an example of the prevailing near west side elite ideology.
I imagined an exercise for these dear children - an itemized listing of all the little privileges they have enjoyed in their lives - things like good schools; extracurricular activities; summer camps; good food on a regular basis; parental involvment because the parents weren't struggling to keep a roof over their heads; mommy and daddy paying for college -- the list could go on and on and end with their cushy little non-profit job they somehow acquired with a BA, Music, flute. Juxtapose that list next to one of non-privilege..
Do you think they might "get it" then?
As I mentioned to a friend the other day: this is the blessed generation of entitled youth now grown to adults. These people truly are confused when you challenge them. They cant understand why everyone doesnt see the glory of their @ss.
Sorry for the crude reference, it just gets under my skin sometimes....
Speaking of families doing
Speaking of families doing things - I just want to share something. Last summer I took my granddaughter 4 at the time out in the yard - she was playing dress up - an old pink easter hat, a red christmas dress - her favorite red shoes, a pink rose bouquet she'd made herself - and we took lots of pictures - she posed all over the yard in front of flowers, she sat on the steps, all kinds of poses - I downloaded them and made a bunch of copies - then she and I took a bunch of magazines and sit down on the floor and cut out whatever pictures she liked - animals, plants, anything - then we got some construction paper and folded it in a book form tied it together with a pretty ribbon - got some glue, glitter and her photos - we cut her out of her photos and then pasted the magazine pictures on the pages of the book - went back and pasted her into the book in different scenes like sitting on the edge of a river or standing in a forest - walking with big dogs - where ever her pose would fit. Then when we finished we could turn the pages and tell the story which was then about her and an adventure and the story could be different every time we looked through the book - we had so much fun and she adores the book - now she wants to make more books. It only cost pennies and makes such wonderful memories.
Great literacy idea
Winter is the time to dust off our ability to entertain ourselves. Great idea :)
reminds me of Sears Robuck catelogues
flour paste and my grandma's house -
thank you Jerleen!
You remember those days too
You remember those days too - I didn't know anybody else knew about the flour paste and the sears and Roebuck's - all of my paper dolls came from a sears catalog - anybody remember Alden's - I used to paste pictures all over the wall......and the out house.
YOU ARE SO WELCOME......AND FOLKS TODAY CAN'T FIND ANYTHING CREATIVE FOR THEIR KIDS TO DO........UNLESS IT COSTS MEGA BUCKS. THEY REALLY WANT TO HAVE SOME FUN......I CAN TELL EM WHAT TO DO WITH SOME POPBOTTLE LIDS AND THREAD SPOOLS.
The other Frank speaks today
Here are photos of the Olney Museum taken today 2/8/2009
Please scroll to the top and see other photos that relate to the intersection of West 14th St. and Fairfield in the Tremont neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio. Mayor Jackson in his City Club address today 3/5/2009 acknowledged that the preferred City of Cleveland solution to the Inner Belt bridge crisis is to build two separate bridges--one to keep open, while the other is being built. So, the obvious question would be how does this existing land clearing fit into the overall scheme???
Note: in the last photo taken of Frank Giglio's house, the new windows
had been "harvested." The house with the windows intact actually looked more presentable than the current state of the Olney Museum and the adjacent Victorian buildings.
View Larger Map
2nd request - has anyone heard from Frank G???
I haven't seen him in quite awhile....
Where are the plans ?
For the parking garage going in to this vacant landscape? Has anyone seen the plans?
These MORONS want to build a garage?!?!
You have got to be kidding me - like any of the food in Tremont is all that special... please. And for the number of people here who actually buy art, there is plenty of street parking...
Who is supposed to pay for a parking garage in the historic residential lower middle-class, cool and artsy with a growing population of yuppie shit-heads neighborhood of Tremont?
How are the ugly mess garages in Cleveland Heights... on Lee, Coventry, and Warrensville... doing to transform those neighboods...
I know they made some money for some shithead builders and developers and screwed the public.
So who is the big shot planning to do that in Tremont?
Disrupt IT
Link to Tremont Leaders Yahoo group
This may shed some light on the parking issues over there. Can you say SII
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/tremontleaders/message/1108
Wow Norm maybe we can use you for a fundraiser
We have to see how things go by the start of next week. We may need your help. Believe it or not even some yuppies want to help but you hit the nail on the head the ones sucking down the TWDC Kool-Aid need to be stopped before we have more homeless people in Cleveland.
We need to team up on discovery and analysis
The urgent challenge right now is for a team of us to work strategically together to investigate all the facts, documents and interconnections behind the SIIs and other economic and community development plans here to stop them. If we are able to stop the bad plans, we stop the wasting of $100s million on them and their planners, allowing for funding of good plans.
Nobody needs to fundraise - we need to reallocate public funds to the public.
I'm here to help and I need the help of anyone willing and able help!
More to post on this later today...
Disrupt IT
Donlevy's Construction
I wish that I could find a photo of the large house that served as the offices of Donlevy* Construction. It was solid and well-maintained and located on Fairfield and torn down along with the Greek coffeshop. Donlevy also had an adjacent and fenced parking lot, which was excavated as part of this scheme. http://maps.google.com/maps?q=fairfield+cleveland+OH+44113&oe=utf-8&clie... Turns out I was able to find a photo of the street before the demolitions, although the contractors had moved out before this photo, so it looks weedy. (I actually remember the Donlevy building closer to West 11th, so it looks like it came down before the google photo). Who paid for these demolitions? Did we pay for these demolitions?
Anyone know what is planned for the former Eikona gallery building across from Parallax? At one time, the Greektown folks tried to desperately buy it before Eikona purchased it. Eikona finally let it go. Is it slated to be demolished, too?
*(Not quite sure on how it is/was spelled)
Not spoken with Frank G
But I may be able to get a few phone numbers if soneone needs them to check in on Frank. You are good to be concerned.
More demolition
Henry--can you give us an update on the Inner Belt bridge meeting held tonight 4/21? Chris saw you there--he noted that several houses have been demo'd on Fairfield west of the I-90. The alignment of the new bridge will obviously be west of the existing Inner belt. What is the purpose of the land clearing on east Fairfield and demo of Frank's house? For equipment staging??