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Yellow Cab

Volunteers for Dayton! Opportunities Sep. 25-Oct. 2

September 25, 2012 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

Get to know your neighborhood

The City of Dayton and it's 64 official neighborhoods. Image: City of Dayton

Some of our most effective urban revitalization comes from the city’s many neighborhood associations, yet a lot of my well-intentioned friends have never been involved with their local group. Some of them don’t even seem to know what neighborhood they live in. (No, all of Southeast Dayton is not Belmont like your realtor told you.) So I thought I’d take a minute to share with you the City of Dayton neighborhood directory and map, divided into 64 unique planning districts. Sometimes the planning district name might not be the same as the common neighborhood or historic district name – for instance Five Points is now known more as Wright-Dunbar and Historic Inner East as St. Anne’s, Huffman, and Newcom Plain. I also asked our Facebook group members to help me compile a list of neighborhoods with a web presence and here’s what we came up with. Let us know what we missed in the comments section below. Once you find your neighborhood, introduce yourself at their monthly meeting!

  • Downtown – Special improvement district
  • Eastern Hills – Facebook
  • Fairview – Web
  • Five Oaks – Facebook
  • Forest Ridge – Web
  • Grafton Hill – Facebook
  • Huffman (Historic Inner East) – Web – Facebook
  • Innerwest Priority Board – Facebook
  • McCook Field – Facebook
  • McPherson Town – Web – Garden – Cats!
  • Mount Vernon – Web
  • Old North Dayton – Web – Facebook – Business association
  • Oregon District – Web – Facebook – Business District
  • Patterson Park – Facebook – Web
  • Pheasant Hill – Facebook
  • Salem Avenue area – Business district – Peace Corridor Web – Peace Corridor Facebook
  • Shroyer Park – Facebook
  • South Park – Web – Facebook
  • St. Anne’s Hill (Historic Inner East) – Web – Facebook
  • Twin Towers – Facebook
  • University Row – Web – Facebook
  • Walnut Hills – Web – Facebook
  • Wright-Dunbar (Five Points) – Business district – Business district web

Get Involved

Twin Towers neighborhood teens meet with updayton to plan a new park for their neighborhood

  • Our updayton Streetvival team is moving forward with plans to turn a vacant lot at the heart of the Twin Towers neighborhood (Xenia & McClure) into an outdoor ‘reading room’ and performance space with an interactive chalkboard mural. This month we met with the neighborhood association and teens from Peace Academy and Camino de Vida after school programs. In October we will host a Fall Work Weekend to lay the groundwork for completing our pocket park at Xenia & McClure in the spring. Saturday, Oct. 13 at 10am (prep/prime wall and plant trees) and Sunday, Oct 14 at 1pm (paint chalkboard). Contact me to get involved.
  • The “Old” Yellow Cab Building is a 7,000 sqft grassroots community arts space at the eastern edge of the Oregon District near Garden Station; both began as initiatives of the Circus Creative Collective. They could always use help from handy volunteers, and in particular are looking for someone with HVAC experience to get furnaces up and running in their garage performance space. Let Jeff Opt know if you’re that person, or if you’d like to use the space for a creative event, contact Christina Lewis.
  • Garden Station still needs more volunteers at their weekly Saturday morning work sessions. Show up at 4th and Wayne from 8:30am to noon and Lisa  will put you to work!

    Bike Miami Valley found some great volunteers for their valet through this column, including these UD students!

  • What to do with that vacant lot?– Got some energy to help clear the weeds next door? Get a head start on next year’s season by registering with the City’s Care A Lot program. Or learn how to take it over as your own through Lot Links.
  • The Community Initiative to Reduce Gun Violence is hosting a community discussion on what you can do to reduce violence in your neighborhood, Thursday, Sep. 27, 5:30-7:30pm, Northwest Recreational Facility. A nice overview on Dayton’s innovative community policing and its chief can be found here.
  • Walnut Hills Delivery Crew – The mayor’s ‘hood, Walnut Hills, is building a team to hand deliver its new newsletter. So if you live in Walnut Hills, leave a comment here.
  • The last alley sweep of the year will be in Historic Huffman. I’m sure they’d welcome extra hands from everywhere!: Jeff Heath, 301-8556
  • Quick & affordable housing – Check out this cool video of how 100+ Habitat volunteers raised a house in eight minutes last Saturday. To volunteer in the future, visit their website.
  • Don’t forget the downtown dog park cleanup we mentioned last week! Deeds Point, Saturday and Sunday, Sep. 29-30, 9am to 1ish each day. Bring your dog, gloves and any brush removal tool you own. Contact Karen Stephens, 510-6900.

Just For Fun

Volunteers led creative PARK(ing) Day activities in the parklets, from yoga to stories to drumming.

  • Yarnbomb Dayton (or just knit)! – Noticed any colorful ‘knit graffiti’ around the Oregon District? It was probably the work of the Oregon Sip-n-Stitch, which meets every 4th Thursday (e.g. this Thursday) at Deaf Monty’s Inn Port d’Vino from 5-8. Open to any ‘portable handcrafts.’ Wine, beer and light snacks are available for purchase; BYO snacks to share are welcome. Contact Margot.
  • Yogic takeover of the boulevard! When the famous Olmstead Brothers designed South Park’s lovely Park Drive boulevard in the 1880s, I bet they never imagined dozens of yogis praticing their sun salutations. Join the first-ever Yoga on the Boulevard with Practice Yoga, Friday, Sep. 28, 6pm.
  • Meet your Salem Avenue-area neighbors at the Festival of Neighborhoods, Saturday, Sep. 29, 3-6pm, Grace United Methodist.
  • Blanket concert – The Patterson Park neighborhood has planned a community concert on their commons. Sunday, Sep. 30, 6-8pm.

Don’t forget to e-mail me your items and report back with your successes!

Filed Under: Volunteer Opportunities Tagged With: City of Dayton, dayton police, Dayton Unleashed, Garden Station, Habitat for Humanity, Historic South Park, Huffman Historic District, Lot Links, Patterson Park, Practice Yoga, Salem Avenue, updayton, Walnut Hills, Yellow Cab

Volunteers for Dayton! Opportunities Sep. 25-Oct. 2

September 25, 2012 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

Get to know your neighborhood

The City of Dayton and it’s 64 official neighborhoods. Image: City of Dayton

Some of our most effective urban revitalization comes from the city’s many neighborhood associations, yet a lot of my well-intentioned friends have never been involved with their local group. Some of them don’t even seem to know what neighborhood they live in. (No, all of Southeast Dayton is not Belmont like your realtor told you.) So I thought I’d take a minute to share with you the City of Dayton neighborhood directory and map, divided into 64 unique planning districts. Sometimes the planning district name might not be the same as the common neighborhood or historic district name – for instance Five Points is now known more as Wright-Dunbar and Historic Inner East as St. Anne’s, Huffman, and Newcom Plain. I also asked our Facebook group members to help me compile a list of neighborhoods with a web presence and here’s what we came up with. Let us know what we missed in the comments section below. Once you find your neighborhood, introduce yourself at their monthly meeting!

  • Downtown – Special improvement district
  • Eastern Hills – Facebook
  • Fairview – Web
  • Five Oaks – Facebook
  • Forest Ridge – Web
  • Grafton Hill – Facebook
  • Huffman (Historic Inner East) – Web – Facebook
  • Innerwest Priority Board – Facebook
  • McCook Field – Facebook
  • McPherson Town – Web – Garden – Cats!
  • Mount Vernon – Web
  • Old North Dayton – Web – Facebook – Business association
  • Oregon District – Web – Facebook – Business District
  • Patterson Park – Facebook – Web
  • Pheasant Hill – Facebook
  • Salem Avenue area – Business district – Peace Corridor Web – Peace Corridor Facebook
  • Shroyer Park – Facebook
  • South Park – Web – Facebook
  • St. Anne’s Hill (Historic Inner East) – Web – Facebook
  • Twin Towers – Facebook
  • University Row – Web – Facebook
  • Walnut Hills – Web – Facebook
  • Wright-Dunbar (Five Points) – Business district – Business district web

Get Involved

Twin Towers neighborhood teens meet with updayton to plan a new park for their neighborhood

  • Our updayton Streetvival team is moving forward with plans to turn a vacant lot at the heart of the Twin Towers neighborhood (Xenia & McClure) into an outdoor ‘reading room’ and performance space with an interactive chalkboard mural. This month we met with the neighborhood association and teens from Peace Academy and Camino de Vida after school programs. In October we will host a Fall Work Weekend to lay the groundwork for completing our pocket park at Xenia & McClure in the spring. Saturday, Oct. 13 at 10am (prep/prime wall and plant trees) and Sunday, Oct 14 at 1pm (paint chalkboard). Contact me to get involved.
  • The “Old” Yellow Cab Building is a 7,000 sqft grassroots community arts space at the eastern edge of the Oregon District near Garden Station; both began as initiatives of the Circus Creative Collective. They could always use help from handy volunteers, and in particular are looking for someone with HVAC experience to get furnaces up and running in their garage performance space. Let Jeff Opt know if you’re that person, or if you’d like to use the space for a creative event, contact Christina Lewis.
  • Garden Station still needs more volunteers at their weekly Saturday morning work sessions. Show up at 4th and Wayne from 8:30am to noon and Lisa  will put you to work!

    Bike Miami Valley found some great volunteers for their valet through this column, including these UD students!

  • What to do with that vacant lot?– Got some energy to help clear the weeds next door? Get a head start on next year’s season by registering with the City’s Care A Lot program. Or learn how to take it over as your own through Lot Links.
  • The Community Initiative to Reduce Gun Violence is hosting a community discussion on what you can do to reduce violence in your neighborhood, Thursday, Sep. 27, 5:30-7:30pm, Northwest Recreational Facility. A nice overview on Dayton’s innovative community policing and its chief can be found here.
  • Walnut Hills Delivery Crew – The mayor’s ‘hood, Walnut Hills, is building a team to hand deliver its new newsletter. So if you live in Walnut Hills, leave a comment here.
  • The last alley sweep of the year will be in Historic Huffman. I’m sure they’d welcome extra hands from everywhere!: Jeff Heath, 301-8556
  • Quick & affordable housing – Check out this cool video of how 100+ Habitat volunteers raised a house in eight minutes last Saturday. To volunteer in the future, visit their website.
  • Don’t forget the downtown dog park cleanup we mentioned last week! Deeds Point, Saturday and Sunday, Sep. 29-30, 9am to 1ish each day. Bring your dog, gloves and any brush removal tool you own. Contact Karen Stephens, 510-6900.

Just For Fun

Volunteers led creative PARK(ing) Day activities in the parklets, from yoga to stories to drumming.

  • Yarnbomb Dayton (or just knit)! – Noticed any colorful ‘knit graffiti’ around the Oregon District? It was probably the work of the Oregon Sip-n-Stitch, which meets every 4th Thursday (e.g. this Thursday) at Deaf Monty’s Inn Port d’Vino from 5-8. Open to any ‘portable handcrafts.’ Wine, beer and light snacks are available for purchase; BYO snacks to share are welcome. Contact Margot.
  • Yogic takeover of the boulevard! When the famous Olmstead Brothers designed South Park’s lovely Park Drive boulevard in the 1880s, I bet they never imagined dozens of yogis praticing their sun salutations. Join the first-ever Yoga on the Boulevard with Practice Yoga, Friday, Sep. 28, 6pm.
  • Meet your Salem Avenue-area neighbors at the Festival of Neighborhoods, Saturday, Sep. 29, 3-6pm, Grace United Methodist.
  • Blanket concert – The Patterson Park neighborhood has planned a community concert on their commons. Sunday, Sep. 30, 6-8pm.

Don’t forget to e-mail me your items and report back with your successes!

Filed Under: Volunteer Opportunities Tagged With: City of Dayton, dayton police, Dayton Unleashed, Garden Station, Habitat for Humanity, Historic South Park, Huffman Historic District, Lot Links, Patterson Park, Practice Yoga, Salem Avenue, updayton, Walnut Hills, Yellow Cab

Ladyfest Dayton Celebrates Women in Music, the Arts

September 15, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

The idea of Ladyfest has been around since 2000 when the first event was held in Olympia, Washington and featured acts like Cat Power, Neko Case and the Gossip.  From there, the non-profit celebration of women in music and the arts has expanded into a network of community-based festivals around the world.  The Dayton community has been lucky enough to have our own Ladyfest since 2008, and the event has become a regular in the late summer/early fall lineup of festivals downtown.

The Fourth Annual Ladyfest Dayton will be help this weekend: Friday, September 16th and Saturday, September 17th at the Yellow Cab Building on E. Fourth Street.  The event will feature displays from visual artists, handmade and food vendors and a great lineup of music and performance on indoor and outdoor stages.  Although it’s called Ladyfest, the men of the Miami Valley are welcome and encouraged to attend.  As you’ll see from the performance line up below, Ladyfest Dayton has a wide variety of offerings:

Friday Live Music and Performance Schedule
Indoor Stage 5:30 Natalie McCollum
Performance 6:00 Fusion Crew
Indoor Stage 6:25 – 6:55 Michelle Bullock
Performance 7:00 Kira’s Oasis
Indoor Stage 7:20 – 7:50 Ashley Watson
Outdoor Stage 8:00 Eric Henry & Miss Lissa
Outdoor Stage 9:00 Vag Speak
Outdoor Stage 9:40 Wet Night
Outdoor Stage 10:20 Misunderstood
Indoor Stage 11:00 Paige Bellar
Outdoor Stage 11:35 The Dirty Socialities
Indoor Stage 12:30 DJ Mistress

Saturday Live Music and Performance Schedule
Indoor Stage 5:30 – Little Cub
Outdoor Stage 6:30 – A Shade of Red
Outdoor Stage 7:45 – The Rough Customers
Performance 8:20PM – Soul Fire Tribe
Outdoor Stage 8:45PM – Good English
Performance 9:30PM – Belly Dance by Bronwen
Outdoor Stage 10PM – The Seedy Seeds
Outdoor Stage 11:30PM – Jasper the Colossal
Indoor Stage 12:15AM – Szilvi J

Click here for a list of visual artists and vendors.

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Ladyfest Dayton, Yellow Cab

Slow Down Fast: How to Give a PK Presentation

June 23, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

Pecha Kucha Dayton Volume 7 is at Yellow Cab, 700 East 4th, next Thursday, June 30 at 7:30pm. It’s free. Our sponsor, Dragonfly Editorial, is providing the beer. Eight speakers will present their

creations and ideas using the fast-paced 20×20 presentation style. Twenty slides that roll by at 20 seconds each, forcing the speaker to be brief but intense. Like a shot of espresso. You should try it.

PK has been called “beat the clock performance art,” a “chaotic culture mash with a relaxed vibe,” and “both an art form and competitive sport.” If the presenter tries to say too much, the slides can get ahead of them, “like they are being dragged down the street by a big dog chasing a squirrel.”

Strangely, despite the strict 20×20 rule, there’s freedom to innovate. It’s one of those things artists understand: you can be adventurous within tight boundaries. Which is maybe another reason you should try it.

PK Night 3 at The Cannery

The goal of Pecha Kucha is to highlight the energy of ideas in a party atmosphere. PK speakers are thinkers and doers from all walks. Designers, artists, writers, activists and anyone passionate about their work who can tell a story. Storytelling is key. Architects don’t just show pictures of their work. They reveal their inspirations, the creative process, their mistakes, their epiphanies and their hopes. Or gourd art. Or funk, as has happened. And it was fascinating.

Your topic can consist of anything that has grabbed your imagination and compels you to share. At Volume 7, artist and art professor Kevin Harris has titled his presentation “Tread.” Kevin creates drawings and prints combining traditional and digital art media, mind and body, eye and hand, camera and computer, printer and press. Writer J.T. Ryder will tell how he ended up producing the “Dirty Little Secret Variety Show.” Idea guy/politico David Esrati presents “The end of coin flip politics” or how to put the people you really want in charge. Actress Megan Cooper will tell of life without a car, restaurateur Kimberly Collett will share the ongoing saga of Olive, Kidtee Hello will treat us to her strikingly beautiful photography and Jeff Opt, Creative Circus, will explain how we all ended up at the Yellow Cab building listening to him and drinking beer.

Pecha Kucha Night is one of those things that feels different every time. It’s dependent on the space, the speakers, the beer (beer is the other PK rule) and the zeitgeist. So you never know. But seriously? You should try it.

The worldwide phenomenon Pecha Kucha (Japanese for “chatter”), devised in 2003 by Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham of Tokyo‘s Klein-Dytham Architecture, has gone around the world virally. Today, PK nights are 418 cities worldwide. www.pecha-kucha.org. Dayton was granted its own PKN via a handshake agreement with Klein-Dytham for four volume per year minimum. Matt Sauer, architect with Rogero-Buckman, serves as Dayton’s PK coordinator with the help of Jill Davis, a local freelance writer. Jason Sheets, architect at Moda4 Design is the MC, which seems to be a more agreeable term than smartass. They’ve all tried it. It was fun.

This post submitted by guest columnist Jill Davis, one of the driving forces that brought Pecha Kucha to Dayton, and who continues to recruit, promote and nurture the presenters that make each PK night a unique sensation.

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jill Davis, Pecha-Kucha, Yellow Cab

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