Hack Your City Returns!
Thursday, May 18, 7:30pm at 33 Barnett Street
Dakota Center – one block south of W Fifth
Pecha Kucha (PK) was devised in Tokyo in February 2003 as an event for young designers to meet, network, and show their work publicly. It has turned into a massive celebration, with events happening in 455 cities around the world, inspiring creative people worldwide. Drawing its name from the Japanese term for the sound of “chit chat,” PK rests on a presentation format of 20 images x 20 seconds. In 2009, Jill Davis started Dayton’s PK Nights, partnering with Matt Sauer and Shayna McConville and presenting these nights of quarterly presentations and rotating locations. Over the years we’ve heard about creative candy making, illegal trips to Cuba, Evel Knievel and and how lunches are delivered in India. The beauty of these nights is for 6 minutes and 40 seconds you’ll be exposed to a presenters world and then another and another.
For this month’s PK night head to the Dakota Center for a special welcome and a night of knowledge hosted by Yvette Kelly-Fields of Wesley Community Center. Come be inspired! Topics will include:
- Amaha Sellassie – Building a cooperative grocery in a food desert
- Bryan Stewart – Improving race relations
- Jared Grandy – Reducing gun violence
- Charlie Setterfield – Auditing Dayton architecture with students
- Elizabeth Koproski – Voices of immigrants
- Dot Schnering – Revitalizing a neighborhood
- Trudy Elder – Creating equitable housing and homeless solutions
- Nick Christian – Taking action against the opioid epidemic
- Amy Lee – Promoting community democracy
- Lela Klein – Enabling worker-owned manufacturing
PARKING: The Dakota Center has a small lot, so expect to use the plentiful free street parking nearby. There’s also public parking at W. 4th and S. Broadway behind Chase Bank. (You are just steps away from Texas Beef + Cattle if you’d like to eat before PKing)













The beehive was often used by the Freemasons and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. It symbolizes human industry, faith, education and domestic virtues.
In 2016, a group of high school students participated in a Work, Earn and Learn program at Woodland. Eight girls worked 16 hours per week for 10 weeks and did the care and upkeep of several gardens, established a new garden in a highly visible area of the cemetery with a focus on design and plant selection, learned the workings of the cemetery from the front office to grounds maintenance, received several tours learning the history of Woodland, its establishment and the people resting peacefully within and also worked on the restoration of several monuments, including the “Beckel Beehive.”
















es of steel look like a flowing, organic thing.”







Have your ever visited the cemetery to take a tour? If no, why not? Woodland Cemetery is one of the best and most beautiful cemeteries in Dayton and Ohio and the nation. Here, you can see a great view from the Lookout Tower, study the architecture of the family mausoleums, explore the geology of the grounds, learn about Dayton’s history, discover the cemetery art work on stones more than 175 years old and so much more. There is never any fee to enter and all of the tours are free and open to the public. Bring your bike or wear a good pair of walking shoes and explore for yourself the timeless beauty that is Woodland Cemetery.




