Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Dunwoody Theatre - time to include this tradition in our planning

When my first daughter was just a tyke in a stroller, we took her to Lemonade Days at Brook Run.  Just past the flea market of artisans was a puppet show (and welcome air conditioning) in the Brook Run Theatre.  It was the first and last time we visited there.

In recent days, Danny and Queenie Ross have regenerated the on-again/off-again discussion about the fate of the old theatre and they have put their money where their mouths are.

Danny's opinion piece from The Crier

From the column:

It is now time to address another major need: A facility to support the performing arts. Our mindset needs to change to thinking of art, not as entertainment, not of education, but of economic development. For certain it is a key ingredient to the fabric of a world-class community that we strive to be. The income level of our citizens together with the educational level dictates that this should happen. In the future, new corporations will look elsewhere if Dunwoody does not offer its workers this important quotient in the equation of quality of life.
Below is an email I sent to John Heneghan back in July 2010, when this blog was just the "SDOC Publishing professional blog", about a year before I started adding municipal commentary and it became the "Dunwoody Working Girl".  Emphases added by me for this post.

John--

If you're seriously interested in input on Brook Run, here's mine:

The park has become the defacto fairground for the city, first with Lemonade Days, now with the Music Festival and who knows what else will come in the future. In addition, most parks are uber-structured: this little plot is for little kids, that little plot is for tennis, etc etc etc. What Dunwoody *doesn't* have is a general common. (Think Piedmont park.) A place where people can just be, walk with a stroller, sit down with a book, or throw a ball or frisbee around on a whim. IMHO, you'll get a lot more people using the park from different walks of life if there is one area that is not strictly regulated in terms of purpose.

I would also make sure for current and future events at the park that water and places set aside for porta-potties are planned for. I heard some whispers during Lemonade Days that there was a big conflict (or some conflict, not sure how big) over whether the fair could access the water that the Community Garden uses for their crops. Best to avoid that, make sure the infrastructure (read: water) can handle the events already there and not bother the Garden with those needs.

While on that subject, the largest parcel of land (where the main hospital used to stand) is All. The. Way. In. The. Back. Plus, has anyone ever seen the lead/asbestos ablation reports from the County when the hospital was torn down? If so, are they credible? (Yes, that's a serious question.) If it's a place to "just play" or do whatever, the City is going to have to promote the hell out of it - . (Paging the Chamber and CVB......)

Is there any way to increase accessibility to those areas? 100 acres is a lot of land to only have one entrance/exit. Is it possible to build a secondary entrance on the "back" side (and again, promote the hell out of it). Add more sidewalks (one of your favorite causes!) to encourage people to walk there, etc. Another drive-in entrance w/ some parking? More bike racks? If I saw those there (esp the drive in and parking - I'm not putting 3 little tots on a bike or a segway, no matter how much you and other enthusiasts push it. ) I'd use that open area more myself.

The remaining buildings that were offices/dorms from the old hospital: use 'em or lose 'em. If they can be rehabilitated in a cost-effective manner then do so. Buildings that appear to be generally unused regardless of their condition are just waiting for delinquents to cause trouble. If you're keeping the buildings, I say expand their use. How about an annex or alternative to the DeKalb Cultural Center? There's smoother access and more parking than the old Dunwoody Elementary location. I'm involved with an organization that meets at the central location and getting a parking space is a royal PITA. Plus if I have to have the stroller with me I can't jack it up a long flight of concrete stairs. The wheelchair (and stroller) accessibility at the current cultural center is a big, fat joke.

How about using the auditorium (again if it's going to be kept) for more community events - like HA meetings, candidate forums, an alternative to the City Hall location for council meetings. (You want more people attending, right? How about bringing a meeting out of the Perimeter once in a while? Would that be so bad?) I could also see the Chamber holding a meeting there if it was spruced up. All of the above could generate some modest revenue as well.

Technically it can even be an alternative location for the Stage Door Players but you'd have issues with visability versus their current location. I wouldn't expect that thought to go very far, but it's worth throwing out there.  
(New Note:  little did I know that SDP had been working this angle for a while.)

This is all if the buildings can be renovated for less than the cost of new construction. If that's not the case, demolish them, and fast. Use the land for something else. Like a general picnic area with tables and grills under the shade. You don't see many of those around and the DNDC doesn't count.

With the land that we have at that one big park you can do all of this, and there would STILL be room for the dog park AND the community garden to expand. And that's just Brook Run - some of these options could be incorporated (scaled to the size of the land) in other Dunwoody parks too.

ADD
I'm proud to support the Stage Door Players and other arts productions when our family has the means.  I remember learning from Robert how SDP is operating on less than a shoestring and I think they deserve better.  As Danny noted in his proposals, there are many arts groups that need a place to call home.  Plus, we need the type of meeting space for organizations that has currently been wasted.  The meeting spaces in the two former classrooms at the North DeKalb Cultural Center would be funny if they weren't so uncomfortable and inadequate.  I speak from a lot of experience with three organizations that meet there.  It's a nightmare to reserve any space and an emotional drag to host anything there because of the condition and parking.

Whether the building can be saved or not, you have a foot print and floor plan that can be used for this purpose.  There is no law saying that such a center MUST be combined with a City Hall.  Just because Sandy Springs is taking that route doesn't mean that Dunwoody has to be the "me too" kid on the block.  You've got the space.  You've got the parking capacity (between the park itself and PCMS).  You've got the collective memory of a theatre there.  The concept isn't broken, there's no need to fix it.  It also does not have to be evaluated or planned to the exclusion of other city needs.

Bravo to Danny and Queenie for putting verbs in the sentences and money where it needs to be so Dunwoody can finally take some kind of action on these facilities.

Monday, March 23, 2015

INTRODUCING: Timberhood Consulting, LLC


SDOC's latest launch is a classic story that could only be Dunwoody.  Two local businesses who make waves on a large scale also work together locally.  Dunwoody has a growing number of local entrepreneurs.  25% of all business licenses are issued to home-based businesses and many of those have a national or  international reach.   These entrepreneurs are regular fixtures in the community too.   It was great to work with Bryan after attending Mass and school carpools for years.

Timberhood Consulting LLC provides engineering design and consulting all around Atlanta.  If you have spent any time downtown, especially around Georgia State or Georgia Tech, you've seen their work.

Bryan's previous site was all in Adobe Flash(R).  It was the state of the art several years ago but today it was impossible to keep updated and invisible on mobile devices.  Bryan's site needed to match his logo and branding, and be easy to update by posting articles related to each area of expertise.

The result is this WordPress based website with an array of slideshows.  The front page is an assortment of images.  Each specialty page contains a slideshow of a brief article and image related to current projects.  Best of all, new content can be added to any of these slideshows through a single interface making it fast and easy to add the latest news.  

The slideshows are also connected to Twitter:  they are automatically posted to that social network when a new article is published.


And - as always:  the site is responsive and is just as readable on your smartphone as on a large screen.
Take a look at a Dunwoody neighbor's portfolio at www.timberhood.com.  


Tuesday, March 17, 2015

INTRODUCING: Commissioner Nancy Jester | www.nancyjester.com



Nancy won her runoff election in December and that's when the work really began.  After building and running the campaign website, Nancy asked me to stay on build her Commissioner's site as well.

After the usual discussions, examining samples, listing content needs, I was assigned to design the interface, then hand it off to the technical staff (Hi Stan!) to make final edits and implement the content.

This is not a stereotypical open source CMS site like WordPress.  This interface was custom-built, line by line and item by item to unique specifications.  AND - as always, all of the elements have to be responsive.

I'll be around for tech support where it's needed but Nancy's staff is going to handle it from here.  Thanks so much to the campaign and to the Commissioner's staff for allowing me a place in this project.