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Spare pARTS fundraiser on SaturdaySeptember 22nd.

This year our 2012 Spare pARTS fundraiser for FWADG will be held on Saturday evening, September 22nd 2012 at the soon to be open Four Corners Brewery on Singleton Blvd. just west of the Calatrava bridge. As usual, great music, fabulous food, beverages and this year, featured local micro brew will be on hand at our celebration.

Last year's fundraiser was an incredible success! Thank you to all the Dallas area artists that participated.


All of the art created from discarded objects and recycled materials for last year's fundraiser has afforded us a juried $6000 commission for a public art installation along our corridor. The winning submission by Erik Glissman and Nicole Horn "Mobeus Bench" is installed at the intersection of Commerce St. and Pittman St. in front of Chicken Scratch restaurant.

Please help FWADG make this years fundraiser a success by creating more fabulous art from discarded, lost and found objects. Our fundraiser is September 22nd, so now is the time to get those brain juices flowing, those glue guns and welders warmed up and those paint palettes glistening with color.

Please have all donations submitted to David Lyles Photography on or before Saturday, September 15th for the show, we will be inventorying the art at David Lyles Photography studio, 2318 Beatrice St. Dallas, 75208

All contributing artists will receive a ticket to our event on September 22nd at the micro brewery. Please do not hesitate to contact me with questions or comments; 214 587.4776

Thank you again to all of our contributing artists from last year; and thank you in advance to all of you who will create for this year's event! We could not be doing this without your support!

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Fort Worth Ave Development Group
Presents
Mobius Bench
A Spare Parts Art Installation


Dallas, Texas – The Fort Worth Avenue Development Group is proud to announce the completion of the first Spare Parts Public Art Initiative.  The team of Erik Glissman and Nicole Cullum Horn’s Mobius Bench is installed at the corner of Pittman and Fort Worth Avenue, on the property of Chicken Scratch. There will be a reception and christening Monday, August 27th, at 7pm and the artists will be on-hand for interviews and photos.
 


About Mobius Bench

 Mobius Bench is a dynamic sculpture designed to provide seating and shade for pedestrians along Ft. Worth Avenue.  The structure is deceivingly simple, yet in the grace of its curvature becomes intriguingly complex.  Reflecting the infinite curve of the Mobius strip, the patron is surrounded by an arched interior of reclaimed cedar with a curved exterior skin of recycled sheet metal scales.  As the arch returns to the ground, the strip is broken into two seats situated to encourage street-level conversation.  The nature of the materials and utility of the structure are meant to reflect the beauty of the neighborhood while serving those who use it. 

About Spare Parts

Spare Parts is an initiative by the Fort Worth Avenue Development Group to support public art that emphasizes re-used materials and utility for the community.  To raise the funds for Spare Parts the FWADG set aside 50% of the proceeds from sales at their annual fundraiser of the same name. This year's auction is coming up on September 22nd at Four Corners Brewery. Our goal is to support the ingenuity and DIY spirit of the area, and to encourage street life and pride along Fort Worth Avenue.

About Fort Worth Avenue Development Group

The FWADG is a group of committed volunteers from the neighboring community.  The purpose of the Fort Worth Avenue Development Group is to improve the West Commerce/Fort Worth Avenue corridor and maintain a high quality of life for the area’s residential neighbors, property owners and businesses.

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MANNY RODRIGUEZ PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO
GROUND BREAKING

AUGUST 08, 2012


FWADG welcomes our newest addition to our growing family dedicated to improving our community,
Manny Rodriguez Photography.

Ground was broken on the new development Tuesday, August 7th, 2012, with the help of Will Pinkerton, Alicia Quintans, Monte Anderson, Vanessa Rodriguez, and Manny Rodriguez. The "Graffiti House" will be rejuvenated and re-purposed
to house the new Manny Rodriguez Photography offices; and a 5000 ft studio will be newly constructed just to the north of the "Graffiti House" building. The new location is scheduled for completion January of 2013.

Thank you again to all who came out and made this a fantastic ground breaking including Angeline Churchill, granddaughter of the original owners of the farm house, members of the Old Oak Cliff Conservation League, staff from Metro Paws and Chris Jeffers from Smoke/Chicken Scratch.

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Mobius Bench…a Spare PArts Installation


 

Dallas, Texas – The Fort Worth Avenue Development Group is proud to announce the first installment of the Spare Parts Art Initiative. The team of Erik Glissman and Nicole Cullum Horn’s Mobius Bench was selected by a Jury Panel of Dallas arts professionals from three finalists, and over twenty-five initial submissions.  The work is to be installed along Fort Worth Avenue this summer.  The FWADG would like to thank all the artists who submitted ideas for this project, with a special salute to the two finalists, Heather Ezell, Jennifer Sereno, and the jury who made the tough decisions – Wanda Dye, Bernardo Diaz, Kay Kallos, Sarah Jane Semrad, and VET.

Download PDF below for more information.

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Join us for an Earth Day Celebration!

 http://oakcliffearthday.com/index.html

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West Dallas Chamber of Commerce You bet we're on Facebook

Bridge-o-Rama, March 2-4: More than 30 official events

Bridge-o-Rama will be a festival like no other staged in Dallas
Bridge-o-Rama's nine Signature Experiences a+re just the tip of the Bridge-o-Rama iceberg. We also have more than 30 highly focused events taking place all over West Dallas (and beyond) that will be free and family friendly.

Review all of our offbeat, intriguing, and mind-expanding official events that will take place next weekend.

Some of these official events include:


Jim Lake Companies Happy Hour   Design District happy-hour social
To kick off the bridge opening celebrations, Jim Lake Companies hosts an open-to-the-public Design District Diversion and Bridge Weekend Kick­off in the Design District with complimentary beer and wine, food, live jazz, and art.
When: Thu., Mar. 1, 4-7 p.m.
Where: 150 Turtle Creek Blvd., Ste. 105

Bridged   Tomorrow's master artists ... today
"Bridged" will feature drawings, paintings, video, photography, sound, sculpture and site-specific installations by MFA candidates in art programs at SMU, TCU, University of North Texas, University of Texas at Arlington, and University of Texas at Dallas.
When: Fri., Sat, and Sun., Mar. 2-4, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.
Where: 500 Singleton

Los Barrios Unidos Community Clinic   Anniversary celebration
In honor of 40 years of serving West Dallas families, the Los Barrios Unidos Community Clinic is pulling out the stops with an anniversary celebration that offers the chance to access pediatric screenings and services while enjoying music, clowns and a bounce house.
When: Sat., Mar. 3, 10 a.m.–2 p.m.
Where: 809 Singleton Blvd.

  Neighborhood youth arts festival
On the grounds of the Bataan Center, West Dallas Community Centers, Big Thought, the SMU Meadows School of the Arts, the La Bajada Neighborhood Association and the Los Altos neighborhood will present a Youth Arts Pavilion.
When: Sat., Mar. 3, 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Where: 3232 Bataan St.

Mercy Street   Home run derby at Field of Dreams
Mercy Street will be going to bat for West Dallas by hosting a Home Run Derby at its Field of Dreams baseball park. Preceding the derby will be a presentation of the future of the complex, which when completed will offer 12 acres of fun.
When: Sat., Mar. 3, 2-4 p.m.
Where: 3500 Goldman St.

  Public readings by renowned Dallas authors
Among those participating in this event staged by LIFT and Dallas Area Habitat for Humanity is John Neal Phillips, who wrote "Running with Bonnie & Clyde." Also, noted sculptor Jesus Moroles will give a talk on his work with granite.
When: Sun. Mar. 4, 1:30-4 p.m.
Where: Habitat for Humanity, 2800 N. Hampton Rd.

Bridge-opening event advisories
PARTY ON!
Bridge-o-Rama and our sister celebrations will take place as planned on March 2-4. News reports have confused some as to when the bridge will be open to vehicular traffic. The City of Dallas and TXDoT had hoped that the bridge would open to vehicular traffic at the conclusion of the public celebrations. However, as the City has announced, "due to weather conditions, mainly much needed rain, portions of the construction will take a few more weeks than anticipated." No matter to us! We're still rocking the bridge March 2-4.
RAIN OR SHINE
Bridge-o-Rama will take place rain or shine. There, we said it! Of course our official weather policy is: It's not going to rain.
WEST DALLAS NEIGHBORHOOD IMPACT
Due to the bridge celebrations, especially on March 3, there will be greater traffic and (during the Parade of Giants) temporary street closures that may disrupt residents and businesses usual flow of activity. Please plan for temporary disruptions. Here is an advisory for our West Dallas neighbors near the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge.
Visit westdallaschamber.com
West Dallas is bounded by the Trinity River Corridor on the north and east, I-30 on the south and the city limits on the west
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A meeting on Valentines Day to discuss
possible bike lanes configurations on Ft. Worth Ave

included members of

CityDesign Studio, Huitt-Zollars, City of Dallas,
Team Better Block, Bike Friendly Oak Cliff and
Ft. Worth Avenue Development Group.

FWADG will be hosting a town hall meeting on
Tuesday, February 21, 6pm
at Salon Las Americas, 1004 Ft. Worth Ave, Dallas TX.

I hope you can join us to help define the first bicycle lanes in Dallas.

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Subject: Dallas mayor's plan to spur southern growth focuses on key corridors

By RUDOLPH BUSH
Staff Writer
rbush@dallasnews.com

Published: 10 February 2012 05:25 PM

Dallas’ greatest opportunities and most intractable troubles have long been wound together in the open land and scattered neighborhoods south of the Trinity River. Now, seeking to capitalize on those opportunities and minimize the troubles, Mayor Mike Rawlings is unveiling a plan he hopes will bring economic growth to eight key corridors of southern Dallas and help change perceptions of the entire area.

Returning to a key plank of his campaign, Rawlings sat down this week to discuss details of the plan that he will roll out Monday at a community meeting in the Cedars. “Growing southern Dallas is one of the most important things I feel I can do as mayor, and I want to make sure we do this in an organized fashion,” he said.

The plan, crafted over months with city staff, boils down to building on successes by focusing money on key areas, leveraging new investment as those areas grow and shifting attitudes by cleaning up and marketing the neighborhoods of southern Dallas. Past mayors, including Rawlings’ predecessor, Tom Leppert, had their own plans for improving southern Dallas that often made little progress.

But certain parts of southern Dallas have changed for the better — dramatically in some cases — over the past decade.

Rawlings pointed to the Bishop Arts District and to Pinnacle Park, near Interstate 30 and Loop 12, where strong private investment has taken root. And he talked about West Dallas and the area around the University of North Texas at Dallas, where major public investments can be capitalized upon.

Investors need to know that these are the places where the returns will be, Rawlings said. “I’m a salesman, unabashedly, about the investment opportunities I think exist. And I want to be clear about where I’m going to be spending my time in my administration,” he said.  He said he is already working to bring investors to the area to show them what has been done and what is coming.

KEY AREAS: Corridors emphasized in city’s plan

Mayor Mike Rawlings’ plan for southern Dallas focuses broadly on eight areas, with long-term (two years) and short-term (one year) goals for each. Here’s a look at some of the goals for each area:

West Dallas Gateway: Overhaul Herbert Street north of Singleton; continue work on restaurant district; build new Continental pedestrian bridge; replace Sylvan Avenue bridge; make improvements recommended by Complete Streets Demonstration Project.

Pinnacle Park: Begin construction of new frontage road along the south side of I-30 from Cockrell Hill Road to Westmoreland Road; begin construction of 130-unit Hillside West apartments on West Davis Street.

North Oak Cliff: Complete “Main Street Plan” for Jefferson Boulevard and strategic plan for Bishop Arts District; begin construction of Oak Cliff streetcar starter line; make improvements recommended by Complete Streets Demonstration Project and zoning changes consistent with Oak Cliff Gateway land use plan.

Greater downtown/the Cedars: Support funding requests for residential and hotel projects; complete South Lamar streetscape improvements; review operations at Dallas Farmers Market and consider options; complete design for Riverfront Boulevard reconstruction south of Cadiz Street.

Lancaster Corridor: Start construction of Lancaster Urban Village mixed-use project; make improvements recommended by Complete Streets Demonstration Project; initiate affordable-housing plan at the Kiest and VA Medical CenterDART stations; work with the VA Medical Center to build a pedestrian bridge over Lancaster Road.

Education Corridor: Overhaul water, sewer and roads; finalize plans for grocery store on Simpson Stuart Road; complete design for Complete Streets Demonstration Project on Camp Wisdom and Simpson Stuart roads; re-establish relationship with BNSF railway for potential intermodal facility; consider pursuing state funding for additional campus buildings at UNT-Dallas.

DART Green Line Corridor: Initiate affordable housing and other development at MLK, Hatcher and Buckner DART stations; improvements recommended by Complete Streets Demonstration Project; continue construction of Fair Park Estates single-family development.

Red Bird: Hire aviation coordinator to oversee land development at Dallas Executive Airport and Love Field; finalize approvals for Wal-Mart Supercenter at I-35E and Ledbetter Road; complete Home Depot distribution center expansion; identify potential private developers at Executive Airport.

SOURCE: City of Dallas

City’s focus areas

Rawlings held back some details of his plan for Monday’s meeting. But he said those ideas involve new financial tools for investing in the area, giving a hand up to schools and strengthening neighborhood organizations. He spoke at length, though, about where he wants to see City Hall focus its efforts during his time in office. And he said he wants to see results soon.

He called for the city to make Jefferson Boulevard, near Bishop Arts, a main street for north Oak Cliff. That means not only improvements to the streetscape, but also engagement with building owners to set a strategy for the future.“This is our complete street right there. Let’s just make this thing come to life,” he said.

He wants to see 2012 bond money committed to extending Herbert Street as a main street in West Dallas. And he wants a focus on improving basic infrastructure around UNT-Dallas and seeing a frontage road built along I-30 at the Pinnacle Park development.

Other ideas include improvements to the Lancaster corridor near the Veterans Affairs hospital, re-engaging the plan to build up the inland port, and driving development to the corridor along DART’s Green Line in southeastern Dallas.

The plan also involves efforts to shift perceptions throughout North Texas about southern Dallas.
Rawlings, former chief executive of the advertising firm TracyLocke, is calling for the city to hire a “brand manager” whose sole job will be to market southern Dallas.

“I’m a marketing guy, so I’m going to be staying very close with this person,” he said.

He wants to have ad agencies donate services to support the marketing plan.
And there is good news to market, city officials say. Crime in all of southern Dallas is down 33 percent from eight years ago. The area can boast that it is home to two nationally ranked magnet high schools. And few parts of the region have as many transportation options.

The area will be easier to market if it’s cleaner and more welcoming.
As part of that effort, the city plans to demolish 250 nuisance buildings this year, roughly the same number it destroyed last year.

Rawlings also wants to see the city help distinguish major neighborhoods with attractive gateway signs, of the sort recently erected in Pleasant Grove. Southern Dallas is often meshed together in many people’s minds when, in fact, it is composed of distinct and diverse neighborhoods, such as South Dallas, Mountain Creek, Red Bird and different sections of Oak Cliff.

Opportunities
Council member Tennell Atkins, who headed Leppert’s Southern Dallas Task Force, praised Rawlings’ plan as the right approach. “This mayor feels like we have a product, and that product is southern Dallas,” he said.

The product is also opportunity, he said.
“UNT, that’s an education opportunity. You know the institution is going to be there. You look at Bishop Arts and you know that’s a great opportunity. You’ve got Methodist hospital there, and a streetcar line coming. Look at the Cedars. Look at West Dallas. Southern Dallas is a good product for the city of Dallas,” he said.

But not everyone is so sure about the plan.
Michael Sorrell, president of Paul Quinn College and a respected southern Dallas leader, said that he knew nothing about Rawlings’ plan and that no one had approached him to discuss it. Paul Quinn is an important part of the “education corridor” around UNT-Dallas that Rawlings identified as one of eight critical areas of focus. Sorrell lives with the challenges that major parts of southern Dallas have presented for generations, and he is clear-eyed about the difficulty of overcoming them.

“To create lasting, substantial, meaningful change, there are some fundamental things which have to occur. You can fix housing stock, you can provide investment dollars, but if you don’t address the pervasive lack of preparation, of educational opportunities and of readiness for the citizens, then I’m not sure how you don’t wind up in a situation, even with all the best intentions, where you don’t maximize your opportunities,” he said.

Investment in land, infrastructure and business, without investment in the people of the area, “can lead to unintended gentrification,” Sorrell said.

City Hall understands change will come slowly.
And Rawlings said he wants to see all of southern Dallas participate in the change through stronger neighborhoods. The city can provide help, but he’s under no illusion government can do it all, he said. It will take investors, leaders and the people of southern Dallas, he said.

“So much of this is outside of the big-C City’s purview. The city, the institutional city, can only do so much,” he said.