Monday, September 30, 2013

30 Ideas in 30 Days: #27 Complete Streets

30 Ideas in 30 Days

Now that we've started to share some of our secrets, it is important to discuss the role of the street at creating an active civic life.


Complete streets accommodate all uses, not just cars, as this example from Milwaukee shows. Credit: DC Streets Blog.


Idea #27: Complete Streets

The National Complete Streets Coalition is a comprehensive resource for communities and agencies working toward creating a safe, comfortable, integrated transportation network for all users. Advocates have effectively documented the need, benefits, and processes and procedures to bring Complete Streets about. Many communities have already made great strides adopting this as their official planning framework. In Middlesborough we will explore concepts such as creating a dedicated bike line, providing for bumpouts in area otherwise not used for traffic and parking, etc. For more info, please visit: http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/complete-streets/a-to-z

The National Complete Streets Coalition has identified five kinds of activities needed to take place in order to reorient a transportation agency’s work to fully and consistently consider the safety of all users. We provide resources, activities, and best practices from communities across the country to help your community successfully implement Complete Streets. (Free.)

Better Block Middlesborough was held from October 25-27, 2013, in Middlesborough, Kentucky. To help with planning for future events like this, please consider making a donation today!

Managing the Event

Sunday, September 29, 2013

30 Ideas in 30 Days: #28 Sharrows

30 Ideas in 30 Days

In our previous post we talked about creating places for bikes to be locked up through Informal Bike Parking. Now we'll move on to how bikes get where they are from to where they are going through the use of Sharrows.

Sharrows show where bicyclists welcome. Credit: Los Angeles Eco-Village.

Idea #28: Sharrows
Shared-lane markings or sharrows for short made their first appearance in the 1993 Denver Bicycle Master Plan. The idea is to show lanes where bicyclists and other uses are expected to share. Both grassroots activists and official figures with city and state transportation agencies have adopted this as a tactic. Temporary grassroots efforts require only a stencil and spray paint. Formal efforts involve using heavy equipment and markings that are more durable. Some communities have gone so far as to create a dedicated lane just for bicycles and also included sharrows.

The 2009 Manual on Traffic Control Devices provided some detailed specifications for sharrows:

  1. Assist bicyclists with lateral positioning in a shared lane with on-street parallel parking in order to reduce the chance of a bicyclist's impacting the open door of a parked vehicle,
  2. Assist bicyclists with lateral positioning in lanes that are too narrow for a motor vehicle and a bicycle to travel side by side within the same traffic lane,
  3. Alert road users of the lateral location bicyclists are likely to occupy within the traveled way,
  4. Encourage safe passing of bicyclists by motorists, and
  5. Reduce the incidence of wrong-way bicycling.


When placing sharrows, space needs to be given for car doors to open without blocking the path of travel for bicycles. Credit: Cleveland City Planning Commission

Sharrows of the more temporary variety. Credit: The Better Block.
Dedicated lane with Sharrows. Credit: Laguna Streets.

Better Block Middlesborough was held from October 25-27, 2013, in Middlesborough, Kentucky. To help with planning for future events like this, please consider making a donation today!

Managing the Event

Saturday, September 28, 2013

30 Ideas in 30 Days: #29 Informal Bike Parking

30 Ideas in 30 Days

Having shown the success of Pallet Chairs to build community, we get you out of your chair and onto a bike with our next idea.


Informal bike parking. Credit: Mike Lydon, Tactical Urbanism Manual, v. 2
Idea #29: Informal Bike Parking

The lack of parking in many built up areas has inspired the installation of temporary and semi-permanent solutions to encourage bicycling as a substitute. Something as simple as a metal pipe affixed to a wall is sufficient to inspire bicyclists to ride and park. Placing such parking in front of stores may be used as a tactic to attract and service customers from a growing bicycle community. This approach is described in more detail with photographs in the Tactical Urbanism Manual, vol. 2.

Informal bike parking. Credit: Mike Lydon, Tactical Urbanism Manual, v. 2
Painting a bicycle outline with stencil and spray paint by the informal bike parking hardware might help to make the association ever more obvious.

Better Block Middlesborough was held from October 25-27, 2013, in Middlesborough, Kentucky. To help with planning for future events like this, please consider making a donation today!

Managing the Event

Friday, September 27, 2013

30 Ideas in 30 Days: #30 Pallet Chairs Bring the Community Together

30 Ideas in 30 Days

This is our first post in a series of posts leading up to our Better Block Middlesborough event from October 25-27. In 48 hours we will transform downtown Middlesborough through dozens of low-cost interventions. These will help to demonstrate the possibility of long term change. Pop up stores will fill vacant buildings. A pop up park will make a great space for people to gather. Walkability will be enhanced through streetscape improvements. And these are just a few of the ideas!

Over the next 30 days we'll present one idea a day of interventions that might work in Middlesborough or virtually anywhere. If you like what you see, please share this with friends, family, co-workers, and neighbors and encourage them to take part in the Better Block event in October. By working together we'll be able to accomplish great things!

Pallet Adirondack Chair from Shelton Davis.

Idea #30: Pallet Chairs
We have to give a hat tip to Shelton Davis of Atlanta. He's the one who inspired the pallet chair craze with his Pallet Adirondack Chair dating back to 2010. Not only did he inspire these beautiful one-of-a-kind products, he has also generously provided detailed step-by-step plans for how anyone can make their own chairs. The process begins by finding two shipping pallets of good quality that are reasonably intact. Then the flat horizontal boards are cut and detached from the pallet. After being cut to various lengths, assembly begins. We'll skip over the step-by-step and show you the end result. If you're really curious, you may Buy the Plans Here!


Drawings from "Pallet Adirondack Chair" by Shelton Davis.

The chairs once completed can be placed near an area with existing social activity or serve as a catalyst to inspire community gathering. This tactic is described in more detail with photographs in the Tactical Urbanism Manual, vol. 2. For an example of the burgeoning of street seats in the New York metropolitan area visit StreetSeats.org.

Better Block Middlesborough was held from October 25-27, 2013, in Middlesborough, Kentucky. To help with planning for future events like this, please consider making a donation today!

Managing the Event

Better Block Middlesborough Wins National CommunityMatters Successful Communities Contest


BETTER BLOCK MIDDLESBOROUGH WINS NATIONAL COMMUNITYMATTERS SUCCESSFUL COMMUNITIES CONTEST

Discover Downtown Middlesboro Awarded $500 to Make Downtown More Successful


Middlesborough, Kentucky – Better Block Middlesborough won $500 in the CommunityMatters Successful Communities Contest.

CommunityMatters asked people to come together, listen to their free conference call on the Secrets to Successful Communities with Ed McMahon of the Urban Land Institute, then decide on one completely achievable action for making their community more successful.  To sweeten the deal, the Orton Family Foundation sponsored the contest by offering $500 to four communities that came up with an idea or strategy for success.  The Orton Family Foundation works to build vibrant, enduring communities in the Northeast and Rocky Mountain West.

Better Block Middlesborough was chosen from among 16 entrants in the competition for the unique way that it is helping to address community challenges and build a more vibrant future.   Selected by online public voting, the four winning entries are:

-          Middlesboro, Kentucky (pop. 10,334): Discover Downtown Middlesboro plans to use temporary demonstrations to test out pop-up businesses, transform vacant lots, set up public seating in high traffic areas, and install signs that highlight future improvements. The two-day Better Block-style demonstration project will bring neighbors together to experience and envision the great potential for downtown.  

-          Silverton, Oregon (pop. 9,222): With a desire to inspire ongoing conversations about real and lasting community change, the Upstream Arts Collective plans to host curated conversations about the art of neighboring. Local community collaborators and neighborhood practitioners will share their stories in a fun and collaborative atmosphere.

-          Medfield, Massachusetts (pop. 12,024): Working to create a vibrant downtown, the Medfield Cultural District plans to revitalize an underutilized pocket park with community art. The project will ask community members to write their ideas for the park on a large chalkboard set up downtown. They also plan to do an art installation through the park featuring portraits of residents. 

-          Mountain View, Arkansas (pop. 2,748): A county seat characterized by a mix of artisans, professionals, retirees, retail and service occupations, this small town is an established tourist destination. People in Mountain View love to gather and play music of all sorts, and they do so nearly every weekend when the weather is good.  But traditional music is being lost to the prominence of more modern sounds; even the Arkansas Folk Festival is no longer truly “folk.” This group plans to create a music festival that will showcase traditional styles, seeking to protect local heritage and educate people about true old-time music.

DDM Executive Director Isaac Kremer said, “We are thrilled to have been the top vote getter nationally and to have received such strong support from our members, partners, and friends. As encouraging as this win is, we’re excited to show real results for the downtown one month from now.”

Want to volunteer to become part of the positive change happening downtown? Pick the shifts you want during the Better Block event using this online form.

Visit http://woobox.com/5omwgq to see the entrants and winners.

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About Discover Downtown Middlesboro
Discover Downtown Middlesboro (DDM) was founded in 2006. Concerned business owners, building owners, and residents came together to start this organization as a response to the perception of decline downtown. Very early on the organization chose the Four-Point Approach®  established by the National Main Street Center. This approach emphasizes grassroots community action in areas including: Organization, Promotion, Design, and Economic Restructuring.

Revitalization efforts gained greater intensity and focus in 2012. The organization acquired a major 27,000 square foot building downtown to renovate. The project is in the pre-development stage now and the desired outcome is to include residential housing on the upper floors and civic/community use on the ground floor. Groundwork is being laid to restore the historic canal that passes through town, as well as to create a walking and biking trail that connects the downtown with the nearby Cumberland Gap National Historical Park. www.downtownmiddlesboro.org

About CommunityMatters
CommunityMatters is an interactive exchange for individuals and organizations working to engage citizens and build strong, vibrant communities from the ground up. CommunityMatters fuels a growing network of leaders, thinkers and doers in a variety of disciplines – planning, sustainability, health, democracy, education, economic development, and the arts. CommunityMatters is a project of the Orton Family Foundation, in collaboration with other partners. www.communitymatters.org

About The Orton Family Foundation
The Orton Family Foundation believes that empowering people to shape the future of their communities will improve local decision-making, create a shared sense of belonging, and ultimately strengthen the social, cultural and economic vibrancy of each place. Orton helps communities navigate change by offering programs and tools that engage diverse groups of residents in collaborative discussions and decision-making driven by what they love most about their town—its “heart and soul.” www.orton.org

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Darlene R. Taylor selected as President of Preservation Action

Preservation Action is a 501(c)4 nonprofit organization created in 1974 to serve as the national grassroots lobby for historic preservation. Preservation Action seeks to make historic preservation a national priority by advocating to all branches of   the federal government for sound preservation policy and programs through a   grassroots constituency empowered with information and training and   through direct contact with elected representatives. Their annual Lobby Day, held in late February or early March each year, is an excellent way to connect with preservation advocates nationally, and to bring the message about the benefits of preservation to our legislators on Capitol Hill. For more information see: http://www.preservationaction.org/. Middlesborough participated in this event in 2013 and has plans to participate again in 2014. 

Please see the following message about exciting new changes happening with PA.

A Message from from the Board Chair
I am excited to announce that Preservation Action has appointed Darlene R. Taylor as our next President! Darlene’s first day is Tuesday, October 1. She is looking forward to working with each of you!
With a career in public service, global communications at Fortune 100 corporations, and as a principal in her consulting firm, Darlene brings valuable skills and expertise to PA. In senior roles as a congressional aide and in municipal government, she advised elected officials and engaged constituent groups on national public policy issues as well as managed legislative and communications staff. She has served on a number of boards and commissions where she has been instrumental in outreach, public awareness, and relationship building to support fundraising and programming initiatives. She joins a very talented and capable staff, and we look forward to PA’s continued growth and success under her leadership.
Welcome to Preservation Action, Darlene!

A Message from Darlene

preservation-action-president-darlene-taylorI’m excited about this opportunity to work with the Preservation Action Board of Directors, the PA staff, and YOU, our members, and other grassroots preservationists around the country.
I grew up in Washington, DC, and I know from personal experience that our buildings and neighborhoods hold stories of America’s history…as they do in your cities and towns. In my public and private sector career and volunteer service, I have been committed to protecting and preserving historic buildings, lands, and works of art.
We all have a role in historic preservation and I look forward to working with Congress and the Administration to promote sound preservation policy and helping to expand the public’s exposure and involvement in my new position.
Thank you!
darlene-taylor-signature




Contact Darlene at Preservation Action

Darlene can be reached by email at dtaylor@preservationaction.org, and a friendly reminder about our new contact information at the Heurich House on Dupont Circle.
Preservation Action
1307 New Hampshire Ave NW
Third Floor
Washington, DC 20036
P| 202-463-0970
F| 202-463-1299

Middlesborough partners with Walk [Your City] of Raleigh to Promote Walking


Middlesborough, Kentucky - This southeastern Kentucky community is one of a handful of communities in the U.S. and internationally to apply for and receive two free complimentary signs from Walk [Your City]. The first sign was placed at 17th and Ashbury Ave and directs people to the Centennial Park in front of City Hall, just a few blocks away. A QR code on the sign navigates people from one location to the other.

The mission of Walk [Your City] is "Getting More Feet on the Street™!" Now that the initial signs have been sent out and are being installed, people from communities all over the U.S. are welcome to get their own signs for a small fee through this easy to use web-based service.



Around the same time the Walk [Your City] sign went up, a trailhead sign for the Middlesborough Canal Walk was installed a few feet away near the 17th Street bridge. This sign is a companion to a similar one at the other end of the trail on Cumberland Ave. It directs walkers and bikers along the one-mile Canal Walk. Eventually the vision is to connect the downtown with the nearby Cumberland Gap National Historical Park via the Canal Walk and through recreating a portion of the Boone Trace that went along the Yellow Creek.

Want to see more signs like this go up in Middlesborough? Tell us where you think they should go on Twitter @DDMBoro or Facebook.com/DDMBoro. We'll do our best to make it happen!

Friday, September 20, 2013

Team Better Block Revives Neighborhoods


Join CommunityMatters® on Wednesday, September 25, 2013 from 4-5pm Eastern for our free conference call! This month’s call will feature Andrew Howard of Better Block, plus we'll hear from Elena Traister and Lynee Wells - they've both spearheaded Better Block events in their local communities. Register Now!
Think about an area of town that you just can’t wait to leave; a place with vacant storefronts that may never be filled, or a block without much life. Could a committed group of local volunteers turn that place around in just one day?
Photo Credit: Filipe Martinez
Jason Roberts, part of Team Better Block, lived in one of these less-than-desirable places in Dallas, Texas.  Yet, when he looked at the derelict buildings and the empty sidewalks he saw great potential, not desolation.  Jason organized his community to create the first Better Block Project, a weekend event in Dallas’s Oak Cliff neighborhood. 
Watch the video below to hear Jason’s story:
Using temporary demonstrations to test out pop-up businesses, create more inviting public spaces and add life to a tired block, Better Block projects transform scruffy, underused streets into vibrant and walkable places. These locally-driven demonstration projects bring neighbors together to experience and envision an area’s potential. 
Armed with tips from Jason and Team Better Block, hundreds of communities across the globe have organized Better Block projects in their own backyards. 
In the small town of North Adams, Massachusetts, students from the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts painted crosswalks, added decorations to light poles, and created the One Day Café – a pop-up coffee shop - to help revitalize Eagle Street.  
Better Block efforts in Oyster Bay, Long Island transformed Audrey Avenue with a series of pop-ups, from a movie theater to a park, all for just over $1,300.  By showing people the potential for local businesses to succeed, an area long characterized by vacancies and few pedestrian amenities in 2010 was fully occupied the following year.  
Oyster Bay’s organizer, Isaac Kremer, didn’t stop there. He’s already planning another event in his new home of Middlesboro, Kentucky.  We’re thrilled that Isaac is one of four winners of our Successful Communities Contest, garnering more than 250 votes in support of the project.  Isaac’s team won $500 toward their Better Block Project, scheduled for late October. We’ll make sure to check back in with him after the event.
Out in the Rocky Mountains, Denver’s Better Block project in the Five Points neighborhood enlivened a local park with live music, free yoga, food trucks and storytelling.  And, efforts in Grand Rapids, Michigan temporarily converted State Street SE from a neighborhood connector to a retail corridor.  
While many of the interventions created during one- or two-day projects may disappear after the events are over, Better Block projects do create real and tangible change in communities.  A survey of past projects shows that 71% have changed or are changing ordinances around complete streets and neighborhoods and 100% saw an increase in sales tax revenue.
Want to organize a Better Block project in your town? Don’t miss our next CommunityMatters call on Wednesday, September 25 from 4-5pm, featuring Andrew Howard from Team Better Block, Lynee Wells from Grand Rapids, Michigan and Elena Traister from North Adams, Massachusetts.  They’ll tell us more about the benefits of the Better Block strategy, and they’ll share tips and tricks for organizing a project in your community.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

EASTERN KENTUCKY TO HOST CITIZENS’ INSTITUTE ON RURAL DESIGN

EASTERN KENTUCKY TO HOST CITIZENS’ INSTITUTE ON RURAL DESIGN
Get creative:  Art as an economic driver

PIKEVILLE, KY—The Central Appalachian Institute for Research and Development (CAIRD) will host the Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design (CIRD) October 29-31, 2013 at the Center for Rural Development in Somerset, KY.

The CIRD conference in Appalachian Eastern Kentucky will integrate arts and culture into existing community plans, raising awareness about the potential of artisans and craft industries to serve as an economic engine for a 54-county region.  The workshop will bring together a wide range of participants, including local political leadership, tourism experts, arts organizations, cultural heritage experts, and federal government officials.  Registration for the event is free at www.caird-connect.org

The conference will demonstrate that incorporating arts and culture into community plans is affordable for all communities.  The event will include recommendations and creative concepts for realistic, affordable initiatives to include artistic design, features, and programming in Eastern Kentucky communities.  Eastern Kentucky has great potential for tourism development with beautiful mountains, winding rivers, trails, music, and colorful fall foliage.  Further development of the arts and cultural fields will be a valuable asset to this emerging industry.

“CAIRD is proud to host this event,” said chief executive officer Dr. John “Jack” Herlihy.  “We want to explore opportunities for economic growth in Central Appalachia.  Arts development is good for the economy and communities.  There is potential for business development, entrepreneurship, and job creation.”

Presenters for the 2.5-day event include Ed Barlow with North Star Destination Strategies; Sarah Evans with Southeast South-Central Educational Cooperative; Berea, KY Mayor Steven Connelly; Anne Gadwa Nicodemus with Metris Arts Consulting; June Holley, formerly with Appalachian Center for Economic Networks; Linda Caldwell with the Tennessee Overhill Heritage Association; and several local speakers.  Interactive roundtable and action planning sessions will engage participants in lively discourse and encourage critical and creative thinking.

CIRD conference bring together local leaders, non-profits, community organizations, and citizens with a team of specialists in design, planning, and creative placemaking to address design challenges identified by rural communities with a population of 50,000 or less.  Presenters include national and local experts who will share knowledge and help participants develop creative plans and solutions for community and economic development.

CAIRD will apply for credits in the County Officials Training Program through the Department for Local Government and provide the Outside Training Request Form for the Kentucky League of Cities program for city official training credits.

The proposal submitted by the Central Appalachian Institute for Research and Development (CAIRD) was one of four selected by an advisory panel from a pool of 30 applicants this year.

“We were so impressed by the quality of applications we received. The selected communities demonstrate rich potential for leveraging partnerships to take action on rural design issues,” said Cynthia Nikitin, CIRD Program Director and Senior Vice President at Project for Public Spaces, Inc. “Rural design is an important tool for communities to build on existing assets and improve a community’s quality of life, and its economic viability.”

Lodging is available at the Hampton Inn Somerset, Holiday Inn Express and Suites Somerset, and Best Western Midtown Inn & Suites.  Please mention the Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design for conference pricing.  Limited funds are available for assistance with lodging for organizations and persons needing financial assistance.  CAIRD will also provide technical assistance and support to communities who wish to organize post-conference activities, including follow-up meetings and workshops.  Please contact Melanie Stevens atMelanieStevens@upike.edu for additional information.

The Citizens' Institute on Rural Design (CIRD) is a National Endowment for the Arts leadership initiative in partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Project for Public Spaces, Inc., along with the Orton Family Foundation and the CommunityMatters® Partnership.  Established in 1991, CIRD has convened more than 60 rural design workshops in all regions of the country, empowering residents to leverage local assets in order to build better places to live, work, and play. For more information, visit www.rural-design.org.

CAIRD is a non-profit, 501(c)3, public policy organization.  Through applied research, the organization is dedicated to driving long-term development strategies to alleviate economic distress in Eastern Kentucky and Central Appalachia.  The organization strives to connect research with results to improve economic, community, and educational development strategies for sustainable progress.  Visit www.caird-connect.org for additional information.

-END-



Please feel free to contact any member of the CAIRD staff for questions or additional information.

Dr. John “Jack” Herlihy                                        Melanie Stevens
johnherlihy@upike.edu                                     melaniestevens@upike.edu
(606)218-5182                                                     (606)218-5185

Shawna Hall                                                           Amanda Fickey
shawnahall@upike.edu                                      amandafickey@upike.edu
(606)218-5183                                                     (606)218-5186

Friday, September 13, 2013

Middlesborough Leading in National Contest that ends Sunday - VOTE EVERY DAY THROUGH SUNDAY!

Middlesborough, Kentucky - Thanks to the combined efforts of hundreds of people in this Southeast Kentucky town and many more from far outside, Middlesborough has maintained the lead in voting for the national Successful Communities Contest ever since voting started this past Monday. With three days of voting to go and the opportunity to vote once every 24 hours, community leaders are asking for your support!

Voting could not be easier. Once you are logged into Facebook, simply go to this link: http://woobox.com/5omwgq, and cast your vote for the "Middlesborough Better Block" project.

If we are among the four communities to win this will help us with carrying out a Better Block project on October 25-27 this year, that will result in the transformation of a block downtown by over 100 volunteers in 48 hours for $1,000 or less. The facilitator for the weekend will be Mike Lydon with Street Plans Collaborative and co-author of the Tactical Urbanism ManualAlready we have Lincoln Memorial University, the University of Kentucky, and a number of other partners signed up to participate in the event.

DDM Executive Director Isaac Kremer said about the voting and the event, "We've gotten an unprecedented level of support so far, and we're excited about the potential of the CommunityMatters competition and the Better Block event to aid in our ongoing efforts to revitalize the downtown."

Support has come from places far and wide. Just yesterday U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers retweeted a link to the voting to his several thousand followers. He then offered this note of encouragement: "Congrats! Keep up the good work!"

  1. Just pushed Middlesborough over 200 in voting for Better Block. Keep voting every day through Sunday!
  2. Congrats! Keep up the good work!

Votes have come in from as far away as Cincinnati and Athens, Ohio; California; and beyond. A review of visitors to our DDM website show people in 26 states and six other countries from Great Britain, to Japan, to India and Mexico taking an active interest in the work of DDM and this project.

The critical missing piece is you. Please vote once a day for the next three days to help ensure we win this contest: http://woobox.com/5omwgq. Then, if you can, join us the evening of October 10 for a planning meeting for the Better Block event, and then from October 25-27 to help bring about rapid improvement to our downtown. More details to follow.



For those who want to participate in this event or have any questions, please contact Discover Downtown Middlesboro at (606) 248-6155 or via our website at www.downtownmiddlesboro.org. We are also on Facebook and Twitter at "DDMBoro."

About CommunityMatters
CommunityMatters® equips cities and towns to strengthen their places and inspire change. As an alliance of leaders in the community building field, CommunityMatters champions the notion that people have the power to solve their community’s problems and shape its future. We facilitate  connections, provide education and infuse inspiration at the local level.

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Detailed Voting Instructions
1. After logging in to Facebook, search for "CommunityMatters." The go to the page as it appears below.


2. Select the "Contest" link on the CommunityMatters Facebook page.


3. Then find the Middlesboro entry on that page. It has a map of the downtown in the center with white blocks representing buildings. Click on that.



4. In the upper left hand corner of the box that pops up, vote for the project. You can vote once a day every day between September 9 and 16.




Other Participants in the Successful Communities Contest

Bozeman, Montana
Montana's Gallatin Valley is a special place. But what makes it special to the people who live here? What do they think are its greatest assets? We will hold a photo show for people to picture their place and show us what they love about the valley. In this way can residents of this "Last Best Place" identify what makes it so valuable to them, which helps build a successful community.

Allentown, Pennsylvania
Our plan is to invite 100 residents to sign-up for the Allentown Police Department's Chec-Mate program.  We envision safer, cleaner blocks for our neighborhood. The City of Allentown, PA has a number of “quality of life” policing issues that detracts from our community's image, and neighbor involvement can initiate change.

Biddeford, Maine
Inspired by the success of our City's Orton Family Foundation Heart & Soul "Downtown Master Plan," Biddeford's mayor convened 20 community leaders over the last 6 months to draft a Biddeford Vision 2020 that encompasses the entire city. This group created (or pulled together from existing documents) vision statements related to work force, children & families, education, downtown & the mills, arts & culture, tourism, the natural environment, infrastructure, and research & development. Now, to garner feedback and ideas from the whole community, we will create a video depiction of the Vision 2020 Draft, and use it to spring discussion online and in community forums!

Conrad, Montana
We will create a green space with grass, trees, and benches on Main Street to promote a more welcoming and relaxing ambiance for the town.

District Heights, Maryland In honor of World Peace Day and the kickoff of the City’s 1st Annual Oktoberfest 2013, the City of District Heights in collaboration with the District Heights Community Garden Program, will host a “Guardrail and Street Art Painting Project” located at the City’s first Community Garden site called Fiesta Place. This event will be the 1st and largest community-wide event that will bring together residents of all ages, schools, churches and other local organizations through the ARTS --- where 3 guardrails and the street located around the garden, “Fiesta Place,” will be painted.

Elbow Lake, Minnesota
1) "Look" - Community members take pictures to "Inventory" the good (assets) and the bad (detractors) of our community. 2) "Visualize"- Post pictures on "A Look at Elbow Lake' social media websites. 3) "Host"- a second listening party: an intergenerational gathering, with a meal & activities, to talk about what we have and to create a vision for our future.

Fergus Falls, Minnesota
This is our preliminary design for a custom bike rack for the City of Fergus Falls. We would install the bike at or near the end of the Central Lakes Trail, which has Fergus Falls as the northern endpoint. We want to encourage Central Lake Trail bicyclists to spend more time (and money) in the City of Fergus Falls!

Hershey, Pennsylvania
Through Derry Township's endeavor of updating our Comprehensive Plan, the downtown area of Hershey, PA has been identified as one of the Township's strongest assets. This listening group exercise led to a discussion on some of the potential "quick-fix" solutions for issues that our community is currently facing. The top solution was trying to improve on bicycle parking in the downtown, utilizing this reward to provide a $100 incentive to five local businesses so that they are able to provide a bike rack to serve that portion of their customer base.

Lancaster, Pennsylvania
We wrote our ideas on a grocery bag to show our commitment to building a strong local sustainable economy in our own backyard, in the market we were listening in. Our idea is to foster leadership in our community, where we can use what we already have, collaborate to do the easy things that can make our community better, and education those around us on community building.  In the 1 to 2 year horizon, we're going to support a bike culture in our city by creating "parklets" in street parking spaces. We are also going to start a local currency within 6 months, based at SSBN member Roaring Brook Market.

Medfield, Massachusetts
Our listening party was inspired by the concepts of engaging citizens to tell the Town what they want for the improvements of a downtown pocket park. “Visions and Voices” will be a community art project to focus attention on this underutilized asset in the heart of downtown between Zebra’s Bistro and Starbucks. Partnering organizations will work to ensure that the enhancements made will be practical and useful for many to enjoy – adding to the aesthetic and vitality of our lovely downtown.

Middlesboro, Kentucky
On October 26 and 27, 2013 over 100 volunteers will carry out temporary interventions costing less than $1,000 to plant the seeds for long-term change. Our facilitator will be Mike Lydon from Street Plans Collaborative (www.streetplans.org) and author of the Tactical Urbanism Manual. Also participating will be a broad cross-section of area business owners, civic leaders, and residents, along with faculty and students from Lincoln Memorial University and the University of Kentucky.

Mountain View, Arkansas
Building on the heritage of our community by sponsoring an old-time music festival to foster the sound that is being supplanted by contemporary musical styles. Educating residents and visitors about what old-time music is and its relation to the styles such as country-western and bluegrass that grew out of it.

New Concord, Ohio
New Concord, Ohio is John Glenn's home town and scene of his triumphant return from space, two times. We would like to restore our small-town integrity by engaging the university students, who are renting houses in the town proper, to take pride in our community and thus help restore its original tranquility and beauty. We plan to recognize a student rental, monthly, with a yard plaque--"Student House of the Month,"--reward them with a meaningful gift, and publicize their efforts in the local and university newspapers.

Seguin, Texas
Per info gleaned from Ed McMahon’s Seven Distinct Secrets, Seguin will begin to Inventory Community Assets and build on them by getting local citizens and visitors to tell their story about what brought them here, what they like, and what really matters. These interviews will be taped during the festival Pecan Fest Heritage Days and converted to Youtube videos as part of a Positive Image Campaign being undertaken by the Seguin Area Chamber of Commerce. The $500 award will pay to video and edit the interviews.

Silverton, Oregon
The Upstream Arts Collective is dedicated to fostering “rural culture for the common good.” Our proposed project, the FRED Conference, will feature TED-style talks and curated conversations on the art of neighboring. (The conference is named FRED as a hat-tip to Mister Rogers.) Featured speakers will include local community collaborators and neighborhood practitioners. The atmosphere will be fun and collaborative and will lead, we believe, to ongoing conversations about real and lasting community change. FRED will be free to the community and videos will be available online. This poster was prototyped using pencil, crayons, and markers.

Wilburton, Oklahoma
In a small town, we believe starting with a project that everyone can see - like fixing up an old gas station will be a successful endeavor to "get the ball rolling" for a grass roots effort to attract more volunteers and get people interested in bettering the community! We will then get input from those volunteers and tap them for leadership for our next projects that are group identified.