Categories
News

This Week In Soapbox 5/26

This Week In Soapbox (TWIS) you can read about the Gateway Quarter Expansion Tour coming up this weekend, positive changes happening in downtown Hamilton, new businesses opening in Over-the-Rhine, update on the City’s pilot sharrow program, a century old church being converted into condos in Bellevue and the City’s efforts to clean up and redevelop a downtrodden piece of property in the West End.

If you’re interested in staying in touch with some of the latest development news in Cincinnati please check out this week’s stories and sign up for the weekly E-Zine sent out by Soapbox Cincinnati.

TWIS 5/26:

  • Gateway Quarter celebrates latest additions with Expansion Tourfull article
  • Downtown Hamilton reimagining center city through development and artsfull article
  • New businesses opening in Over-the-Rhinefull article
  • Sharrows coming to a street near youfull article
  • Century old church in Bellevue to be converted into contemporary loftsfull article
  • Cincinnati applies for funds to redevelop Providence North sitefull article
Categories
News

Cincy Fringe Festival ’09

The Cincinnati Fringe Festival starts today with the Fringe CityBeat Kick-Off Party and will continue through June 6th with 33 productions, nearly 170 performances, more than 150 artists and some new venues. The art opening will take place tonight from 6pm to 8pm and be immediately followed by the Kick-Off Party ($5 suggested donation).

The festival offers an opportunity for a variety of artists to get exposure by submitting their work to be considered for inclusion. During the festival local, regional, national and international artists come to Cincinnati and for 12 days show off their work in traditional and non-traditional art spaces throughout Cincinnati’s center city. The artists represent a variety of media including theatre, dance, music, poetry, visual art, film and much more.

’09 Overview:
In its sixth year, the Cincinnati Fringe Festival saw a record number of submissions from artists outside of Greater Cincinnati and accounted for roughly 52% of all submissions. The diversity and reach, of the growing festival, is something Eric Vosmeier (managing director) is pleased with.

At this year’s festival some 69% of the applicants newcomers and will provide some new faces for those Fringe Festival stalwarts. This growth in newcomers and outsiders is symbolic of the Festival’s explosive growth and popularity over its six years in existence says Vosmeier.

The 2009 Cincinnati Fringe Festival will have a variety of venues throughout Cincinnati’s center city including Media Bridges, Art Academy of Cincinnati, Know Theatre, Jackson St. Underground, Below Zero Lounge, Coffee Emporium, New Stage Collective, Mixx Ultra Lounge and more.

Throughout Cincinnati’s center city there will be a slew of 200+ dedicated Fringe Festival volunteers. What is interesting about the volunteers this year is that many will be scooting around on Segways to help people find their way, answer question or whatever else.

Single tickets for the festival productions are just $12, but passes are also available for $200 (all access) and $60 (six shows). Single tickets and passes are available now and can be purchased online.

An official 2009 Cincinnati Fringe Festival map can be downloaded here (pdf). For full schedules and lineups see bottom of article.

Visual Fringe:
For the second year in a row a part of the Visual Fringe work will be the creation of a mural over the course of the Festival. This year local artists will create a mural on the north wall of the Know Theatre to compliment the south wall mural done last year.

Woven Wall by John Benvenuto (sculpture) & Horizontal by Kelly Jo Asbury (painting)

“Life on the Fringe”:
New this year will be an experiment in very short social cinema as part of the Film Fringe component. “Life on the Fringe” challenges filmmakers to make a short film that in some way completes the statement, “Life on the fringe is…”

Each filmmaker will decide how the statement ends, and in what context “fringe” is defined. Documentaries, dramas, comedies and experimental films are all fair game. The films should be between three and ten minutes in length and be produced specifically for the “Life on the Fringe” event.

Filmmakers will then be a part of the special Cincinnati Fringe Festival screening, and have their films shown on Northern Kentucky University’s NorseMedia television station.

History:
The Cincinnati Fringe Festival traces its roots to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival that started in Edinburgh, Scotland some 51 years ago when eight groups staged their own “fringe” performances at the Edinburgh Festival of the Arts. They set up and created makeshift theatres on the outskirts of the established festival and eventually gained a large following that then outstripped the mainstream festival.

This “fringe” festival concept then jumped the pond to Canada in the 1980s. Canada currently boasts many of these festivals throughout the country and has the largest festival of this type in North America at the Edmonton Festival which regularly draws more than a half a million people annually.

Over time these festivals grew throughout the United States and came to Cincinnati in 2003. There are presently 20 active “fringe” festivals in North America including cities like Philadelphia, Orlando, San Francisco, Minneapolis and New York.

Full Schedules/Lineups
Performance Fringe | Visual Fringe | Film Fringe
Categories
News

This Week In Soapbox 5/19

This Week In Soapbox (TWIS) you can read about Rookwood Pottery’s new OTR digs, new restaurants in College Hill and Newport, downtown Cincinnati residential trends, new life for the historic Crosley Building in Camp Washington, a new water sports complex on Cincinnati’s upper westside and my feature article on Ohio’s 3-C Corridor that would introduce high-speed rail to Ohio’s primary metropolitan areas.

If you’re interested in staying in touch with some of the latest development news in Cincinnati please check out this week’s stories and sign up for the weekly E-Zine sent out by Soapbox Cincinnati.

TWIS 5/19:

  • Linking Ohio through the power of railfull article
  • College Hill business district welcomes Shhhhh Restaurantfull article
  • Historic Crosley Building may see new lifefull article
  • Rookwood Pottery completes first phase of $18M rehabilitation project in OTRfull article
  • Newport Pizza Co. adds locally owned pizzeria to Monmouthfull article
  • Wake Nation brings water sports thrill to Midwest with new Cincinnati parkfull article
  • Downtown Cincinnati experiencing steady population growth and stable selling pricesfull article
Categories
News

This Week In Soapbox 5/12

This Week In Soapbox (TWIS) will be a weekly feature that highlights the various development news stories I have written for Soapbox Cincinnati. You will most likely see the variety of photographs and some general commentary about the issues and places I have covered in that week’s edition on here, but the full stories will never be duplicated.

So if you’re interested in staying in touch with some of the latest development news in Cincinnati please check out this week’s stories and sign up for the weekly E-Zine sent out by Soapbox Cincinnati.

TWIS 5/12:

  • May means it’s bike month in Cincinnatifull article
  • Green Township adding 6th park to commemorate bicentennialfull article
  • Experienced Over-the-Rhine developer sees bright future for neighborhood, businessfull article
  • Christ Hospital Imaging Center opens and earns LEED Silver certificationfull article
  • SouthShore tower most recent jewel added along the Ohio Riverfull article
  • Cincinnati’s two-wheeler parking program taking next step, needs community inputfull article
Categories
News

Findlay Market now open Tuesdays

Ohio’s oldest open-air market and Cincinnati’s historic Over-the-Rhine landmark will now have expanded hours of operations as Findlay Market will now be open an additional day with extended hours throughout the week.

Tuesday will now be added to the days of operation for Findlay Market starting today. The rest of the weekdays will see an hour of extended business in the evening to 6pm, and the market will open an hour earlier at 10am on Sundays at the request of both merchants and shoppers.

Also new will be weekly Wine Tastings at Market Wines every Tuesday from 3pm-6pm. The revised weekly hours of operation can be seen below.

Tuesday: 9am – 6pm (Wine tastings from 3pm-6pm)
Wednesday: 9am – 6pm
Thursday: 9am – 6pm
Friday: 9am – 6pm
Saturday: 8am – 6pm (Biergarten open 11am-5pm)
Sunday: 10am – 4pm