Archive for December, 2010

Washtenaw: Parks

The 2011 funding recommendations by the Michigan Natural Resources Trust Fund board were announced on Wednesday, and include two projects in Washtenaw County: 1) $500,000 for improvements to Lakeside Park in Ypsilanti Township, and 2) $500,000 for the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority to develop the Hudson Mills Hike/Bike Trail – 2.9 miles of hike/bike trail from Hudson Mills Metropark to the village of Dexter. The recommendations now go to Gov. Jennifer Granholm for review, then will be forwarded to the state legislature as part of the appropriations process. [Source]

Monthly Milestone: To Address a Meeting

Editor’s note: The monthly milestone column, which appears on the second day of each month – the anniversary of The Ann Arbor Chronicle’s launch – is an opportunity for either the publisher or the editor of The Chronicle to touch base with readers on topics related to this publication. It’s also a time that we highlight, with gratitude, our local advertisers, and ask readers to consider making a voluntary subscription to support our work.

submit comment button

For regular attendees of Ann Arbor city council meetings, this piece of art is easily recognizable as a "photo-illustration" – there's no "submit comment" button for the public commentary slot on the paper agenda.

I’m fond of using the milestone column as an occasion to highlight some of the work our readers do when they write comments about material we publish.

So I’d like to begin this month’s column with a request: Stop reading the words on this page and fetch yourself a stopwatch.

Now go read some different words – all 972 of them – assembled into a coherent comment by a reader, Richard Murphy, about a recent Chronicle column: Murph’s comment on the purpose of downtown development authorities.

How long did that take you? [Full Story]

Huron & Third/Chapin

(Wednesday night) Pedestrian “HAWK” light takes eons (about 40 sec.) to respond when button is pressed, an improvement over yesterday (at least 60 sec.).

In the Archives: Papered-Over Money Issues

Editor’s note: As municipalities in the state of Michigan start to look ahead to their next budget year, we will likely hear often about the difficult economic times in which we live – and the importance of squeezing every last dime out of the budget. It’s fair to guess, however, that wrangling over Michigan municipal budgets will not include a discussion of who should pay for toilet paper. There was a time, however, when the topic of toilet paper was fair game.

It is wise to choose one’s battles. For one hard-headed 1920 Ypsilanti alderman, the hill he chose to die on was a hill of toilet paper.

rest-room-original

In 1919 the original Rest Room opened on the west side of Huron just north of Michigan Avenue.

In that time, the city was halfway between old-timey days and the modern age. Fewer than a third of its 7,400 residents had telephones. The Ypsi phone directory was nine pages long. Due to a limited supply of electricity, many city factories deferred working hours to the night time. And an ongoing “sanitary sewer” project, viewed as a progressive upgrade from noisome urban septic tanks and privies, emptied directly into the Huron River.

Issues before the city council reflected this time of transition. At its Oct. 4, 1920 meeting, the council weighed the street commissioner’s bill for oats for his horse. The bill had been carried over from a previous council meeting when aldermen had struggled but failed to resolve the issue of a horse’s feed.

One alderman was fed up. “Alderman Worden said he had bought oats about the same time for 85 cents a bushel, while the charge for oats in this bill was $1.35,” reported the Oct. 5, 1920 Daily Ypsilanti-Press.

“Profound silence on the part of the other aldermen.

“Finally it was moved that the bill be paid, and the vote was 9 to 1 in favor.” [Full Story]

Fourth & Liberty

Couple in town from Boston visiting family for Thanksgiving holiday flag me down, and we bond over the Bikes At Work bicycle trailer I am towing. They own a similar model from the same company. They claim Boston has giant holes that rival the one being dug for the underground parking garage.

Heritage Row Redux: Again

Based on its Dec. 6, 2010 agenda, on that evening the Ann Arbor city council will begin a multiple-meeting reconsideration of the Heritage Row proposal from Alex de Parry. The Heritage Row project was previously presented to the city council as a residential project for South Fifth Avenue that would renovate seven houses and construct three new 3.5-story apartment buildings behind those houses, with an underground parking garage and a maximum 82 apartments, with no more than 163 bedrooms.

The proposal to be reconsidered includes the following revisions: (1) The top floor the new south building would be removed from the design; (2) The density is reduced from 79 units to 76 units and the number of bedrooms is reduced from 154 to 147; (3) The project will include five affordable units at the 50% AMI (average median income) level, in addition to six affordable units at the 80% AMI level; and (4) The three new buildings will be LEED certified [.pdf of current proposal] Except for the removal of a top floor from one of the newly designed buildings, de Parry had in principle indicated agreement with the other revisions at a Sunday evening council caucus on Sept. 19. [Full Story]

DDA Offers $14,417 for Ypsi-A2 Buses

At its Dec. 1, 2010 meeting, the Ann Arbor Downtown Development Authority passed a resolution offering a $14,417 challenge grant to fund service improvements for the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority Route #4 bus, which runs between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor. The dollar figure for the grant is based on a total estimated price tag for the improvements of $180,000 and a Washtenaw Area Transportation Study (WATS) computer model, which estimates about 8% of riders on the #4 bus have destinations west of State Street in the DDA district. The DDA hopes the challenge grant will encourage other organizations to support the transit improvements, like the University of Michigan, Eastern Michigan University, private property owners, other municipalities, and the AATA.

The improvements in service might include: increasing service frequencies to every 10 minutes; reducing travel time from 45 minutes to 38 minutes or less; or inclusion of a stop downtown before continuing to the UM Hospitals.

This brief was filed from the DDA offices on Fifth Avenue. A more detailed report of the meeting will follow. [Full Story]

UM: Architecture Dean

The Boston Globe reports on a feud between Monica Ponce de Leon, who’s now dean of the University of Michigan College of Architecture & Urban Planning, and Nader Tehrani, her former partner in the Boston architectural firm Office dA, which the Globe describes as “one of the nation’s most innovative design practices.” From the report: “So bitter is the fight that last month, Ponce de Leon locked Tehrani out of Office dA’s building in the South End and prevented him from using the firm’s e-mail system. … Today, a Suffolk County Superior Court judge is expected to order the duo to submit to arbitration to resolve charges made in dueling lawsuits.” [Source]

UM: Art

Writing on the UM School of Art & Design’s Play blog, Kath Weider-Roos describes the performance art of Emilia Javanica, a graduate student who showed up to the Nov. 19 opening reception of the All Student Exhibition at the school’s Work gallery on South State Street. Javanica came as Buoj iz Jeb, an anatomically correct old man who posed as a nude model for anyone who wanted to draw him during the show. The post includes a video of the performance. [Source]

Appel’s Title Incorrect

A Dec. 1, 2010 article about a proposed low-income housing project at 1500 Pauline gave an incorrect title for Avalon Housing’s Michael Appel. He is associate director of that nonprofit organization. We note the error here, and have corrected the original article.

Low-Income Housing Project Planned

Documents filed on Monday with the city of Ann Arbor’s planning staff show details of an affordable housing project at 1500 Pauline that includes tearing down the existing apartment buildings and rebuilding a combination of apartments, townhomes and a community center.

Apartments at 1500 Pauline

Entrance to the apartment complex at 1500 Pauline in Ann Arbor. (Photos by the writer.)

The project is being proposed by the Ann Arbor nonprofit Avalon Housing, though the property is still owned by the Washtenaw Affordable Housing Corp. Avalon took over operations of several WAHC properties, including 1500 Pauline, in 2009.

Also filing with the city on Monday was the Michigan Alpha Chapter of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, which is seeking a special exception use to transform the Memorial Christian Church building at the corner of Tappan and Hill into a fraternity house. [Full Story]

A2: New York Schools

The author of the Ann Arbor Schools Musings blog writes about a local connection to the New York City public schools system – its new deputy chancellor “is Shael Polakow-Suransky, who got his high school education at the fine local institution, Ann Arbor’s own Community High School. He also has the distinction of having a mother, Valerie Polakow, who is a professor of Teacher Education at Eastern Michigan University; and a father, Leonard Suransky, with a PhD from the University of Michigan who is a professor in the Netherlands.” [Source]