The Ann Arbor Chronicle » free stuff http://annarborchronicle.com it's like being there Wed, 26 Nov 2014 18:59:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.2 Liberty & Murray http://annarborchronicle.com/2013/04/02/liberty-murray-4/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=liberty-murray-4 http://annarborchronicle.com/2013/04/02/liberty-murray-4/#comments Tue, 02 Apr 2013 18:24:28 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=109592 Collection of items along the curb, next to a “Free Crap” sign. [photo] An hour later, more crap – still free. [photo]

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Free Stuff http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/06/24/free-stuff/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-stuff http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/06/24/free-stuff/#comments Wed, 24 Jun 2009 20:23:15 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=23203 These heads are also free for the taking

These sculpted heads are among the many items free for the taking at the Ann Arbor Art Center's studios on Felch.

By the time The Chronicle arrived at the Ann Arbor Art Center’s studios at 220 Felch St. on Wednesday afternoon, it was less than 24 hours after the center had made its “free stuff” posting on Freecycle and Craiglist – but much of the initial batch of furniture set outside the building had already been picked over.

Inside, quite a bit remains, including ceramic molds, low-fire glazes, unclaimed finished pottery and other items. And over the next few days, they’ll be setting out more furniture for the taking, too.

The center sold its 11,000-square-foot building to ICON Creative Technologies earlier this year, and is consolidating at its 117 W. Liberty location. Taking a break from packing, ceramics studio manager Suzanne Poulton told us the new studio space at the Liberty Street building is about half the size of the Felch Street property, so they need to unload quite a bit. For anyone interested in picking up some deals, the Felch studios will be open from 1-8 p.m. every day this week.

Ceramics for sale or free at the Ann Arbor Art Centers Felch studios.

Ceramics for sale at the Ann Arbor Art Center's Felch studios.

A Chronicle reader alerted us to the center’s posting on Freecycle, but while we were there the three people who showed up had all seen the notice on Craigslist.

A volunteer for the Ann Arbor Animal Hospital stopped by looking for tables. They usually rent tables for their fundraisers, he told Poulton, and were hoping to get some for free to avoid that expense.

Poulton told him they’d be putting out more tables later this week, including some that were currently loaded with ceramic pots, picture frames, bowls and other items.

Those things are free, too, or sold for a pittance. They’re asking for donations, and raised about $100 yesterday alone, Poulton said.

Whatever they don’t get rid of by June 30 – the day they have to officially vacate the building – goes into the dumpsters.

A few pieces of furniture hadnt yet been taken on Wednesday afternoon. More will be set out later this week.

A few pieces of furniture hadn't yet been taken on Wednesday afternoon. More will be set out later this week.

Suzanne Poulton, ceramics studio manager for the Ann Arbor Art Center.

Suzanne Poulton, ceramics studio manager for the Ann Arbor Art Center.

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Free Stuff? Slow Down! http://annarborchronicle.com/2008/08/29/free-stuff-slow-down/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-stuff-slow-down http://annarborchronicle.com/2008/08/29/free-stuff-slow-down/#comments Sat, 30 Aug 2008 00:57:51 +0000 Dave Askins http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=2017 Late August in Ann Arbor brings any number of signs by the curb announcing that the items set out there are free for the taking. Here’s an example of a such a sign that turns out to have been composed by Kevin Leeser. Whatever had been left out under the sign was already gone by the time The Chronicle noticed it, so we pounded on the door this morning to find out.

"Free" sign along 7th St. between Liberty and Washington

Free! What's that fine print, though?

Free Stuff: Kevin’s wife Lauren Miller answered the door and explained that they had put out a variety of items using a dresser drawer as a container for them. Today the drawer remained on the front porch, because of the still-threatening skies after a light rain earlier in the morning. The purge was prompted by Lauren’s grandfather’s move from the house where he’d lived since getting married in 1939 (Youngstown, Ohio). Their inheritance of items like the dining room table and chairs, Lauren’s grandmother’s chair, a cedar chest, and a snow shovel provided the extra impetus to make some additional room in their own house.

The sign on the drawer indicates they’d most recently set out video tapes. As Kevin explained when he joined us on the porch (after finishing the dog’s walk in Water Works Park), books and video tapes didn’t seem worth the trouble of trying to sell on eBay or in a garage sale for $0.25, when you could set them on the curb and they’d just disappear.

Kevin and Lauren agreed on the need to just get rid of a lot of their stuff, citing the example of a candlestick that had been left in their house when they bought it four years ago, which they had, until now, kept for no particular reason. A minor disagreement emerged when it came to a copy of Al Gore’s book, An Inconvenient Truth, which Kevin had put out in the drawer to pass along to someone else “because that’s sort of the point of the book.” Kevin learned about the same time The Chronicle did that Lauren had retrieved it from the drawer and taken it back inside.

Please take videos but leave our drawer--we need that ...

"Please take videos but leave our drawer – we need that ..."

Slowing Down: The fine print on the sign, “… if you promise to slow down,” reflects Kevin and Lauren’s frustration – shared they say pretty much universally by neighbors – with the excessive speed of the passing cars on 7th Street. First there’s the noise factor, which is exacerbated when the city seals the cracks in the road, creating a lattice of tar ridges that lend an extra level of hum to a passing car’s tires.

Free ... if you promise to slow down

Free ... if you promise to slow down.

And then there’s the difficulty of turning safely into their own driveway. Their concern comes from close-following cars, who just don’t respect their turn signal enough to slow down adequately. They’ve reported several near rear-ending events. And they’ve lost one of their cats to a young speeding driver who, after striking it, knocked on their door to report the sad news. Kevin is convinced that if the Ann Arbor Police Department set up a speed trap at the bottom of the hill near Washington Street, they could write plenty of tickets to drivers going over the limit of 30 mph.

What Chronicle readers could do now, or else wait for The Chronicle staff to find the time to do, is:

  • inquire with AAPD how to request that speed limit enforcement be stepped up along a particular stretch.
  • measure speeds of cars between Liberty and Washington to assess empirically how fast cars typically drive on that stretch. [No need for a radar gun: use a stopwatch and measure of length and some mathematics.]
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