Categories
News

One last battle: Anderson’s Carriage Food House closes as lease dispute flares

Years after fighting their landlord in court for the right to stay in their space in the Meadowbrook Shopping Centre, the owners of Anderson’s Carriage Food House decided to close their doors last month and hoped that the decision would put an end to more than a decade of acrimony. Instead, another legal battle is brewing with Meadowbrook owner Clara Belle Wheeler, this time over the Andersons’ desire to terminate their lease two years before it ends.

“She’s been trying to get us out for so many years, we thought she’d let us go,” said Ted Anderson, whose family won a $100,000 judgment against Wheeler in 2006 after claiming she’d tried to harass them into leaving to make way for development on the prominent site at the corner of Emmet Street and Barracks Road. “Now, she’s saying ‘you can go, but you have to pay.’”

At the heart of the new dispute is whether the last five-year lease the Andersons signed on the building where they’ve been located for 18 years has been breached, rendering it invalid. As part of their leases, Meadowbrook tenants pay Common Area Maintenance (CAM) fees for repairs and maintenance of the shared areas, said Anderson, who claims that the condition of the property is a violation of the lease. Evidence of the violation, he said, includes 2’ tall weeds, crumbling brick around the base of the shopping center sign, and a snapped off metal signpost sticking out of the asphalt that he says poses a risk to customers’ cars. 

Inside the Anderson’s building, he pointed to disrepair including two holes in the ceiling where he said a leaking roof allowed water to come in. He claims Wheeler is unwilling to repair the damage, and that her refusal makes it impossible to sublease the space, as the lease would allow. 

Wheeler disputes Anderson’s claim, describing it as an effort to get out of a legal obligation and insisting she has met her obligations as a landlord and completed necessary repairs. 

“The building is no different today than it was two years ago when they asked to stay in the building for five years,” she said. “I had repaired the roof, cleaned out the downspouts before that date. If it wasn’t satisfactory two-and-a-half years ago, then it would have seemed prudent to have not renewed the lease at that time.”

She said that recent heavy rains had delayed mowing, and that a brick mason had already been hired to repair the damaged sign base. (Within days, the base was indeed repaired.)

In their previous lawsuit, the Andersons alleged Wheeler had tried to drive them out to make way for CVS pharmacy, something an attorney for Wheeler denied at the time and which Wheeler still denies. Wheeler says that while she would eventually like to develop the property and see a new tenant in the Anderson’s spot, she was taken by surprise by the announcement and has no potential tenant lined up.

Whether the latest disagreement will land the Andersons and Wheeler back in court remains unclear.

Anderson said his parents’ declining health prompted the decision to shut down the 40-year-old family business, and he doesn’t relish the idea of another drawn out legal battle.

“I don’t know what we’re going to do,” said Anderson. “I just want to be able to move forward.”

 

Categories
Arts

Director John Johnson remakes and celebrates the “worst movie ever made”

John Johnson doesn’t spook easy. An avid fan of all things macabre, the film director built his career on mauled bodies, zombies, spine-tingling hauntings, and heinous murders. But the pending release of his latest work has him shivering.

“The day Plan 9 gets released to general audiences I will be probably be hiding in a closet somewhere,” the Charlottesville native said in a recent interview.

Johnson’s trepidation is not unfounded. The film is a remake of Ed Woods’s 1959 film Plan 9 From Outer Space, which authors Michael and Harry Medved famously dubbed “the worst movie ever made.” But retelling the story, which describes the small town implementation of aliens’ “Plan 9” to use zombies to prevent humans from destroying the universe, became a point of obsession for Johnson.

“No one was crazy enough to do it, but I was,” he said. “I was working on another film and complaining about remakes, so someone asked what movie I would actually want to remake.” Johnson felt a connection to Woods that helped prompt his decision.

“Even if you don’t agree with the quality of his work, the idea of the relentless filmmaker is something we all agree with,” Johnson said. “I decided I would try to remake Plan 9, not to make fun of the original but to do what they would have done without the budget and time restraints they faced.”

The final product preserves its new director’s personal approach to film-making while offering 54 visual and auditory nods to the original. The film boasts several actors well known in the horror community, including Brian Krause (Stephen King’s Sleepwalkers), Mike Christopher (Dawn of the Dead), Addie Miller, the little girl who portrayed the now iconic “first zombie” in AMC’s hit series The Walking Dead, and Conrad Brooks, a cast member from the original Plan 9 From Outer Space. Johnson himself joins makes several onscreen appearances.

“It’s really a love letter to that kind of film,” Johnson said, who characterized Plan 9’s style as a type of “make-believe” underappreciated by moviegoers today.

“Modern audiences don’t just let it be a movie,” he said. “They don’t allow a fourth wall, and they constantly want answers.” He hopes that the deliberate “fakeness” of the Plan 9 universe will help audiences relax into an alternate reality.

“It’s not meant to be real,” Johnson said. “We constantly remind you with the costumes, dialogue, even certain situations characters find themselves in. We want you to just enjoy the ride.”

Plan 9 appears to be succeeding, with preliminary successes that include a spot in the Cannes Film Market this summer and a partnership with Spotlight Pictures.

“I’m definitely fighting for Ed [Woods] with this movie,” he said. “I hope people might look more kindly at him. I hope someone will hang a Plan 9 poster on their wall and not because it was a bad movie. Hopefully his story won’t be clouded by that legacy.”

Reserve a free ticket to see Plan 9, playing at Regal Stonefield cinema on June 3, through this link

~ Maggie Underwood

Categories
Arts

Saul Kaplan puts his legacy on paper

“I’ve been drawing for 65 years. That’s not an exaggeration. I have a pile of stuff. In the end, I know they’re gonna pull a dumpster up, and there goes the stuff.“ Saul Kaplan, artist and poet, paused as he opened his self-published volume of drawings, ceramics, and paintings. “The way I explain it is, I could either produce a legacy in this book or have a fancy coffin,” he said. 

At home with his wife at Lake Monticello, the 85-year-old Kaplan maintains the creative practice he kept during various turns as a student, mechanic, teacher, and high school assistant principal: drawing, painting, and writing poetry amid the flurry of life.

Kaplan recently decided to curate his work in a book, Life Drawing: A Legacy, for his three sons and grandchildren. He asked Michael Hoover, a friend and collector of his work, to look through his catalogue and choose the right pieces. “Mike and his wife looked through 1,000 drawings, and I just got out of their way,” Kaplan said, and the pair selected nearly 100 sketches, paintings, and pen-and-ink works. 

“If you want to get into the artist’s heart, you go to their drawings,” Kaplan said. “Michelangelo threw away his drawings because he didn’t want anybody to see his suffering, his agony.”

Paging through the book, he lit on a small scribbled butterfly. “It shows in little sketches, little doodles,” said Kaplan. “This is my signature.”

That signature includes single or multi-planed faces, people in conversation or wrapped around one another, defined by strong lines and cross-hatching and rhythmic curves. He often hears viewers compare his neo-cubism to Picasso’s, but he rejects the idea of imitation.

“I draw in ovals because that’s how I draw,” Kaplan said. “The intellectual painter is not a painter. It’s not formulistic. It’s facing that blank canvas and spilling your guts.”

Kaplan’s introduction to professional art-making came in 1948 at the prestigious Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts.

“I got thrown into the art world,” Kaplan said. “I was in the middle of the abstract expressionist movement, De Kooning was down the street, and I didn’t know what was happening.”

On a scholarship, he studied drawing under Hofmann, who was a contemporary of Henri Matisse. Kaplan quickly learned the value of muscle memory, drawing the same figure over and over for 20 hours a week, and the discipline required to fail repeatedly on the path to success. “There was an artist who did my portrait in charcoal, and he could get the likeness of anybody. I asked him how he did it? His leg had been blown off in the war, and they put him in the hospital for six months, and he drew and he drew and one day he got it. So I learned how to do the head from him, and the head became my obsession.”

He paused. “You know how art is,” Kaplan said, pointing to a finished painting in his book. “This is a hole in one. I can’t do it again. I did this in just a few minutes. It’s luck, work, luck.”

Kaplan first reflected on the impermanence of art when flooding destroyed many of his paper works. He began creating plates and pots and three-dimensional sculptures because “unless they get smashed, nothing can happen to ceramics,” he said.

Now his studio is a blend of paper and clay, tools that preserve the memories of his artistry. “When the apocalypse comes, this will outlast everything,” he said, touching a dish with an image of two figures intertwined. “You know what most artists do? They fill up space. It’s how they say, ‘I was here.’”

Saul Kaplan’s work is on view at Vivian’s Art for Living on the Downtown Mall. 

Categories
News

Creigh Deeds leads mental health discussion at public forum

It’s been six months since Virginia State Senator Creigh Deeds was attacked by his mentally ill son Austin C. “Gus” Deeds, who fatally shot himself after stabbing his father in the head and upper torso near a barn on the family’s Bath County property. Now, the senator is actively seeking legislative and community involvement in a statewide discussion about mental health.

Deeds, whose son had been diagnosed as bipolar and was denied access to a hospital bed after a Rockbridge Area Community Services Board mental health care worker determined that he should be hospitalized the night before the incident, has cleared the way for legal action against the agency that released Gus Deeds. Earlier this month, Deeds’ attorneys notified the agency and the localities it serves that a lawsuit may be possible. Meanwhile, the senator addressed about 100 people at the Jefferson School City Center on Thursday at a forum organized by the Community Mental Health and Wellness Coalition.

“One in four Americans have some form of mental health issue going on. It might be as simple as depression or substance abuse, or it could be more serious,” Deeds said. “Too many people live crisis to crisis. Too many people struggle on a daily basis.”

Deeds noted that parents know what to do if their kids have the flu or a heart defect, but what about when it comes to mental health?

“There is no adequate response,” Deeds said. “There’s never going to be enough money to do everything we need, but that’s no excuse for negligence, and a failure to respond to emergency situations.”

Joining him on stage were representatives from the Free Clinic, Region 10, UVA Medical Center, and the Thomas Jefferson Area Crisis Intervention Team (CIT), who all spoke about the local and statewide steps organizations have been taking since Deeds’ tragedy in November.

According to Region 10 Executive Director Robert Johnson, the agency has seen a significant increase in mental health related calls in the past year. In April of last year, Region 10 filed 33 temporary detention orders; this April that number nearly doubled to 64. In April 2013, the agency performed 163 crisis evaluations; in April 2014, 208. The number of emergency custody orders has also jumped from 25 to 41 since last spring.

“There are a lot more people in distress,” Johnson said. “The upside is, people are more aware of the need to call before something happens. They’re not sitting in denial, trying to handle it by themselves.”

Sue Hess, a community nurse and mental health navigator with Mental Health America of Charlottesville Albemarle, shared a brief story about one of her patients. “Karen” had lost her job, was suffering severe shoulder pain, and had begun spiraling downward.

“Most of us know what it’s like to hit a brick wall, and ask questions like ‘How do I regroup and find the strength to get out of bed today?’” Hess said. “She needed support and encouragement.”

Hess said “Karen,” like most people in her situation, wanted to stay out of the hospital and out of jail, but needed help navigating local programs so she could get back on her feet.

After the presentations, about a dozen audience members stood in line behind the microphone to address the issues that had been brought up. When Dornita Herndon took the mic and introduced herself, the room erupted in applause.

“I’m ‘Karen,’” Herndon said. “I’m the lady that Sue Hess helped.”

Herndon said the lack of programs available for unmarried, childless adults has made it even more difficult to get her life back on track, but she’s actively seeking opportunities to work and hopes to help others like herself.

 

“There are stigmas everywhere around mental health,” Herndon said after the event. “There’s still so much left to be done.”

 

Categories
News

What’s Happening at the Jefferson School?

Creigh Deeds Speaks About Legislative Progress at Mental Health Coalition Gathering

State senator Creigh Deeds was the keynote speaker at the Mental Health Coalition’s meeting on Thursday, May 29, held in the auditorium of the African American Heritage Center.  Deeds confined his remarks to the progress the legislature has made remaking the mental health system in Virginia.

The Community Mental Health and Wellness Coalition includes the AIDS/HIV Services Group; Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail; ARS Pantops; Charlottesville Albemarle Office of the Public Defender; Charlottesville Department of Social Services; Charlottesville Free Clinic; Charlottesville Department of Human Services; District 9 Probation and Parole; Jefferson Area Community Corrections/Crisis Intervention; Jefferson Area Board for Aging; Offender Aid and Restoration/Jefferson Area Community Corrections; Martha Jefferson Hospital; Mental Health America; On Our Own; PACEM; Region Ten Community Services Board; The Women’s Initiative; University Medical Associates and the University of Virginia Master of Public Health program.

The most recent legislative changes for mental health in Virginia are an almost “real time” psychiatric bed registry and an increase in the amount of time a person can be held on an emergency custody order.

Representatives from Region Ten, Charlottesville Free Clinic, UVA, and Thrive also spoke about changes. They all fielded questions from the audience which ranged from concerns about children’s mental health services to patients’ rights.

YMCA Celebrates Pre-K Graduation Next Week

The Y at the Jefferson School will celebrate the graduation of 9 of its 22 of pre-k students next Friday, June 6, 10:00am-11:00am. All children in the class will participate and graduates will receive diplomas. Following the short ceremony, will be a reception for friends and family to celebrate with their students. Guests are welcome to bring a finger dish to share.

Women’s Initiative Hosts Career Workshop Series

The Women’s Initiative will host three workshops in May, June, and July to help women become the architects of their careers so they can pursue their dreams through a structured approach. These workshops will focus on resume writing, interviewing, and establishing a career path. Each workshop is three hours long and there is no obligation to attend all three. There will also be an ongoing support group available to workshop participants and anyone else interested in receiving support in their career search.

The three workshops are on the following dates:

  • Resume Writing: May 31, 2014, 9:00am-12:00pm
  • Interview Basics: June 28,2014,  9:00am-12:00pm
  • Professionalism: July 26, 2014, 9:00am-12:00pm

All workshops will be held at the MJH Starr Hill Health Center, on the second floor of the Jefferson School City Center. For more information or to register, contact Kirsten at 434-872-0047 x 101 or kirstenfranke@thewomensinitiative.org.

Vinegar Hill Cafe Hosts Chill’n & Grill’n next Thursday

The party continues at the Vinegar Hill Café’s Chill’n & Grill’n on Thursday, June 5 from 5:00-7:30pm. The cafe will be offering a straight-off-the-grill menu, including barbecue ribs, barbecue chicken, or hamburgers, with a choice of collard greens, baked beans, coleslaw and homemade cornbread. All for only $10. Children’s menu and pricing, and vegetarian options available.

As always, Chill’n & Grill’n will feature live music. The Café also welcomes dogs on the patio when accompanied by well-behaved owners.

Vinegar Hill Café is located in the historic Jefferson School City Center, 233 4th Street NW in Charlottesville 22903. For details visit www.VinegarHillCafe.org or contact Joel Schechtman, JSchechtman@jabacares.org, 434-817-5234.

JSCC logoJefferson School City Center is a voice of the nine nonprofits located at Charlottesville’s intergenerational community center, the restored Jefferson School. We are a legacy preserved . . . a soul reborn . . . in the heart of Cville!

Categories
Arts

Album reviews: Carrie Elkin & Danny Schmidt, Eli Cook, Coldplay

Carrie Elkin & Danny Schmidt

For Keeps/Red House Records

Whether performing individually or as a duo, Carrie Elkin and Danny Schmidt have proven themselves to be two of Austin’s most engaging singer-songwriters in recent years. For Keeps only furthers this opinion. Whether marrying dusty vocals on the charming “If I Need to Know,” or singing about the comfort of another’s presence on the Americana ditty “Girl in the Woods,” the duo is as confident as ever. “Sky Picked Blue” is a slightly bluesy, jazzy number personifying love as an irresistible force and “Swing from a Note” encourages sincerity through a country tune. The album has an appealing, easygoing way about it and musically Elkin and Schmidt are minimalist, often letting the guitars fill in the spaces between their words, coming off as engaging, laid-back troubadours.

Eli Cook

Primitive Son/Cleopatra Records

If you want one of the most enjoyable ass-kickings of your life, then check out Eli Cook’s Primitive Son. An undeniable combination of gritty rock, soul and blues, this album is a damn good time. Cook proves to be a charismatic guitar player and singer throughout, whether he’s pulling out fuzzy licks on the bluesy stomper “Sweet Thang,” or howling at the moon on the too groovy for its own good “War Horse,” Cook goes balls to the wall with his performance. He attacks the nasty rocker “Shake the Devil Down,” and switches gears with ease on the title track, matching guttural vocals with ominous guitars and a gloomy dread. Cook calls in a bevy of great support for this record as well, with Pat Travers, Sonny Landreth and Tinsley Ellis making an appearance. Full of attitude and panache, Primitive Son is an album that rocks.

Coldplay

Ghost Stories/Atlantic Records

Most reasonable people will admit that Mylo Xyloto was a bloated mess, so it is nice to see Coldplay return to form on Ghost Stories. For those who are curious what the album sounds like, take the more ambient, echoing qualities of the X&Y album and mash with some of the more organic, stripped down sensibilities of Viva La Vida, and you pretty much have the answer. “Midnight” features Chris Martin’s otherworldly falsetto set to a hypnotic background of keys and beats, and the opener “Always in My Head,” is a lush, dreamy, electric guitar track. In general, the album embraces a mellow aesthetic augmented by acoustic guitars and strings at different times, which make moments like “Magic’s” climax and the ebullient piano pop track “A Sky Full of Stars” so electric and thrilling. Ghost Stories doesn’t contain wall-to-wall hits, but its quality does make you forget about that other album.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Moby and the Dicks

If you’ve yet to see Moby Brown perform with his band, you’ve been missing a rock ‘n’ roll firestorm. Originally formed at UVA in 2002, the local power troupe’s line-up has evolved over the years resulting in high-energy gigs that draw comparisions to Otis Redding, Chris Robinson, and Joe Cocker and have made Moby and the Dicks (not all named Richard) a staple of the local live music scene. The Shack Band and Gunchux open.

Friday 5/30. $8-12, 8:30pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

Categories
Living

Where do national chains fit in with the local beer scene?

If you put any thought at all into the food and drink you consume, chances are you think “chain restaurants” are about as good for your body as a Paula Deen cookbook. But times they are a chain-gin’.

Even dollar-hungry national restaurant groups have begun to recognize that consumers appreciate well-made products. For craft beer lovers especially, that means you can have a great beer-drinking experience in a Charlottesville restaurant that’s headquartered 250 miles away in North Carolina.

Both Brixx Wood Fired Pizza and Mellow Mushroom have gotten the memo. With rotating taps, loyalty clubs, and beer events rolled out the way only well funded conglomerates can, the two pizza joints deliver an experience that’s worth relaxing your buy local standards for at least a night.

The black sheep

Brixx’s Charlottesville location has gone rogue. Visit the Barracks Road pizza pub, and you’ll get something you won’t get at any other Brixx—a paper beer menu. It’s a necessity to keep the tap list rotating, according to general manager Casey Hall.

“Corporate likes the beer menus to be printed in the actual menu, but I decided to do this because those menus have to be ordered, and I couldn’t possibly change the kegs as often as I do,” she said. “I hate that. I don’t think a piece of paper should limit our beer list.”

Brixx’s 24 taps are instead limited only by Hall’s imagination and a few house rules. She tries to keep four or five imports on and devotes one tap to nitrogen carbonation (a carbon dioxide alternative that produces a creamier draft), one to cider, and one to root beer. When the restaurant isn’t hosting massive tap takeovers—one-night events devoted to single breweries—she tries to keep a balanced list with something for everyone. That’s a change from only a few years ago, according to Hall.

“I’m a huge hop head, so in the beginning I was putting on a lot of IPAs,” she said. “Then I heard a table saying, ‘this place always has IPAs, but they don’t have anything else.’ I realized I was making a beer list for myself.”

A list just for Hall likely wouldn’t be all bad. She got started in the brew game at Pizzeria Paradiso in Washington, D.C., where she was on the ground floor of developing a world-class beer list of 12 taps and more than 100 bottles. While living in D.C., she met and started a close relationship with Devils Backbone brewmaster Jason Oliver.

The one thing the local beer hounds can’t expect from Brixx is a decent bottle list. Hall said she had to downsize that part of the menu because too many bottles were breaking in the cooler, which is “broken money.” Man, that’s corporate talking.

National brand, local focus

Mellow Mushroom was founded in 1974 in Georgia, but visit the Charlottesville location on W. Main St., and you’ll have no trouble navigating the local beer scene. The menu features hashtags next to the local brews on tap, and anywhere from a third to half of the list will typically represent #DrinkLocal.

“Beyond general good beer, we really focus on local and regional beer,” beer buyer Greg Kane said. “We always try to carry Three Notch’d, Champion, Blue Mountain. There’s so much great beer in this area.”

Case in point: Mellow had Three Notch’d 40 Mile IPA and Hydraulian Red on tap last year before the brewery’s tap room was even open.

Mellow doesn’t stop at the local, but it does essentially stop at the U.S. border. Other than Guinness, all of the 39 taps at the restaurant pour American craft brew. The pub also disses bottles, but it does everything it can to make up for that misstep.

“At any point, we have 40-50 new beers in our keg room,” Kane said. “Right now, we are rotating 200 or more beers a year.”

With that much fluctuation, it can be difficult to keep servers up to speed. Kane said the only way to do it is to encourage the staff to try new brews through comped “shift beers.”

Like Brixx and most chain beer spots, Mellow hosts a lot of tap takeovers, as many as eight a year. There is a downside to those events, though—if you hit the bar in the days after the takeover, you’re going to find a repetitive tap list.

“That is the risk you run,” Kane said. “With [our recent] Devils Backbone tap takeover, we had some of their taps on for weeks. That’s why it’s safer to do it only with the breweries you know you love.”

And of course there is only one way to figure out which breweries you love. Say, any chance customers could get in on this shift-beer action?

Categories
News

The big chill: Why city and county are betting on a flash-freezing facility to grow the local food movement

 Ever check to see where your frozen veggies from Whole Foods were grown? In the future, the back of that package of peas could read “Albemarle County.” 

Charlottesville and Albemarle have received a joint Agriculture and Forestry Industries Development (AFID) grant from the state to craft a business plan for a flash-freezing facility, and those involved in studying the possibility say it could be a game-changer for the local food movement.

The AFID grants are intended to give local governments a leg up when it comes to studying how to grow their farming and forestry industries. The idea of a freezing facility was already kicking around Charlottesville and Albemarle, thanks to a preliminary feasibility study by the Jefferson Area Board for Aging (JABA), which wanted to explore freezing pre-cooked meals for seniors. It also piqued the interest of the Local Food Hub, a nonprofit created in 2009 to connect small local farms to big local markets.

“We’ve got a huge agricultural economy here, but much of what is produced in Virginia goes out of Virginia, and isn’t consumed here,” said Local Food Hub Executive Director Kristen Suokko, but a freezing facility could change that.

Some of the barriers that block big consumers—schools, hospitals—from relying more on local food are logistical, explained Charlottesville Director of Economic Development Chris Engel, who spearheaded the AFID grant application process. 

“When fruits and vegetables are coming in, they’re coming in all at one time, and there’s a lot of waste,” Engel said. Flash-freezing crops straight out of the fields would mean a steadier flow of produce and a more stable supply chain, which could open up new market channels for local growers. 

“There’s really no facility anywhere in central Virginia, or really Virginia at all, that does this,” Suokko said.

Enter the state money. City and county teamed up and created a committee to apply, and landed the $35,000 matching grant to develop a business plan. There are lots of questions to answer: What kind of demand exists, and is there enough supply to meet it? Could existing infrastructure—the old ConAgra plant in Crozet, for instance—be harnessed to house such a facility? Would grocery store chains get onboard as buyers? What about local schools? 

And then, of course, “the trick is to make it work from a financial perspective,” said Engel. The committee will be studying lots of structural possibilities, from a nonprofit partnership to a for-profit corporation. Whatever the eventual ownership setup, Engel sees potential.

“I don’t use this phrase very often, but it’s kind of a win-win-win,” he said. “We have people who are low-skilled and unemployed who could be put to work in these types of jobs. In the county, they have farms and farmers that could potentially grow and produce more, which would incrementally add jobs. There would be local benefit to institutions such as UVA or JABA or the local schools, which would benefit from higher-quality, locally sourced food. There’s something in it for everyone involved.”

The grant and the business plan that will grow out of it are just a first step. “We don’t know what the end result is going to be,” said Suokko. But it could ultimately make a huge difference in the effort to get local food onto local plates. “It’s very exciting,” she said.

 

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

Crozet: A Vibrant Community Surrounded by Natural Beauty

Drive twelve miles west from Charlottesville and you’ll find Crozet, a quaint village and a popular residential area surrounded by gorgeous mountain scenery.  One of Albemarle County’s fastest growing areas,  Crozet  features the walking community of Old Trail and a growing number of other subdivisions where residents can experience a relaxed country lifestyle  and still be within easy driving distance of the jobs and amenities found in nearby Charlottesville, Staunton, and Harrisonburg.

Originally called Wayland’s Crossing, Crozet was renamed in 1870 for Colonel Claudius Crozet, a Frenchman who engineered and oversaw the construction of the Blue Ridge Tunnel, completed in 1858.  Although the area has remained largely agricultural through the years, two corporations, Morton Frozen Foods and Acme Visible Records located there in the mid-1900s.  While they are both long gone,  different companies now call  Crozet  home including US Joiner, which installs interiors for large ocean going vessels, Starr Hill Brewery and Music Today,

In recent history, local author Rita Mae Brown made Crozet famous as the setting for her Mrs. Murphy mystery series featuring the cat Sneaky Pie Brown.   In 2007 it gained more fame when the movie Evan Almighty was partially filmed there.

The real estate market in Crozet is strong and offers a range of prices and property styles to suit just about everyone.   Whether you are a first time buyer looking for a town home, a family wanting an elegant estate property, a retiree wanting maintenance free living or someone who wants the freedom and privacy of a multi-acre spread, chances are good you will find what you are looking for in Crozet.

A Popular Place to Live

In an effort to accommodate development but still maintain its rural character, Albemarle’s Comprehensive Plan set aside five percent of the county as designated growth areas, most of which are near Charlottesville.  Crozet was named one of these designated areas in 1971 and the result has been growth and expansion as more and more people recognize the benefits of living in this scenic part of the county.

“Crozet has it all,” said Justin Kent with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate III who represents Craig Builders.  He listed the “beautiful views from the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, great schools, shopping, and a variety of restaurants serving local food and supporting local music,” as just some of the many reasons Crozet is such a popular choice among homebuyers.

Kathryn Bentley, with Roy Wheeler Realty, Co., agrees, describing Crozet as the “perfect combination of everything.”

Bentley was born at Martha Jefferson Hospital and has lived in Crozet all of her life.  She said “I totally think the growth was needed,” in describing Crozet’s transition from a small, largely blue collar, country town to a bedroom community of Charlottesville.  She explained that people like living where they have a village kind of setting, yet can enjoy the amenities of town and the cultural and educational benefits of UVA.

In spite of its growth, and the infusion of so many new people, Crozet still retains its sense of identity as a community, Bentley said.   When she grew up there, everyone literally knew everyone else. However, that sense of community persists today, Bentley explained.  She described Crozet as a friendly place where people are neighborly and genuinely enjoy each other’s company, unlike in subdivisions in more urban areas where neighbors barely acknowledge each other as they go to and from work.

Crozet’s small town feel is an important part of its appeal, said Jim Duncan with Nest Realty, but it also helps that it is a place where residents can breathe clean air and enjoy mountain views.  People  appreciate the “slower pace of life,” here, he added, saying that he often gets calls from out of town buyers who have read his blog, RealCrozetVA.com and are looking for just those qualities in their search for the perfect place to live.

The Crozet Real Estate Market

In Bentley’s view Crozet and Western Albemarle were shielded somewhat from the recession of a few years ago.  “We definitely saw values drop,” she said explaining that she lost money on a home she bought at the height of the market.  She still lives in Crozet, but relocated to a home on a much larger lot where she can look out onto her very own pond.

Nevertheless, Bentley described the today’s real estate market as “very strong,” including both resale and new construction.  She referenced the new community of Grayrock West where three new homes have sold in the last six months.

“Some pockets are increasing while others are stable,” Duncan said about the Crozet market.  Like many parts of our region, there is a shortage of inventory in general reflecting the market’s strength.  However, Duncan said this shortage is especially severe in the $300,000 to $400,000 price range. He is looking forward to a continuing strong market stating that it is “poised for increase” over the next 18 months.

People Move to Crozet from Everywhere

Crozet appeals to people from as close as Charlottesville and from as far away as Europe and Australia.

“Crozet welcomes home buyers from all over the world,” Kent said.  “However,” he continued, “I think one of the biggest testaments to its appeal is that there are more and more residents selling their current Crozet homes to buy new ones.  Whether they’re moving up to a larger home for their growing families or scaling down to purchase a new Crozet home that requires less maintenance, the fact that so many are staying right here is a strong indication of how much this vibrant community as a whole has to offer.”

Bentley couldn’t agree more, stating that “Crozet has something for everyone from young families to people purchasing homes costing in excess of $800,000.” Her clients include young families and first time buyers as well as retirees relocating here from urban areas like northern Virginia and New York because they love the Blue Ridge Mountains.

While many people like Old Trail and some of the newer subdivisions, Laurel Hills, an older neighborhood which has been there since the 50s, is also growing in popularity, Bentley said, especially amongst younger buyers.  These are “well built” homes, Bentley added, explaining that many young families are enjoying the process of moving in and renovating to update and meet their needs.

People move to Crozet from Charlottesville and further away because they want to enjoy a quieter lifestyle, Duncan explained.  He regularly hears from out of towners who do a Google search and like the “feel” of Crozet which they get from reading his blog that describes the local culture and community.  “It’s nice to know that people are doing this kind of research,” he added.

Opportunities for First Time Buyers

There are definitely first time buyer opportunities in Crozet.

Old Trail has some higher end first timer opportunities Bentley said including town homes and smaller single-family homes.  She currently has a resale listing in the low $300,000 range, which she described as “a perfect starter home for a buyer who qualifies.”  However, she has also worked successfully with Crozet bound clients in the $200,000 and under range.  Recently she helped a first time buyer look at five homes all between $175,000 and $200,000.  These are smaller homes, some have been remodeled, she said and she described most as “very nice.”

“I work with a lot of first time buyers,” Duncan said.  He described Crozet as “truly a great area to come and stay.”  For families who want to stay put, Crozet is a place where “you can find the right house and stay for twenty years,” he continued.

First timers who like the idea of owning a brand new home will also find options in their price range.  “Craig Builders recently offered Cottages in Old Trail Village from around $200,000 and continues to offer some larger town homes from under $300,000,” Kent said.  The town homes come with a list of amenities such as attached two-car garages, maintenance free decks, hardwood floors and granite countertops, all of which appeal to today’s younger buyers, Craig added.

A Community with Lots to Do

Crozet is often described as a welcoming place where people know and look out for each other.  For this, Bentley gives a lot of credit to Old Trail, which she says “forged the way” in making Crozet a true community.

One of the ways they do this is by welcoming their neighbors from outside of Old Trail to come and be part of activities there.  For example, there are summer concerts, a Halloween party in the fall, and an Easter Egg Hunt in the spring featuring the Easter bunny, hayrides and children’s activities.  All are open to Old Trail residents and to the larger community.

The village of Crozet has also embraced walk and bike trails, Bentley said, which are “changing the face of downtown,” making it more inviting to come visit the restaurants and shops there.  Recently the area has also benefited from the additions of sidewalks and bike lanes on Jarman’s Gap Road between Crozet Avenue and Old Trail Drive.

There are many more activities that make Crozet a popular place to visit and to live.  A good example is the bi-annual arts and crafts festival at Claudius Crozet Park that attracts lots of people from all over the region.  The festival takes place every May and October and includes food, entertainment and a juried art show.  Proceeds fund the growth and upkeep of the 22 acre park.

Crozet residents can also easily enjoy activities such as  “swimming, golf, visiting wineries and breweries, hiking in the Blue Ridge mountains, enjoying some great fishing spots or scenic drives on the Blue Ridge Parkway and Skyline Drive,” Kent said.

Buy a Home and Find a Community

“I just love Crozet,” Bentley said, describing her deep roots there and stating that she continues to be friends with people she has known since she was born.  However, she also has many new friends who have relocated there more recently and live in neighborhoods like Old Trail.  “Most people welcome the sense of community they find in Crozet which makes it hard to leave once they put down roots here,” she added.

For home buyers this means Crozet can be a good financial investment with stable property values, Bentley said.  More importantly, however, it is also a place where people feel at home and form the kinds of relationships that turn into long-term friendships as they share a commitment to a lifestyle that has something for everyone.

If you work in nearby Charlottesville or just like the idea of unwinding in a place that offers a quiet, rural atmosphere with plenty of amenities of its own, then Crozet may be just what you are looking for.  Call your REALTOR® today for more information.

Celeste Smucker is a writer, blogger and author.  She lives near Charlottesville.