Categories
Arts

Film review: Blended relies on clichés to stay afloat

It just so happens that Adam Sandler once made good movies. More than once, even. There’s Billy Madison and Happy Gilmore. And on the odd occasion he acts in a drama, he gives good performances in the so-so Punch-Drunk Love, the flawed Reign Over Me and the highly flawed but watchable Funny People.

But whatever. There isn’t room in this review to lament Sandler’s career choices, and his choices are so spectacularly lazy, they don’t deserve lamenting.

That brings us to Blended, which is not the worst movie in the Sandler catalogue. The worst movie in the Sandler catalogue that I’ve seen—That’s My Boy—is so loathsome that if there were any justice, the people who made it would be kicked in the groin repeatedly for not fewer than seven days, annually, to herald the vernal equinox.

No, Blended is not that bad. In fact, nothing could be so bad. (Note: I have seen neither Jack and Jill nor I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry.)

Blended, you see, has the one thing in a Sandler comedy that can elevate it: Drew Barrymore. It’s not that Barrymore hasn’t made execrable movies (He’s Just Not That Into You; Fever Pitch; Lucky You), it’s just that when she’s with Sandler, she elevates his game. Slightly. Her limited charm raises his populist smarm and the results are mediocre.

They did it with The Wedding Singer (bland but harmless). They did it with 50 First Dates (it’s O.K. despite its best efforts to be stupid). They try it again with Blended.

If only Blended did not open in a bathroom. Lauren (Barrymore) is on the phone to her babysitter, asking her to fake an emergency call in 10 minutes because her blind date with Jim (Sandler) is terrible. Oh, and the bathroom is in a Hooter’s. Because why not set it in a Hooters?

Lauren is divorced (cheating assbag husband cliché). Jim is widowed (sympathy card cliché). She has two rotten sons. He has three nice daughters. Lauren’s best friend and business partner Jen (Wendi McLendon-Covey; just give her a starring vehicle already) is dating a guy with five kids who wants to take her to South Africa, and before long there’s some contrived nonsense that gets Jim, Lauren, their five kids and a whole lotta borderline racist jokes to Sun City. (As current as most of the gags are in Blended, I’m surprised Little Steven Van Zandt doesn’t pop up to chastise the entire cast; Google it.)

Barrymore and Sandler have as much chemistry as two old friends climbing aboard the money train, and there are maybe two laughs in 117 minutes (!). There’s also that maddening undercurrent of sweetness that exists in Sandler’s films to temper the bullying, race-baiting, and sexism. Even jerks have hearts, right? And Sandler’s daughters are written to be nice enough while Barrymore’s sons are written as turds. You know, ’cause boys will be boys or something.

Will Sandler and Barrymore end up together? More importantly, how is Blended not totally terrible? Again: It’s a million times better than That’s My Boy.

Playing this week

Amazing Spiderman 2
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Back to the Future
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Belle
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Captain America: The Winter Soldier
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Chef
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Fed Up
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Godzilla
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Grand Budapest Hotel
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Heaven Is For Real
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Immigrant
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Locke
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Million Dollar Arm
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Neighbors
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Other Woman
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Rio 2
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

X-Men: Days of Future Past
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Movie houses

Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6
979-7669

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
244-3213

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

Farmers Markets: Buy Fresh, Buy Local

Every season, more people are becoming fans of farmers markets, counting them as genuine quality-of-life enhancements in their communities.  In fact, Virginia has nearly 250 across the commonwealth and quite a few of them are in the seven-county area around Charlottesville.

“I’m really proud of our City Market,” says Charlottesville REALTOR ® Cynthia Viejo, an associate broker with Nest Realty Group.  “It’s an integral part of our community and it’s all about supporting local farmers, artists, crafters and entrepreneurs. It really speaks to the high quality of life in our community.”

She loves the “Buy fresh, buy local” bumper stickers she sees all around town. “Wonderful motto,” she declares. “When we shop local, we support our community as a whole and a great place to start is at farmers markets. That money stays right here.”

In fact, a Virginia Cooperative Extension study about seven years ago indicated that if each household in our area spent just $10 of their weekly grocery dollars on fresh local produce and farm-based products, it would boost our five-county economy to the tune of nearly $50 million a year! And it’s likely those figures are higher today. Many related businesses such as orchards, farms, and restaurants benefit from our increasing hunger for locally grown food. 

A special program at Charlottesville’s City Market is the SNAP station (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) where food stamps may be converted to wooden “coins” redeemable for foods to be taken home for preparation. The first ten dollars are doubled so SNAP shoppers get a valuable bonus towards farm-fresh foods. Any shopper who hasn’t brought enough cash—many vendors aren’t equipped to accept debit or credit cards—can use a debit card (for a mere $1 fee) to get tokens to swap with any vendor.

MARKETS HAVE PERSONALITY

Farmers Markets are flourishing throughout Albemarle, Fluvanna, Greene, Louisa, Madison, Nelson, and Orange Counties. Charlottesville’s City Market is the largest in Central Virginia, while smaller ones are held in a variety of venues including subdivisions and community parks.  (See listings.)

Every market is different.  Some are shady, some are under tents, some have individual canopies, some have seating. Many regularly have Master Gardeners in attendance offering gardening expertise such as pest identification and recommendations for home gardens.

An especially appealing feature of all these markets is the chance to visit face-to-face with the growers, bakers, cooks and artists. Many markets also have food and beverages to carry home or enjoy on the spot.

Not all items are available at all Farmers Markets all the time. Some vendors participate at only one market, others miss a time now and then, and a number of items are seasonal. As a result, much of the fun is discovering a vendor with special treats.

Here’s a short list of what you might find: produce, often organic, including fruits and veggies. Flowers, plants, honey, preserves, vinegars, eggs, meat, cheese, baked goods, candles, candy, jewelry, sewn items, pottery, woodcrafts, furniture, and soap.

“Our vibrant farmers markets not only add to the economic health of our area,” concludes REALTOR ® Viejo. “They also add to the quality of life here, making Charlottesville and our surrounding counties the place to ‘Live where you love.’”

So this week, plan to visit a Farmers Market near you for fun, fresh produce, and friendly faces.

By: Albemarle County resident Marilyn Pribus loves Charlottesville’s City Market, especially for fresh-baked bread, veggies and plants. 

FOR MORE INFORMATION: The Piedmont Environmental Council maintains a user-friendly, searchable website at www.Pecva.org.  Search options by county include local Farmers Markets, farms and orchards (many offering U-pick fruits and veggies), wineries and breweries, grocers, buyers clubs, local food co-ops, caterers, restaurants and specialty foods. For more information, visit: www.buylocalvirginia.org.  Hardcopy versions are available at a number of places in the area.

Regional Farmers Markets include:

Charlottesville City Market Corner of First St. and Water St., Downtown Contact: Stephanie Anderegg-Maloy  (434) 970·3371 citymarket@charlottesville.org www.charlottesvillecitymarket.com April – October; Saturdays 7 a.m. – noon

Crozet Farmers Market Crozet United Methodist Church parking lot Contact: Al Minutolo  (434) 823·1092 aminutolo@embarqmail.com May 3 – October 18; Saturdays 8 a.m. – noon

Earlysville Farmers Market 4167 Earlysville Road Buck Mountain Episcopal Church Parish Hall parking lot Contact: Wendy Russo  (434) 996·8313 evillefarmersmkt@embarqmail.com www.earlysvillefarmersmarket.wordpress.com May 1 – mid October; Thursdays 4 – 7 p.m.

Eastern Orange Farmers Market Locust Grove Town Center at corner of Route 20 and Route 611 (434) 227-4561 easternorangefarmersmarket@gmail.com Mid-April – October; Sundays 8 a.m. – 2 p.m.

Farmers in the Park Meade Park on Meade Avenue, Charlottesville Contact: Same as City Market May – September; Wednesdays 3 – 7 p.m.

Forest Lakes Farmers Market, Charlottesville South Recreational Facility on Ashwood Blvd Contact: Alisa Wildman forestlakesmarket@gmail.com Mid-April – late October 29; Tuesdays 4 – 7 p.m.

Fluvanna Farmers Market 1735 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy, Pleasant Grove, Palmyra Contact: John Thompson (434) 591·1950 jthomp75@vt.edu April – October; Tuesdays 2 – 6 p.m.

Greene County Farmers Market Greene County Technical Education Center, Route 33 Contact: Bob Burkholder (434) 882·1324 Mid-June – late September; Saturdays 8 – 11 a.m.

Louisa Farmers Market 213 E Main Street, Louisa Contact: Mark Bailey (540) 967·1400 louisamarket@gmail.com Memorial Day – Labor Day; Saturdays 8 a.m. – noon

Madison County Farmers Market Hoover Ridge Park on Fairgrounds Rd. (Next to Madison Primary School) (540) 948-6881 bjarvis@vt.edu May – October; Saturdays 8 a.m. –  noon

Mineral Farmers Market, Louisa Avenue Across from the Mineral Town Park Contact: Becky Vigon (540) 854·7626 market@townofmineral.com www.MineralMarket.org May – late October; Saturdays 8 a.m. – noon

Nelson Farmers Market in Downtown Nellysford Route 151, under the big white tent Contact: Bo Holland  (434) 244-2399 www.nelsonfarmersmarket.com April – October; Saturdays 8 a.m. – noon

Orange County Farmers & Artisan Market Faulconer parking lot, Rt. 15 north of Orange (540) 672-2540 director@orangedowntownalliance.org May – November; Wednesdays 11 a.m. – 5 p.m

Categories
News

Tax scandals, lawsuits, and Rotunda renovations: This week’s news briefs

Below, find our latest news briefs—several stories we’ve got an eye on. Pick up C-VILLE’s print edition tomorrow and check c-ville.com daily for regular updates. 

Charlottesville resident involved in international tax scam 

Credit Suisse Group, an international financial services holding company based in Switzerland, doesn’t have any offices in Virginia. But according to a Newsplex report, court documents filed in Virginia federal court reveal that a Charlottesville resident was involved in a billion-dollar tax scam that Credit Suisse admitted to last week. The individual’s identity is protected by the Swiss Banking Act of 1934, which instituted bank secrecy.

The Swiss bank admitted to helping thousands of Americans evade taxes by filing false income tax returns and hiding money in overseas accounts. Credit Suisse admitted to charges of criminal conspiracy and will have to pay a settlement of $2.6 billion. The company is still permitted to conduct business in the U.S.

The Charlottesville resident was one of 22,000 other Americans who committed tax evasion with the help of the Swiss bank. All in all, Credit Suisse helped Americans avoid an estimated 12 billion dollars in taxes. Due to Swiss banking laws, neither the resident nor any other evaders are likely to be charged.

Local couple sues GM over son’s death

An Albemarle County couple has filed a lawsuit against General Motors, attributing the 2009 death of their son to an ignition switch defect in his ’07 Pontiac G5, one of 2.6 million GM models to be recalled this year. According to the complaint, filed May 21 in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, Southern Division, the defect was first identified in the 2001 Saturn Ion and systematically covered up. Ignition switch failure has the potential to shut down the car’s engine and electrical system, causing brakes and airbags to fail.

The plaintiffs, Gordon and Brenda Hair, lost their son Benjamin in December 2009. Ben Hair—who had attended Virginia Tech and competed on the school’s swim team—wrecked going 50 mph in a 45 mph zone in the early afternoon. According to the complaint, the Hairs were unaware of  the possibility of mechanical failure until this year when GM issued a sweeping recall in March. The company cited faulty ignition switches for six different models ranging from 2005 to 2011.

The Hairs are suing GM for withholding information, and theirs isn’t the only legal action against the company. Earlier in May, the Department of Transportation announced it would levy a $35 million fine against GM for the cover up. The Hairs’ complaint alleges that the company knew about the defect long before this year and tried to obfuscate the facts in their son’s death. Lack of skid marks and failure of airbag deployment were two signs that the vehicle suffered mechanical failure, according to the suit, which describes “devastating effects on Brenda Hair,” including severe depression and reclusiveness, culmi-
nating
in a stroke early this year.

According to the complaint, Benjamin Hair’s G5 also contained an Event Data Recorder, a device which would have preserved critical data, including the position of the ignition switch. Despite knowing that the device could have determined whether the ignition switch played a role in the crash, the complaint claims GM allowed the vehicle—along with the recorder—to be crushed. As early as 2002, the ignition switch supplier Delphi had appraised GM that the switch was not up to minimum specifications, but GM approved it anyway. In 2005, GM redesigned the part but scrapped it, according to the complaint, because the “’price [was] too high,” and “none of the solutions represent [ed] an acceptable business case.’” The redesign would have raised the cost of manufacturing $0.57 per vehicle.

As of Tuesday, May 27, GM had not filed a response to the suit.

Phase two of Rotunda renovation begins 

Now that students are off Grounds for the summer, it’s back to work on the University of Virginia’s iconic Rotunda. Phase one of the project, completed last spring, included installation of a new oculus and copper roof, masonry repairs, and refurbishing work on the window sashes and architraves.

According to local reports, the second phase, which is expected to take about another year, will include repairs on the dome room, fire safety mechanisms, building infrastructure, and installation of new marble capitals on the columns.

The cost of the project comes in at $42.5 million, and is funded by a combination of private donations and state appropriations.

Waynesboro man uses disguised camera to take upskirt photos of Target shoppers 

A 31-year-old man was arrested last Thursday for not-so-discreetly taking upskirt photos of women at a Target store in Waynesboro. According to a report on NBC29, Joshua Norred used a camera disguised as a pen to photograph female shoppers, which was confirmed by Target security footage. Police told reporters that Norred confessed immediately upon being confronted, and he has been charged with unlawful photographing, a class one misdemeanor.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Jami Sieber

Few artists dare to reach as deeply into music and shake it alive in the way that Jami Sieber does. Donning her electric cello, the composer and musician invites audiences to explore the exhilarating arrangements of original music that know no boundaries and to approach music as a tool for powerful connections. Perhaps her most unique collaboration to date is the awareness-raising concert Sieber performed in Thailand accompanied by a herd of elephants.

Friday 5/30. $15, 7:30pm. Unity of Charlottesville, 2825 Hydraulic Rd. 978-1062.

Categories
Living

Mary Beth Schellhammer brings chocolate-dipped insects to the Downtown Mall

At My Chocolate Shoppe, the new candy store on the Downtown Mall, daily deliveries are expected. Dark chocolate bars with raspberry filling, colorful jelly beans, and giant Rice Krispies treats fly off the shelves every day. Last week, however, store owner Mary Beth Schellhammer took delivery of a special order that’s inspiring more of a gag reflex in some customers than her standard mouthwatering fare: several hundred creepy crawlies that were farm-raised, baked, and shipped from the West Coast.

Say what?

Schelhammer’s bug-eating inspiration came last summer during the 17-year cicada cycle when she and some friends hopped on the cicada eating trend. She became convinced there could be an ongoing market for chocolate-covered insects among the adventurous sweets-lovers of Charlottesville. But when the Tupperware containers of crickets, worms, and individually-wrapped scorpions she ordered from HOT LIX Candy Store—a California-based company that specializes in snacks featuring insects farm-raised and baked specifically for human consumption—showed up at My Chocolate Shoppe a couple weeks ago, even Schellhammer was a little icked out about picking up the bugs with her fingers and dipping them in her homemade melted chocolate. 

“I didn’t think I would be squeamish,” Schellhammer said as she popped the lid off a container holding more than 100 dried crickets. “But I was at first.”

Now that the idea is less of a novelty—for her, at least—she dips with confidence. The bugs have been wildly popular already, and started flying off the shelves almost immediately upon being dunked, she said. But developing the best dipping method has been trial and error, and she’s settled on a partial dip that covers only half the insect since the thrill of the treat is, in large part, the idea of eating a bug.

As Schellhammer plucked a particularly long worm out of the plastic tub with a pair of zebra-print tweezers, she paused and examined the critter up close.

“Oh, I didn’t realize the worms had little legs,” she said with delight. “And look at his face—you can see his eyes! I’ll make sure you can see those from now on.” She carefully swirled the worm’s bottom half in the chocolate and placed it, face-side up, with its beady little eyes staring straight at me, in a quarter-sized pool of milk chocolate. I shuddered.

Schellhammer insisted that I sample all three buggy varieties, and I’ve never been one to turn down a dare or free chocolate. After snapping a few photos with my phone and posing for the quintessential “What am I about to put in my mouth?” shot, I squeezed my eyes shut, took a deep breath, and raised the chocolate thing—a half-inch long cream colored worm that was probably wriggling around a few short weeks ago—to my mouth. Chomp.  

“Well?” Schellhammer asked expectantly.

Surprisingly enough, it didn’t really taste like much. The bittersweet chocolate was by far the dominant flavor, and the hollow airiness of the dried worm gave it a texture similar to Rice Krispies.

By the time I picked a cricket off the plate, a teenage girl and her mom had wandered into the store, and stopped in their tracks when they noticed the treat in my hand. More confident this time, I popped the whole thing in my mouth, and the two customers equal parts gasped, groaned, and giggled, shaking their heads and assuring us that no, they absolutely would not be next.

The crickets are heftier and crunchier than the worms, and after chewing and swallowing, I confirmed that no, Schellhammer was not kidding when she warned me that the brittle, splinter-like little legs would probably get stuck between my teeth.

The scorpions—which cost $3.99 a piece, as opposed to the $0.99 worms and crickets—are by far the most intimidating. Roughly the size of my palm when paired with a slab of chocolate, the third in the insect trifecta (trinsecta?) brought back squeamish memories of discovering a live, angry scorpion in my suitcase shortly after returning home from a high school trip to Costa Rica. At this point I’d already eaten the first two, so clearly there was no going back. The taste and texture weren’t drastically different from the cricket, but there’s a level of badassery that comes with chowing down on something with claws and a stinger. 

Schellhammer said responses to her newest delicacies have been two extremes: those who jump at the chance and those who audibly gag.

“Everyone who tries it wants to do it for the novelty,” she said. “Moms come in here and I think ‘there’s no way,’ and then they eat it right in front of their kids.”

And don’t worry—Schellhammer doesn’t let anything go to waste. Once a tub is emptied and nothing but the stray legs, wings, and eyes are left at the bottom, she sprinkles the insect remnants over a sheet of melted chocolate, breaks it up into chunks, and packages it for sale as bug bark.

Gettin’ buggy wit it

Want to try your hand at making creepy crawly candies? Keep an eye on My Chocolate Shoppe’s Facebook page for announcements about chocolate school and reservations for birthday parties. 

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Two Ladies: A Musical Revue

What’s sweeter than the sound of one beautiful voice? Two beautiful voices harmonizing on popular tunes. Such is case in Two Ladies: A Musical Revue, the first offering from the recently rebooted Play On! theatrical group. The live show is an ode to the beauty of the duet featuring sixteen classic songs from pop and country to opera and Broadway. Each rendition is dual-pitched to perfection by a team of local female vocalists who reject the white noise of modern music and replace it with pure vocal splendor. Check playontheatre.org for other locations.

Thursday 5/29. $15, 7:30pm. White Hall Vineyards, 5383 Sugar Ridge Rd. 823-8615.

Categories
Arts

Sharon Jones beats cancer and fights to save soul

The opening track to Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings’ Give the People What They Want is the burning and brassy “Retreat!” Nominally, it’s a song about the fury of a woman scorned, and Jones sings it masterfully, filling her vocal barbs with impassioned invective.

But for Sharon Jones, the song has a deeper, unintended meaning.

Last June, Jones was diagnosed with bile duct cancer, a rare carcinoma that blocks the tubes that push bile from the liver and gallbladder through the pancreas and into the small intestine. She underwent a seven-hour Whipple procedure—wherein various organs were partially removed or shifted to allow for a re-routing of bile—at a New York hospital.

She thought she was going to die.

Following the surgery, she laid in a hospital bed for 13 days. She was lying in that hospital bed when she first saw the animated video for the song, where Jones’ powerful vocalizations repel ever-circling wolves. Eventually, when the wolves have her surrounded, she invokes soul power and grows to giant size, as if empowered and emboldened by her music.

“I’m laying and I’m looking at this video, and I saw it, and then I was getting ready to look at it a second time, and Saundra [Williams], one of my background singers, she said, ‘Girl, I know you saw the meaning of that video,’” Jones said. “‘You saying retreat, and those little wolves running, that’s like you telling the cancer to retreat, and you overpowering the cancer.’ And I’m like, ‘Wow. Wow.’”

Jones went through her last chemotherapy treatment on New Year’s Eve, was declared cancer-free in mid-January, and hasn’t looked back since. The Dap-Kings returned to the stage in February, and swing through Charlottesville on May 29 in the midst of an extensive American and European tour.

Her hair still hasn’t fully grown back, but Jones insists that’s the only thing she’s lost. The Dap-Kings still put on their trademark nonstop soul marathon, and Jones still brings it, sequined dresses and tiny heels and all.

“My energy, I’m feelin’ it,” she said. “I’m not doing everything exactly like we did it before, but I’m still shoutin’, I’m still jumpin’, I’m still movin’. I’m feeling good. That energy’s still there. That’s a blessing. That’s how good God is.”

Jones, who grew up singing in churches in South Carolina, credits her faith—along with her fans—as a large part of her successful recovery, but she thinks the almighty spared her for a higher purpose—saving soul.

“That’s why God spared my life,” she said. “These people need to know that soul is here.”

The Dap-Kings were the first act of Brooklyn-based Daptone Records, an independent label started by Dap-Kings Gabe Roth and Neal Sugarman 13 years ago. The aim was to bring soul music back to the masses. The company roster now includes Antibalas, Sugarman 3, Charles Bradley, and the Menahan Street Band, but Jones remains its flagship act, one that almost singlehandedly brought soul back en vogue in the mid-’00s.

While Daptone expertly captures the vintage vibe of Motown and Stax—it built its own studio in Brooklyn, and uses old-school recording consoles and analog tape to capture the sound of its influences—it’s also come with a trade-off: the “retro” tag, a label the 58-year-old Jones dreads.

“To me, retro is some young person trying to sing like some old person back in the day,” Jones protested. “And here I am, when I open my mouth, soul music comes out. Ain’t nothing retro here.”

Daptone has never been shy about its commercial aspirations, and neither has Jones. “You don’t hear us in the mainstream,” she said. “Why aren’t we mainstream? It’s a good question.”

After toiling in relative obscurity for years, Jones and Daptone found a certain amount of exposure in the mid-’00s with 100 Days, 100 Nights, which broke the Dap-Kings out of its niche audience. (Even though the Dap-Kings’ earliest work, like the James Brown-ish hard funk of Dap-Dippin’ With…, might be the group’s strongest material.) While NPR and the mainstream music press—and, uh, alt-weeklies—have heaped a lot of laud on the Dap-Kings, Jones still feels soul gets slighted, adding an alternate meaning to tracks like “People Don’t Get What They Deserve.”

“Not me, not even Dap-Kings or Daptone, not even us,” Jones said. “But the other record labels, even all these young people out here trying to come up with this new soul thing and keeping soul music alive, we’re not getting what we deserve. We deserve to be recognized. Recognize our music. Recognize soul music.”

That’s Jones’ ultimate goal. And she’ll sing “100 Days, 100 Nights” as many times as that requires. After all, Jones posits, Tina Turner didn’t get tired of “Proud Mary.” Aretha didn’t get tired of “Respect.” “I’m not tired of doing nothing yet,” said Jones. “When I get tired of it, it’s time to sit my lazy behind down. That’s all that is, it’s laziness when you’re tired of doing your own stuff.”

“I’m not tired,” she concluded. “I’m just getting back out here.”

Categories
News

Over or under: A decision looms on the future of the Belmont Bridge project

One thing seems sure. In the not too distant future, a years-long construction project will get underway to replace the 52-year-old, crumbling Belmont Bridge with a new structure for cars, bikes, and pedestrians to cross the 500-foot stretch that connects downtown to Belmont. After five years of planning and more than a million taxpayer dollars spent on consulting, engineering, and design fees, however, the future of the project is still unclear as two divergent visions have emerged.

The first, put forth by Norfolk-based engineering and architecture firm MMM Design Group and already approved for transportation funding, is a traditional bridge replacement that features wider sidewalks and bike lanes. The second, more recently created by three local design professionals, does away with the highway bridge model entirely and would send cars under Water Street, the CSX railroad tracks, and Avon Street Extended while placing a soaring pedestrian bridge above it all and creating parklike spaces alongside.

With a final public hearing on the future of the project looming on June 16, the backers of the underpass design have ramped up their criticisms of the current bridge plan, accusing the city of bias and lashing out at critics of the design who claim the concept is unvetted, too expensive, and would take too long to build.

“This is all about the economic well being of the city,” said architect Jim Rounsevell, a Belmont resident who partnered with husband/wife landscape architects and fellow Belmonters Peter O’Shea and Sara Wilson to create the underpass design two years ago after seeing the winning entry of a citizen-sponsored 2012 Belmont Bridge design competition, which envisioned an at-grade crossing surrounded by green space.  

The public response to the winning entry was enthusiastic, said Rounsevell, and while his own entry in that competition called for separate vehicle and pedestrian bridges and took second place, he was inspired by the design that trumped his own.

“People have asked for a gateway,” he said. “They want something cool.”

Asking the city to stop a process already years underway and consider a new, untested, and admittedly more expensive alternative, however, has proved daunting.

Different visions

For more than 100 years, a bridge has crossed the rail yard and tracks adjacent to Water Street carrying cars and pedestrians from Avon Street north into downtown and back. The original bridge—built in 1905—was about 15-feet lower in elevation than the current bridge, which was opened in 1962 and had an expected 50-year life span. Its decay became more evident in recent years, with concrete sidewalks cracking and crumbling to such a degree that pedestrians walking across could actually look through to the ground below.

In 2012, the city fenced off the eastern sidewalk to keep pedestrians off, and in an investigative article in the Hook newspaper, critics including now-City Councilor Bob Fenwick and developer Oliver Kuttner blamed the bridge’s poor condition on a lack of maintenance, including the fact that it hadn’t been painted in 26 years. Fenwick, a former member of the Army Corps of Engineers, believed even at that time that the bridge could still be repaired, citing the much-older ages of numerous bridges around the state, but the engineering firm the City hired to determine the future of the bridge had recommended replacement several years earlier.

That same firm, MMM Design Group, was also hired to oversee design of the bridge, an estimated $14.9 million project that received funding approval from the Commonwealth Transportation Board. But after MMM presented Council with an initial bridge design that was rejected by the Board Of Architectural Review in September 2011, a group of Belmont residents with creative streaks decided something bigger and better should happen at such a critical location in the city.

In early 2012, “Project Gait-Way,” a citizen-sponsored Belmont Bridge design competition, attracted entries from the UVA School of Architecture and from local design professionals including Rounsevell, all hoping to elevate a sense of community and pedestrianism above the automobile.

City Councilors had also been disappointed in the initial MMM design.

“It was essentially a replacement bridge with no character to it, much longer than it needed to be, completely unimaginative,” said former City Councilor Dave Norris, who was mayor at the time. Norris said he was inspired by the winners of the bridge design competition, but didn’t believe changing course at such a late date was realistic. “The only option I saw was to send the bridge back to the drawing board, to have them come back with something smaller, that would better fit into the context, and be more imaginative.”

As MMM worked on a new bridge design, the passion among some for the underpass design grew—and that’s been helped along recently by a 20-minute short film spread widely through social media. Rounsevell and proponents of his design have only grown more determined to pressure city council to change course. MMM recently unveiled two “enhanced” bridge designs, one an arch with wide sidewalks, bike lanes and plantings, which has only further convinced the underpassers that Charlottesville is going in the wrong direction at the Belmont Bridge.

MMM's arch bridge design. Image: MMM rendering
MMM’s arch bridge design. Image: MMM rendering

“It looks like it walked out of Pittsburgh from the 1930s,” blasted Rounsevell, who further criticized MMM’s plan for new buildings to be constructed up against the bridge, something he believes will create a canyon-like effect and further block views. Citing a Florida-based economist who is featured in the film about the underpass, Rounsevell claims his plan, which won support from the city’s Placemaking, Livability and Community Engagement (PLACE) Design Task Force and the Charlottesville Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee, would have a greater economic impact on surrounding properties by bringing them to street level and creating an inviting space that would encourage development and socializing.

Brian Wimer, the organizer of the Project Gait-Way competition and a Belmont resident, is even harsher in his criticism of the MMM bridge design and of the city’s approach to the underpass plan, accusing the city and MMM of conflicts of interest for allowing the same firm to assess and condemn the bridge and then receive the contract to design its replacement. 

“Until a day ago, [the city] didn’t even post the underpass as a design alternative online,” writes Wimer in an e-mail. “The city staff simply won’t support anything other than what MMM has proposed. Why? Especially when the public keeps rejecting MMM’s unprofessional, overpriced work.”

Fenwick also asked about a conflict of interest for MMM in 2012, as he suggested repairing the bridge, and while City Manager Maurice Jones has said the entire RFP process with MMM was conducted ethically and legally, Fenwick says his question has not been answered to his satisfaction.

“The inability to get a straight answer is troubling,” he said. MMM representative Joe Schinstock did not respond to C-VILLE’s request for comment.

City Councilor Kristin Szakos, chair of the local Metropolitican Planning Organization, said the accusation that the city hasn’t given the underpass design fair consideration is inaccurate, and she cites the upcoming public hearing as proof that councilors have been willing to be open minded. 

The underpass proponents haven’t provided enough information to allow a decision to be made in their favor, she said, noting a lack of an engineering study to determine whether it’s even feasible. Rounsevell said core samples taken in 2008 show construction is possible, but Szakos said those samples were taken as part of a bridge study and would need to be conducted differently for an underpass. 

The biggest issue, said Szakos, is the funding. Rounsevell claims the $27 million estimated price tag is inflated and is concerned that the figure was provided by estimating firm Barton Malow, which has worked with MMM and the city on numerous other projects including the rebricking of the Downtown Mall. But Szakos notes that while MMM’s enhanced bridge design may cost several million more than the original design, the Commonwealth Transportation Board will allow an already approved project to be amended. An underpass, she said, would require the entire funding request process to begin again, putting construction back by at least a year if the project was even approved. And in any case, she said, pedestrian overpasses don’t qualify for state transportation funding, which means even if the majority of the underpass project was approved and funded, the city would have to come up with the money for that component and cut costs elsewhere from the city budget to avoid losing its top credit rating.

“I think if the public only hears ‘We could have this thing that’s going to connect the city and solve all these problems and be beautiful…or we can have a bridge, most people are going to say, ‘I want the prettier one,’” said Szakos. “That’s not what the comparison is. Some of the assumptions that are being used to argue that the underpass is the more desirable option aren’t verified, like the fact that it would cost less to maintain, offer more connectivity, like the fact that we’d be able to afford to build it.”

Rounsevell and others, however, see the city as being shortsighted and missing an opportunity that could positively transform the downtown area for generations to come. Yes, the underpass requires an upfront investment, Rounsevell said, but he believes that money will be recouped over the years through reduced maintenance costs and the superior economic stimulation he believes it will bring. He points to other cities around the country investing in creative infrastructure including Greenville, South Carolina, where a pedestrian bridge has revitalized that city’s downtown.

“This is what cities are doing to remain competitive,” he said. “This isn’t about me; this is what the community has asked for.”

Over or Under by the numbers

MMM replacement bridge: $14.9 million, estimated 20 months construction with road open throughout

MMM enhanced bridge: $16.4 million, estimated 18 months with full road closure

MMM arch bridge: $18 million, estimated 16 months construction with full road closure. This is a fracture critical bridge, which means any failure is catastrophic.

Underpass: $27.3 million, estimated 28 month construction period with six month total road closure.

Source: MMM

Architect Jim Rounsevell sounds off on some of the criticisms he’s heard about his underpass design

The cost estimate for the underpass is $27 million, close to double the estimate of the replacement MMM bridge design.

That includes a 26 percent contingency because of possible undiscovered subsurface conditions, but the feedback that I’ve gotten from other people in the industry is that the numbers are generous and represent a worst-case scenario. The MMM arch bridge design is at $18 million. Also, the $27 million doesn’t take into account possible savings through use of design/build or the increased economic stimulation the underpass provides.

There’s no difference in potential economic impact between the bridge and the underpass.

Show me the data. You’re making a decision for the next 100 years, and to move forward with that
without the best information is dangerous. This is a focus on short-term cost while the benefit of long term economic growth is not being weighed. Right now, city council does not have the full economic picture. A full study needs to be done through Department of Economic Development and not Neighborhood Development Services.

We would have to start the funding process all over with the Commonwealth Transportation Board.

We have the time to figure this out, and if it takes longer to get it done for a better result, yeah, let’s start over. Now that the economy has improved, there’s a lot more money in the pipeline for projects exactly like this. Other cities have done this and they find a way to get the funding because it’s that important. You need sustainable infrastructure to attract and maintain the right kinds of businesses.

The railroad won’t allow an underpass.

The railroad has not said that. They have done underpasses. They just did this eight or 10 years ago on 10th Street/Roosevelt Brown Boulevard. That was CSX and Norfolk Southern. They do it all the time.

Lexis/Nexis will lose its tunnel to the Pavilion.

They explicitly stated in a letter to the city it was important that they maintain walkability for their employees, and by taking away a 30 foot high embankment and a dark tunnel and making it like any other street in the city, you improve access, you don’t make it worse. It’s actually better for them.

This is liberal big government, pie-in-the-sky spending.

It’s the opposite. It’s the responsible investment in our community that will cost less in the long term and have greater economic benefit to the entire community into the future. This is not a four or five year decision. This is a 60- to 100-year decision.

Architect Jim Rounsevell created the underpass design with landscape architects Peter O'Shea and Sara Wilson. All three are Belmont residents. Photo: Christian Hommel
Architect Jim Rounsevell created the underpass design with landscape architects Peter O’Shea and Sara Wilson. All three are Belmont residents. Photo: Christian Hommel

 

Correction: The original version of this story misstated the age of the Belmont Bridge. It is 52 years old.

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News

Plaza pain eases: City steps up to help businesses affected by McIntire Road construction

The nearly 50 small businesses that call McIntire Plaza home have made their voices heard above the din of incessant construction that stretches from their front yard at the intersection of McIntire Road and Harris Street down to the U.S. 250 Bypass.

Responding to steady complaints from commuters and customers, City Manager Maurice Jones met last month with some of the business owners to hear firsthand the financial hardships they’d been experiencing.

Days after C-VILLE published an article detailing their fiscal woes, the city took several steps to try and help businesses in the plaza.

For starters, the city’s engineers adjusted the timing of the red lights at the intersections of McIntire Road and U.S. 250, as well as at McIntire Road and Harris Street, so that cars can turn right on red, improving traffic flow for customers headed to or from the plaza, according to Jones.

The city also painted a large white box where McIntire Road intersects with Harris Street with signs declaring, “Do Not Block the Intersection.” Jones said a police officer has been stationed at the intersection during busy periods to keep the intersection traffic free.

Signs have also gone up along Preston Avenue promoting Harris Street as an alternate route to get to McIntire Plaza.

The steps seem to have helped, with Jones describing response from Plaza tenants as positive.

“We’ll continue to monitor the situation and work with the businesses to address their concerns where we can,” he said.

One gesture the city made—a promise to match a $5,000 advertising campaign for the businesses if they can raise an initial $5,000 between them—has fallen by the wayside, according to Matt Monson, owner of Great Harvest Bread Co. But, he said, it’s not the city’s fault.

“Honestly, the problem is on our end,” said Monson, who initially took on the task of rallying other McIntire Plaza businesses behind the fundraising drive. Differences of opinion on how to spend that money have gotten in the way, he said.

“There are like 70 different businesses here, and trying to make a decision on something like this is just difficult. It came back down to all of us wondering how we’d ever decide how it got distributed and who was going to do that work.”

Beate Casati, owner of La Linea Bella!, said that business has been steady in recent weeks, and she has exhausted her advertising budget for the year already. Both Casati and Monson agreed that the stress of day-to-day operations means business owners don’t have the time or energy to coordinate a new advertising campaign involving dozens of businesses.

While the city has increased its support for the business owners, several say they’ve also reached out to their landlord, Woodard Properties, with mixed results. None would divulge any type of assistance they’d been offered.

Woodard Properties’ manager of McIntire Plaza, Mike Morris, also declined to comment on any communications between Woodard and its tenants. 

“We have no desire to offer proof of our intentions or validation of our actions in regards to our tenants,” he wrote in an email he sent to C’ville Coffee owner Toan Nguyen and to C-VILLE Weekly. “We consider these things private matters between those with which we do business.”

Morris also expressed support for both the City of Charlottesville and the contractors, “both diligently working to complete a project that has been in the works for years.”

Perhaps the biggest potential boon for tenants is set for the end of this summer, when the McIntire/Harris intersection will be reconfigured to improve pedestrian crossings with the addition of crosswalks, pedestrian countdowns, and walk buttons, according to Jeanette Janiczek, the city’s Urban Construction Initiative project manager.

In a follow-up phone call, Morris said he has tried to keep businesses focused on the prospect that the project will ultimately bring long term benefits by increasing and smoothing traffic to the area.

“Obviously it’s something that has to be done and it’s an unpleasant situation for everybody involved,” said Morris. “But at the same time, if you want to make omelets, you’ve got to crack a few eggs. The best situation is where they get done and we can move on. Obviously the faster they get done, the better.”

The city has taken steps to ease the plight of tenants at McIntire Plaza, who say construction of the McIntire/250 exchange is hurting business.

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Charlottesville Area Real Estate Professionals Give Back

Volunteers are a valued part of our society and our economy. In 2012, the Corporation for National and Community Service reported that 64.5 million Americans volunteered a total of 7.9 billion hours, which had an estimated economic value of $175 billion.

In Charlottesville, an online survey conducted by CAAR (Charlottesville Area Association of REALTORS) found that 94 percent of the 99 respondents reported they give an average of five hours per week to a wide range of volunteer activities. These individuals help with children and schools, give time through religious organizations, and are active with issues involving housing, seniors, the local food bank and many more.

People choose to volunteer for many reasons, including a desire to make a difference, to share special skills or develop new ones (such as fund raising or public speaking), or to gain visibility and make contacts. Regardless, we all benefit when individuals such as our local hard working real estate professionals go outside of themselves and share what they have with the wider community.

Why They Volunteer
Successful real estate professionals are busy with their work and make a good deal of money. So why do they take time to help others?

Pat Wood is a REALTOR® with Sloan Manis Real Estate Partners. A former nurse, she has volunteered at the Charlottesville Free Clinic since 1999. The Free Clinic serves Charlottesville’s working uninsured population, and thanks to Wood’s love of nursing and desire to help others, the 160 hours she gave last year benefitted as many as 400 patients. In December of 2013 she received the CAAR Good Neighbor Award that recognizes REALTORS® who give a significant amount of volunteer time. Wood encourages others to volunteer, saying that giving of yourself is rewarding and makes you feel good.

Our real estate professionals also give out of a desire to give back to the community where they make their living. “I get as much as I give,” said Pam Dent with Gayle Harvey Real Estate, Inc., adding that for her, “life needs to have a purpose other than just making money.” Dent has participated in fundraising for AHIP (Albemarle Housing Improvement Project) as part of her participation with the Communication Committee at CAAR. Her commitment to the AHIP mission of keeping people safe at home means she plans to continue her involvement there even after completing her work on the CAAR committee.

Another Good Neighbor Award winner, Francesca San Giorgio with Four Seasons Realty, works at the Nelson County Pantry, which is affiliated with the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank. The Nelson pantry serves 700 people a month including 250 families. Every month volunteers like San Giorgio assemble and distribute over 700 bags of groceries, an activity which requires a total of 250 volunteer hours. San Giorgio was looking for the right volunteer opportunity and the food pantry was the one that “caught my heart,” she said, adding that “it could be you or I in that line.”

For Jim McVay with Roy Wheeler Realty Co., volunteering is “how I was raised.” McVay is a supporter of MACAA (Monticello Area Community Action Agency) that has a mission of helping to lift people out of poverty through training and education. His involvement there started with a personal charitable activity that he does annually. Ten years ago a friend at social services suggested he do something to help kids, but not during the holidays since that is the one time of year when they receive lots of other gifts.

As a strong believer in the importance of education, McVay decided to help young kids get off to a good start in school. Every year he buys 50 backpacks and fills them with school supplies, according to advice he received from a local kindergarten teacher about what would be most useful. His relationship with MACAA began when he approached them about helping to distribute the back packs to kids who need them the most.

“Imagine what the backpacks do for the attitude of these kids just starting school,” McVay said. Instead of showing up with nothing they have “cool backpacks with writing materials like paper, pens and pencils.” This year will be the tenth in a row that he has given away the backpacks.

Like Wood, McVay described his giving as rewarding. “It is not a sacrifice,” but rather, he said, “when I give I feel better.”

Sometimes agents choose to volunteer because of a personal experience they have had. For example, Bill Howard with Real Estate III Commercial Properties is known for his annual sponsorship of the Alzheimer’s Association Golf Tournament at Birdwood. This year marked the 16th such tournament and Howard was honored for his consistent fundraising efforts when a year ago in March he received the very first CAAR Good Neighbor Award.

The original motivation for initiating the tournament came when Howard’s father died of Alzheimers seventeen years ago. Barck then the local Alzheimer’s Association, which was just one full time person and two volunteers, offered resources to help his family through this difficult time. It was out of gratitude for their help that he wanted to give back. Due to past experience he said to himself “I know how to raise money,” and that was the start of the tournament. He started talking to people including someone at Pepsi of Central Virginia which became his very first sponsor. Overall the tournament raised about $20,000 that first year. This year’s tournament, sixteen years later, raised over $1 million.

Some Volunteer Opportunities Just Happen
Sometimes agents find unexpected opportunities to volunteer. Tara Savage, with Judy Savage & Company Realtors, said “I never really had a fondness for cats.” Yet her main volunteer effort is fostering cats and kittens for the Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA, our local no-kill animal shelter.

Three years ago, Savage and her daughter found a kitten in a parking lot. Her daughter wanted to keep the kitten, but instead they took it to the SPCA. While they were there they decided to sign up for fostering. “I don’t have a fenced yard,” Savage said, “so we can’t foster dogs.” Instead they foster cats and kittens.

The SPCA calls them whenever they have animals that need a temporary place to stay. Sometimes it is an adult cat that needs a break from the shelter or a chance for some socialization. Sometimes an animal has some kind of infection and needs medication, or it might be a litter of kittens too young to neuter who need a place to stay until they are old enough. “Sometimes,” Savage said, “we just go to the SPCA to play with the animals and while we are there, ask if they have any cats to foster.”

It was also a coincidence that made Tommy Brannock with Loring Woodriff Real Estate Associates, an avid supporter of the Virginia Institute for Autism (VIA), a local school for children with autism and autism spectrum disorders, where he served on the Board for twelve years. He has no family members or close friends with autism, but 12 years ago the Association’s board president asked him to help find a new school campus. About that same time his daughter baby sat for a family with two autistic children. The coming together of these two events triggered his interest in autism.

VIA’s biggest fundraiser is the 5K Run for Autism. To help support that event, Brannock, who also volunteers as a girls’ lacrosse coach, created what he calls the Golden Stick Challenge. This is an annual competition between the girls’ lacrosse teams at the various local high schools. The teams compete to see which one can enroll the largest number of participants in the VIA 5K, and the prize is a lacrosse stick painted gold which the winning team gets to keep for a year. This competition alone has helped raise more than $100,000 for the VIA 5K over the years. It has also raised the girls’ awareness of autism and motivated some of them to also participate in other ways.

Many Ways to Make a Difference
Local REALTORS® volunteer in many capacities. Clearly fundraising is a big one.

An agent who gives fundraising a unique twist is Betty Aguilar with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate III. Aguilar, who created a concept called Win Win For a Cause, donates 10 percent of her commissions from every closed transaction to local, mostly small, charities. Donations are made in the name of the clients involved in that particular transaction.

“It is often the small organizations which struggle for financing,” Aguilar said. Her clients can choose from a list on her Win Win For a Cause website where she links to a variety of organizations that serve children, the elderly, the environment and animals. Clients sometimes have suggestions of local worthy organizations such as one she learned about recently called A Fertile Foundation which offers what they call “farm therapy” to individuals with special needs helping them to connect with nature.

Aguilar’s clients have 30 days after their home closes to give her a name of an organization for the donation. If for some reason she doesn’t hear back from them she still makes a donation, sometimes asking for suggestions from her followers on Facebook, but always the funds are given.

Why does she do it? “I realized at one point that I spent a lot of time working and that didn’t leave much for other activities, but I do have resources,” she said. The result was Win Win For a Cause and the regular donation of thousands of dollars to local organizations.

Agents also do hands on volunteer work. The volunteer hours that Wood, Savage and San Giorgio contribute at their respective charities are good examples. Dent sometimes gets involved with AHIP renovation projects, such as the deck they built for an individual who wasn’t allowed to return home from a hospital visit because his home wasn’t wheel chair accessible.

While hands-on opportunities may be time consuming, there are exceptions. Savage explained that when you foster animals, all the “work” is done at home, although occasionally it offers unique challenges. She once had a cat which managed to get in the space behind her tub and down into the floor joists above her family room while she was in midst of a repair project. To get him out she had to have a friend cut a hole in the family room ceiling.

All Volunteers Welcome
All of these local real estate professionals urge you to join them in their activities. Not only are they rewarding but they help build a stronger community, making the Charlottesville area a better place to live. Contributions are also always welcome. While big ones are great, the agents all agree that the organizations are grateful for whatever you can afford to give.

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