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Off the grid: A model for environmentalism made easy

It’s affordable, actually sustainable and certainly not the modern American lifestyle most have become accustomed to, with multiple cars per family, smart phones for everyone and streaming video on demand. The 5-year-old project called Living Energy Farm is an off-the-grid, zero-fossil-fuel-emission community in the works in Louisa County, described in two words by its creator: real sustainability.

“Opposed to the fake version,” says Alexis Zeigler, the primary man behind the design, who believes the word “sustainability” is both overused and misused. His project aims to define real sustainability by developing 127 acres of land into a self-sufficient, income-sharing community, education center and farm that employs the best of old and new technologies, while using no fossil fuels and leaving no carbon footprint. It’s an ambitious project, but for Zeigler, it’s the natural progression of a life that’s been long focused on treating the earth kindly.

Lifelong dream

The main house is a three-bedroom dwelling that’s still under construction. Photo: Christian Hommel
The main house is a three-bedroom dwelling that’s still under construction. Photo: Christian Hommel

A longtime environmentalist, activist, author and farmer, 47-year-old Zeigler grew up on a self-sufficient Georgia farm and moved to Twin Oaks, a cooperative community in Louisa County, when he was 18. In the mid-’90s, Zeigler moved to Charlottesville where he led a campaign to build bike lanes, fought the construction of a Walmart on Fifth Street, published a few books and built conventional buildings and renewable energy systems, as well as a cooperative house that runs on less than a tenth of the energy an average American household uses. He had a grander vision, though: Create a community that uses zero percent grid-tied energy. The idea for Living Energy Farm was born.

A project like Living Energy Farm is a massive undertaking, and Zeigler knew he couldn’t do it alone. Fortunately, he found ample support from like-minded volunteers, interns, friends and family who were ready to get their hands dirty and who, like him, envisioned living and working together in a self-reliant community. The group met for several years to develop a plan for the community, which is classified as a 501(d) or “quasi-nonprofit” corporation, and in 2010, they bought the land in Louisa for $218,000, with half the money raised by the planners and Zeigler taking out a mortgage for the remainder.

When the farm is completed, Zeigler says, only $100,000 more will have been invested in building the community that could support over a dozen people. This low price comes from the number of donated and refurbished materials being used to complete the project, as well as its design, which uses simple, cheap materials. In a few years, Zeigler imagines building a couple of houses on the property, but for now, he says they’ll stick with the three-bedroom house and kitchen building with a bathroom, plus an array of fields where over 25 fruits, nuts and vegetables are farmed. The aesthetic emphasizes fresh air and light and minimizes costly trim and detail.

With financial support from the nonprofit Virginia Organizing Project for educational programming, Zeigler’s ultimate goal is to introduce Americans to the truly sustainable cooperative lifestyle, and to say, “Hey, it’s not so hard. This is OK.”

Old and new

A solar parabolic cooker known as the “death ray” is used to cook many meals for the community. Photo: Christian Hommel
A solar parabolic cooker known as the “death ray” is used to cook many meals for the community. Photo: Christian Hommel

Right off Bibb Store Road in Louisa, passersby are greeted with a sign for Living Energy Farm and, upon pulling off, another one that reads No Vehicles Beyond This Point. Guests are then expected to leave their cars parked in a makeshift lot on the edge of the farm and from there, it’s about a quarter mile hike up a beaten gravel and dirt path to the kitchen, the first finished building on the property. To get around, Zeigler, his family and his crew of volunteers and interns rely heavily on their feet and bicycles, which are stationed throughout the community. For transporting materials, they have a couple of tractors, one from 1939 and one from 1961, designed to run on woodgas and biofuels.

The kitchen is separated from the house, and its roof is decorated with a grid of flat plate solar hot water collectors that are connected to the storage tank inside. “It’s like every bad pattern from the ’70s and ’80s combined,” says Zeigler about the floor which is slated with refurbished tiles in reds, blues, greens and yellows with a wood stove sitting against a wall. He plans to use a solar ammonia loop refrigeration system that has no electronics, no moving parts and can be built out of low-cost materials, but for now, there’s a mini-fridge in the corner to store his daughter’s antibiotics.

A shiny, silver metal table looks like something found in a factory. And, kind of like a factory, this space doubles as a community food processing facility where no fossil fuel is used to heat or cool the building, or to cook and preserve food. Since the kitchen stands apart, food canned in August doesn’t dump heat into the house, and in the winter, the active and passive solar features will provide warmth, and the buildings will need almost no supplemental heat, Zeigler says.

Active features include solar panels and other technologies, but passive solar is all about design and thermodynamics—windows often face south to collect more sunlight; this way, heat is easily transferred into a room. The passive design is commonly seen in greenhouses and sunrooms. For extra heat, they’ll burn wood as a last resort.

And for cool air, the farm’s irrigation system—a bundle of water pipes—runs under the kitchen and the unfinished house beside it. The water in the pipes provides a cooling that is almost free, thus achieving “air conditioning,” Zeigler says. They use surface water pumped from creeks for irrigation.

Both the kitchen and main house are super-insulated with 18-inch straw bale walls, so once they’re filled with warm or cool air, they will maintain that temperature for days.

The lighting at Living Energy Farm comes from DC-powered LED bulbs, which are powered by nickel iron batteries that are low-output and not toxic or explosive like standard lead acid batteries. The nickel iron battery in the kitchen is 80 years old, Zeigler says, and though obtaining one is a bit of an investment, he says it’s well worth the money and it will last a lifetime.

And the bathroom? Composting toilets built with a simple, two chamber design can be found down a hallway flanking the kitchen. The waste is used as fertilizer—it’s buried under fruit trees on the property.

A short walk down a dirt path from the kitchen and house leads to the other side of the property where Zeigler and his crew have set up a camping facility. This is where he and his family sleep while staying at Living Energy Farm, though they usually stay in a local house called Magnolia. Regulations prevent them from living at the farm until they receive a certificate of occupancy, which will be at the end of this year or the beginning of 2016, when the community is operating.

At this camping facility, 33-year-old Debbie Piesen—the mother of Zeigler’s children—and guests are chatting and preparing lunch while the kids play and rummage for firewood. A shack-like structure built off the tractor barn has been turned into a temporary cooking facility with fresh foods, water jugs, a table, dishes and a couple things bought from a grocery store, like coffees and sweeteners tucked away neatly.

“Nothing is over the counter for us,” Zeigler says. “Or almost nothing.”

Piesen is cooking rice in a hay box, or insulation cooker, which retains the heat and uses it to cook the grain thoroughly. It will be eaten for lunch and dinner.

On a nearby wood stove, Piesen heats carrots and oil to fry the rice. When she takes a break from the cooking, Zeigler picks it up and adds kale and some other veggies to the mixture. It smells fantastic and the two, along with their kids, guests and laborers, get in line for a communal lunch before anyone has the chance to sound the cornet—the Living Energy Farm way of signaling workers on the other side of the property that lunch is ready.

“We call this the death ray,” Zeigler says, standing next to a solar parabolic cooker. He holds a thin piece of kindling in front of the cooker’s dome to demonstrate the intensity of the cooker by showing how quickly the stick starts smoking when placed in the sun’s direct ray.

On this side of the property, there’s also a batch collector. It’s a tank inside an insulated box with a glass cover, tilted to catch the sun. Pressurized water comes in the cold side of the collector and passes out the hot side to the tap, without using any pumps or electronic control systems. Water can remain in the collector for long periods of time, and for six months out of the year, Zeigler says, it stores all the hot water they need here.

He says batch collectors are by far the most common means of water heating on the planet, but Americans don’t seem to know much about them. The pressurized water comes from the same pressurized source used for cold water, which in Zeigler’s case, is a hand pump, but he says city water would work just as well for urban dwellers.

To wash clothes, the crew is tinkering with an exercise bike hooked up to an old washing machine. Doing a load of laundry could take a few miles of spinning; four or five clotheslines are hung up to dry damp clothing.

When Zeigler, Piesen and family camp out at Living Energy Farm, they’re not quite roughing it. Their camping facility is built from scraps from the Habitat for Humanity dumpster in Charlottesville, and instead of insulating with straw bale like the kitchen and main house, this cabin has 12 inches of fiberglass wrapped around it. It has a passive solar design with its windows on the south side and is lit by DC LED lighting and nickel iron batteries, like the other side of the property. Zeigler says anyone could copy the passive solar design, but most don’t, since American culture is more apt to focus on appearance than sustainability.

Some Americans aren’t too keen on the unsightliness of decorating their properties with solar panels, either, but that hasn’t stopped the folks at Living Energy. They have solar photovoltaic, or PV, panels in four locations—two near the main house, one at the tractor barn and one small set used to run an irrigation system in a remote location near a field.

A solar shower is outside the camping facility, facing the woods, but the kids have stripped down and are splashing around in a small pool to cool off.

Community

While standing around the table, volunteers and interns chat and drink tea. Photo: Christian Hommel
While standing around the table, volunteers and interns chat and drink tea. Photo: Christian Hommel

Most parents are proud of their offspring, but Ziegler and Piesen believe their way of life is giving their children certain advantages. Both of their children, Rosseyanka, 4, and Nikita, 9 months, are named after persimmons—Zeigler’s favorite trees.

Though Zeigler and Piesen agree that Nikita is primarily focused on learning how to walk, they’ve seen Rosseyanka, who goes by Rosa, perform in ways that are different than that of most 4-year-olds: She understands grafting trees. She knows which weeds are edible. She likes bugs. She names the wild rabbits on the property like they’re her pets.

“It’s good for my kids to be exposed to [environmentalism] from a really early age, that it’s not just this kind of abstract thing,” says Piesen, who grew up in New Jersey suburbs, but moved to Twin Oaks, where she met Zeigler. “When I was a kid, it was like ‘I’m reusing toilet paper tubes for a project and I’m saving the earth!’”

She says her kids are learning early on how the plants react to different weather patterns and seasonal changes. They’re learning how the weather affects them and how it affects the land, she says, calling this one of the most challenging aspects of living off the grid. They must pay close attention to what the sun is doing at all times, since nearly all of their operations rely heavily on solar power.

The Living Energy community is flourishing; long- and short-term interns and volunteers of all ages work on farming or building almost every day. Until the main house is finished, these people camp out in their own tents when not staying at Magnolia. Tom Lever, who has volunteered at Living Energy for three years, says living in the community has been an enormous growing experience.

“It’s a great life,” says Lever. “It just feels right.”

Growing healthy foods and preserving agricultural heritage is Lever’s passion. He loves orange glow watermelon with bright, golden flesh harvested in late July or mid-August. “You eat so much you get a headache, a sugar rush,” he says. He also swoons over harvesting multicolored corn cobs with purples, yellows, blues and tans.

For him, farming teaches a sort of patience, humility and perseverance that help him to become better acquainted with the sky and the earth. His favorite part of working at Living Energy has been “honchoing,” or being in charge of some seed-growing work shifts.

Piesen is the farm’s manager, however, and seed-growing is how Living Energy Farm supports itself. The community is income-sharing and its members sell open-pollinated seeds to wholesalers for profit. They sell some produce, like sweet corn, summer squash, kale, beets, watermelon and strawberries from their gardens, too. With farming and building, Zeigler says hundreds of people have probably worked on their community thus far.

A volunteer, Talis Basham, says farming in blazing heat is the most challenging aspect, and to that, another volunteer, Baccarus Foster agrees, “The sun is brutal,” he says.

They rely on it, though, and this operation would be impossible without the sun’s strong presence.

Cooperation

Baccarus Foster stirs the community’s meal that cooks on the woodstove. Photo: Christian Hommel
Baccarus Foster stirs the community’s meal that cooks on the woodstove. Photo: Christian Hommel

In the heat of the day, the volunteers sit around a table in the shade with the rest of the community, as one member arranges freshly picked flowers in a jar and chats with Rosa, and the others crack jokes and scarf down their fried rice. One would never guess that they had met each other semi-recently, as interns and volunteers, and that they hadn’t grown up together in a similar environment.

The communal lifestyle demands cooperation between its members. “People are fascinated by the technology, but it’s really the cooperation that makes it work,” says Zeigler. “You can define that however you want, but we can’t build renewable energy with 7 billion independent renewable energy systems, nor can we build sustainable renewable independent energy systems on an industrial scale. It really has to be done on a village scale. That’s how it works.”

Zeigler has plenty of local environmentally minded friends, and he’s done years worth of research on what makes environmentalism work. He’s even written a couple books about it, including the 2013 tome Integrated Activism: Applying the Hidden Connections Between Ecology, Economics, Politics and Social Progress.

While developing the idea for Living Energy Farm, he asked his friends to send him records of at least three years of their residential energy usage. In his research, the lowest number he found came from the cooperative house he owns in Charlottesville that uses 9 percent of grid-tied energy. Other local communities like Twin Oaks came in between 10 and 40 percent, he says. But he was shocked by the numbers he received from his like-minded friends who live in private houses—their energy usage was between 120 and 150 percent above average for Americans.

Most Americans live in apartments in cities, Zeigler says, and living in a free-standing house has more economic and environmental costs. His research shows that community living cuts down on energy usage tremendously. Taking the final step from 10 percent energy usage to zero, like Zeigler is doing with Living Energy, is the tough part, but living at the 10 percent mark, he says, is actually pretty easy. It only requires living cooperatively.

“I’ve given this speech to thousands of people and most people don’t want to live cooperatively, but that’s because most people don’t care much about the environment,” Zeigler says.

Americans tend to live less cooperatively than people overseas who are confined to living in villages, and therefore, projects like Living Energy Farm are more likely to spread overseas, he says.

“If we could go into villages and set up better cookers and better hot water heaters, they’ll love that,” Zeigler says, claiming that Americans are the most dominant culture, obsessed with consumption and mostly responsible for destabilizing the climate.

“We’re annihilating the planet for the sake of our own short-term consumption and all we have to do is change our lifestyle,” he says. “But we don’t want to because our lifestyle is what makes us powerful.”

 Correction: The original version of this story misstated the depth of water pipes. Most are two to three feet below ground, and one descends 240 feet to a submersible pump at the bottom of the well.

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News

Anson’s crawl: City Council candidate details arrest record

Republican City Council candidate Anson Parker is not the first person running for office with an arrest record—Wes Bellamy had his own bout with unresolved traffic tickets two years ago. Parker has racked up three arrests for public drunkenness since 2006, with the most recent in January of this year. He also was charged with obstruction of justice in 2007—and found not guilty.

Parker, 37, a computer programmer, tells C-VILLE what happened with each of his charges, starting with his first drunk in public arrest at 3:50am June 25, 2006. “This is the time I was quite literally crawling home,” he writes in an e-mail. “The officer told me to stop and I tried to crawl faster…. rather pitiful….” He was found guilty in absentia and paid the $25 fine and $86 in court costs July 10, 2006.

On March 23, 2007, Parker was charged with obstruction of justice and later found not guilty. He says his friend was in an accident and “kinda loopy” and he was trying to help. In his explanation to some officers, he says he may have been a bit brusque. A week later at a March 30, 2007, hearing, a judge found him not guilty.

His August 18, 2012, DIP arrest was “a bit of a mess,” concedes Parker. He says he had about a week in between his apartment getting torn down and closing on his house, so he spent a few days sleeping by the river and had “several beverages” to make sleeping simpler. He says he awoke to police officers asking where he lived, and when he explained his situation, they “were pretty nonplussed,” and said, “Since you don’t have a home, we’re going to provide one.” Parker pleaded guilty and prepaid the $106 fine and costs, according to court records.

Parker attributes his most recent January 24 drunk in public arrest to the open bar at a beer festival and “those porter stouts.” The police officer who arrested him was en route to jail and saw a white male stumble across Ridge Street at Cherry Avenue in front of traffic. The suspect was belligerent, had slurred speech and smelled strongly of alcohol, according to the officer’s report. “Truth is I wiped out right in front of two cops,” says Parker, who claims he was a block away from his house. “Soooo close…could see the front door.” 

Parker reminds us that his arrests are not his only mischief, and points to his patent for making THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, out of bacteria. He also says he was thrown out of UVA after 9-11 for making a peace sign. “That was fairly epic,” he says.

As for whether his arrests will affect his chance at election in the Dem-heavy town that already makes the chance of a Republican getting elected slim, Parker says he’s more interested in getting people to use the Cville Council Us app he’s developed that allows citizens to weigh in on issues and learn about cool things in the city: “So if I can get 1,000 people to download the app, I’ve done pretty well, if I can get 5,000 I’ve totally won—even if none of those people vote for me…. just that the technology is in place and there’s a means for people to communicate with the city at a granular level.”

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Living

Ownership scramble cooking at Bluegrass Grill & Bakery and more local restaurant news

Ownership scramble cooking at Bluegrass Grill & Bakery

Chrissy Benninger’s been part owner of Bluegrass Grill & Bakery for more than five years. Just a couple months ago, she got a bee in her bonnet to make serious changes. Why now? She’s bought out her partners, Jim and Lalah Simcoe, and that’s renewed her enthusiasm.

“They were kind of in semi-retirement for the past few years, and I was getting my feet wet,” she says. “Once they decided they wanted to retire fully, I just got a burst of energy and all these things are falling into place at once.”

Bluegrass, of course, ain’t broke—see the lines out the door on weekends or the local, regional and national acclaim it’s earned. So lots of folks might say don’t fix it. But Benninger, who was the restaurant’s manager before buying into ownership, thinks she can have her hot cakes and eat ’em too, making selective upgrades while keeping everything regulars love.

What needs work? Benninger says she’ll finally launch a website for her small breakfast joint, and she’ll create different weekday and weekend menus. The specials will be incorporated into the full-time menu, and favorites like the Hungry Norman and fresh corned beef hash will stay. But several items will go. A few of the scrambles were taking too much time to push out of the kitchen, Benninger says, and 86’ing them will make those lines out the door shorter.

“We are honestly trying to make more room for more specials,” Benninger says. “I’ve got a million ideas and no room for them. I want to streamline the menu.”

Benninger says she’s planning to replace the carpet in her restaurant, pointing up the fact that Bluegrass is so damn good it can get away with being carpeted in 2015. And the comically small Bluegrass parking lot is likely to go. The half-dozen functional spots are reportedly slated for replacement by a patio that Bluegrass and neighbor Paradox Pastry would share. Benninger calls the change a “rumor” but says building owner Oliver Kuttner has been talking about it for a while.

But what of the loss of the Simcoes, who officially retired on May 1? Lalah Simcoe says she and Jim bought Bluegrass from its original owners, Jonas and Joan Marie Worsham, in 2003, about a year and a half after the restaurant opened. Over the next six to seven years, the couple double handedly made their hole in the wall the hottest breakfast spot in C’ville. Benninger admits she has big shoes to fill.

“It’s definitely a little more challenging,” she says. “Now I need to do a little more delegation, but I have a great support staff.”

Twelve-ounce curls

Most people would agree booze ain’t the thing if you’re looking to trim your waistline. But that’s not stopping ACAC Fitness and Wellness Centers from applying for a liquor license at its Downtown location.

The local gym-pire, with two locations in C’ville, one in Crozet, two outside Richmond and two more in Pennsylvania, has completed construction on a new downtown patio that stands, along with the location’s rooftop pool, to be a fitting place to have a beer or cider when the ABC license comes through. No word yet, unfortunately, on when that will be.

“Our plan is to offer light beverage service on the rooftop and in the new patio space in front of the building,” ACAC VP of marketing Christine Thalwitz says. “It will be similar to the service we offer in our Short Pump club. Our members like to work out with us and also spend leisure time with us, so we are adding spaces in the club where they can relax, unwind and socialize.” 

Taco takeover

Since it opened on June 6, Brazos Tacos has been doing a brisk business for breakfast and lunch, and as of July 15, the Austin-style taco shop is serving up dinner Monday through Saturday until 7pm. Sunday brunch is served 8-3pm, and the restaurant stays open later when special events go down at the property.

“It’s been really good,” says Brazos co-owner Peter Griesar, who says the restaurant’s ABC application is complete so booze should be on sale “soon.”

In other Brazos news, early birds get two-for-one tacos before 9am all summer, and “grab-and-go tacos” are helping rushing lunchers get in and out before break-time ends. And if the Ix location doesn’t work for your morning or lunchtime routine, breakfast tacos are now sold every weekday at Shark Mountain Coffee, between UVA School of Law and the Darden School.

–Shea Gibbs and Courteney Stuart

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News

Bad week in July: Five dead in four crashes; four still in critical condition

Five people were killed in four separate car accidents last week, and four of those deaths occurred within 48 hours.

The high number of vehicular deaths in such a short amount of time is unusual, according to Carter Johnson, spokesperson for the Albemarle County Police Department,

“We’ve had spurts where you’ll have fatal crashes close together, but this is a lot more than normal,” Johnson says. “To have four [fatal crashes] in one week is pretty unusual. Usually we see one or two back-to-back.”

The string of fatal crashes began the morning of July 20 when a white Ford Expedition traveling northbound on Gordonsville Road crossed the double yellow line and struck a gray Nissan Altima traveling south at 6:41am. Ten-year-old Quincy Jamal Jones, who was riding in the Altima, was pronounced dead at the scene. His 9-year-old brother, Desmond Javon Holmes, was transported to University of Virginia Medical Center, where he died Tuesday, July 21, from injuries sustained in the crash. The two other passengers in the Altima, including the father of the two boys, were flown to the UVA Medical Center and remain in critical condition. Whether they were wearing seatbelts is still under investigation, according to Johnson. The driver of the Expedition was transported to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

The brothers, who are from Fairfax, attended Cardinal Ridge Elementary School. A vigil commemorating the boys will be held July 30 at Cardinal Ridge Elementary and funeral services are scheduled for July 31 at Mount Pleasant Baptist Church in Herndon.

“It’s hard when you see anyone killed in a crash, but to see children who are so young and have so much of their life ahead of them… it really takes a toll on you,” says Johnson. “The officers are professionals who are committed to their investigations and they have support within the agency, but it was a challenging week.”

Another traffic-related fatality occurred on July 21 at 3:14pm. A Ford F150 traveling south on the Route 250 bypass during a downpour hydroplaned, causing the driver lose control of the truck and cross the median into northbound lanes of traffic, where it struck James K. Miller, 66, who was on a motorcycle. Miller died at the scene. The driver of the truck was unharmed.

Fewer than nine hours later, a Honda Civic traveling south along Seminole Trail took a left turn on a red light at Branchlands Boulevard into the path of a northbound Mitsubishi Montero. The Montero slammed into the passenger side of the Honda, killing 22-year-old Josh Payne of Troy. The driver of the Honda, 21-year-old Brandon Scott Martin, was charged with driving under the influence and is in critical condition at the UVA Medical Center. A juvenile passenger riding in the rear of the Honda was ejected from the car and is also in critical condition. No one in the Honda was wearing a seatbelt, say police. The driver of the Montero was transported to the University Medical Center with non-critical injuries.

Last year 10 of the 16 people killed in county crashes were unbelted and six of the 14 fatal crashes involved impaired drivers, according to a July 23 traffic safety alert released by Albemarle Police.

“None are the same and you can’t pinpoint a cause or why they would all happen in one week. That’s why we do crash reconstruction because we want to get to the bottom of each case and get closure for the families,” Johnson says. “If there was criminal behavior or negligence we want to be able to determine that and remind people about drinking and driving.”

The latest deadly accident occurred on the morning of Saturday, July 25, when father of three James R. Taylor, 57, traveling west on Garth Road, crossed the double yellow line in his Toyota Tacoma and hit a GMC Yukon in the eastbound lane head-on. Taylor, of Earlysville, was taken to UVA Medical Center where he later died. The driver of the GMC Yukon sustained minor injuries.

Saturday’s crash was the eighth fatal accident this year in Albemarle.

“We know it’s concerning for the community when you have this many crashes back-to-back,” says Johnson. “We are thinking ‘What can we do? What can we focus on? How can we get this message out? How can we make the roads safer?’ It’s a top priority for our agency and it’s important for the people who live and work throughout Albemarle County.”

Map

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News

Baby on board in roll-away car

A 2011 Dodge Avenger left running in the parking lot at Guadalajara with a baby in the backseat July 26 rolled across Market Street and crashed into a truck in the parking lot beside the Charlottesville Recreation Center. The baby was unharmed, according to Charlottesville Police’s Steve Upman.

Originally the car was believed to be stolen, but after an investigation and viewing a video, police say the car either popped out of gear or was left in reverse when one person went inside the restaurant to pay for food and another stepped out of the car to throw away trash. “The car rolled at low speed,” says Upman.

And he says no charges are pending at this time.

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Arts

The last VHS tape: A eulogy for the Sneak Reviews experience

“I’m proud of what we’ve done for more than 21 years. It’s the little guys, the small business that really get to make an impact on the community,” says Mark Tramontin, owner of Sneak Reviews. This month, the local video store closes its doors, marking the end of one of Charlottesville’s most beloved experiences. Because that’s what it was to go to Sneak Reviews: an experience.

It used to be that the front doorbell jangled when you arrived—a sound that was an oft-repeated refrain on busy days, as customers entered to return videos and rent new ones. Inside, it was a movie buff’s dreamland: floor to ceiling movie posters, 16mm film reels dangling from the ceiling like chandeliers, and, of course, shelves upon shelves of new releases. There was always a wall of staff picks to help inspire, from Kieslowski‘s Blue to the latest from Pixar or a local filmmaker.

Upstairs, the real exploration began. Sections weren’t always genre-specific in the traditional sense; more often, films fell into categories of country, arranged by director. Whether British, Japanese, Iranian or Czech, shelves of seemingly endless films created a maze that you could explore time and time again. “It’s always been a place for anyone who’s interested in film… the film knowledge they left with was extraordinary. You learned your directors in no time at all,” says Tramontin. Indeed, Sneak Reviews served as an ad hoc community film school for thousands of residents and UVA students over the past two decades.

The store’s slogan was “where video returns to the art of film” and the beauty of the layout was that it forced browsing. If you tried to find a specific title, there was a good chance you’d have to inquire about the director, and then you’d be sent upstairs to root it out, discovering along the way another film or five that also caught your attention. Tramontin recalls, “You’d have families in different rooms upstairs and they’d spot each other and it’d be, ‘Well, what did you see?’ You don’t have any one person making recommendations, you have the community recommending to the community. That’s always been half the fun. But that’s something that’s disappearing from our society.”

Tramontin bought the store in 1993. “We didn’t have that big of an inventory, but it just kept growing and growing,” he says. “I knew that I wanted to establish a place that was a library and so we didn’t get rid of things, we just kept them.” The last count brought the total to about 35,000 unique titles, totaling approximately 45,000 movies once you account for duplicates. With the store closing, many of these have already found new homes at UVA and other universities.

As the Media Collections Librarian at UVA, Leigh Rockey is helping secure a legacy for the collection by absorbing some of the titles into their circulating video library. “We are set to buy around 13,000 titles,” she says. “The purchase will greatly augment the UVA library’s collection of LGBT, foreign, documentary, horror and major release feature films as well as children’s movies and television series.”

“It’s a collection we admire,” Rockey says. “Everybody in town knows about the wonders of Sneak Reviews.”

A local filmmaker, Zach Keifer, is also working to preserve a lasting memory of the popular rental spot. “I have the distinct memory of the excitement about movies that I got when I entered the store for the very first time,” he says. “It’s one of the last and best examples of what a ‘rental store’ could be. I wanted to film this store because of the fear that it would one day disappear.” Since October 2014, Keifer has filmed interviews with Tramontin and store manager Robert Merkel. “He is more passionate about film than anyone I have ever met,” says Kiefer about time spent with Tramontin. He also remains hopeful that, in the coming weeks, he’ll be able to film additional interviews with customers and former employees in order to preserve the Sneak Reviews experience even after it’s closed.

The store survived one flirtation with obsolescence at the end of 2012, facing a sharp decline in rentals and mounting unpaid late fees from customers. The community rallied though, and it was soon back to business as usual for Sneak Reviews. Since then, streaming sites and alternatives to the traditional movie rental model have grown, as has the historic late fees debt. Combined, these factors were insurmountable. “We don’t want to [close]. We’re doing it because we have to,” says Tramontin. The store stayed open for business through the July 4th weekend, and hosted a sale of all remaining movies, posters and furniture on July 10-11. They have to be out of the space by the end of July.

“Everyone’s just adjusted to the fact that, like a lot of good things in Charlottesville, this is going out. Charlottesville is going to lose its own personality and it’s just going to become an extension of Northern Virginia, at the rate that it’s going,” says Tramontin. As Sneak Reviews and others close their doors for good, it’s apparent that the loss of such cultural institutions has as significant an impact as their contributions to our community once did.

Which former local businesses do you miss?

Tell us about it in the comments.

Categories
News

Sold: SNL bought by McGraw Hill Financial

On Monday, McGraw Hill Financial announced it had signed a definitive agreement to buy Charlottesville-based SNL Financial for $2.225 billion in cash from privately held New Mountain Capital.

Jason Feuchtwanger from McGraw Hill says his company is committed to Charlottesville as a strategic location and no layoffs are planned for current SNL employees.

SNL, which provides financial news and analysis to subscribers, has 3,000 employees in 10 different countries, while McGraw Hill has a massive 17,000 employees in 30 countries. McGraw Hill’s iconic brands include Standard & Poor’s rating services.

The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2015.

“We are enthusiastic about SNL because it is a fast-growing, highly complementary subscription-based business that will enable us to accelerate our strategy to be the leading provider of transparent and independent benchmarks, analytics, data and research across the global capital, commodity and corporate markets,” said Douglas L. Peterson, president and CEO of McGraw Hill Financial in a written release.

Mike Chinn, president and CEO of SNL Financial, will report to Peterson once the deal closes.

“This is an exciting day for our clients, employees and shareholders and a true milestone event in our 28-year history,” says Chinn,

Many are asking just how rich does this make Reid Nagle, who founded SNL in 1987 and who was the second largest shareholder when New Mountain Capital bought a majority stake in 2011?

“No comment as far as that goes,” says SNL spokesperson Christina Twomey in an e-mail.

Updated on July 28.

 

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

Historic Scottsville is affordable, scenic and conveniently close

The town of Scottsville, home of Albemarle’s first county seat, is located at the intersection of Routes 20 and 6 straddling the three counties of Albemarle, Fluvanna, and Buckingham.  Though set in the midst of a rich agricultural area, it is part of the Charlottesville SMSA and offers an easy commute to jobs there.  It has a rich past reflected in its downtown where 153 commercial, residential and religious buildings are nationally recognized as having historic significance.

In the 1700s, when the most efficient way to move goods west to east was by boat, Scottsville was an important commercial center thanks to its location on the James River.  The James River and Kanawha Canal, connecting Richmond to Lynchburg, ran alongside the river adding to Scottsville’s prominence during this time.  The town also served as a drop off point for agricultural goods moving on a toll road from Staunton to Richmond.   As a result, Scottsville was the largest grain market in the state and home to many wealthy people.

In 1761 Scottville lost its status as county seat, which moved to Charlottesville.  The old courthouse, no longer needed as a municipal building, was converted to an ammunition storehouse during the Revolutionary War. By the late 1800s when river traffic gave way to rail, Scottsville also lost its importance as a commercial center.

In more recent times, the downtown area suffered from frequent flooding due to its proximity to the James River, causing many business owners to give up and leave their boarded up buildings behind.

Fortunately in the 1980s, the town acquired federal money for a levee. The resulting flood protection made it possible for businesses to be viable in downtown and contributed to a renaissance in the area. Now, not only is there a growing list of new businesses, but the downtown area enjoyed a facelift thanks to a streetscape project completed in 2013 that spruced it up making it much more inviting.

Today Scottsville is valued for its growing list of amenities, its proximity to Charlottesville, and its quiet country lifestyle that nevertheless offers much in the way of outdoor activities, restaurants, historic preservation and community based activities like the recent July 4th fireworks.   In addition, the real estate market continues to improve, offering a range of options for first time buyers as well as for those looking for a historic home, a farm or estate overlooking the river or just a piece of land.

A Small Town with a Big Heart

A. Scott Ward, Jr. is a REALTOR® and appraiser with A. Scott Ward Realty, Inc, the oldest locally owned real estate company in Scottsville.  He described Scottsville as a “great little town, friendly and welcoming,” where it is easy to get to know people and very different from what he called “the hustle and bustle of Charlottesville.”

Larry Barnett is another prominent local agent who recently decided to shut down his Scottsville company, Barnett Real Estate, and join the Old Ivy office of Long and Foster.  Years ago he and his wife moved to Scottsville after visiting there frequently and deciding they wanted to stay.  He described the town as a place with a “wonderful mix of people from all walks of life.”  Although he initially had reservations about moving to a small town (his wife was originally from New York City) neither of them has had any regrets.

Today, at age 78, Barnett is still an active agent and property owner.  He was especially excited about a new business that recently opened in the space that was his former real estate office.  Called James River Embroidery it offers sewing, screen printing, custom embroidery and graphic design.  “When you visit Scottsville, you must go in there,” he said.

John Ince, with Nest Realty, described Scottsville as a “very real slice of Americana right in our own back yard.”  For those who choose to live there, it is “a unique opportunity to forge an intimate relationship with one of Virginia’s classic small towns. Scottsville is not gentrified or fancy.  It’s grounded with agriculture and the rich history of a thriving 18th century river port.”  In many ways it is the best of two worlds offering,  “home town character with cosmopolitan Charlottesville just 25 miles north.”

In addition to being friendly, Scottsville residents recently showed they could be very generous. In October of 2014 the James River club, a chapter of the Boys and Girls club of Central Virginia, opened its doors.  It offers after school and summer activities for local children, many of who are low income with few other alternatives for structured activities when school is out.  The project required significant local fundraising to obtain the $1.5 million required to open the doors as well as an agreement from Albemarle County to lease an old school house for $1 a year.   

Barnett, who volunteers there as a tutor, recently rented one of his apartments to a family with two children who expressed appreciation for the Boys and Girls club. He explained that not only is it a safe place for their children to go after school and during the summer, but the $30 per child annual fee makes it very affordable.

Although Charlottesville, with its many cultural activities, is nearby, Scottsville is in many respects self contained.  Residents will find most of what they need there including a major grocery store, medical care, restaurants, and recreational activities.

Scottsville’s Real Estate Market Coming Back to Life

When it comes to real estate, people have many options in Scottsville.  Buyers will find a wide range of prices, everything from starter homes under $150,000 to million dollar plus properties depending on the size and location of the home and the number of acres that accompany it. This means Scottsville is a place where first time buyers as well as those looking for farm and estate properties can find just what they need.

Scottsville is the “southern anchor of Albemarle County,” Ince said.  Those “looking for a farm or estate will find some of the finest period homes and richest land in Virginia’s Piedmont there.  It’s also a great place to find an affordable home in town or on a couple of acres.”  He went on describe the allure of local river properties.  “Fine homes overlooking the river sell well,” he said.  He recently sold a $1.8 million such property and said that the river was “the major part of its ambiance.”  He also just sold some pieces of land as well as a farm on 50 acres that went for $895,000.

Barnett described Scottsville’s market as “mixed.”  Starter homes and others under $150,000 are selling quickly he said, adding that the market has “not come back like Charlottesville’s.” He currently has two homes listed in town, both built in the early 1900s, one at just under $310,000 the other at $249,900.  He added that the rental market is very strong in Scottsville.

Ward described the market as a little slow, but homes are selling.  “First timers will find a better home at a better price in Scottsville,” he said noting that closer to Charlottesville they would pay $199,000 for a double wide currently on the market north of Carters Bridge.

Another big advantage of Scottsville is that buyers can choose from three different counties each with its own school system and a lifestyle that is a little different from the others.   Albemarle is closer to Charlottesville and has more jobs, but Buckingham offers better prices on homes along with lower taxes.  Prices are higher in Fluvanna, which may mean smaller lot sizes that nevertheless appeal to people who like living close to their neighbors.

Buyers can also find good values in town including historic properties. For example, in town properties for sale now include some “fabulous period homes for under $500,000,” Ince said. There are also deals in more rural settings where, “there are some really wonderful opportunities for under $200,000,” he continued.

Who’s Moving to Scottsville?

Scottsville is attractive to young families who want space and a back yard big enough for a garden or to those who appreciate historic properties and love good prices.

Peter Lee, with Roy Wheeler Realty, said the area attracts young professionals who like the feel of the town and the older buildings.  “It is especially appealing to people who don’t have to commute such as people who have a home based business or who are retired,” he added.

One of Barnett’s recent buyers is a couple from Norfolk who just retired and wished to downsize from a huge house on the bay and to be closer to their daughter in Richmond. They chose Scottsville for its small town flavor.

Ward described buyers who relocated to Scottsville from the northeast.  Also retirees, they wanted to live in a rural community where they could have some acreage and enjoy life away from the big city.

Scottville’s Food and Drink

Visitors come from all over to enjoy some of Scottville’s brewery, wineries and restaurants that are a source of pride to locals.  The popular James River Brewing Company is located in a 19th century brick warehouse right in town. It recently reopened under new management and patrons can enjoy its brews along with live music and food delivered from local restaurants. The recently renovated James River Tavern is also doing extremely well. Barnett said that on a recent Sunday he looked around at a full house and saw only two tables with people he knew, the rest were visitors.   

Baines Books and Coffee, an Appomattox-based business, opened a second location in Scottsville just a couple of years ago.  Ward described it as “a great place to catch up with the local gossip.”

Outdoor Activities

This time of year Scottsville offers many recreational activities for anyone who loves to canoe, tube, swim or fish, and water enthusiasts will find three companies that offer excursions via canoes and kayaks as well as river floats on rafts and tubes.

The river is also the focus of an annual event called the Batteau Festival celebrated every year in June. Back when water was the most common mode of transport, people and goods were shipped on flat-bottomed boats called batteaux that regularly stopped in Scottsville.  For the annual festival, volunteers build their own boats and recreate part of this journey dressed in period costumes.

Residents and visitors can also enjoy the nature trails at the Van Clief natural area, a 63-acre park right in town. Its highlight is Scottsville Lake, stocked with trout by the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries and open to the public.

Whether you are a first time buyer or someone looking for a period house in town a historic plantation home, farm or estate, you will find what you are looking for in Scottsville.  Call your agent today for more information.

By Celeste M. Smucker, PhD

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

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

Choosing siding for your home

Few things make a bigger impact on your home’s appearance—whether new construction or remodeling—than the siding you choose. Not only can the right siding make your place look great, it protects from damage from wind, weather, humidity, and insects.

Unlike the Three Little Pigs, few people in Central Virginia make their homes of straw or sticks, which can be blown down by an itinerant Big Bad Wolf or the occasional derecho. Bricks, on the other hand, have been a popular siding since Thomas Jefferson’s time.

And today, there are many additional options for house siding that Jefferson never heard of, each with its charms and caveats. For example, vinyl and other synthetics are becoming more attractive, often mimicking wood in a realistic way, yet costing far less.

Here’s a primer on the most popular sidings with their pros and cons from the least to the more expensive.

Vinyl or Plastic

Vinyl, with its low cost and easy upkeep, is the most popular siding in the country and technology has changed for the better just in the past five years. Deeper “graining” makes it look more like wood from a distance and it comes in a variety of colors and styles including lap siding, board and batten, shingles, and simulations of brick or stone. While vinyl doesn’t warp and is completely unappetizing to insects, it can crack, dent, or even melt.

Plastic siding usually comes in wood-mimicking shingles or shakes and demands little upkeep. It’s generally thicker than vinyl and is more resistant to impact damage. It’s also considerably more expensive than vinyl.

Fiber-Cement Siding

Fiber-cement siding is a mix of cement, cellulose, and sand. Fire-resistant and low-maintenance, it is of zero interest to termites. It can mimic masonry or stucco and presents a surface very closely resembling real wood, yet costs about the same as vinyl. It often comes pre-painted from the factory and although a bit more expensive than painting it yourself, the color will last much longer. Fiber-cement comes in lap siding, shingles, and vertical styles.

Wood

The most classic of sidings, wood offers traditional charm, but it can be pricey. Clapboard is generally less expensive than shingles, but still costs more than vinyl or fiber-cement. Wood resists impact, so it will not dent like vinyl or chip like fiber-cement, but it can warp and burn. It’s also subject to rot and can be attacked by insects as well as some birds like woodpeckers.

There are several choices of wood with cedar and redwood being particularly durable. Wood can be painted, stained or left natural and requires maintenance and refinishing from time to time.  On the other hand, when well maintained, wood siding can last for a hundred years or more.

Shakes and shingles—which are often treated with fire-retardants—can be milled in various shapes and offer particular interest in a gable or other architectural feature.

Stucco

Another siding, less common in Central Virginia, is stucco created from Portland cement, sand, and lime. It is generally mounted over metal screening with a waterproof membrane, and when applied well it can last for many years. It is sometimes used in combination with brick or stone finishes,

Bricking

Bricks have been used for hundreds of years and come in different shapes, sizes, and textures. Bricks are sturdy, durable, and classically handsome and particularly popular in this region. These days, brick siding is commonly a veneer mounted on the frame of a building with a waterproof membrane between the bricks and framing. Contrasting brick patterns and colors can punctuate the appearance and tinted mortar can provide extra interest.

Brick, partly because of the expense of installation, is one of the most expensive siding choices, but it can last almost free of additional maintenance for hundreds of years.  Just look at Monticello!

Stone

Stone is durable and handsome, but is generally the most expensive siding choice because of both the material and the labor cost of installation. Still, stone’s texture and drama are impressive. A less expensive option is a stone-veneer siding of either natural stone or one of the modern synthetics including vinyl.

Once you’ve Chosen your Material

First, if you live in a development with architectural requirements, be sure your homeowner’s association approves your siding.

Next, obtain bids from several installers. Check with the Better Business Bureau and, if possible, previous clients. Don’t install new siding over old unless the existing siding is absolutely sound. In addition, new siding should attach to the house’s framing, not just the previous siding. Ask about waterproofing materials, caulking, and the possibility of adding extra insulation.

By Marilyn Pribus

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Marilyn Pribus lives with her husband in Albemarle County near Charlottesville. They are happy with their fiber-cement siding, although they duel with carpenter bees on the wooden soffits every spring.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Jackie Daly and Matt Cranitch

Though difficult to read and even harder to pronounce, Sliabh Luachra, a region in southern Ireland on the border of Cork and Kerry, has birthed a rich style of music that is easy on the ears. Jackie Daly is renowned for his talented instrumentals, heralded by the New York Times as “probably the best accordionist in Ireland,” and Matt Cranitch, a master fiddler, is equally formidable in his solo works. Together they create sublime and vibrant compositions that put the unique beauty and culture of Irish music in the limelight.

Saturday 7/25. $20, 7pm. C’ville Coffee, 1301 Harris St. 409-9631.