Categories
News

Parking wars: City fires back in Water Street Garage death match

Despite concerns that the Water Street Garage could close should the company that manages it and Charlottesville not resolve their escalating legal battle, the city filed a counterclaim April 29 against Charlottesville Parking Center one day after owner Mark Brown sent a letter urging the city to sell the complicatedly owned garage to him.

And that’s on top of the city being in default of its agreement with CPC, which, if not resolved by May 6, could mean the garage will be without an operator. Rumors of the garage’s closing prompted George Benford, chair of the Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville, to write City Council and Brown and urge them to settle their differences.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen May 6,” says Brown.

“We’re working to avoid that,” says Chris Engel, director of the city’s economic development office, when asked on April 27 whether the garage could close, two days before the city’s latest volley.

The counterclaim alleges the parking center conspired with Wells Fargo when the bank sold its parking spaces in the garage to CPC without offering them to the city, which has a right of first refusal.

“Why wouldn’t the city sue Wells Fargo for not giving them right of first refusal?” wonders former CPC shareholder Richard Spurzem, who adds that he has used Tom Wolf, the Richmond LeClairRyan attorney the city has hired. “If anyone can get the city out of this legal morass, it is Tom Wolf,” says Spurzem. “But he is very expensive.”

On April 28, Brown sent a five-page letter to the city, detailing its tangled history of leasing the land for the parking garage from CPC in 1994 to an entity called the Water Street Parking Garage Condominium Association, whose board currently is deadlocked with the city and CPC, each holding four seats. Brown reminds the city its ground lease expires in 2024, and when it does, the municipality will likely be unable to afford to renew the lease at market rates.

He also notes there are 400 spaces in the garage that are usually empty and reserved for monthly parkers that could be freed up with state-of-the-art technology, which the city cannot afford, to more effectively manage demand. The lack of investment in the garage, he writes, has resulted in a “substandard garage that permits 400 parking spaces per day to sit unused.”

Exiting the garage can take an hour at peak times, which is “unacceptable,” says Brown. He urges the city to sell its shares in the garage to him so he can make the necessary improvements and free up the unused spaces.

“I sent the letter to the city in an attempt to find some common ground and de-escalate the situation,” says Brown. “I was very surprised to see the city’s counterclaim against us and I believe they are also accusing Wells Fargo of being our co-conspirator.”

Brown sued the city in February, accusing it of forcing him to run the garage at below-market rates.

The big question is will the city’s dispute with Mark Brown close the Water Street Garage. Both sides say no—while escalating the battle.

brown letter to City Council 4-28-16

city counterclaim 4-29-16

Correction 6-8-16: Tom Wolf’s name was misspelled in the original version.

Categories
Living

Hardywood announces C’ville brewery and other food and drink news

How many breweries do we need in this town? At least one more, apparently. Last week the owners of Richmond’s Hardywood Park Craft Brewery (twice voted Virginia’s top brewery by ratebeer.com users) announced its plan to open a location in Charlottesville, and everyone’s already in a tizzy over it. Located at 1000 W. Main St. (about equidistant between the Downtown Mall and the Corner), the new brewery will include a 3.5-barrel brewery, a taproom and an outdoor beer garden.

According to the recent online announcement, 12 Hardywood beers will be on tap, “with a focus on experimental batches brewed on site.” The menu will also feature locally roasted coffee, locally brewed kombucha and snacks such as fresh-baked pretzels and charcuterie. 

The Hardywood folks are aiming for a September opening.

Game on

Steak and cheese fries? Beer-battered artichokes? Fried mashed potatoes? Yes, please.

Introducing Hurley’s Tavern, a new sports bar off Route 29 with an extensive beer list and apps menu that has quietly made its debut just in time for baseball season. Located at 1000 Rivanna Plaza Dr., Hurley’s officially opened for business last Thursday afternoon.

“We wanted to be a local sports bar with homemade food,” says co-owner Janice Rossano.

The menu features classics such as crispy wings and burgers, of course, but also some of Rossano’s own creations inspired by late nights in the kitchen at Cheeseburger in Paradise (before the Charlottesville location closed a few years ago), like the steak fries smothered in melted provolone cheese, steak, grilled peppers and onions and bacon.

Hurley's Tavern, a new sports bar with a daily rotating draft beer list, opened last week off Route 29. Photo by Desmond Hester
Hurley’s Tavern, a new sports bar with a daily rotating draft beer list, opened last week off Route 29. Photo by Desmond Hester

And there’s more to the menu than meat and cheese (though there’s plenty of that). A vegan herself, Rossano wanted to have something for everybody, not just the wing-eating crowd—the menu features meat-free options like the crispy, satisfying deep-fried cauliflower, smothered in the homemade wing sauce of your choice (hey, we said vegan, not low fat).

The daily rotating draft beer list is displayed on a chalkboard visible from the long wooden booths, each of which is equipped with its own TV and remote. No house cocktails, but the bar has just about anything other than frozen drinks.

For more information, check out the Hurley’s Tavern Cville Facebook page.

Tasty tidbits

Rise and shine…Now open at 7:30am on weekdays (11am on weekends), Roots Natural Kitchen on the Corner has added breakfast items such as chia yogurt, oatmeal, toast and coffee to its menu. And many more…Happy birthday, Littlejohn’s New York Delicatessen. The sandwich shop with an extensive menu and loyal following turns 40 this spring, and the original location on the Corner will hold an anniversary event later this summer—we don’t know all the details yet, but we hear it will involve giveaways like concert tickets and gift cards. Read it and eat…Volume 3 of Our Local Commons has just been released, and the 152-page book includes 16 feature stories, cooking tutorials, recipes and other pieces about the area’s food community.

Categories
Arts

Community fostering makes it to the First Fridays Finish

IX Art Park is a place where Charlottesville gets up close and personal with art. The art is big; it’s bright. You can write on the warehouse’s exterior walls and touch many of the sculptures. So it’s no surprise that First Fridays at IX is a bit different from First Fridays at other Charlottesville galleries.

The city-wide event is “A foray into imagination, possibility and all that art can actuate in an evening,” says the park’s executive director, Brian Wimer. The fine arts galleries “do the carefully curated culture, filling folks with the wow and what-ifs, and we wrap it up with a celebration.”

IX is usually the last gallery stop on the art walk and it provides music, dance and theater performances, in addition to libations and a fine art show at First Fridays Finish.

This month’s show in the GallerIX space of the Dream Big warehouse features oil paintings, wax creations and straw sculptures by style icon, artist and writer Beatrix Ost. Much of the show’s work has been exhibited before, but not in the IX space. Ost says she’s mostly writing now and hasn’t made visual art in a while, but this show encouraged her to revisit some of the pieces she made years ago, particularly her straw sculptures from the 1990s.

Humanlike in form but faceless, the statues made of woven straw and draped burlap have an otherworldly quality. Ost says she sees something shamanistic in them, but it’s the medium—the straw—that moves her most. Straw is the husk left behind when the grain it holds is harvested for humans and other animals to eat. Ost says she wanted to use the “scrap material from the earth” to create art that shows how nothing has to go to waste, how everything is useful.

“Everything has its profound place, specifically on our planet, where we are so into destroying so much of it,” says Ost. “It has this circle of meaning, and I think that’s the force I fell in love with,” she says.

Ost will also show some of her designs for Article 22, a Laos-based fair-trade company that makes jewelry from pieces of detonated bombs. Ost points out that during the Vietnam War, Laos became the most bombarded place on the planet. Many of the deployed bombs did not detonate, and a portion of Article 22 jewelry sales goes to helping farmers defuse or safely detonate bombs so they can get their land back.

“We are turning the horror into beauty,” says Ost. “We are making a statement for this world.” Ost “uses her talents and her arts to speak to important matters for the planet, unity, hope and beauty,” says Lyn Bolen Warren, director and owner of Les Yeux du Monde gallery, where she exhibits Ost’s work. She is also partially underwriting the show at IX.

You never know what you’ll see—or hear—at an IX First Fridays Finish. Have you ever wondered what music from Arrakis, the fictional, harsh desert planet from Dune would sound like? Steven Archer of Stoneburner has, and it’s the inspiration behind the tribal electronic dance music that will fill the IX air on Friday.

The music is “dense, almost violent,” says Archer, a New York-based fine artist, writer and musician who has composed music for NASA. He also projects video collages of imagery he has “mostly gleaned from YouTube” onto five screens, all synced up to the music, and it’s just another manifestation of his creative energy.

Charlottesville belly dancing duo Fire in the Belly is scheduled to perform as well.

IX’s First Fridays events are “not art at arm’s distance, but up close and intimate, with warmth, pulse and purpose,” says Wimer. Part of that is using art to bring awareness not only to what’s happening around the world, but to what’s going on right here in Charlottesville.

That’s why IX, McGuffey Art Center and Second Street Gallery are partnering with Community Attention Foster Families to host a mobile installation, created by local artist Kaki Dimock and sponsored by Bryan and Jennifer Slaughter, intended to bring awareness to local foster children, parents and families.

According to the Virginia Department of Social Services, 231 children in Charlottesville, Albemarle and Green counties were in foster care as of March. That number fluctuates and is probably closer to 250 right now, says Marnie Allen, family services and recruitment specialist for Community Attention Foster Families. Dimock will create one bluebird for each foster child and place them on the lawn outside of McGuffey during the center’s First Fridays gallery show. Then, social workers and foster parents will “fly” the birds to Second Street Gallery and later to IX, representing the journey that many foster children make from home to home. Some will nest; some will not.

It’s important for foster children to remain in their community so they can stay connected to their biological families, to their school, their friends and the Charlottesville community, says Allen. If they stick around, their quality of life can improve drastically, despite the many challenges of living in foster care.

This foster art program goes both ways, says Wimer, as “artists support foster families with awareness and inclusion, [but it’s] also the notion of the community fostering art.”

Through its monthly celebration of all types of art, First Fridays Finish at IX lets us experience first-hand the many ways that art can move us. We can be entertained, we can be touched, we can be provoked to think. Maybe we will be inspired to take action and participate ourselves, either out in the wide world or right here in town.

–Erin O’Hare

Categories
News

Council okays commission on Lee et al.

City Council unanimously approved a Blue Ribbon Commission on Race, Memorials and Public Spaces May 2 after a Charlottesville High School student presented a petition to remove the statue of General Robert E. Lee and rename Lee Park in March.

The nine-member commission will look not only at Confederate monuments like Lee and Stonewall Jackson, but will also consider options to tell the “full story of Charlottesville’s history of race relations and for changing the city’s narrative through our public spaces,” according to the resolution. That could include augmenting the slave auction block at Court Square, rehabbing the Daughters of Zion cemetery and revisiting Vinegar Hill through the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center.

Three commission members will come from the PLACE Design Task Force, Human Rights Commission and Historic Resources Committee, and all must apply in the next 30 days. Council will appoint the members June 6 after a closed session, and the commissioners will produce a written report by November 30.

At an April 28 work session, councilors discussed who should be on the commission, because the issue has drawn interest from people all over the commonwealth. They agreed that members need to have a strong affiliation with the Charlottesville/Albemarle area.

City Councilor Bob Fenwick said the commission’s discussions will be “blunt,” “brutally honest” and not always civil.

“It’s extremely important we’re transparent,” said Councilor Kathy Galvin. “This is something very emotional for our community, that we open it up and let people apply.”

Council approved $10,000 to fund the commission’s work.