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All together now: Agnor-Hurt is uniting kids, K through 5, in one joyful space

“How do we treat children with as much respect as we treat adults?” That was one of the primary questions driving the design of an addition to Agnor-Hurt Elementary, an Albemarle County public school, last year. Camilo Bearman, the Stantec architect who led the project, loved reaching for that lofty goal. “It’s inspiring as a designer,” he says.

With Principal Michele Del Gallo Castner at the helm, Stantec and the school community set out to create an environment—7,800 square feet of new classroom space—that would go far beyond what Bearman calls the “cells-and-bells corridor” of a traditional school. Instead, six classes of Agnor-Hurt students, ranging from kindergarten to fifth grade, would share one large space. This multi-age environment would be conceived as flexible and communal, with students being given choices about how to pursue their learning.

“This is the ideal learning environment,” says Castner. “Teachers give up control and become facilitators.” Students learn through creative projects and through interaction with each other. The space is meant to create natural opportunities to practice leadership and to let students learn at their own pace.

So, besides putting up fewer walls, how can a designer support such a vision? One answer is by making lots of the elements movable. The classroom is essentially a central commons surrounded by three pods. Within that structure, many details can change depending on the task of the moment. Furniture is lightweight enough for kids to move it themselves. Tablets and other tech devices can easily roll around where they’re needed. This way, different groups can gather for specific tasks, then reform when the activity changes.

On a recent visit, one of the six teachers who works in the multi-age space was discussing a book with about 15 kids. The rest of the 115 students were working in small groups at tables, on the floor, in the “Skype cave” (which lets Agnor-Hurt kids connect with peers around the country and the world) and on reading benches under the big windows. Some were sprawled on beanbag chairs—illustrating the idea that kids learn better when they’re comfortable. Lighting was kept low to promote a calm atmosphere.

The space is colorful and modern, with as many curving lines as straight ones. “The ceiling plane is very articulated,” says Bearman. “It attenuates sound, and describes zones with an acoustical ceiling”—delineating spaces without walls. It’s largely open-ended. “When students have these beautiful ideas, teachers can run with them,” says Castner. “We have the space to do it.”

Bearman and his colleagues deliberately made the space difficult to convert to traditional classrooms—an architectural commitment to a new model for education. The students just finished their first year in the space, and Castner says it’s proven very popular.

“There’s another way to do this that reflects joy,” she says, “and has nothing to do with testing.”

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News

In brief: Terry’s bad week, lots of dog poop and more

Photo John Robinson
Governor Terry McAuliffe. Photo John Robinson

Worst gubernatorial week in Richmond

Terry McAuliffe learned May 23 he’s under investigation by the FBI for what was first reported as donations from a Chinese businessman and later for business dealings under the infrequently prosecuted Foreign Agents Registration Act. General Assembly Republicans also sued to overturn his order restoring voting rights for 206,000 felons. And the clerk of the House of Delegates refused to publish his line-item veto in the budget.


Thomas Eagleson is charged with five counts of unlawful filming after allegedly hiding a camera in his neighbor's bathroom. Mugshot courtesy of Albemarle Police
Thomas Eagleson. Photo Albemarle police

Alleged surreptitious-filming pet sitter in court
Forest Lakes resident Thomas Eagleson, who “had been trusted to take care of the neighbors’ pet” and installed hidden cameras in the family’s master bathroom, according to Albemarle police, waived his right to a preliminary hearing May 26 for three counts of filming a nonconsenting nude person and two counts of breaking and entering. He’s also charged with two felony juvenile filming counts.


Behind closed doors with Dewberry

Atlanta’s John Dewberry bought the Landmark in 2012. Four years later, he may be getting around to putting a hotel there. Photo: Courtesy subject
John Dewberry

Several city councilors met with John Dewberry, the owner of the derelict Landmark Hotel, and say construction could begin in 2017 and be completed in 2018, the Daily Progress reports. No site plan has been submitted to the city’s planning department.


Photo Charlottesville police

As if brandishing a weapon weren’t bad enough…
Charlottesville police allege Shaidee Amend Wingate, 22, did so while holding a child in a May 18 domestic-dispute confrontation on Sixth Street SE. Wingate faces multiple charges, including B&E, child endangerment and carrying a firearm while under a protective order.


$4.2 million grant for English prof
UVA’s Rita Felski scored a whopping award from the Danish National Research Foundation for a non-STEM endeavor: to study literature and the social world.

dogs
Judging by all these friendly faces and wagging tongues and tails, the Downtown Mall has become a hot dog spot in the city.

RUFF ESTIMATES

Projected numbers show that Charlottesville could be home to a pile of illegal pups (the number of vaccinated dogs compared with dogs with licenses), while dogs in the county surpass city dogs by about half. And if you’ve ever needed an incentive to choose the city over the county, how does saving a whole dollar on your dog registration sound to you? That’s what we like to call more bark for your buck.

3,442

dogs on record in the city as being vaccinated in 2015

2,688

owners have obtained a license for their dogs

10,280

pooches estimated in the city, according to current U.S. Census data (that’s an estimated 2.8 million pounds of poop in Charlottesville per year from dogs)

3,736

dog licenses issued so far in 2016 in the county, with 5,392 issued in 2015

$4

for a dog license for a spayed/neutered pet in the city (one year)

$5

for a dog license for a spayed/neutered pet in the county (one year)

1,076

dogs and puppies adopted from Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA in 2014 

84

million dogs living in the United States

*Numbers by DoodyCalls, the CASPCA, Census data, American Veterinary Medical Association pet calculator, city treasury and Albemarle County

Quote of the week

UVA alum and veteran broadcaster Katie Couric “must have graduated from the Joseph Goebbels School of Journalism.” Philip Van Cleave, president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League gun rights group, takes issue with the editing in Couric’s new documentary, Under the Gun.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Mary Fahl

Singer-songwriter and co-founder of the defunct chamber-pop group October Project, Mary Fahl draws on classical and world music influences to forge her earthy sound. Fahl, who has written and performed songs for several films and television shows, recently toured to promote her latest release, Love and Gravity. The folk-tinged album, produced by John Lissauer (noted for producing Leonard Cohen’s recording of “Hallelujah”), features a slew of emotional ballads set to imaginative melodies.

Friday 6/3. $25-27, 8:30pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 First St. S. 977-5590.

Categories
News

In bloom: Algae in reservoirs ‘significant’

An unquantified, but substantial amount of blue-green algae has bloomed at the Beaver Creek and South Fork Rivanna reservoirs, according to a new report presented to the Rivanna Water & Sewer Authority’s board of directors May 24. Consultants say the water supply at Ragged Mountain Reservoir is another one to watch.

Algae—caused by a nutrient overload—is problematic in a water system because it can cause taste and odor compounds, cyanotoxins and filter clogging.

At Beaver Creek and South Fork, consultants and RWSA staff have spent nearly $120,000 since 2014 on chemical treatments to stop the algae. While the consultants will present the board with a modified monitoring program for those reservoirs in the coming weeks, they have instructed staff to continue monitoring the water at Ragged Mountain, in which they have found occasional floating algae.

“I’d be very surprised if [Ragged Mountain Reservoir] didn’t develop problems very soon,” Alexander Horne, a professor emeritus of environmental engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, says. He, along with Kelly DiNatale of DiNatale Water Consultants, presented the report.

RWSA board members had questions about cost and procedures, but they all generally seemed to agree that treating the blue-green algae, or cyanobacteria, is a priority.

“It’s all going straight into your bathtub,” former city councilor Dede Smith said at the meeting. She has led the charge to keep Ragged Mountain Reservoir a natural area, while her opponents hope to make the area less exclusive by permitting dog walking, mountain biking and other recreational activities.

The side that leans toward permanently banning dogs and other pets often cites the harmful effects of animal droppings in the water supply.

“While livestock are the greatest contributor of animal waste, perhaps the least suspected source of animal waste is a man’s very own best friend,” the EPA states in a 2014 bulletin on its website. “Pets, particularly dogs, are significant contributors to source water contamination.”

The EPA has also cited dog waste as a contributor to excess nutrients that lead to algal bloom.

“It’s serious,” says Smith. “As a community, we have the opportunity now to prevent this from happening at what has become the single most important reservoir we have.”

But DiNatale points to research that shows Ragged Mountain may not need to remain sans Sparky for the overall health of the water supply.

“Animal droppings, whether from wild or domestic animals, represent a very minor source of nutrient inflows to the authority’s reservoirs,” he says. “We could remove all of the animals, both wild and domestic, but still would be experiencing algae blooms from all of the other sources.”

There’s always tension between allowing recreational activities near reservoirs and protecting the water supply, DiNatale says, and that’s partially why RWSA is looking for in-lake algae-management methods.

“With that said, it is always preferable to address whatever land use activities are manageable,” he says. “Every water provider would love to have a protected watershed without any animal or human impacts, but, as we know, that is impossible for virtually all of the country’s water supplies.”

But Smith cites a 2002 letter from the Virginia Department of Health to the authority, in which she says the department “admonished RWSA for not considering the quality of its raw water source.”

In the letter, the department stressed that the 1996 Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments and the EPA have placed “greater emphasis on source water protection and preventing contaminants from entering water supplies in lieu of the past practice of removing contaminants at water treatment facilities.”

According to Smith, failure to protect the water source has already led to contamination of half of our reservoirs, the necessity to add chemicals and heavy metals for purification and about $25 million in new infrastructure to deal with the worst of the pollution.

“In other words,” she says, “don’t contaminate your raw water source in the first place.”

Related Links:

May 10, 2016: Critics still question Ragged Mountain plan

March 9, 2016: One local wants litter removed from the Rivanna

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: The Charlottesville Women’s Choir

Thirty-two years after an informal beginning, The Charlottesville Women’s Choir continues to perform in honor of its commitment to peace and justice. With minimal percussion, the a cappella group, comprised of 40 voices, soars to inspirational heights on songs such as “One” and “Born This Way,” and the tribute “Ruth Bader Ginsberg.” This year’s spring concert beneficiary is Service Dogs of Virginia.

Sunday 6/5. $4-15, 4pm. The Haven, 112 W. Market St. 973-1234.

Categories
Arts

June First Fridays Guide

Self-taught quilt artist Jane Fellows has always been drawn to fabric and the natural world. After exploring several techniques, Fellows left her nursing practice last year to dedicate herself
fully to quilt-making. “With an eye toward my surroundings and nature, I focused on botanicals and landscapes,” Fellows says of her initial process. “I wanted to challenge myself with an abstract series as well.” In the series, she incorporates repurposed vintage handwork, antique Indian silks and even yo-yos.

Jane Fellows’ New Works in Fabric and Thread quilts exhibit opens on June 3 at The Women’s Initiative.

First Fridays is a monthly art event featuring exhibit openings at many Downtown art galleries and additional exhibition venues. Several spaces offer receptions. To list an exhibit, please send information two weeks before opening to arts@c-ville.com

First Fridays: June 3

Chroma Pop-Up 853 West Main St. “Iconic Memory: Capturing the Fugitive,” photographs by Binh Danh, Robert Schultz, Anne Savedge and John Grant. 5-7pm.

C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St. “Art from Nature,” featuring preserved floral art by Haley Jensen. 6-8pm.

Graves International Art 306 E. Jefferson St. “Masters of Contemporary Art,” featuring limited edition original prints, exhibition posters, stone lithography, drypoint etching and more by Ellsworth Kelly, Salvador Dali, Georges Braque, Damien Hirst, David Hockney, Keith Haring, Roy Lichtenstein, Sam Francis, Philip Pearlstein, John Chamberlain, Andy Warhol, Gerald Laing, Joan Miro, Josef Albers and more. 5-8pm.

IX Art Park 963 Second St., SE. “To the End of the World: Wet Plates, Panoramas, and Mushrooms,” featuring photographs by Aaron Farrington. 5:30-10pm.

Mudhouse Coffee 213 W. Main St. An exhibit featuring photography by Will May. 6pm.

Neal Guma Fine Art 105 Third St., NE. “Naturata,” featuring photographs by Graciela Iturbide presented by The LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph. 5:30-7:30pm.

Second Street Gallery 115 Second St., SE. “Mine Mind,” featuring social and environmental art by Torkwase Dyson and “Sunken City,” featuring photographs by John Trevino. 5:30-7:30pm.

Spring Street Boutique 107 W. Main St. “NaturaFlora,” featuring photography by Rob Myers. 6-8pm.

Tenth Street Warehouse 134 10th St., NW. “Adherence,” featuring works by Isabelle Abbot, Sarah Boyts Yoder and Cate West Zahl. 5-7pm.

The Women’s Initiative 1101 East High St. “New Works in Fabric and Thread,” featuring quilt art by Jane Fellows and portraits in oil by Kelly Doyle Oakes. 5:30-7:30pm.

Welcome Gallery at New City Arts 114 Third St. NE. “Reality Show,” featuring photographs by Olivia Bee and Doug DuBois in partnership with the LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph. 5-7:30pm.

WVTF & Radio IQ Studio Gallery 218 W. Water St. “Yearnings,” featuring paintings by Jeanette Cohen and photographs by Stacey Evans, curated by Leslie Ava Shaw. 5-7pm.

Other Exhibits

Art on the Trax 5784 Three Notch’d Rd., Crozet. An exhibit featuring mixed media prints and fiber art by Jill Jensen, with a reception on Saturday, June 11 at 4pm.

The Fralin Museum at UVA 155 Rugby Rd. “Struggle…From the History of the American People,” featuring paintings by Jacob Lawrence; “Fish and Fowl,” featuring sculptures, paintings, and prints; “Casting Shadows: Selections from the Permanent Collection,” featuring the FUNd, “Art Lovers,” featuring a collection of prints and “Icons,” by Andy Warhol.

Hotcakes 1137 Emmet St., N. “Virginia Spring,” featuring oil paintings by Randy Baskerville.

Jefferson School African American Heritage Center 233 Fourth St., NW. “Pride Overcomes Prejudice,” featuring works that represent the history of African Americans from 1865 to 1965 by various artists.

Les Yeux du Monde 841 Wolf Trap Rd. “Syria Before the Storm,” featuring photographs by Ed Kashi, with a reception on Tuesday, June 14 at 5:30pm.

Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church 717 Rugby Rd. “Blaze of Color,” featuring paintings by the BozART Fine Art Collective, with a reception on Wednesday, June 1 at noon.

Tim O’Kane Open Studio 107 Perry Dr. An open studio and sale featuring oil paintings and matted prints by Tim O’Kane.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: The Tallest Man on Earth

Swedish singer-songwriter Kristian Matsson approaches his music as a folk purist reminiscent of early Bob Dylan in his delivery and aesthetic. Performing under the moniker The Tallest Man on Earth, Matsson has four albums, the latest being Dark Bird, in which The Man pulls in mysterious backing voices credited in the liner notes as “angel vocals.” A charismatic stage presence fueled by an eager, in-the-know following, cements Matsson’s status as a darling of the indie underground.

Tuesday 6/7. $27.50-30, 7pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
Arts

Amelia Williams uses sculpture and poetry to protest pipeline

Artists-turned-activists typically use their work to amplify awareness about an issue. Increased publicity, the thinking goes, inspires action in the field.

But poet Amelia Williams has found a way to leverage art as a direct blocking and delay tactic in the fight against fracked gas pipelines and compressor stations.

“In 2014, when we learned about the prospect of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline coming through Nelson County and other counties and wild areas in Virginia, I wanted to do something,” Williams says.

The poet and eco-artist, who has a Ph.D. in English from UVA, lives on Shannon Farm Community, an intentional community in Nelson County with 500 acres owned in common by the people who live there. “This big property has beautiful wetland areas and open meadows and communal organic gardens, and they would have been plowed through by the pipelines,” she says, referring to one of Dominion Resources’ proposed routes for its planned 550-mile natural gas pipeline from West Virginia to North Carolina.

“I chose a lifestyle that isn’t about money and things,” says Williams. “It’s about being here, on this land, living with other people together. Something that’s hard to touch on with numbers and dollars is what happens to your heart when your place is ripped away from you. There are birds that are dependent on deep woods environment. What happens to the wood thrush, the whippoorwill, the barn owl, when these trees are gone? What happens to me? What kind of spiritual desolation do I experience?”

She says that many members of Shannon Farm are working against Dominion’s Atlantic Coast Pipeline, not just because it threatens to “carve an enormous swath” through their backyard but because pipelines are a regional and statewide issue.

“Natural gas pipelines, in general, are a very bad idea,” she says. “How they leak methane, how environmental protections are often ignored by state-based departments, how rivers and streams and well water is polluted. We also learned about how energy companies can earn money from a pipeline even when the ‘need’ for it is not really substantiated.”

So Williams’ interest piqued when she read about Canadian artist Peter von Tiesenhausen, who waylaid a mining company when he registered his 800 acres as intellectual property in the form of land art.

According to an article in the Cantech Letter, von Tiesenhausen explained that any disturbance to the top six inches of his property would constitute a copyright violation—and, ideally, a prohibitively expensive legal battle that dissuades installation of a pipeline.

“I’m not a legal scholar, and I didn’t know if there was any precedent for doing this kind of thing in the U.S., but I thought I would imitate it here,” Williams says.

The lifelong poet reviewed her work and found a large number of poems with roots in Nelson County. Next, she set about creating sculptural containers and assemblages that would integrate her writing with the landscape.

“I wanted to make land art like the projects of Andrew Goldsworthy, whose works are intended to fade back into the landscape because they are created out of natural elements like twigs and leaves,” she says.

Ultimately, Williams made 16 different containers out of local biodegradable materials, including clay bowls, cedar boxes, felted bags and fire-hardened bamboo. Community members donated many of these materials, all of which hold up well in rain, snow and the humidity of Virginia summers.

She sealed the cases with local beeswax and placed each piece in the location referred to in its poem. “This included hauling two of the pieces up to the trees in an area we call the Beech Grove, which is on a ridgeline, because those trees would have been taken down by the pipeline,” she says.

As soon as the project was installed in the field, she had a documentary photographer take pictures of each piece, which she submitted as a collective eco-art trail for copyright registration with the U.S. Copyright Office.

“As a maker you own the copyright as soon as you make it, but you register that copyright if you anticipate some kind of legal issue,” she says, which is an important distinction for artists-turned-activists.

Because land art derives its meaning from its precise location, an eminent domain lawyer would likely recognize that you can’t just put it somewhere else and maintain its value.

So does the theory work in practice?

Hard to say, because no precedent exists and Williams’ work hasn’t been put to the test. Though she’s collecting examples of successful art-as-environmental-protest tactics, she points to the fact that most battles are won by fights on multiple fronts.

“When we learned that the preferred route [of the pipeline] was now not going to run across this land, I felt it essential to keep up the fight to help other landowners and other people,” she says. “I also don’t trust Dominion; that they won’t move it back.”

Williams wants to inspire others to consider land-art protests of their own. “The best-case scenario is that the energy companies wake up and realize the future lies in renewables, and if they want to do their shareholders a favor, they will move in that direction with all of their money and their R&D and their publicity,” she says.

All proceeds from Walking Wildwood Trail: Poems and Photographs, a book of poetry and photography documenting her project, benefit Friends of Nelson and Wild Virginia. The significance, she hopes, reaches everyone.

“The words of poets speak to people’s hearts, she says. “It allows them to figure forth their own attachments to the trees and the water and the land.”

Related Links:

May 24, 2016: A win for Nelson pipeline opponents

Categories
Living

Living Picks: To-do this week

Family   

The Trail at Monticello Community Celebration

Join fellow trail-lovers for a morning of hiking, music and a dedication in memory of former trail manager Jason Stevens.

Saturday, 6/4. Free, 9am-noon. Monticello, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. 984-9800.

Nonprofit

Celebration of Strong Nonprofits

Celebrate more than 110 nonprofit, business and community leaders with an evening of food, fresh air and conversation.

Tuesday, 6/7. Free, 5pm. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. 244-3330.

Health & Wellness

4 the Wounded 5K

The University of Virginia Foundation hosts its sixth annual race to raise funds for the Wounded Warrior Project, a veteran service organization that serves those injured in military actions following September 11.

Saturday, 6/4. $35, 8am. University of Virginia Research Park, 1001 Research Park Blvd. 4thewounded5k.com.

Food & Drink

Bold Rock birthday bash

Enjoy live music from Empire Strikes Brass, Erin & the Wildfire and Michael Coleman Band; food by Moe’s Original BBQ and Banyan Day Provisions and, of course, hard cider.

Saturday, 6/4. Free, 11am-8pm. Bold Rock Cidery, 1020 Rockfish Valley Hwy., Nellysford. 361-1030.

Categories
Living

For pets’ sake! What it’s like to raise a furry (or scaly) family in Charlottesville

Being a pet owner is no easy feat; it’s a constant responsibility that rewards us in scratched furniture, ripped up rolls of toilet paper and unexpected visits to the vet. And, okay, constant companionship and entertainment. In this issue, we cover the good, the bad and the ugly of owning a furry (or scaly!) friend —from dog park etiquette and confusing cat behavior to common vet questions and end-of-life pet care. And we introduce you to some local pets with big personalities, like Pepper, a potbellied pig with a few canine cohorts, and Gizmo, a Welsh corgi who “works” downtown. …What? Somebody has to pay for all those dog bones.

By Samantha Baars, Mike Fietz, Laura Ingles, Jessica Luck and Caite White