Categories
Best of C-VILLE Services

Best place to work 2013: UVA

UVA

1721 University Ave.
924-0311
virginia.edu

Runner-up:
SNL Financial
700 E. Jefferson St.
295-4381
snl.com

Love what you do and you’ll never work a day in your life. That’s what they say, anyway, and if that saying is to be believed, then a lot of folks at UVA and SNL aren’t really working—because they liked their jobs enough to land their employers in the No. 1 and 2 spots in this new category this year. Keep up the good “work!”

See more:

Student-built satellite project funded by NASA and UVA will go aloft next year

UVA Dean Meredith Woo to step down in May

Employers brace for increased costs after UVA changes insurance policy

Questions still swirling in wake of UVA swim coach Mark Bernardino’s departure

Too generous for the times? UVA scraps no-debt commitment for low income students

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Services

Best attorney 2013: Tucker Griffin Barnes

Tucker Griffin Barnes

207 W. Rio Rd.
973-7474
tgblaw.com

Runner-up:
Ed Lowry of
Michie-Hamlett
500 Court Square, Suite 300
951-7200
michiehamlett.com

In 1995, inmate Robert Lee Brock claimed he violated his own civil rights by drinking alcohol against his religious beliefs and subsequently getting arrested. Once imprisoned, he sued himself for $5 million, then asked the state to pay because he had no income in jail. That’s a somewhat extreme legal case, but readers are confident Tucker Griffin Barnes would be able to get them out of any scrape—from family matters and injury and disability to criminal law and real estate cases. Ed Lowry of Michie-Hamlett, in the runner-up spot, takes on commercial litigation.

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Food & Drink

Best French 2013: l’étoile

l’étoile

817 W. Main St.
979-7957
letoilrestaurant.com

Runner-up:
Petit Pois
201 Main St.
979-7647
petitpoisrestaurant.com

And we thought there were too many dining options in Charlottesville! Turns out, there are even more in Paris, with over 5,000 restaurants currently in operation. Locally, our taste of the City of Love doesn’t come better than at l’étoile, where owner Mark Gresge serves up la cuisine Française with a Southern twist. At Petit Pois, get a tuna niçoise with a view. The tiny restaurant is located at Central Place on the Downtown Mall—perfect for people watching.

See more:

Star of the show: Now 20, l’étoile keeps shining

Five Finds on Friday: Ian Redshaw of L’Etoile

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Retail

Best local grocery store 2013: Whole Foods

Whole Foods

1797 Hydraulic Rd.
973-4900
wholefoods.com

Runner-up:
C’ville Market
221 Carlton Rd.
984-0545
cvillemarket.com

We probably should have been a bit more specific when we said “local grocery store,” because while Whole Foods is indeed inside city limits, it’s not locally owned. Still, its appeal is undeniable—a commitment to natural foods free of growth hormones or processed ingredients; full-service butchers and fish mongers; a wood-fired pizza oven; and even an outdoor patio with free Wi-Fi. It’s hard to argue with that. Over on Carlton Road, C’ville Market stocks fresh local produce and gourmet groceries.

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Services

Best plastic surgeon 2013: Victoria Vastine

Victoria Vastine

600 Peter Jefferson Pkwy. #270
654-8920
mjhplasticsurgery.org

Runner-up:
Stephen Park
415 Ray C. Hunt Dr.
924-2153
cosmeticuva.com

Plastic surgery sure has come a long way: For the very first nose job, performed in 600 B.C., wooden tubes were placed inside the nose to keep air passage open during healing. These days, that procedure (and many others) go a little differently, and readers say Victoria Vastine, with Martha Jefferson Hospital, is the person they trust most. UVA’s Stephen Park takes the number two slot. Readers choose him when they want to put their best face and neck (Park limits his practice to just those areas of the body) forward.

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Living Tales of passion

Kenny Ball: Pounding pavement

“Nothing has ever been planned in my life,” said Kenny Ball.

When Ball arrived in Charlottesville in the 1980s for a job working with and showing horses, he never dreamed that 30 years later he’d own a successful antiques shop and be training with the area’s top marathon runners. He’s passionate about everything he does, he said, so it’s not terribly surprising that he qualified for the Boston Marathon after running his first-ever long race.

Aside from horseback riding, Ball said he was never athletic growing up.

“I was the one picked last for the team in school,” he said. “I couldn’t run a lap around the track—at least, I didn’t think I could because I wasn’t encouraged to do it.”

Running 26 miles for fun was never something that crossed his mind, until a couple years ago when he watched his daughter run a 5K. Inspired by the race day energy, Ball laced up a pair of running shoes himself, entered a short race with his daughter, and was hooked.

“I found it to be quite rewarding and easy, for never having done it or trained,” he said.

In tandem with his newfound appreciation for running was the realization that he was approaching the same age his father had been when he began suffering heart problems.

“When you’re approaching 50, you start to think about the rest of your life,” Ball said. “I decided right then and there that if I was going to live, I was going to do it in a healthy way.”

Ball laughed when he recalled how much fun he had during the first half of his life, and vowed to live out the next 50 years without some of his prior indulgences. He hasn’t touched alcohol since his running career began, he’s wearing the same size clothes he wore in high school, and he said old temptations like junk food no longer faze him.

“I’m so much more in tune with what’s going on in my body,” he said. “When you realize how hard you have to work to burn off a doughnut, you tend to not have them.”

Ball noted that because of the extreme calorie burning, runners do have the option of eating more freely. It’s “not a license to eat a box of doughnuts,” he said, but he gets a kick out of watching his running comrades reward themselves with frozen coffees and giant pastries at Greenberry’s, the unofficial Charlottesville runners’ hangout spot.

Much of the passion Ball has for running is fueled by a sense of community around the sport. At least once a week he trains alone, to prepare for the oddly isolated nature of long races, but Ball said he couldn’t imagine putting in the hours and miles without his fellow athletes by his side.

“It’s not just about the running,” he said. “When you run with a group, you form lifelong bonds with those people.”

It’s been a couple years since Ball’s life as a runner began, and he doesn’t intend to slow down anytime soon.

“I have never once regretted putting on my running shoes and getting out the door,” he said.

He’s traveled everywhere from Chicago and New York to Berlin and London for races, and has a new marathon in Tokyo on his radar. When asked about ultra-marathons—any race longer than a standard marathon, up to 100 miles—he said he didn’t have much interest.

“Well,” he said, shrugging. “Maybe I’ll do a 50-miler. But that’s probably how all that gets started, huh?”

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Recreation & Fitness

Best gym 2013: ACAC

ACAC

200 Four Seasons Dr.
978-7523
111 Monticello Ave.
984-3800
Albemarle Square Shopping Center
978-3800
1015 Heathercroft Cir., Suite 100 (Crozet)
817-2055
acac.com

Runner-up:
CrossFit
1309 Belleview Ave. #2
260-0209
crossfitcharlottesville.com

All the best things come in threes. At least, that’s true of ACAC, with locations in Downtown Charlottesville, Crozet, and Albemarle Square to maximize your access to fitness. The wellness center offers everything from yoga and Pilates to swimming and raquet sports. Plus, there’s a spa. (There has to be some reward for all that hard work.) Just off Rte. 250, CrossFit is gathering its own loyal following, with small-group, semi-private classes that emphasize using your own body’s biomechanics (and not machinery) to achieve lofty fitness goals.

See more:

Best Fitness Class 2013: Athletic conditioning at ACAC

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Recreation & Fitness

Best park for kids 2013: Pen Park

Pen Park

East Rio Road

Runner-up:
McGuffey Park
Corner of Second Street NW and Jefferson Street

What’s a three-letter word for fun that isn’t “fun”? Pen. As in, Pen Park. Readers say it’s the best place for kids to play around, and no wonder—its 280 acres boasts eight tennis courts, a Little League baseball field, volleyball court, outdoor picnic shelters, and a playground with an area especially for littler little ones. Downtown, McGuffey Park makes a great place to stop after a trip to the library or adjacent art gallery.

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Best of C-VILLE Retail

Best place to buy wine 2013: Market Street Wineshops

Market Street Wineshops

311 E. Market St.
305 Rivanna Plaza
Dr., Suite 102
964-9463
marketstreetwine.com

Runner-up:
Trader Joe’s
Stonefield Shopping Center
974-1466
traderjoes.com

For nearly 30 years, Market Street Wineshops have served as not only the best place to buy wine (there’s more than 1,200 wines in stock), but also to learn about it, through weekly tastings, newsletters, and occasional events led by owner Robert Harllee. As for newbie (to Charlottesville and to this category, that is) Trader Joe’s, you really can’t beat a bottle of two-buck Chuck (which is actually three-buck Chuck these days, but who’s counting?) when you’re looking for a buzz on the cheap.

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Food & Drink

Best Indian 2013: Milan Indian Cuisine

Milan Indian Cuisine

1817 Emmet St. N
984-2828
milan-indian-cuisine.com

Runner-up:
Himalayan Fusion
520 E. Main St.
293-3120
himalayanfusion.com

Readers know Milan has the best curry in town, but as it turns out, everything else on the restaurant’s menu is pretty darn tasty too. The Emmet Street spot serves up tandoori, seafood, and vegetarian options. At Himalayan Fusion on the Downtown Mall, get a taste of the menu with the lunch buffet.

See more:

Best Buffet: Milan Indian Cuisine

Best curry 2013: Milan Indian Cuisine