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Archive for the ‘Atlanta BeltLine’ Category

Art on the BeltLine Lantern Parade under a full moon on June 26th, 2010!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on May 25, 2010

The Krewe of the Grateful Gluttons invites us to join them on June 26th, 2010 for a Lantern Parade as part of Art on the BeltLine from Irwin / Krog, up the BeltLine trail, to Park Tavern in Piedmont Park!

The Krewe of the Grateful Gluttons invites us to join them on June 26th, 2010 for a Lantern Parade as part of Art on the BeltLine from Irwin / Krog, up the BeltLine trail, to Park Tavern in Piedmont Park!

Looking for something to do the next full moon? What about a Lantern Parade with Art on the BeltLine and the Krewe of the Grateful Gluttons? I just received this from Chantelle, who is putting together this swaray as her performance piece – and she needs all of us. :-)

The Latern Parade is on Saturday night, June 26, with a full moon rise at 9:15! What luck! We will have a tailgate line-up 8-9 at Irwin & Krog and step off at 9pm. We expect to arrive at Park Tavern around 10:30ish, where will tie the lanterns to the fence and have a cold one! We have 4 lantern-making workshops coming up. They are free and only a 30 minute to 2-hour time commitment. A lantern would be a lovely memento for anyone to have from the 1st ever Art on the BeltLine! But the Coleman in your garage works just fine, too.

All the info is here: www.gratefulgluttons.com.

Posted in Atlanta BeltLine, Events | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Cabbagetown Artists’ Tribe looking for volunteer support for Art on the BeltLine project!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on May 22, 2010

With Art on the BeltLine opening on June 5th, 2010 (in Gordon White Park – check art.beltline.org for calendar of events!), our artists are incredibly busy installing their works in these final two weekends. Next weekend, May 29-30, 2010 from 10 a.m. til 5 p.m., the Cabbagetown Artists’ Tribe will be putting the finishing touches on their piece, “The Pardoned Eden Garden,” and have sent along this call for volunteer assistance (check out the project’s progress on facebook):

It‘s time to install art on the Beltline!!!

Come be a part of the art! Help hang those beautiful, wild, and creative birds that you and your neighbors made. Give a hand to groom the grounds of The Pardoned Eden garden. Participate in placing the perfect punctuation to a community art project!

Saturday, May 29 and Sunday, May 30 from 10-5 behind the Depot on Memorial Drive.

Rakes, shovels, ladders, wire, and other knickknacks are appreciated. Woman power, man power, child power and everything-in-between power are needed!

It’ll be a party (with some of the fixins).

You do not have to be a resident to come help. You do not have to be an artist. You do not have to have made a bird or participated in this project before. ALL ARE WELCOME!

In case you haven’t heard, The Cabbagetown Artist Tribe was awarded the opportunity to contribute art to the Atlanta Beltline, which will be popping up around Atlanta this spring. It’s a community art project and your neighbors spent the last two weekends making beautiful and creative birds as part of the project. Now it’s time to install and complete the work. Come join and be a part of it!

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Shop Whole Foods on Ponce on May 26th for 5% of your purchase to go towards Art on the BeltLine!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on May 11, 2010

Come pick up groceries, dinner, or a delicious treat at the Whole Foods Market on Ponce de Leon and support a worthy cause with your purchase. The BeltLine Partnership will be the recipient of 5% of our net sales on this day, so the more you shop, the more you give! The goal is to raise funds from private and philanthropic sources to support the Atlanta BeltLine, an emerging system of parks, trails, transit, affordable housing and new development that reclaims a 22-mile loop of historic and mostly unused rail around the center of Atlanta.

  • What: 5% day at Whole Foods on Ponce to benefit Art on the BeltLine
  • When: Wednesday, May 26th from 8 a.m. – 10 p.m.
  • Why: The donation will be used for Art on the BeltLine, which will support the creation of visual arts, performing arts, and historic site interpretation in the BeltLine this May-October!

For more information on this big public arts exhibition, visit art.beltline.org.

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Atlanta’s temporary public art project, Art on the BeltLine, needs your help with clean ups this weekend!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on April 27, 2010

Art on the BeltLine needs your help on May 1st and 2nd in clearing and preparing artists’ installation sites on trails on the east and west sides of Atlanta! In addition to clearing artists’ specific sites, we will also pick up general trash as we prepare to launch temporary public art projects in June and to introduce people to newly opened sections of the BeltLine. We will meet at the intersections listed below on each day to be divided into teams and get tools before spreading out along the trail.

Please bring a reusable water bottle and gloves; tools will be provided.

  • The clean-up on the west side will be on Saturday, May 1st at 9 a.m. – meet at Gordon White Park.
  • The clean-up on the east side will be on Sunday, May 2nd at 1 p.m. – meet at the intersection of Somerset and the BeltLine.

Please visit the Hands on Atlanta site here for full details, directions, and to RSVP. You can also email me, Jenny, at jenny.p@mac.com.

Thanks so much to Gina with the Atlanta ToolBank, Kim with Hands on Atlanta, Keep Atlanta Beautiful, and the BeltLine team for helping to make these two Art on the BeltLine clean-ups happen!

About Art on the BeltLine:

Join us May through October 2010 as we celebrate the reawakening of old railroad corridor as Atlanta’s new public place with a kick-off arts event staged from late spring through summer. This spring, Atlanta BeltLine, Inc. plans to open nearly 8 miles of the future BeltLine corridor to pedestrians and off-road bicyclists via an interim trail. Visual arts, performing arts and historic site interpretation will direct the public’s attention to this amazing resource that encircles downtown Atlanta!  Potential projects are expected to include temporary sculptures and visual installations, environmental art, murals, transformations of building facades that border the corridor, public performances and more. There also will be a series of historic markers and way-finding signs to orient and introduce the public to Atlanta’s new linear greenway.

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You’re invited to the 2010 Volunteer Kick-Off for the Atlanta BeltLine!!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on March 9, 2010

The Atlanta BeltLine is charging full force into 2010 with a Volunteer Kick-Off Happy Hour on March 18th, 2010 at Park Tavern on Piedmont Park! To welcome the spring, the 2010 festival season, and the BeltLine’s great accomplishments this year, we would like to gather our current, future, and potential volunteers for this social event! As the BeltLine project continues to advance rapidly, we want to keep everyone up-to-date with the latest news and developments so you feel prepared to volunteer this coming year. Come out and socialize with fellow volunteers, enjoy a drink or two, review the latest BeltLine 101 presentation, and learn about all of the ways you can get involved with the Atlanta BeltLine! And feel free to stick around for a local dinner at our fantastic BeltLine supporter, Park Tavern.

Some of our volunteer opportunities include staffing the booth at local festivals, becoming a BeltLine Ambassador, administrative help in the office, Art on the BeltLine, social networking, and much, much more!

  • What: BeltLine Volunteer Kick-Off 2010
  • When: March 18th from 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.
  • Where: Park Tavern on Piedmont Park at the corner of Monroe and 10th Street in Midtown

Busy summer schedule? Not sure if you’ll have time to volunteer? We still encourage you to come out anyway so you’re trained and prepared to volunteer whenever it’s convenient for you.

Please feel free to bring your friends, family, colleagues, and anyone else who might be interested in learning more about the BeltLine and our volunteer program. You don’t have to have volunteered previously to attend and, of course, you’re under no obligation to volunteer by attending.

If you have other ways you would like to get involved with the BeltLine, please email festivals@beltlinepartnership.org.

As always, a HUGE thanks to all of you who make it possible for the BeltLine booth to appear at over 15 festivals each year and spread the word about the future of Atlanta’s transportation! We look forward to seeing every one of you out at a festival this coming spring, summer, and fall!

You don’t have to take our word for it – check out this BeltLine volunteer video! (and yes, that’s me in there talking about our stellar volunteers!)

Posted in Atlanta BeltLine, Events, Piedmont Park, Volunteer | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Atlanta BeltLine walk on the west side this weekend, February 27th!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on February 24, 2010

Atlanta BeltLine walk on the west side on February 13, 2010

We enjoyed a stunningly snowy walk on the Atlanta BeltLine's west side trail - be sure to check out the next one this Saturday, February 27th! Click the photo to check out more wintery west side BeltLine photos on flickr!

This weekend’s BeltLine walk may not look like it did two weeks ago >>>>>
but it will be awesome – and you should be there! Whether you are an artist answering the call for artists’ submission for Art on the BeltLine, or a volunteer interested in bringing the BeltLine to life, or you’re just curious to see what all this fuss about transit and trails is all about, you should come out! Here are the details on this Saturday’s BeltLine walk:

  • What: A six mile walk through Atlanta’s west side neighborhoods along the BeltLine
  • When: this Saturday, February 27th, 2010 at 12 p.m.
  • Where: Meet at the tennis center at Washington Park at the dead end of Lena Street (map it!)

Artists’ submissions for Art on the BeltLine are due March 12th!! Please visit the website for more information: http://art.beltline.org.

Please leave a comment if you have questions or need more details. And please email me or leave a comment if you’re interested in volunteering – I’ll be helping the BeltLine out with volunteer coordination for our festival program as well as Art on the BeltLine.

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BeltLine Art: come put your signature on the BeltLine with hand-painted signs!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on February 18, 2010

BeltLine Art signs at Atlanta street crossings

Last year's Signing of the BeltLine yeilded 108 plywood signs at 54 BeltLine crossings - this year's goal is 216! Photo courtesy of Angel Poventud, not sure which artist. :-)

Last summer, dozens of Atlantans came out for the Signing of the BeltLine – a grassroots project that involved 108 plywood boards, hand-painted and hung two-to-a-crossing along the entirety of the Atlanta BeltLine. Did you see those signs and wonder what those signs were? Did you wish you’d been able to participate? Well, it’s happening again! Whether or not you’ve wielded a paint brush before, your help is needed! Especially since the goal is to double the number of signs to 216 to place four at each of the BeltLine’s 54 crossings!

  • What: Signing of the BeltLine 2010
  • When: Saturday, February 20th, 2010 from noon until complete
  • Where: Eyedrum Gallery at 290 Martin Luther King Jr Drive, Atlanta, 30312
  • Who: YOU! Everyone is needed to paint signs, no matter the level of artistic skill
  • What you need: Bring any paint and paint brushes you may have lying around the house, as well as the determination to paint as many boards as you can handle

Questions? Please feel free to contact Angel Luis Poventud, official BeltLine Cheerleader at anotherloudperson@yahoo.com or 404-892-8306.

Posted in Atlanta BeltLine, Volunteer | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Calling all artists for the Atlanta BeltLine’s first temporary public art event: Art on the BeltLine

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on February 6, 2010

Art on the BeltLine 2010: Atlanta's New Public PlaceWelcome to Atlanta’s New Public Place!

The Atlanta BeltLine is inviting Atlanta artists and residents to rediscover our historic rail corridors as they are transformed into the future of Atlanta’s transit! Coming this June 2010, the BeltLine will launch a massive public art event taking place along the eight miles of open hiking trail. “Art on the BeltLine: Atlanta’s New Public Place” will showcase visual arts, performing arts, and historic site interpretation to direct the public’s attention to this amazing resource that encircles downtown Atlanta, thus increasing the level of awareness and fostering a sense of ownership to ensure that the BeltLine becomes a truly public amenity.

We just released the call for artists to submit proposals this week and, already, this public art project is taking on a life of its own! In conjunction with performances, sculpture, music, art, and more within the BeltLine corridor itself, galleries and festivals along the path are already gearing up with their own tie-in events – and it’s all happening quickly! So how can you get involved?

Submit an Artist’s Proposal to Art on the BeltLine

Visual and performing artists are invited to submit proposals for temporary works of visual and performing art to be a part of this May through October event. Potential projects should reflect the historic, environmental, cultural, functional, urban design, and/or aesthetic parameters of the sites and should be well‐researched, well‐planned and feasible. Although not limited to the following examples, potential projects might include all or some of the following:

  • Temporary art, sculptural or visual installations
  • Gateway or entrance works
  • Performance works of all kinds, including but not limited to music, dance, theater and performance art
  • Transformation of existing structures or surfaces, such as bridges and overpasses
  • Utilization of fences or screening devices
  • Transformation of the backs of buildings
  • Amenities for visitors – such as benches, bike racks, shade structures, recycling and trash collection receptacles
  • Establishment of play areas or game sites
  • Loan of existing artwork, such as sculptures or assemblages
  • Murals
  • Plantings or environmental works

Direct from the Atlanta BeltLine temporary call for artists:

Potential art projects may be designed for site‐specific installation, but this is not a requirement. Contemporary and interdisciplinary approaches, innovative uses (or re‐uses) of materials and new technologies are encouraged. Applicants are asked to consider ways in which some level of community involvement might be facilitated in the creation or ongoing interaction of the projects.

Proposed materials should be modestly priced and durable with minimal maintenance in an outdoor setting. All works must be designed to be safely removed at the end of the designated period, or disintegrate safely into the environment. No works or materials deemed to be dangerous, toxic or hazardous to public safety will be accepted and all construction methods must be adequate and safe for public interaction. While we would like to have projects that last throughout the six month time period, we are also interested in performance works or ephemeral works that could be scheduled to occur periodically throughout the time frame. If the location or its elements (trees, slope, etc.) might be part of the concept, we will identify volunteers to work with the artist(s) to help prepare the site, clear underbrush, etc.

Art on the BeltLine public arts exhibition on Atlanta summer 2010

This view from Inman Park Village toward Freedom Park bridge in the BeltLine corridor will be transformed into a massive Atlanta public art exhibition this summer as this stretch of hiking trail opens!

Proposed projects will be presented in the following sections of the BeltLine:

1) Stretch between Piedmont Park and DeKalb Avenue
2) Stretch between Wylie Street and Glenwood Avenue
3) Stretch between Washington Park and Allene Avenue

BeltLine walking tours will be conducted every Saturday along a section of the BeltLine. Artists are encouraged to explore the trails during one of these tours to be better educated about the terrain and history of the BeltLine (see timeline and calendar below).

There are three budget levels for the temporary projects: $1,000, $3,000 and $5,000. Please note that funds are limited and we encourage proposals at all three levels. The amount awarded will be at the discretion of the selection panel. Of the total grant amount, artists should incorporate a minimum of 20% as an artist fee in the budget that must be submitted with each proposal. The fee will cover the design (including artist’s fee) fabrication, shipping, installation, maintenance and de‐installation of the project. Artists may solicit contributions of materials or cash from other sources.

The timeline for informational workshops, BeltLine hikes, submission, juried selection, notification, and installation is as follows:

  • Call for artist proposals published: February 2010
  • Workshops: February 16, 17, and 18, 2010 (see full calendar for details)
  • BeltLine walks to explore the corridor for site-specific submissions: February 13, 20, 27 and March 6, 2010 (see full calendar for details)
  • Deadline for entries: March 12, 2010 at 4:00 pm
  • Panel review: March 2010
  • Accepted entries notified: Week of April 5, 2010
  • Contracting and initial payment: Beginning week of April 12, 2010
  • Installation period: May 8 – June 4, 2010 [Installations will be staggered beginning in May, projects must be installed no later than June 4th. A timeline and installation schedule will be developed with each artist or artist team.
  • Exhibition officially opens: June 5, 2010
  • Public events and performances: May – October 2010
  • Final de‐installation: October 2010

Click here for the artists’ and volunteers’ google calendar, which will be updated as dates and events are solidified – so keep checking back! The official website for all things Art on the BeltLine is http://art.beltline.org. Easy enough, right?

Volunteer with Art on the BeltLine

This temporary art project will not be possible without the help of dedicated volunteers – and I know you’re out there because I’ve worked with so many of you! I am working with the committee on establishing our volunteer needs and schedule, so please stay tuned as we put out calls for volunteers as well! A few of the volunteer types we will be looking for include: an overall Installation Manager to coordinate the artists’ work along the eight miles of trail; artist liaisons to be the point of contact for a certain number of artists; volunteer crews to help clear and prepare sites for installation; folks to assist artists with their installations during their allotted set-up time; etc. If you’re interested, you can email me right now at jenny.p@mac.com and I will make sure I keep you posted as opportunities develop.

Donate to or sponsor Art on the BeltLine

In addition to a volunteer force, we’re also looking for generous donors who may have goods or services they are able to donate to help pull off this project. This could be anything from building materials to help with stages for performance art or a crane to help lift in heavy sculptures or printing services to help with the Art on the BeltLine guide maps that will be made available. We’re also looking for corporate sponsors who are willing to donate funds in return for us displaying your logo across marketing materials. We’ll also be developing this list of specific items we’ll be in need of, but in the meantime, if you’re interested, please don’t hesitate to email me at jenny.p@mac.com!

We hope to make this an annual public art event in Atlanta and appreciate everyone’s support in this inaugural year! From artists to volunteers to donors to sponsors, we’ll have a lot of talented people putting on this huge, one-of-a-kind event in Atlanta’s new public realm!

Posted in Atlanta BeltLine, Events, Volunteer | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Another BeltLine walk, this time to begin planning for the huge BeltLine public arts project and exihibition debuting along 8 miles of trail this summer and fall!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on January 16, 2010

Railroad cross ties are removed to make way for the Atlanta BeltLine hiking path in the northeast corridor

Heading south on our BeltLine walk of the northeast corridor, we walked over these railroad cross ties. On our way back north, two small bobcats hard at work had already pulled up those same cross ties and tossed them into piles to be picked up and carted off. Look for mulch trails coming this spring!

This morning, a smaller crowd than usual set off on a six mile hike of the Atlanta BeltLine’s northeast corridor, headed from Piedmont Park to DeKalb Avenue. (The predicted rain deterred some folks from coming out and we hoped it would hold off until after 1 p.m., but that’s didn’t work out so well.) We had to watch our steps as we walked back and forth across the tracks of two small bobcats that were at work tearing up the railroad ties. Last month, the rails had been pulled up, but the cross ties remained. Not so anymore. On our way south, we tromped on some of the remaining ties and, on the way back north, walked past the piles of wooden beams the crew had extracted from the earth in the hour or two we’d been gone. It just keeps getting easier and easier to walk the path and if you haven’t already, I highly suggest you check it out!

I just did this walk a month ago with Angel and was doing it again so soon as part of our planning efforts to debut the first ever BeltLine public arts and exhibition coming to the 8 miles of open trail this summer and fall. By June 2010, artists will begin installing works of art, ranging from sculpture to performance art to horticulture, along the northeast and southwest sections of the BeltLine.

Who are these artists? We will be sending out a call for entries in two weeks for artists across metro Atlanta to submit proposals for their own public art projects that represent their take on the past, present, and future of the BeltLine and, most importantly, the welcoming of these historical parts of the city back into the public realm. This public art project will be a reawakening of an integral part of Atlanta’s past and a peak at the future of transportation and greenspace. So stay tuned for more details on the call for entries for artists and for the call for volunteers to support them in the near future!

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Atlanta urban hike along the BeltLine’s newly cleared northeast corridor!

Posted by Our Green Atlanta on December 23, 2009

Urban hike along the Atlanta BeltLine corridor on December 19, 2009

A view looking north towards City Hall East on our Atlanta BeltLine urban hike this past Saturday. Click to see more photos of the walk, including a panoramic view of downtown as seen from the North Avenue bridge by the Masquerade!

A few weeks ago, I posted a blog about the old Norfolk Southern railroad tracks coming up along the Atlanta BeltLine’s northeast corridor to make way for the new hiking path arriving in early 2010. We’ve done two major trash and underbrush clean-ups along this stretch (as well as in the West End), so I’m pretty familiar with isolated stretches, but this past Saturday morning I had the opportunity to walk a continuous three miles of the path from Piedmont Park to DeKalb Avenue with almost 30 other intrigued residents.

Eli Dickerson (of WonderRoot Urban Hiking) and Angel Poventud (BeltLine and Trees Atlanta volunteer extraordinaire) gathered our crew together behind Amsterdam Walk at the intersection of Monroe and Amsterdam in Morningside / Virginia Highland. Heading on the path up the hill behind the complex, we were greeted with a view of the Piedmont Park expansion, slated to be completed next year. We couldn’t hike north through the construction site to Ansley Park, but Angel gave us an overview and turned us around to head south.

The actual rails, dating back to the very early 1900′s, have been pulled up and set aside for future recycling, but the crossties are still in place for the most part. Everything is scheduled to be uprooted in the next several weeks and replaced with a mulch hiking trail in advance of the permanent concrete path to follow in the next few years. The walk itself transports you back in time, giving urban hikers a glimpse of Atlanta’s industrial past – the Terminus of old that was criss-crossed with tracks, railroad yards, industrial warehouses and factories.

For all those who complain about Atlanta traffic (and we all do), I highly suggest parking the car and taking a walk as the crow flies. It’s incredible how much ground you can cover on this flat railroad bed when you cut through neighborhoods, over and under major streets – a completely uninterrupted walk in the heart of Atlanta’s northeast quadrant. Not to mention the expasive, unique views of downtown and Midtown Atlanta – the old Sears building (now City Hall East) being one of the most notable. The path cuts directly beside the Historic Fourth Ward Park, a gem that is currently under construction from the Masquerade on North Avenue down to the skate park beneath Freedom Parkway. By next year, Historic Fourth Ward Park will sparkle with a new storm water retention pond (which will be as practical as it is aesthetically pleasing) along with almost eight miles of BeltLine trail open to the public.

This urban hike held another perk – the company. I had the pleasure of meeting (or getting to know better) a number of people – everyone with a varied background and different approach to their interest in the BeltLine.

  • Robby Astrove, Program Coordinator with Trees Atlanta, has been the #1 advocate of the BeltLine Arboretum and has been actively working with schools along the BeltLine to “better connect students to nature through service and explorations… collective outdoor learning, student leadership opportunities, and hands-on projects..”(more to come on that in a future post!).
  • Michael Bryan of Emory is studying the public health impact of the BeltLine and how having a network of trails can lower obesity and health issues due to increased walking and physical activity (side note: he would love to tackle green roofs and document the potential for them here in Atlanta – love it).
  • Craig Durkin of Concrete Jungle has been mapping residential fruit trees across metro Atlanta, harvesting the fruits and nuts when in season, and donating the fresh produce to the Atlanta Community Food Bank (more to come on this project, too! I’ve read about what they’ve done in Portland and look forward to following Craig’s expansions). Check out his blog here, www.Concrete Jungle.com!
  • Jack Walsh, in the small world that is Atlanta, is my neighbor and, as it turns out, is a producer and editor for Public Broadcasting Atlanta (we’ll see each other running in the morning and have crossed paths volunteering for the Atlanta Community Food Bank, but never talked about our day jobs). He was out on that cold morning to cover urban hiking and the hidden places that you can uncover. Look for the story to come out around April!
  • Eli Dickerson and I also had the chance to talk more. We met initially at the Trees Atlanta Fall Fest where we had information tables next to each other (his had composting worms) and I found out that he works for Fernbank Science Center, a place near and dear to my heart. Stay tuned for more from WonderRoot Urban Hiking and more!
  • And, of course, Angel – the fellow BeltLine volunteer who, in another small-world twist, is a CSX train conductor for the rail line that runs directly behind my house (home to the future Brain Train? we’ll see).

Ready to go on an urban hike yourself? Stay tuned to Angel’s facebook page or Eli’s blog – they happen just about every Saturday. And, come April of next year, prepare yourself for an all-day hike of the full 22-mile BeltLine loop!

Posted in Atlanta BeltLine, Developments | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »