Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Final Countdown: Elections!
CityBeat endorsements are out! From today's print edition:
Chris Bortz
Laketa Cole
John Cranley
David Crowley
John Eby
Brian Garry
Greg Harris
Joan Kaup
Roxanne Qualls
With that, all the "newspapers" have now made their endorsements: The Enquirer, CityBeat, and the Downtowner. (There is a nice chart in CityBeat today showing a who’s who of endorsements. The Post is not endorsing candidates apparently.) Bortz, Cole, Crowley, and Harris have endorsements from all three. Cranley and Eby have endorsements from two: The Enquirer and CityBeat. Ghiz has endorsements from two: The Enquirer and Downtowner. Kaup and Qualls have endorsements from two: CityBeat and the Downtowner. Monzel and Thomas have endorsements from only the Enquirer. Berding and Young have endorsements from only the Downtowner. Garry has an endorsement from only CityBeat.
Is it safe to use this information to maybe make some predictions?
Locks: Bortz, Cole, Crowley, and Harris
Near: Cranley, Eby, Ghiz, Kaup, and Qualls
Needs help: Monzel, Thomas, Berding, Young and Garry
Honestly, I am not sure it is that simple but fascinating never-the-less!
Interesting things I see. No newspaper endorsements for Pat Fischer. A month or so ago I would have said he’s a lock to finish in the top nine. I actually would still give him a chance with the money behind his campaign and if the Republican base comes out for him. And I personally love that Charlie Winburn has no newspaper endorsements. His "shoot ‘em up" commercial had me so fuming I have told people NOT to vote for this guy. And that is out-of-character for me. His ad totally preys on fear and I am still mad. But I still give him a chance too to finish in the top nine.
The other interesting thing to me is who of say those three papers best has their pulse on the City. Is any one out of step? (We’ll find out next Tuesday?) And how do some get endorsed while others do not? I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall at the Enquirer, for instance, when they decided not to endorse Berding and Qualls. Maybe the endorsement that bother me the most are from the FOP. I cannot imagine a law enforcement organization endorsing Winburn, who in his commercial portrays some sort of lawlessness in the city, or Malone who has run up against the law a few times. (Here is an article in CityBeat and another in the Enquirer.)
Blog Alert: Beit Carr

All of Steve’s photos can be accessed through his other website, House of Carr. Find the link to flickr. (General question: I don’t use flickr. Should I be using this? What are the benefits?)
Final Countdown: Elections!
Elections are now less than one week away. I'll be counting down each day (or nearly every day) until Tuesday, November 6.Tuesday, October 30, 2007
The Tarnished Crown
Photo from CincyImages


Construction photos taken on 10/28/07. The Excellent City Park System
1. A clear expression of purpose
2. An ongoing planning and community involvement process
3. Sufficient assets in land, staffing, and equipment to meet the system’s goal.
4. Equitable access
5. User satisfaction
6. Safety from crime and physical hazards
7. Benefits for the city beyond the boundaries of the park.
It is a good read for anyone really. They include key questions under each factor. And they include "Excellent Practice" initiatives throughout the publication. One practice listed that I specifically thought was interesting was in Denver. In their Parks & Recreation Master Plan they mapped all useable parkland (medians of parkways not included for instance), identified a six-block-radius circle around each and developed the mantra that all residents should be no more than six blocks from a park. As of the report date (2003 I think), "more than 9 out of 10 residents live within six blocks of a park." This is partially attainable by not having any one very large park. Parks are scattered and land area is not concentrated in a large park for instance. Actually their total percentage of area of parks in relation to area of city is actually smaller than Cincinnati. Park area as percentage of total area for Cincinnati is a healthy 13.6. In Denver, park land is only 8.2% of Denver's total land area. (Data from 2006 and can be found here.) Nearly 40% of all City of Cincinnati's total park area is contained in Mt. Airy Forest. (Just shy of 1470 acres.) I'd be curious how far off Cincinnati is to having all residents six blocks from a park. And how our park system measures up to those seven factors.
Anyway, the report is available at the Trust for Public Land for free. You just have to provide them with personal information . . .
Blog Alert: Let’s Say You’re Right . . .
The following photographs though are from "Let's Say You're Right" blog entries "The Little Sis Comes to Town" and "Beer, Spatzle, and atomic pop!" Enjoy!
The Queen Speaks
". . . The more people who live in the city, the more property taxes that are generated and contributed to our coffers. The more money that people spend in the city, the more sales taxes generated for our city budget. The more money our city has to spend, the more services we can provide to all residents — in all neighborhoods not just downtown.It makes economic sense to focus investment downtown to generate dollars for investment in the inner suburbs and throughout the city." – Joan Kaup, Cincinnati City Council Candidate.Monday, October 29, 2007
Survey Says . . .
1. Music Hall (1878)
Music Hall takes first place predominately for its uniqueness as a building type, exuberant High Victorian Gothic details, and its listing as a National Historic Landmark. It edges out number two on the survey because of its setting on Washington Park and proximity to Nast Trinity Episcopal Church, designed by Hannaford and completed in 1880, and Memorial Hall completed in 1908 and designed by his sons.

Including Brittany Apartments (1885), Saxony Apartments (1891), and the Phoenix Club (1893). Also around the corner is the Fechheimer Residence (1862) at 22 Garfield Place.


Including Samuel Hannaford Residence (1865), Winton Place Methodist Church (1885), Parsonage (1889), St. Stephen's Episcopal Church (1887), and Norman Chapel (1880) at Spring Grove Cemetery.

Samuel Hannaford served as the only mayor of Winton Place before it was annexed to Cincinnati in 1903. The neighborhood has changed over the years but it as a whole, in my opinion, needed to be included. Individually there are probably nicer buildings that I could have included. Notice the "SH" carved in the gable end of his house. And Samuel Hannaford is also buried at Spring Grove Cemetery (a National Historic Landmark also) in Section 110, Lot 437, Space 9. Oddly enough, he wanted apparently no headstone and his plot remains unmarked. He and his wives basically rest in this area, under and near the tree.
Including Elsinore Tower (1883), Eden Park Water Tower (1894), and Pumping Station (1889)



Samuel Hannaford (1835 – 1911) practiced architecture here from 1857 to his retirement in 1904. He worked solo, with various partners, and eventually with his sons, Harvey and Charles, who continued the practice after their father’s retirement and death. Nearly every neighborhood has a building by him and he left a considerable legacy on Cincinnati’s built environment.


Do you have a favorite you think should be on the list – Palace (now Cincinnatian) Hotel, Alms & Doepke Department Store, Lombardy Building, Episcopal Church of the Resurrection (now St. Luke’s in Saylor Park), and the Episcopal Church of our Savior in Mt. Auburn to name just a few? Let me know about it.
A great online reference for all these buildings and more is The Legacy of Samuel Hannaford by Betty Ann Smiddy. All research came from that website along with John Clubbe’s book Cincinnati Observed, a 1999 article that appeared in the Cincinnati Post, and from wintonplace.org.
Historic photos from Library’s Cincinnati Memory Project.
Queen’s City Hall
Chris Bortz
Laketa Cole
John Cranley
David Crowley
John Eby
Leslie Ghiz
Greg Harris
Chris Monzel
Cecil Thomas
The Enquirer also listed "a second group of candidates as well worth consideration by voters. While they didn't quite make our top nine, we feel any of them would be valuable, productive members of City Council." They were:
Jeff Berding
Pat Fischer
Joan Kaup
Roxanne Qualls
Charlie Winburn
Wendell Young
Cincinnati Blog has a great write up on his perspective on the endorsements.
I also happened to catch "Alternating Currents" on WAIF 88.3 on Saturday. They had a quest columnist pontificating on the political season. An excerpt from the piece entitled "Scary":
"A white lesbian wins by winning all the liberal democrats, straight-ticketOuch. Council Candidate Joan Kaup was on after. And while the comment was obviously not about Joan, she is a Charterite and she eventually had to follow that. One issue that the columnist brought up was the idea of having direct neighborhood representational voting, a lá Wards. I think if that was done (and I am not sure I agree) some at-large seats would be required. I am afraid it would fractionalize council beyond effectiveness. A council member from the Westside votes "no" on a streetcar because it doesn’t help his or her ward and constituency for example.
democrats, and by playing ball with enough conservative power brokers to meet
their needs, sometimes by masquerading in Charterite drag…Scary."
City Beat endorsements come out on October 31st. I can't wait!
Program Alert!

Review: “anon(ymous)” @ CCM
So I saw anon(ymous) at CCM. I honestly didn’t know anything about it until walking into the theatre and reading the "Director’s Note" in the program. A new play that premiered in 2006, it is "a wonderful modern adaptation of The Odyssey, Homer’s epic tale of a man’s difficult journey home."Sunday, October 28, 2007
Restaurant Review: Nicola's
At Pendleton, my favorites of those gallaries open were Joanne Honschopp and Ned Stern's architectural acrylic paintings and Nancy Nordloh Neville's watercolors.
Joanne Honschopp: "City Brite" (from her website)
Ned Stern: "Trilogy" (from his website)
I wasn't able to use/link an image from Nancy Nordloh Neville's website so you'll just have to go there and check them out.
Let's go to the game!
Went to the game today. Took a few pictures on the walk down from the apartment. I was cautiously optomistic, but sadly we lost 24 - 13.














