Archive for January, 2008

Saving money with eco-friendly cleaners

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Park + Vine is putting a different cleaning line on sale each month to encourage more people to switch over to eco-friendly cleaners.

In February, all Biokleen cleaning products are 20 percent off. Biokleen laundry, kitchen and all-purpose cleaners are non-toxic, biodegradable, and free of animal byproducts and testing.

Park + Vine offers special case pricing on cleaning products and other earth-friendly supplies. If you’re looking to lessen your impact on the environment while saving a few bucks, contact us at 513-721-7275.

Rethinking the Meat-Guzzler

Monday, January 28th, 2008

By MARK BITTMAN
The New York Times

A SEA change in the consumption of a resource that Americans take for granted may be in store — something cheap, plentiful, widely enjoyed and a part of daily life. And it isn’t oil.

Beef cattle raised for the Harris Ranch Beef Company, Coalinga, Calif.

It’s meat.

The two commodities share a great deal: Like oil, meat is subsidized by the federal government. Like oil, meat is subject to accelerating demand as nations become wealthier, and this, in turn, sends prices higher. Finally — like oil — meat is something people are encouraged to consume less of, as the toll exacted by industrial production increases, and becomes increasingly visible.

Global demand for meat has multiplied in recent years, encouraged by growing affluence and nourished by the proliferation of huge, confined animal feeding operations. These assembly-line meat factories consume enormous amounts of energy, pollute water supplies, generate significant greenhouse gases and require ever-increasing amounts of corn, soy and other grains, a dependency that has led to the destruction of vast swaths of the world’s tropical rain forests.

Just this week, the president of Brazil announced emergency measures to halt the burning and cutting of the country’s rain forests for crop and grazing land. In the last five months alone, the government says, 1,250 square miles were lost.

The world’s total meat supply was 71 million tons in 1961. In 2007, it was estimated to be 284 million tons. Per capita consumption has more than doubled over that period. (In the developing world, it rose twice as fast, doubling in the last 20 years.) World meat consumption is expected to double again by 2050, which one expert, Henning Steinfeld of the United Nations, says is resulting in a “relentless growth in livestock production.”

Americans eat about the same amount of meat as we have for some time, about eight ounces a day, roughly twice the global average. At about 5 percent of the world’s population, we “process” (that is, grow and kill) nearly 10 billion animals a year, more than 15 percent of the world’s total.

Growing meat (it’s hard to use the word “raising” when applied to animals in factory farms) uses so many resources that it’s a challenge to enumerate them all. But consider: an estimated 30 percent of the earth’s ice-free land is directly or indirectly involved in livestock production, according to the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization, which also estimates that livestock production generates nearly a fifth of the world’s greenhouse gases — more than transportation.

To put the energy-using demand of meat production into easy-to-understand terms, Gidon Eshel, a geophysicist at the Bard Center, and Pamela A. Martin, an assistant professor of geophysics at the University of Chicago, calculated that if Americans were to reduce meat consumption by just 20 percent it would be as if we all switched from a standard sedan — a Camry, say — to the ultra-efficient Prius. Similarly, a study last year by the National Institute of Livestock and Grassland Science in Japan estimated that 2.2 pounds of beef is responsible for the equivalent amount of carbon dioxide emitted by the average European car every 155 miles, and burns enough energy to light a 100-watt bulb for nearly 20 days.

Grain, meat and even energy are roped together in a way that could have dire results. More meat means a corresponding increase in demand for feed, especially corn and soy, which some experts say will contribute to higher prices.

This will be inconvenient for citizens of wealthier nations, but it could have tragic consequences for those of poorer ones, especially if higher prices for feed divert production away from food crops. The demand for ethanol is already pushing up prices, and explains, in part, the 40 percent rise last year in the food price index calculated by the United Nations’ Food and Agricultural Organization.

Though some 800 million people on the planet now suffer from hunger or malnutrition, the majority of corn and soy grown in the world feeds cattle, pigs and chickens. This despite the inherent inefficiencies: about two to five times more grain is required to produce the same amount of calories through livestock as through direct grain consumption, according to Rosamond Naylor, an associate professor of economics at Stanford University. It is as much as 10 times more in the case of grain-fed beef in the United States.

The environmental impact of growing so much grain for animal feed is profound. Agriculture in the United States — much of which now serves the demand for meat — contributes to nearly three-quarters of all water-quality problems in the nation’s rivers and streams, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Because the stomachs of cattle are meant to digest grass, not grain, cattle raised industrially thrive only in the sense that they gain weight quickly. This diet made it possible to remove cattle from their natural environment and encourage the efficiency of mass confinement and slaughter. But it causes enough health problems that administration of antibiotics is routine, so much so that it can result in antibiotic-resistant bacteria that threaten the usefulness of medicines that treat people.

Those grain-fed animals, in turn, are contributing to health problems among the world’s wealthier citizens — heart disease, some types of cancer, diabetes. The argument that meat provides useful protein makes sense, if the quantities are small. But the “you gotta eat meat” claim collapses at American levels. Even if the amount of meat we eat weren’t harmful, it’s way more than enough.

Americans are downing close to 200 pounds of meat, poultry and fish per capita per year (dairy and eggs are separate, and hardly insignificant), an increase of 50 pounds per person from 50 years ago. We each consume something like 110 grams of protein a day, about twice the federal government’s recommended allowance; of that, about 75 grams come from animal protein. (The recommended level is itself considered by many dietary experts to be higher than it needs to be.) It’s likely that most of us would do just fine on around 30 grams of protein a day, virtually all of it from plant sources.

What can be done? There’s no simple answer. Better waste management, for one. Eliminating subsidies would also help; the United Nations estimates that they account for 31 percent of global farm income. Improved farming practices would help, too. Mark W. Rosegrant, director of environment and production technology at the nonprofit International Food Policy Research Institute, says, “There should be investment in livestock breeding and management, to reduce the footprint needed to produce any given level of meat.”

Then there’s technology. Israel and Korea are among the countries experimenting with using animal waste to generate electricity. Some of the biggest hog operations in the United States are working, with some success, to turn manure into fuel.

Longer term, it no longer seems lunacy to believe in the possibility of “meat without feet” — meat produced in vitro, by growing animal cells in a super-rich nutrient environment before being further manipulated into burgers and steaks.

Another suggestion is a return to grazing beef, a very real alternative as long as you accept the psychologically difficult and politically unpopular notion of eating less of it. That’s because grazing could never produce as many cattle as feedlots do. Still, said Michael Pollan, author of the recent book “In Defense of Food,” “In places where you can’t grow grain, fattening cows on grass is always going to make more sense.”

But pigs and chickens, which convert grain to meat far more efficiently than beef, are increasingly the meats of choice for producers, accounting for 70 percent of total meat production, with industrialized systems producing half that pork and three-quarters of the chicken.

Once, these animals were raised locally (even many New Yorkers remember the pigs of Secaucus), reducing transportation costs and allowing their manure to be spread on nearby fields. Now hog production facilities that resemble prisons more than farms are hundreds of miles from major population centers, and their manure “lagoons” pollute streams and groundwater. (In Iowa alone, hog factories and farms produce more than 50 million tons of excrement annually.)

These problems originated here, but are no longer limited to the United States. While the domestic demand for meat has leveled off, the industrial production of livestock is growing more than twice as fast as land-based methods, according to the United Nations.

Perhaps the best hope for change lies in consumers’ becoming aware of the true costs of industrial meat production. “When you look at environmental problems in the U.S.,” says Professor Eshel, “nearly all of them have their source in food production and in particular meat production. And factory farming is ‘optimal’ only as long as degrading waterways is free. If dumping this stuff becomes costly — even if it simply carries a non-zero price tag — the entire structure of food production will change dramatically.”

Animal welfare may not yet be a major concern, but as the horrors of raising meat in confinement become known, more animal lovers may start to react. And would the world not be a better place were some of the grain we use to grow meat directed instead to feed our fellow human beings?

Real prices of beef, pork and poultry have held steady, perhaps even decreased, for 40 years or more (in part because of grain subsidies), though we’re beginning to see them increase now. But many experts, including Tyler Cowen, a professor of economics at George Mason University, say they don’t believe meat prices will rise high enough to affect demand in the United States.

“I just don’t think we can count on market prices to reduce our meat consumption,” he said. “There may be a temporary spike in food prices, but it will almost certainly be reversed and then some. But if all the burden is put on eaters, that’s not a tragic state of affairs.”

If price spikes don’t change eating habits, perhaps the combination of deforestation, pollution, climate change, starvation, heart disease and animal cruelty will gradually encourage the simple daily act of eating more plants and fewer animals.

Mr. Rosegrant of the food policy research institute says he foresees “a stronger public relations campaign in the reduction of meat consumption — one like that around cigarettes — emphasizing personal health, compassion for animals, and doing good for the poor and the planet.”

It wouldn’t surprise Professor Eshel if all of this had a real impact. “The good of people’s bodies and the good of the planet are more or less perfectly aligned,” he said.

The United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization, in its detailed 2006 study of the impact of meat consumption on the planet, “Livestock’s Long Shadow,” made a similar point: “There are reasons for optimism that the conflicting demands for animal products and environmental services can be reconciled. Both demands are exerted by the same group of people … the relatively affluent, middle- to high-income class, which is no longer confined to industrialized countries. … This group of consumers is probably ready to use its growing voice to exert pressure for change and may be willing to absorb the inevitable price increases.”

In fact, Americans are already buying more environmentally friendly products, choosing more sustainably produced meat, eggs and dairy. The number of farmers’ markets has more than doubled in the last 10 years or so, and it has escaped no one’s notice that the organic food market is growing fast. These all represent products that are more expensive but of higher quality.

If those trends continue, meat may become a treat rather than a routine. It won’t be uncommon, but just as surely as the S.U.V. will yield to the hybrid, the half-pound-a-day meat era will end.

Maybe that’s not such a big deal. “Who said people had to eat meat three times a day?” asked Mr. Pollan.

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Endangered OTR buildings go before board

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

The Freestore Foodbank is going before the city’s Historic Conservation Board to ask for permission to demolish 1606 and 1608 Walnut Street 3 p.m. Jan. 28 at Two Centennial Plaza, 805 Plum Street.

Neighborhood representatives are questioning the Freestore’s plans to remove these two 125-year-old buildings in favor of a driveway that would access the loading dock.

Over-the-Rhine has already lost too many buildings to driveways and surface lots. This project sets a precedent for more gaps in our neighborhood. The people who live and work in Over-the-Rhine deserve a more sensitive plan.


Send correspondence to:

Historic Conservation Office
Department of Community Development and Planning
805 Central Ave., Suite 700
Cincinnati, OH 45202
(513) 352-4890
William L. Forwood, Urban Conservator
skip.forwood@cincinnati-oh.gov

City’s heart worn on its chest

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Young entrepreneurs using T-shirts to help the city find its soul
BY STEPFANIE ROMINE | SROMINE@ENQUIRER.COM

Michael Palmer returned from New York City to his native Cincinnati in 2005 to find an energy bubbling that hadn’t been there when he left.

Fountain Square renovations were under way. Condos were being built in Over-the-Rhine. His friends were moving downtown.

Cincinnati, he discovered, was evolving.

Inspired by the anything-is-possible vibes surrounding him, Palmer designed a couple of T-shirts and invested $1,000 with some friends to start an apparel company, which he named Nati Evolvement.

“There’s so much energy going on in the city right now, it’s just another good outlet for people to just grab onto it,” Palmer, 28, said of the downtown-based company, which sells limited editions of T-shirts, hats and track jackets as a way to keep designs from getting stale.

T-shirts have been a medium of expression for decades, and Cincinnatians have long showed sartorial support for the Reds, Bearcats and Bengals. But the shirts by Nati Evolvement – along with those by Wire and Twine and Alternative Motive – aim to boost the city’s self-esteem and show those far beyond the I-275 loop that Cincinnati is a great place to live.

From images of a hypothetical subway map to the slogans “I believe in Nati” and “find your soul in the city,” the shirts – sold online and in locally owned and operated businesses – have become 100 percent cotton inspiration.

INSPIRED BY THE CITY

Logan Wallace is a wine sales rep turned part-time barista and full-time T-shirt designer. Wallace, 28, says Nati Evolvement was an inspiration for his Covedale-based Alternative Motive company, which tries to “use fashion for good” by donating 5 percent of profits to nonprofits.

“I’ve lived here almost all my life, and I love it,” said Wallace, a Milford High School and Xavier University graduate. “Everyone wants to be a part of what’s going on (in the city). A T-shirt is an affordable way to say, ‘Hey, this is where I live.’ “

Cincinnati has traditionally struggled with self-esteem and denies itself the pride it richly deserves, said Raymond L. Buse III, director of public relations for the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber.

“We aren’t as boisterous about our place as we should be,” Buse said. “But the Chamber encourages every wellspring of pride in this city.”

Some of that pride is tongue-in-cheek, said Wire and Twine co-owner Chris Glass, 36. The group’s “Cincinnati Transit Map for Optimists” T-shirt is the Oxford-based company’s best seller in stores and second best online.

“A lot of people just walk by it,” he said. “They think it’s a bus map or might not see the irony in it. Other people just find it hilarious.”

Glass, who founded the company in 2006 with Tom and Wendy Duvall of Oxford, lives in Dayton but grew up in Cincinnati.

From Glass’ perspective, Cincinnati is becoming a hip destination city rather than a layover on a Delta flight.

“A lot of friends and a lot of peers in the design industry moved to big, hip towns … (and came back),” said Glass. “I think we’re catching up.”

SPREADING THE WORD

Donivan Perkins, chief creative officer for Northlich, the communications and brand consulting agency in downtown Cincinnati, said the city’s energy is one of his best tools for recruiting fresh new talent to the area.

And T-shirts, said Perkins, are easy to produce and easily convey that pro-Cincinnati message, “particularly the more youthful sense of what’s right and wrong in the world.”

“The fact that Cincinnati is a part of that expression just strengthens that whole brand perception, if you will, of the value of the city,” Perkins said.

Nati Evolvement partner Matt Norcia is a testament to Cincinnati’s value.

The New York native met Palmer while working at the Manhattan office of Interbrand, the brand consultancy with offices in Norwood. By choice, Norcia moved to Cincinnati full time in December after spending four days a week here for more than a year.

“There is definitely an energy in the city, kind of youthful and exciting,” said Norcia, 27.

Despite that enthusiasm, no one shirt has the iconic appeal of, say, the “I (heart) NY” logo, just yet. The message is closer to “it’s OK to be Cincinnati,” to echo the words of Carol Coletta, the host of Smart City Radio and president and CEO of CEOs for Cities, who spoke in Cincinnati last summer.

Regardless, said Perkins, “It’s just fun, and that’s all it really has to be.”

At a glance

ALTERNATIVE MOTIVE Owner: Logan Wallace
Web site: www.alternativemotive.com
Where to buy: Online and at The Mustard Seed Boutique in Clifton, Park + Vine in Over-the-Rhine, Karisma Klothing in Hyde Park, the Cincinnati Gallery at Kenwood Towne Centre, Pangaea Trading Co. in Clifton.

NATI EVOLVEMENT Partners:
Michael Palmer, Adam Bowen, Matt Norcia and Colin Groth
Web site: www.natievolvement.com
Where to buy: Online and at Denim in Oakley, Park + Vine, Anonymous Skate Shop in Western Hills and The Mustard Seed Boutique.

WIRE AND TWINE Partners: Chris Glass, Wendy and Tom Duvall
Web site: www.wireandtwine.com
Where to buy: Online and at Mica in O’Bryonville and Park + Vine.

 

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Going green with ‘zoo poop’

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

BY JIM KNIPPENBERG | JKNIPPENBERG@ENQUIRER.COM

The Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden has launched a project that will turn one of its most abundant natural resources into energy.

Poop.

There are no specific numbers on how much it will save the zoo in energy costs, but the team working on the project says it will be tens of thousands of dollars annually at the outset and more as the program progresses.

In about two years, when the plan is fully implemented, the elephant and giraffe houses will be heated, cooled and lit by animal waste converted to energy. At least two other zoos – Denver and Dallas – are in the beginning stages of similar projects.

Poo Power, as the senior staff is calling it, is one phase of Go Green, a multi-tiered initiative that informally began in 2005 with a water-saving project and construction of the Harold C. Schott Education Center aimed at making Cincinnati one of the country’s greenest zoos, said Mark Fisher, senior director of facilities and planning.

“From now on, every project we undertake will be with LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification in mind,” Fisher said. “This is a long-term, lifetime commitment we’re undertaking because of the tremendous cost advantage, but more than that because it’s the right thing to do for the planet.”

Fisher, 32, a civil engineer, has been at the zoo two years. The Mason resident arrived after 11 years with Turner Construction, “with half of the years spent here, working on the elephant house, polar bear exhibit, Children’s Gift Shop, Safari Camp and smaller projects.”

“But this is the biggest and most ambitious one we’ve undertaken. We realize it’s something that will cost us more on the front end but will pay huge dividends as time goes by. Some of the changes we’ve made or are making will pay for themselves in as little as a year.”

LEED is a national program developed by the U.S. Green Building Council to promote environmentally sustainable construction and energy use (www.usgbc.org/LEED). It awards points based on how well a site meets certain prerequisites, then rates a building as Certified, Silver, Gold or Platinum. The zoo’s education center, certified last September, is the only Silver Certified building in Cincinnati and two points short of Gold.

The extraction of power from “poo” – biomass in more scientific terms – is a project is in its infancy. Step one is a $15,000-$20,000 feasibility study, co-funded by Duke Energy and the Ohio Department of Development, and already under way to determine how much energy the elephant waste will generate.

Hard numbers are due back in the spring, but Fisher has what he thinks are accurate estimates.

“We have four elephants weighing more than 37,000 pounds and they produce 800 pounds of waste a day. That’s at least 20 kw (kilowatts) and enough to heat the elephant house and maybe giraffe house too (on a daily basis). Right now, we pay Rumpke to haul the waste away, so there’s another savings and another plus because we’re diverting it from a landfill.

“Other animals here don’t produce like elephants, but the study will look at the rhino, giraffe, other hoofed stock and even tiger output for conversion rates.”

Zoo visitors will contribute to Poo Power as well – but only via meals they don’t finish. As the project progresses, separate bins for food waste – half eaten burgers, hot dogs, pizza crusts – will be installed so dinner remnants can go through the energy conversion process. Likewise, the horticultural department will contribute with clippings and other garden waste.

“The biomass technology is out there and functional, but it has never been done on a small scale,” Fisher said. “Huge factory farms that produce tons of waste a day use it, but we don’t have tons to work with, so one of our first jobs after the study will be to design and build a small unit for smaller-scale facilities.

“The unit we design will have implications for the rest of the country in other zoos, smaller horse farms and cattle ranches.’’

Poo Power cost projections won’t be available until the feasibility study is completed, but the bulk will be private money.

“I’m confident we can fund it as we move along,” Fisher said. “Duke and the State of Ohio are already behind the project.”

Jim Lefeld, Duke’s director of renewable energy, said Poo Power is just a start.

“This project will provide Duke Energy the opportunity to further investigate the feasibility of small-scale waste-to-energy applications,’’ he said. “And it compliments current work Duke is doing in rural areas of its service territory to develop economic solutions to resolve livestock waste management problems.

“We have an active livestock industry in Indiana and North Carolina, and this project has implications for them, especially in the area of waste management problems. But there are also zoos all over the three states where the project has applications.”

When the time comes to fully implement, the zoo will use either a gasification unit or an anaerobic digester. Both do the same thing – convert methane gas into energy – but a digester does it with micro organisms while gasification uses heat. Whichever the zoo uses, the unit will be positioned on a main loop where visitors can see it and read signage about what’s happening.

“At the end of the day,’’ Fisher said, “the most important thing is that this is the right thing to do.”

Eco-friendly wooden cards

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

There are still occasions that call for something with warm intentions such as the permanent stroke of a pen against a physical surface. New Park + Vine stationery vendor Night Owl Paper Goods has crafted a charming series of veneer postcards thinly sliced from sustainably harvested wood. As a result, very little power and no water is used in the process. We’re excited about this new line, which includes a series of cute Valentine’s Day designs, including the one pictured here:

China’s war on plastic bags

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

The country that everyone loves to hate for its poor environmental record (i.e., lead in toys) is taking on the “white pollution” that’s choking its cities, farms and waterways. China is banning free plastic shopping bags and calling for a return to the cloth bags of old, according to an MSNBC report. The ban takes effect June 1, two months before Beijing hosts the Summer Olympic Games. Under the new rules, businesses are prohibited from manufacturing, selling or using bags less than 0.025 millimeters (0.00098 inches) thick, according to the order issued by the State Council, China’s Cabinet. OK, America, now it’s our turn.

Photo: Vincent Cobb

Design charrette pushes green design in OTR

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

Cincinnati continues to move in the right direction when it comes to implementing more green initiatives. This time it’s the Over-the-Rhine Infill Design Charrette Jan. 19 at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, 1212 Jackson Street.

Teams of architects and students will produce four green designs for infill construction in Over-the-Rhine. This large historic district immediately north of downtown has a lot of empty lots ripe for new construction amid hundreds of buildings that could make or break how the neighborhood looks and functions in the future.

The morning session begins at 10 a.m., followed by an afternoon session at 2 p.m. Attendees can expect to see finished drawings at 4:30 p.m.

The charrette is a product of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, Architectural Foundation of Cincinnati, Cincinnati Preservation Association, Over-the-Rhine Foundation and numerous local architects.

The charrette is free and open to the public, but space is limited. RSVP to info [at] cincinnatipreservation [dot] org or (513) 721-4506.

OTR’s Main Street has new plan

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

BY STEPFANIE ROMINE AND LISA BERNARD | SROMINE@ENQUIRER.COM; LBERNARD@ENQUIRER.COM

Two years ago, if someone wanted to open a business on Main Street, a pulse would have been sufficient, says Over-the-Rhine Chamber of Commerce president Brian Tiffany.

Today, Tiffany says, the group can afford to be more discerning.

While in recent years the area has been a transient entertainment district – with good years full of businesses and activities and slow years where bars and other businesses emptied out – the vision now is for Main Street to become a real neighborhood with people living, working, shopping and sleeping there.

“We’re treating it like a mall, where you don’t just see businesses thrown together without some sort of critical mass,” said Tiffany.

At the moment, the stretch of Main Street between Central Parkway and Liberty Street is in one of those slow periods. But while almost two dozen vacant storefronts remain, a revitalization is within reach, Tiffany says, thanks in large part to the success of retail and residential projects on nearby Vine Street as well as Over-the-Rhine’s long-term growth plan.

Key to the plan is residential growth, which is difficult when an area is too reliant on the nightclub scene.

“We’re about to see Main Street developed just as Vine Street has,” Tiffany said.
Tiffany said the week before Christmas, he had four businesses call to say they wanted to open on Main Street. And Kathleen Norris, the retail leasing consultant for the nonprofit Gateway Quarter, said that she has “probably a dozen or more businesses in the beginning phases.”

“The goal is to link those two important streets,” said Norris, of Vine and Main streets.

With the addition of more than 25 condos, Main Street’s dynamic will change. Tiffany sees it as a positive time to transition and diversify.

“We’ve learned,” he said. “Landlords get it now. You have to reinvent yourself.”

He’s also working on getting more consistent operating hours from existing shops and galleries and attracting new businesses.

“We don’t want to cannibalize other communities,” Tiffany said.

Storefronts remain empty, leases are as yet unsigned. But four restaurants and bars are expected to open by late spring, and the faithful Tiffany said that change is coming.

“Look at what we’ve done at 12th and Vine,” he said, referring to the Gateway Quarter development that began two years ago. “We just need you to be a little more patient.”

Such patience worked along Covington’s MainStrasse Village, which is now what Main Street strives to be: a neighborhood within a city where people eat, play and live.

Covington city manager Jay Fossett says it’s the village atmosphere that has made MainStrasse successful.

“Really, what you need is that community,” he said. “I think really it’s a close-knit community.”

Changing scene

Ten years ago, about 25 bars, lounges and nightclubs were clustered in a three-block radius. In the late ’90s, clubgoers waited in long lines on weekends and jammed shoulder-to-shoulder into clubs.

But after the riots in 2001, Main Street bars and clubs began playing a game of musical chairs that hasn’t stopped. In 2006, more than a half-dozen clubs closed, and last year Vinyl, Club Red, Club Dream and The Exchange were among the venues that closed their doors.

The turnover is not unique to Over-the-Rhine, said Tiffany, who points to changes at Newport on the Levee and the closing of the Jillian’s entertainment complex in Covington.

“It’s such a cyclical business,” he said.

“Nightclubs fall into that two- to three-year business plan, literally,” agreed Paul Yankie of the Maven Group, which operates Cue and Speakeasy.

“(When a club closes), it doesn’t mean the corporation will change. They rename, remodel – I’m in one of those right now.”

Yankie and partner Ed Lindenschmidt closed The Exchange nightclub at 1130 Main St. in December after three years. They plan to reopen the space by summer, along with the former Harry’s Pizza at 1207 Main St.

After trouble from the previous two tenants, Steve Ross of Indianapolis-based Sycamore Gardens Real Estate has put his building at 1133 Sycamore St. on the market to sell or lease, he said.

He’s getting help from Norris at Gateway Quarter and focusing on attracting “the right people into that space, someone who has the same long-term goals,” said Ross.

3CDC’s impact

Five years ago Realtor Peter Chabris spent nearly $2 million rehabbing three Main Street buildings into condos.

“I was kind of the next generation who came in after the riots and tried to make Over-the-Rhine better,” said Chabris, a Washington D.C., native.

Although his condos sold, Chabris said he was “less successful than we hoped because there wasn’t a critical mass or city support. Without those forces behind you, it’s impossible to change a place.”

Chabris believes the involvement of Cincinnati Center City Development Corp, 3CDC, is key to the success of Main Street’s transition.

“The fact that 3CDC is pushing its money and focus onto Main will really help get it over the hump,” he said.

The nonprofit development group is in the midst of a $29.5 million initiative to transform dozens of Over-the-Rhine buildings into more than 100 housing units with 15,000 square feet commercial space.

As part of that plan, the group is working with developer and Over-the-Rhine property owner Urban Sites to renovate three Main Street buildings into upper-level condos with street-front retail.

All told, Urban Sites is planning more than 25 condos and work on the buildings – 1202, 1306 and 1417 Main Street – is expected to be complete by summer.

If successful, the investment will help carry momentum created by the $30 million revitalization in Over-the-Rhine’s Gateway Quarter.

Bounded by Central Parkway, 13th, Vine and Race streets, the Quarter is home to 90 condos and more than 20,000 square feet of renewed commercial space.

Since last spring more than 45 percent of the condos have been sold and more than 75 percent of the commercial space has been leased.

“We’ve had great success, and we’re seeing a very nice business district beginning to build up on Vine Street,” said Chad Munitz, executive vice president of 3CDC’s development team.

“Our hope is that the work on Main Street will continue to stabilize that area, just as it has Vine Street.”

What’s ahead

How far the renewed interest and energy will take Main Street continues to be a question mark for the district and for Over-the-Rhine.

Although neighborhood crime rates have fallen, Over-the-Rhine continues to combat violent crime and was the scene of the year’s first homicide: Thomas Pernell was killed and another person was shot early on Jan. 1 in the VIP room at Ocho Rios, a nightclub at 221 E. 12th St.

As the year gets underway, concerns linger about the impact as the Hamilton County Sheriff Department pulls deputies from patrols in the neighborhood – a move made in light of a strapped county budget.

“It’s an issue that we continue to struggle with,” said Jim Moll, an 18-year neighborhood resident and member of Over-the-Rhine’s Chamber of Commerce Safety Sector program.

Through monthly meetings, the program coordinates initiatives among residents and business owners aimed at improving cleanliness and safety in Over-the-Rhine.

“Years and years ago when I first moved to the neighborhood people always asked me, how can you deal with the crime on Vine Street?” Moll said. “Look where we are now with Vine. It’s not just law enforcement, it’s the people of the neighborhood that will help end this.”

Community to discuss Rothenberg Jan. 15

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

Peaslee Neighborhood Center, 215 E. Fourteenth Street, is hosting a community engagement meeting 5 p.m. Jan. 15 to discuss plans to turn Over-the-Rhine’s shuttered Rothenberg Elementary School into a community learning center designed by–and intended for–the community. For more details, e-mail Mary Anne Berry at jwberry [at] fuse [dot] net.

Rothenberg is one of the buildings featured in Cincinnati Preservation Association’s and Betts House Research Center’s “Endangered Cincinnati: Can These Buildings Be Saved?” exhibit on display at Park + Vine. Fortunately, there’s strong community opposition to the demolition of this neighborhood landmark.

(We have no photos of Rothenberg to share)