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News

I Wish This Was Here

I love this project.

Artist and urban planner Candy Chang had stickers printed up that say “I wish this was __________.” Then she distributed for free in cafes, bookstores, bars, and beauty shops:

The stickers are custom vinyl and can be easily removed without damaging property. It’s a fun, low-barrier tool for citizens to provide civic input on-site, and the responses reflect the hopes, dreams, and colorful imaginations of different neighborhoods.

Chang says she likes to make cities more comfortable for people, which I think is a pretty great goal. And the results are exactly what you’d expect: thoughtful, inspiring, funny.

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This kind of reminds me of what happened on Broad Avenue a few weeks ago, but I think the folks on Broad took it a little further and actually created those things, albeit temporarily. Either way, very cool.

To learn more — Chang has apparently had a lot of interest from people in other cities — visit www.iwishthiswas.com

Incidentally, I won’t be blogging or writing for the Flyer for much longer, but I do plan to keep blogging. It might not be exactly the same form and it won’t be in the same place — it will be here, instead — but with the same name and subject matter.

Feel free to stop by.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Closing Thoughts

This is roughly my 300th In the Bluff column. It’s also my last.

Later on this month, I’ll be leaving the Flyer to take a position with the city as its brand management and civic engagement specialist.

One of Memphis’ most pressing challenges in terms of taxes and the economy is its brain drain. But more recently, the city seems to be experiencing an amazing transformation.

Crime is down 27 percent in the last four years.

With the Shelby Farms Greenline opening in October and the Wolf River Greenway opening December 1st, residents are exercising together in droves (creating both stronger community bonds and muscles).

And those aren’t exceptions. The mayor has pledged his support for 55 miles of bike lanes in the next two years, and the Greater Memphis Greenline is working on opening a pedestrian bridge over the Mississippi River. The city’s first dog park opened last June, and the city’s first skatepark is slated to open in Tobey Park by next September.

MATA has hired a consultant to look at rerouting the bus system, and board president Fred Johnson says their focus is on two things: “providing better, more efficient service and increasing ridership.”

Things are changing in Memphis. The perception of the city needs to change to reflect the new reality. Hopefully, that will help grow the population.

And while I’m excited about the work I’m going to be doing with the city. I’m also going to miss the Flyer. I’ve been here a decade, pretty much ever since I came to work as an intern. I was in college near Chicago, and, as part of Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism, each student is sent on a quarter-long internship. To keep it as real-life as possible, students apply and interview for openings, and two weeks before they’re expected to start work, they learn where they’ll be going.

In Chicago, I liked the weekly Chicago Reader and Newcity. Seeing a newsweekly — the Memphis Flyer — among my choices, I decided to rank it first and ended up coming to Memphis.

I didn’t know much about the city at the time, apart from Graceland and grittiness. I didn’t know anyone in Tennessee, much less in Memphis. But the city sounded cool and interesting, and I have to say it’s never disappointed on either of those fronts.

My first story in the Flyer was about Joe’s Wine and Liquor renovating the Sputnik star. My last, other than this column, was about the renaissance on Broad Avenue.

In between, I’ve written about the Memphis City Schools system hiring art teachers for each of its elementary schools, the Bill and Melinda Gates money and the initiatives it’s being used to fund, and the blight in Memphis and what local residents and officials are doing to combat it. I’ve written about changes to Memphis’ demographics, changes at The Commercial Appeal, and changes in Uptown. I’ve covered controversies over the Memphis Zoo and Overton Park, the leadership at the public library, Libertyland, and what used to be called the Memphis Sexual Assault Resource Center. I’ve written about annexation and consolidation.

Along the way, I’ve been fortunate enough to meet some really incredible people, those who embody every bit of Memphis’ entrepreneurial, unique, creative, fun, and just plain DIY spirit.

But some of my favorite people have been the ones I’ve seen every week for the last 10 years at Contemporary Media, the parent company of the Flyer. And, if y’all will indulge me, I’d like to thank some of them:

• Copy editors Pam Denney and Leonard Gill for catching most, if not all, of my typographical errors. I always count on Pam to tell us when we’ve crossed the line and Leonard to be a down-to-earth, calming presence (even when they are spilling red ink all over the place);

• Senior editors Jackson Baker and John Branston for setting an example of what it means to be both a reporter and a columnist. The JBs, as we call them around here, are dedicated, talented journalists, and I’ve learned a lot from both of them;

• Senior editor Michael Finger for his ability to make me laugh — out loud — at any given moment;

• Managing editor Susan Ellis for her fabulously dry wit and quiet determination. She makes putting out quality work week after week seem effortless;

• Events editor and staff writer Bianca Phillips for reminding me to turn my calendar over at the beginning of each month, for listening to my various ramblings over the cubicle wall, and for always bringing yummy vegan treats to the office;

• Staff writer Chris Davis for telling — and acting out — the absolute best stories in the world;

• Music and film editor Chris Herrington for teaching me about music and basketball (I don’t think he realizes just how much I learned from eavesdropping on the conversations and interviews going on in the next cubicle);

• Food writer Hannah Sayle for actually wanting to listen to my advice;

• A bevy of interns for being energetic and eager: Shea O’Rourke, Zac Hill, crazy Ben Popper, crazy Michael Flanagan, and our latest: style and savings guru Halley Johnson;

• And Bruce VanWyngarden for being an amazingly cool boss. (I’d think that even if he didn’t have a rock star for a son.) He’s always encouraged me to pursue whatever wild idea I had that day and given me the freedom to write whatever I wanted.

Actually, everyone here is like family. I love you guys.

Categories
Style Sessions We Recommend

Memphis Tiger Tees

Before saving and style guru Halley Johnson takes over this space, I thought I’d share the latest from my friends over at Memphis Incorporated.

You may remember their heavy metal inspired Memphis tee … Check this out.

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To order, check out their website. Also, added bonus: They have girl sizes!

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News

Robust Retail?

Last weekend saw one of my favorite holidays … Black Friday, of course.

And what a Black Friday it was. (Watch for Cyber Monday figures tomorrow.)

For the last few weeks or so, I’ve helped a few friends update their wardrobes and it’s meant that I’ve been shopping pretty much every weekend. And I cannot believe how many people have been out and about.

True, I’ve hit a bunch of sales, but this has been incredible. Lines six people deep. Cashiers at every register. It certainly looks like something is going right with the economy.

ShopperTrak says early November sales might have stolen some sales from Friday — and really, can you blame people for shopping early when we start seeing the candy canes come out before the Halloween candy? — but even so, there was a slight increase in the number of shoppers out from last year.

Guess we’ll see what happens the rest of the holiday season …

Categories
Cover Feature News

A Broad Look

Metalsmith Jerry Couillard calls the old days on Broad Avenue “a little adventure.”

“I couldn’t go outside much, I’ll tell you that,” Couillard says. “It was frightening, but that’s why I came here, because it was a low-rent district.”

The gregarious metalsmith moved his metal shop to Broad Avenue 16 years ago. He looks the way you might expect a blacksmith to look — stout with a thick, coarse beard — and he lives in the top half of his building. The forge where he and his staff create metal furniture and specialty projects occupies the first floor.

Initially, he rented the building, but when it went up for tax auction, “I didn’t want to move my junk,” he says, “so I basically bought it for back taxes.

“I had a studio and a house before and, with the double taxes, the double utilities, not to mention the commute. Now I walk down the stairs in the morning with my cup of coffee — this was really attractive to me.”

At the time, the street had its share of prostitution and drugs. Couillard shared a wall with a hard-partying motorcycle club, prompting him to move his bedroom to the other side of his building.

But in recent years, the once rough-and-tumble area — some have compared the street’s earlier days to the Wild West — has seen an influx of businesses, especially those associated with the arts. A few years ago, the neighborhood business association began hosting quarterly “art walks,” and most recently, the Three Angels Diner, operated by Bari restaurant’s Jason and Rebecca Severs, opened to raves. The general feeling is that Broad Avenue is a neighborhood on the cusp.

These days, Couillard operates his front office as a gallery during art walks.

“Now we have people walking the streets at night out here, and they are good citizens rather than people selling things,” he says. “We’ve come a long way.”

With the business association’s most recent event last weekend — the “New Face for an Old Broad” — it seems the area has turned another corner.

Partnering with Livable Memphis, the Historic Broad Business Association showed residents what Broad — and other neglected urban areas of Memphis — could look like, even without millions in public investment.

Volunteers restriped the street, adding crosswalks and protected bike lanes to make it more pedestrian- and cyclist-friendly. Vacant buildings, quickly cleaned and repainted, were filled with pop-up shops and restaurants.

Event organizers estimate that roughly 13,000 people came to the street over the course of the weekend, and the result was a festival-like atmosphere that left many amazed at both the transformation and the possibilities ahead.

In the early 1900s, Broad Avenue was a main street of sorts for the surrounding neighborhood, offering a barbershop, a bank, and a dry-goods store.

Oddly enough, the street’s latest renaissance may have started with the recession. For many of the businesses and organizations that have located on Broad in recent years, the neighborhood just made economic sense.

The UrbanArt Commission used to have an airy, first-floor office at the corner of Third and Madison downtown. Executive director John Weeden says it had a lot of traffic and trolley noise. PowerPoint presentations and the like were difficult because of daylight coming in from the windows.

“Another issue was panhandlers would knock on our windows and harangue our visitors,” he says. “It was not a conducive setting to do business.”

Shortly after Weeden was hired at UrbanArt, the group’s lease was set to expire and they began looking at office space around the city. When they viewed an empty space on Broad — really just a gutted shell of a place, at the time — they saw potential.

“It also helped that the rent was significantly less,” Weeden says. “We got at least two-and-a-half times the space we had downtown, and the rent was $1,500 less a month.”

Some of the organization’s board members still had reservations, however, because of the area’s rough reputation. Since then, they’ve seen the risk pay off.

“When we moved here, everyone was looking at us like, ‘Whoa, what are you doing?'” Weeden says. “We wanted to be a pioneer and an anchor in what we believe will turn into a vibrant art community.”

Currently, there are at least a dozen art-related businesses in a quarter-mile stretch. Some have been there for years. Others, such as the T Clifton Gallery, are more recent additions. Pat Brown, business manager for the gallery, says she and Tom Clifton knew 2009 was going to be a difficult year for the business. Like UrbanArt, they were looking for a less expensive space and settled on the emerging arts district.

“It’s been our best year in 26 years,” she says. “People enjoy coming to this part of town. The area has an incredible vibe.”

David Wayne Brown, president of the Historic Broad Business Association, opened Splash Creative in the neighborhood in February 2008.

“I had been looking all over the city for the right place to be,” Brown says. He settled on a building that was once a small brewery and later a tavern.

“I thought this was exactly the kind of environment I wanted to be in: lots of cool people, lots of artists and artisans,” he says. “It’s also about 12 minutes from any place in the city. That was a plus.”

As the president and the vice president of the Historic Broad Business Association, David Wayne Brown and Pat Brown (no relation) were key to last week’s New Face for an Old Broad.

A week before the two-day event, Pat Brown stood in front of what she called her ultimate wedding-seating chart. On a large diagram of the street, she had placed different colored sticky notes — each denoting a different business or pop-up shop — on each storefront.

“It all started as a way to showcase what a community can do and what the Broad Avenue Arts District could look like in a few years,” she says. “We’re trying to give the street a facelift.”

With volunteers from the neighborhood, Livable Memphis, and Americorps, among others, facades and interiors were repainted. Trash and debris were moved out of empty storefronts. Old paint was scraped off of windows.

“The first thing I thought was: Wow, that sounds like a big undertaking. My second thought was: Why not?” says David Wayne Brown. “We need something that takes Broad Avenue past where we are. The art walks have been great, but we want to see people here every day.”

By the time of the event, wood paneling in the street’s so-called heaven and hell building (it has been home to both a church and a biker club in its previous incarnations) was painted a muted green and mauve. Inside, people were selling jewelry and children’s clothes.

In another previously empty space, the only thing recognizable from the week before were the words “Authorized Memphis Dealer” still adorning the wall. The rest — attractive fabric wall-coverings, paper lanterns giving the room a soft glow — looked like an upscale boutique.

People were everywhere: riding aerobic cruisers down the bike lanes (and navigating around others using the lanes to stop and chat), eating squash soup from Fratelli’s or drinking Bloody Marys from Three Angels, skateboarding in a makeshift skate park, taking yoga or kickboxing at the exercise center, listening to live music, and buying books, jewelry, candles, or vintage clothing. Three Angels actually sold out of all the food they had. “Yes, all of it,” they wrote on a sign outside the door.

It’s not the first time that Broad Avenue has served as an urban experiment. In early 2006, the Office of Planning and Development held a design meeting in what is now T Clifton Gallery to learn what area residents wanted to see in their neighborhood. Ultimately, however, Planning and Development was using the Broad Avenue corridor as its test case for the new Unified Development Code, passed recently by both the Shelby County Commission and the Memphis City Council.

“We wanted a specific laboratory that has every problem or opportunity in the city,” Louise Mercuro, then deputy director of Planning and Development, said at the time. “This neighborhood was perfect for us. … There’s the whole question of Sam Cooper Blvd. Not only does it create high-speed traffic, it cuts the neighborhood in half. Public policy made that decision, and it effectively made this area a ghost town.”

At least some of the things residents said they wanted to see at that design meeting — restaurants, a farmers market — have come to pass.

The Binghamton Development Corporation opened the Urban Farms market in an old gas station in April, and the area is now home to three eateries: Broadway Pizza, the Cove, and Three Angels Diner.

Part of the area’s success can be attributed to the business association’s art walks. The rest may be their willingness to try anything.

A New Face for an Old Broad, which created a quasi-reality similar to staging a house for sale or a director creating a film set, initially sprang out of the area’s location.

Representatives with Livable Memphis had heard of an event called “The Better Block Project,” in which a Dallas suburb took one block and transformed it into a complete street with outdoor seating, bikes lanes, and parking. At the same time, Livable Memphis was working on identifying a connector between the Shelby Farms Greenline and Overton Park. Broad fit the bill for both.

“It seemed to me that this area would be the perfect application for this type of event,” says Sarah Newstok, program coordinator at Livable Memphis. “It’s a runway-sized straightaway without a lot visually to slow you down. The road infrastructure does not meet the needs of the community as it once did.”

One thing about Broad Avenue: Its name is fitting. The street — 60 feet of asphalt with two wide lanes for vehicular traffic and diagonal parking on one side and parallel parking on the other — was restriped with protected bike lanes, narrowing the width of each vehicular lane.

“We wanted to fuse a couple of different visions with this project,” Newstok says. “Bringing in the businesses and the infrastructure, we’re trying to show what a full-blown, healthy vibrant community would look like.”

The roughly $12,000 event generated a lot of press and a lot of excitement. Several vendors who tested the area last weekend are interested in leasing a permanent space. Even some of the more entrepreneurial-minded attendees are thinking of opening businesses on Broad.

“There are a lot of people in the community and this city who are hungry to see old neighborhoods come back. I think the day of moving to the suburbs and leaving the older parts of the city are behind us,” David Wayne Brown says.

He may be right. Already, other neighborhoods have asked how they might do something similar, and the event was billed as “an inaugural project of FaceLift Memphis.”

The Broad laboratory definitely has some lessons to impart to other communities.

“A couple of nearby schools came out and painted the crosswalks. That’s technically not the way it’s supposed to be done, but it looks great; it’s eye-catching; people are slowing down to look at it,” Newstok says. “It functions much better than the existing model.”

Another lesson may be that something like this is possible.

“The power is in the hands of the people,” Newstok says. “This has been a total grassroots planning project in a way we haven’t seen before in Memphis. … This is what can happen when a community gets together and shares a vision of what it can look like.”

Local anchor, Broadway Pizza, has been part of Broad Avenue for 34 years.

Like other businesses that located on the street, Dewana Ishee’s mother got a good deal on the building. The former site of La Rosa Tamales, it had been empty for about 10 years when Ishee’s mother opened the pizza parlor.

“In the early ’80s, Broad was a booming street,” Ishee says. “We were packed every day, and it stayed that way for a long time.”

Ishee began working in the restaurant when she was 7 and, four years ago, when her mother passed away, she took over. She says business slacked off a bit in the ’90s when a few nearby businesses closed, but it was in early 2001 that things took a real turn.

“When they started doing Sam Cooper, it closed Broad off to everything,” Ishee says. “We were out of sight, out of mind. We were lucky — almost every business on Broad went out of business but us, because we have a loyal customer base.”

Her husband, Denny Ishee, says they would have gone under had the building not been paid for. They even thought about moving east, but rent on space near Poplar and Perkins was about $15,000 a month.

Today, however, things are better on Broad.

“In the last year and a half — since they started the art walks with all the galleries — we’ve seen a big fluctuation,” Dewana Ishee says. “They estimated there were 1,500 people at the last one. We saw a lot of new faces.”

As for the Historic Broad Business Association, they plan to finalize the Broad Avenue Master Plan and get it approved by the City Council. The temporary bike lanes connecting the Greenline to Overton Park also will be made permanent, hopefully by this time next year.

“We want to be a best-practice,” Pat Brown says. “We want to give the city’s engineering department a real-life example to influence policy development. … There’s not a better location that can help unite the city.”

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News

City Bound

Well, I’ve got news.

After 10 years, I’m leaving the Flyer to go work for the City of Memphis as a specialist in brand management and civic engagement.

People — undoubtedly broken-hearted at the thought of never reading another well-reported story by me — have asked me why.

The reasons are many. Some personal. Some professional. One is simply that I’ve been a fan of Mayor Wharton since he was elected in Shelby County, and I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to work for him.

Another is that I believe in Memphis.

This is a place where if you have an idea or want to do something, no one is going to stop you from pursuing it. Look at Aaron Shafer. He came from California and wanted to get a skatepark built here. Sure, it took him five years, but the city is building a skatepark in Tobey Fields.

People have also asked how a journalism background is going to help me do my new job.

I’ve spent the last 10 years reporting on the city of Memphis. Through my work here, on this blog, and my companion column, I’ve looked at what makes cities successful, what doesn’t, what we’re doing in the city of Memphis to move forward, and what other cities are doing to meet challenges similar to those of Memphis.

I understand the realities of Memphis — its challenges and its opportunities. I’m hoping to use the skill sets I honed here to find bright spots that are happening in city government and the community, to communicate with the general public — both locally and nationally — about the amazing things going on in the city of Memphis, and, frankly, I hope to contribute to policy development that will make Memphis even better.

Crime is down 27 percent since 2006. People are exercising together in droves on the Shelby Farms Greenline, creating healthier habits and healthier communities. Citizens are looking to innovative strategies to make their neighborhoods more livable.

We’re in an amazing place right now, and I can’t wait to see what’s next.

(I’ll still be posting here for the next several days … so feel free to check back. And thank you all for your continued support. It means the world to me.)

Categories
News

MATA Picks Consultant

MATA board members approved San Francisco’s Nelson\Nygaard Consulting for a $350,000 short-range transit plan yesterday.

The five-year plan is expected to address visioning, routes, scheduling, capital assets, and finances.

“Both supported a simple, more direct routing system,” said board member John Vergos. “One thing they were both definite on is that if buses come every 20 or 30 minutes, you will see increased ridership on those routes. … It gets back to directness, simplicity, and clarity.”

“I’m hoping that when we have the new routes, they’ll be much easier to understand.”

Staff and board members interviewed the two finalists, Nelson\Nygaard and Perteet, Inc. earlier this month. The format included a 30-minute presentation and an hour-long Q&A.

The board also talked about needing an answer line that is easy to understand.

Last week, the Flyer ran a letter to the editor that said it took 36 prompts to find out what time the Poplar bus would arrive at the downtown terminal under MATA’s new call system:

“With the old system, you could get the same information by responding to six prompts. With the old line, the time actually spent on the phone to get the information was a third of what is required with the new system,” John Manasco wrote.

“We’re working as hard and as fast as we can to correct the problem,” MATA head William Hudson told the board when questioned. “We’re trying to correct it.”

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News

Broad Change

Random mohawked cat. B/c thats the kind of thing that makes my intern happy.

  • Random mohawked cat. B/c that’s the kind of thing that makes my intern happy.

Today marks the beginning of the New Face for an Old Broad event on — where else? — historic Broad Avenue.

The street will be striped with protected bike lanes and pedestrian crosswalks, the vacant storefronts filled with businesses and eateries, and an empty parking lot turned into a skatepark.

“We’re trying to give the street a facelift,” says Pat Brown, co-owner of Broad’s T. Clifton Art Gallery.

I’m looking forward to my friend Melissa Anderson Sweazy’s Happiness store and pop-up shops by Blues City Thrift and Strange Fruit Vintage, but with all the people and organizations involved, I think there’s going to be lots of great things to see and do.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Quick Draw

Ever since last summer, artist Elizabeth Alley has been “spreading the good word of sketching.”

“People can do it regardless of their level of ability,” she says. “If you’re interested in drawing but haven’t gone to school for it, you can just pick up paper and a pen or a pencil.”

Alley, a painter who did the Memphis in May poster in 2007 and a former project manager for the UrbanArt Commission, founded Memphis Urban Sketchers in September. The group is affiliated with the larger Urban Sketchers organization, a network of artists from around the world who “draw on location, indoors and out,” “share our drawings online,” and “show the world, one drawing at a time.”

Started by a staff artist and blogger at The Seattle Times, the Urban Sketchers have about 100 correspondents who post sketches on a blog, which Alley has been following for the last few years.

And this summer, when the group held its first international Urban Sketching Symposium in Portland, about 60 people registered. Alley was one of them.

“It was really inspiring,” she says. “When I got there, I thought about how I almost didn’t go. I would have kicked myself if I had missed it.”

At the symposium, the sketchers met in groups of 10 to 15 people twice a day and, with an instructor, focused on topics such as nature, people, color, architecture, composition, and line.

At home, Alley would often sketch while she was waiting for things, but the symposium changed the way she thought about the practice.

“Sketch groups are a way to set a certain time to go and sketch just for the sake of sketching,” Alley says. “I wanted to have that same experience here.”

After telling a few friends and posting the idea on Facebook, Alley and several others met at the downtown Memphis Farmers Market in September. Since then, they’ve met at Elmwood Cemetery and the National Ornamental Metal Museum, locations with a variety of things to sketch, whether it be people, buildings, or nature.

“Right now, we’re just doing a couple of hours,” Alley says about the most recent outing to Elmwood. “I think we all wanted to stay a little longer, but we weren’t prepared to.”

Though the group welcomes all skill levels, even the occasional child, there’s no doubt it’s a practice that can help working artists.

“Anytime you draw from direct observation, it improves your artwork,” Alley says. “It gives you an understanding of what things really look like, what colors exist in nature, how shadows work.”

Sketching together in a group can help even more.

During the group’s sessions, a comfortable silence develops, punctuated only by occasional conversations.

“You’re doing something with other people, but you’re only focusing on your work,” Alley says. “It’s a solitary endeavor with a group.”

Chandler Pritchett teaches art classes at the University of Memphis; for her, drawing is a professional requirement.

So far, she’s been to all the meetings of Memphis Urban Sketchers and says she likes the energy the group has.

“It’s fun because you get to show your work as you’re doing it. I have to work a little bit faster than I usually do,” she says. “It’s exciting.”

“It gives artists an opportunity to get together and work. … We can talk without being competitive,” Pritchett adds.

Though the Memphis sketch group is informal, Alley makes sure all the artists come together at some point to look at each other’s work.

“It gives us an opportunity to get to know each other and to see what materials people are using and how they’re achieving certain effects,” she says.

The group also provides a vivid example of how people see the world from various perspectives.

In Portland, there was one bridge that most of the symposium’s attendees ending up sketching at some point.

“Sometimes you end up doing the same thing, but it always looks different,” Alley says. “It’s in the different way people approach the same subject.”

The Memphis Urban Sketchers meet the first Saturday of each month. Their next meeting will be Saturday, December 4th, at 10 a.m. at Bluff City Coffee on Main Street.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Build a Better Broad

Some people “stage” houses. On Broad Avenue, they’re staging the whole street.

For “A New Face for an Old Broad,” the street will be striped with protected bike lanes and pedestrian crosswalks, the vacant storefronts filled with businesses and eateries, and an empty parking lot turned into a skatepark.

“We’re trying to give the street a facelift,” says Pat Brown, co-owner of Broad’s T Clifton Art Gallery.

Beginning in the 1900s, Broad Avenue was a main street for the area, with a barbershop, a bank, and a dry-goods store. In more recent times, however, the street has been home to empty storefronts and biker gangs before transitioning to today’s burgeoning arts district.

In an effort to entice entrepreneurs to Broad and show just how, ahem, broad the possibilities are, they’re filling up those empty spaces with all sorts of enterprises.

The Peddler, Outdoors, Inc., and the Brooks and Pink Palace museums, among others, will be doing pop-up shops. There also will be exercise classes, a kids’ bike parade, a climbing wall, and 20 musical performances. Food vendors will include Fratelli’s, Three Angels Diner, Broadway Pizza, Caritas Village, the Crepe Maker, Republic Coffee, and DejaVu.

“It all started as a way to showcase what the Broad Avenue Arts District can look like a few years down the road,” Brown says. “It’s a snapshot of the future.”

“A New Face for an Old Broad,” Friday, November 19th, from 3 to 10 p.m. and Saturday, November 20th, from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Broad Avenue between Hollywood and Collins.