Submitted by lmcshane on Sun, 06/13/2010 - 08:59.
Photo credit-see link
Today's Plain Dealer describes the Kensington Market in Toronto and includes an image of the shop show above.
I would like to see this happen with the two Victorian buildings that make up the Art House complex on Dennison Ave.
It would not take much effort and then the organization and other artists in Brooklyn Centre could capitalize on prime street frontage. I especially like the all-purpose awning structure on the yellow building, which allows for display of wares etc.
Until the buildings themselves can be updated and remodeled, the facades can become colorful advertising for the Brooklyn Centre neighborhood, which continues to attract great people here.
How about it? By the way, if you missed the Riverside Cemetery tour--you can always stop by the library and pick up the self-guided tour guide.
It was a beautiful day. See you next year!
Dennison
Interesting side note to today's Cemetery Tour--
Most folks know that Denison runs through Brooklyn Centre and that it's a very historic thoroughfare that originated as an Indian Trail.
Yesterday, I caught a fascinating WVIZ program on the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, which was completed (after almost twenty years of drama-filled construction--that ALMOST makes the Medical Mart seem like a cake walk;) during Governor Dennison's term 1860-1862.
http://www.ohiochannel.org/your_state/ohio_statehouse/education/capitol_timeline.cfm
Turns out--Denison Ave. was originally Dennison Ave. I wonder when the extra "n" was dropped? The street, no doubt, was named after Ohio Governor Dennison, but can any one confirm this for me?
1903 Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps show this grouping of buildings in the area near Riverside Cemetery:
Cleveland, Ohio; 1903 vol. 5; STREETS: Dennison Ave. [500-596]; Forestdale Ave. [107-198]; Grand Army Court; Lyle Court [2-20]; Pearl [1788-1898]; Willowdale [2-38]; SPECIALS: Krochle Building; Lutheran Church Willowdale Street; Sheer G. Novelty Iron-works; Star Baking Co.
Ohio history continued-Dennison!
Our friend, unofficial-offical Brooklyn Centre historian Sandy Rozhon pointed this out:
http://www.brooklyncentre.com/wiki/index.php5?title=Newburgh_St.
Post-1906 name:
Location:
Development:
Named for:
Miscellaneous History
The following appeared in a copy of Ohio Architect and Builder:
References
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I am going to stick my neck out here and propose that this entry should be amended to consider that the road/street/thoroughfare was originally named after the Ohio Governor. Will anyone back me up here ?:)
My favorite thing on Kensington is illegal
My favorite thing on Kensington is the revolutionary spirit - the radical libertarial intelligence - bring that to NEO:
Disrupt IT
Kensington and the artistic spirit in NEO
NEO Bureaucrats/Oligarchs can sure kill the artistic spirit of fighting crime with flowers and color.
Please, I hope some one can attend the Jacqueline Edelberg presentation today.
very cool
cool picture, Norm.
we had that sort radical libertarial intelligence in NEO
Frank Giglio
we killed it.
knocked it down and now we're billing him $16k to try to pound him deeper into the ground.
that will never live in NEO.
It is Giglioesque
It is Giglioesque... and I was just thinking they need something like this in Tremont...
Disrupt IT
tell them, dbra
land stealers, tramps and thieves
Extreemont Danger
Community Service
High school students from Rhodes who helped out at the Brooklyn Centre Cemetery Tour all related that the experience meant something special to them.
For future reference--CMSD students need 40 hours of community service during their senior year to graduate.
Have a special event? Make sure you contact a CMSD high school and you will be glad you did. Brooklyn Centre Garden tour benefitted from volunteer assistance of Rhodes High School students. Go Rhodes students!!!
We LOVE our teens in Brooklyn Centre!