Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Patty Jewett Neighborhood Association' Tag

SLOW DOWN AND CATCH ‘ART ON THE RUN’

July 8th, 2012, 11:30 am by

The Patty Jewett Neighborhood Association created the Art on the Run series of Tuesday evening concerts along the Shooks Run Trail as a way to surprise passers-by and enhance the quality of life in the neighborhood northeast of downtown Colorado Springs. Photo by R. Scott Rappold, The Gazette

Whew! I was afraid I’d been too slow to catch “Art on the Run.”

But as it turns out, there will be two more chances to see the unique celebration of art and open space.

If you haven’t read about it, this summer the Patty Jewett Neighborhood Association has surprised folks riding and walking the Shooks Run Trail with music on Tuesday evenings.

They called it “Art on the Run” because the concerts were staged along the trail, which traces the path of the Santa Fe Railway tracks that sliced a diagonal path through the neighborhood northeast of downtown Colorado Springs.

The tracks evolved into the trail, now a beloved feature of the neighborhood.

Public art is also loved by the neighborhood association, which it has expressed by creating a locomotive-themed bench in a pocket park along the trail.

The bench, built in partnership with Concrete Couch, the public art nonprofit created by  Steve Wood of Manitou Springs, was designed to alert passers-by they were in a unique neighborhood.

The Art on the Run program is an extension of that thinking, said Amy Triandiflou, PJNA president.

“Patty Jewett really is a neat community,” Triandiflou said. “The Art on the Run event really gives us a voice for what we care about: community, art, music and the trail.”

She said the association board came up with the idea after learning the Pikes Peak Community Foundation was offering “ingenuity grants” to encourage people to use art to enhance the quality of life in the region.

“One of the ideas was to create spontaneous performance art along Shooks Run Trail,” she said.

A goal of the Patty Jewett Neighborhood Association's Art on the Run project was to surprise folks walking and riding the Shooks Run Trail. Photo by R. Scott Rappold, The Gazette

So the neighborhood partnered with the Colorado Springs Conservatory to locate artists, musicians and performers. In exchange, Patty Jewett is donating its $750 grant to the conservatory for scholarships. A neighborhood business, Dogtooth Coffee, donated bottled water.

The first concert, on June 12, featured a bluegrass band and the second, a week later, a jazz trio. They performed along the trail between Columbia and San Miguel streets, east of Corona Street.

“We had 150 people the first night,” Triandiflou said. “And about 90 came the second night.

“It was so great to see people excited about it.”

I was bummed because the series was scheduled to end July 3 before I could attend.

But due to the Waldo Canyon fire and some bad weather, the last two events were postponed.

Triandiflou said her board will decide this week when to reschedule those performances before the neighborhood’s Aug. 11 annual party.

Watch the Patty Jewett Neighborhood’s Facebook page for the new dates.

“It was so great,” Triandiflou said. “I love it that neighbors and the community embraced it.”

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CLIMB ON BOARD THE PATTY JEWETT EXPRESS!

December 26th, 2010, 12:00 pm by

The Patty Jewett Neighborhood Association is one of those groups that looks for ways to build the morale and strengthen the unity among neighbors. 

PJNA board members care about the image of the neighborhood. They want to improve the neighborhood by building playgrounds and painting telephone poles, spreading wildflower seeds and installing public art. 

PJNA board chairwoman Amy Triandiflou said her group is proud of the neighborhood. She and the others want people passing through to get a strong sense of the values of Patty Jewett residents: “activity, art, greenspace and community.” 

They also value the neighborhood’s place in the history of Colorado Springs. Besides its proximity to the historic Patty Jewett Golf Course, the neighborhood was along the route of the old Santa Fe Railway as it sliced northwest to Denver from his 1917 depot on Pikes Peak Avenue. 

The tracks were abandoned in 1971 after the last passenger train rolled through and gradually were replaced by the Shooks Run Trail. Here’s a look at the trail in Patty Jewett neighborhood. 

 

After months of collaboration between the Patty Jewett Neighborhood Association, the Club of Arts and the Concrete Couch project from Manitou Springs, a locomotive bench was unveiled and installed along the Shooks Run Trail along Corona Street, just south of Columbia Street

To draw attention to the neighborhood among trail-users, the PJNA decided to dress up the area. 

The liked the idea of public art. And they wanted to draw attention to the history of the trail. 

So they collaborated with the neighborhood non-profit Club of Arts to come up with a concept. 

The club was created in 2005 by Bella Eisenstein to give folks with developmental disabilities a place to learn social skills and gain independence in an artistic environment. 

The Club of Art, 505 E. Columbia St., suite 103, serves about 200 students with developmental disabilities.

This "concrete couch" was built in 2009 by the Club of Arts to honor a client, whose picture is in the center, who had died.

The club occupies a storefront near the intersection of Corona and Columbia streets. A year earlier, the club had built a “concrete couch” to honor a client who had died. The Concrete Couch  is a public art, community-building project started by Steve Wood of Manitou Springs.  

The history of the Shooks Run Trail is etched on a sign near the new locomotive bench. On the other side is a map of the trails in the area.

Here’s a view of the small park along Corona Street, just south of Columbia.  

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