Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'U.S. Highway 24' Tag

SIGNS, SIGNS, EVERYWHERE SIGNS . . .

March 17th, 2010, 1:52 pm by

And now, more and more of those signs are using Light-Emitting Diodes or LEDs.

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LEDs are super-bright electronic lights.

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 Imagine thousands of the brilliant little suckers flashing messages on a 30-foot-tall billboard outside your bedroom window.

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That’s happening all around the Colorado Springs region: in Security; on Austin Bluffs Parkway near Barnes Road; along U.S. Highway 24 near Petersen Road; and on Powers Boulevard near Galley Road.

All five signs are owned by Lamar Outdoor Advertising, which spent upwards of $250,000 apiece for the boards.

Here’s a photo of a two-sided board on Austin Bluffs, towering over the Fabulous TNT’s strip club:

Neighbors are divided over the LED boards. Some hate the blinking every six seconds as the message changes. Others accept them, grudgingly, as a fact of life.

Here’s a look at one that stands along South Academy Boulevard, in near Bradley Road, in Security. Folks living in modest houses amid the trees behind the storage warehouses are not thrilled with the sign.

 Lamar  owns an estimated 150,000 billboards in 44 states, Canada and Puerto Rico. Of its inventory, about 250 are LEDs.

Advertisers love them because motorists can’t ignore them. They can be networked nationwide. The message can be changed instantly for a single-day promotion. All with just a computer keystroke.

But more cities are banning them because they pose a danger to motorists, who can’t ignore them. And folks living near them object to the bright, blinking signs.

Critics include Scenic Colorado and the Council of Neighbors & Associations.

Denver and Colorado Springs don’t allow them. But they were permitted in El Paso County last year after a staff review.

Here’s a link to the 68-page report prepared for the El Paso County Commission on billboards in the county.

Screen Magazine  describes LEDS as an efficient, effective and ultrabright alternative to incandescent light bulbs.

A light emitting diode (LED) is an electronic light source. The first LED was built in the 1920s by a radio technician who noticed that diodes used in radio receivers emitted light when current was passed through them.

 The LED was introduced as a practical electronic component in 1962 (See Wikipedia). LEDs are considered more energy efficient and require less maintenance than traditional lighting. They also boast a life of about 50,000 hours–more than five years!

If you’ve been to Freemont Street, seen below, in Las Vegas or Times Square in New York City, you’ve seen LEDs in all their glory.

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These new billboards are light-years away the original billboards in the 1830s which advertised: “The circus is coming to town,” according to a history written by the Outdoor Advertising Association of America Inc.

Electronic digital billboards go back about 10 years, again according to OAAA.

Of the 450,000 billboards nationwide, about 2,000 are LEDs but the inventory is growing by the hundreds every year.

The signs cost upwards of $250,000 or more, compared to $5,000 to $50,000 for a traditional billboard.

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RAINBOW FALLS: years of work rewarded; years of work remain

February 24th, 2010, 4:55 pm by

L’Aura Montgomery came to Colorado Springs in May 2005 for a week-long business trip.

She took a drive up Pikes Peak and on the way down, she pulled of U.S. Highway 24 to use her cell phone. Her exit happened to be along Fountain Creek near Rainbow Falls and it led her into Manitou Springs.

“I thought: ‘Omigosh, where am I?’ ” Montgomery recalled. “There was such an energy about Manitou. I couldn’t stop thinking about it.”

She was so enthralled that when she got back home to Lancaster, Pa., she sold or gave away everything that wouldn’t fit in her car and headed back to Manitou.

“I cut all my ties and drove out here,” she said. I left my two adult boys, my ex-husband, mom and dad, brother.

“I came here without knowing a soul here. But it called to me.”

It didn’t take long for L’Aura, 49, to immerse herself in the community. The jeweler and photographer made friends, was joined by her sons and eventually found love in Lane Williams. Here is a photo of L’Aura and Lane:

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An activist by nature, she was quick to take up the cause of Rainbow Falls, a postcard-beautiful waterfall. Here it is on a historic postcard .

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I love the hype used in describing the falls. Actually, I’m surprised they got away with the “largest falls in Colorado” line since it is only a fraction as high as Seven Falls, a few miles away.

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Still, it was a popular tourist destination a century ago.

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 But the falls had become a sad joke in recent years, known as “Graffiti Falls.” Here’s how it looked Wednesday. Snow covered much of the graffiti near the falls.

It’s trouble started in the 1930s when the state built a bridge across it, obscuring its view. In recent years, it has become the favorite canvas of juvenile delinquents with spray paint.

Then came the taggers.

They clearly like the location, in a remote canyon accessible only by foot along a historic wagon road to the gold fields of Cripple Creek and South Park. Here’s a look at the location from FlashEarth.com.

The taggers spare nothing in their quest for fresh canvas. Here is the sign erected at the canyon entrance to alert people to the historic nature of the road.

The short hike to the falls is more of the same:

Then you reach the bridge.

Not only is it ugly, but it is deteriorating. If it needs repair, maybe it ought to be removed altogether, daylighting the falls!

Not only did the state obscure scenic beauty, it created an environmental nightmare of gravel fill that continually slides into Fountain Creek below the falls.

 The hillside has pumped tons of silt and sediment into the creek over the years. Colorado Department of Transportation crews have made the situation worse trying to stabilize the hillside by dumping huge boulders down the hillside. Many rolled right into the creek, actually changing the course of the creek and causing even worse erosion to the tow of the hill.

In this photo, boulders are strewn down the hillside and in the creek.

For decades, the falls have been privately owned. Recently, the owners, Mansfield Development Co., which also owns the Cave of the Winds, agreed to give the property to El Paso County. Already, a preliminary rainbow falls master plan has been drafted addressing all the issues and goals for the property.

Once the change of ownership is official, a new round of public meeting will be held to update and formalize the master plan. Money will need to be raised and work will begin to clean up the area, build a trail, picnic areas and more.

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IT MAY BE JUST A HOLE IN THE GROUND, but it’s still home sweet home

January 10th, 2010, 12:05 pm by

Some folks grow up in mansions. Others in modest houses. And some grow up in little more than a hole in the ground.

That was the case for Marvin Baskett and his sister, Esther Redington.

Their childhood home was a concrete block basement house in the modest Knob Hill neighborhood, east of downtown Colorado Springs. Here they are in front of their old home: basement-house-marvin-laughing

 The house is barely taller than the 4-foot-high chain link fence surrounding the yard.

It sits at the southwest corner of Iowa Avenue and Yampa Street, just east of Queen Palmer Elementary School. Here is a map from FlashEarth showing the area: knob-hill-map2

 

 

It was built in 1947 by their father, Raymond Baskett, and home for years to the Baskett family: Raymond and his wife Beulah and their three children, Esther, Leatha and Marvin.

It looks like the house was swallowed by the ground. Protruding from the back of the roof is a covered doorway that leads down into the house. Here’s Marvin at the “front door” to his childhood home.

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Originally, there was no covered doorway, just an open stairwell down into the two-bedroom house. It had a living room and kitchen, running water and electricity.

But it was heated by a pot-bellied stove and they cooked on a wood-burning iron stove. The bathroom was an outhouse in the backyard. Ice was delivered every other day until 1951 when the family got a refrigerator and buried a natural gas line and installed a furnace.

Raymond was in construction and built several of the small bungaloes in the area of Iowa Avenue and Yampa Street. He planned to build an entire house above the basement. But he cut off a finger during construction. The resulting medical bills drained the family’s savings so the house was never finished, Marvin Baskett said.

It really wasn’t out-of-place in Knob Hill  a working-class neighborhood east of downtown Colorado Springs and the intersection of Platte Avenue and Union Boulevard.

 It’s one of those places the developed after World War II without much in the way of building codes. It was unincorporated El Paso County and home to folks of modest means.

Some oldtimers say Knob Hill‘s major artery, Platte Avenue (a.k.a. U.S. Highway 24) resembed the two ends of Nevada Avenue, where small motels and shops were built on the outskirts of the city. 

In recent years, residents and business owners formed the Platte Avenue Business & Neighborhood Association, which has worked to improve the area with new medians, sidewalks, curbs and gutters among other projects.

Here are a couple more photos of the Baskett family home.

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Here’s a look at a couple other nearby basement houses.

This one is on the northwest corner of Alexander Road and Cache La Poudre Street. For decades, it had a free-standing door at the back, visible on the left, leading down to the house. A few years ago, a house was built atop the basement.

basement-house-alexander

The building below is just down Iowa in Otis Park and has served as a community center.

basement-house-otis

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