Jack Johnson Coming to Walnut Creek
On August 12 Jack Johnson will make his return to Raleigh. This time he’s at Walnut Creek with Rogue Wave and Neil Halstead opening.
Where’s Walter?
The 11-foot Sir Walter Raleigh statue that stood on Fayetteville Street Mall since 1988 is now standing at the northeast corner of the Progress Energy Center for the Performing Arts. It was removed in April 2005 and spent time in Ohio being refurbished before being unveiled at last year’s Raleigh Wide Open celebration. The City’s website gives some background about the statue:
In 1901, school children contributed pennies, nickels and dimes to see a memorial to this man who was responsible for the first English colony in America and for whom their state capital was named. The children from throughout the state gave generously to the Sir Walter Raleigh Commission and the sum grew substantial but was not put to its purpose. A goodly portion of the contributions were lost in a Depression bank failure. Only $10,228 of the Tarheel children’s donations remained.
Sporadic and half-hearted attempts to bring the statue into being surfaced and succumbed over the coming decades, until in 1975 a statue was commissioned to be executed by noted sculptor Bruno Lucchesi of New York. Corporate sponsors from throughout the state contributed to getting the statue created and dedicated during the nation’s bicentennial; the year ahead.
Seventy-five years into the idea stage, Mr. Lucchesi moved the idea of the statue into metallic reality. It was to be a heroically scaled bronze sculpture. The Italian-born artist prevailed upon the Sir Walter Raleigh Commission members to allow his vision of the sixteenth-century genius to be realized. While many of the commission members wanted Sir Walter represented in the “ruff” — the customary curly collar of his time, the artist prevailed with Sir Walter striking a haughty pose in open collar.
ECU 2008 Football Schedule for Your PDA
ECU fans who like electronic calendars rejoice! I’ve uploaded the 2007-2008 ECU football schedule in the .CSV format.
Outlook/Palm Users:
- Create a new folder in your in Outlook calendar (Fball08, for example). Use the File | Import and Export… to import from “another program or file”, then “Comma Separated File (Windows)”. This will set up the Pirate schedule in your new sub-calendar where you can make whatever changes you want.
- When you are happy with the way the subcalendar looks, change the calendar view to “Events” (instead of 7-day or 31-Day or whatever view you’re using). “Select All” from the list, and drag them over to your main “Calendar” (The Treo and other Palm Handhelds only sync to the main calendar – time for Palm to get with the program on that one!). If you want to keep your sub calendar intact, use Ctrl-drag instead of plain drag. That will create a copy of each event to the main Calendar and keep the Fball08 calendar in place. Sync your handheld to copy the events to the handheld.
iCal Users:
- Use iCalTextImport to import the .CSV version of the schedule.
(right click on the link above and “Save As…”)
Note: Use at your own risk. I do not accept responsibility for any consequences resulting from errors in the schedule.
Short Changed?
Over the past few years Raleigh residents have enjoyed the excitement of a new building rendering on several occasions. The dreams and hopes of our next generation of buildings is typically energizing and builds expectations of a better tomorrow. As Raleigh’s tallest building takes form, we can now look back at a couple of artist renderings and see how close they were.
For best results, open each photo in a new tab, then switch back and forth to compare.
The popular skyline rendering can be compared to the picture on the right, taken on February 29, 2008. The nearly topped-off RBC Plaza stands in the center while the convention center and Marriott have completed their massing. It appears that the RBC Plaza’s rendering was the most accurate. While the building is actually farther to the right and is wider than portrayed, the size is fairly close. The building’s 22nd floor (marked by the yellow horizontal band) steps back at almost the same point relative to Two Hannover Square, but the residential floors will not be quite as tall as the rendering shows (the buidling’s highest inhabitable floor has been poured). I added a black triangle to the photo to show where the spire will top out (based on proportional measurements of lower floors compared to the cutaway diagram). Because the spire itself reaches the same height but the residential section is indeed shorter, the spire will proportionally be slightly larger than shown in the rendering. The error is minor, however. The rendering’s portrayal of the building’s blue glass is somewhat overly saturated in color. On the other hand, the shadows in the glass are full of errors. Overall, though, the RBC Plaza rendering is an accurate portrayal of what is being built.
The second project, the convention center, is also well portrayed. The rendering’s structural details are impressive, especially the NW corner’s glass protrusion and the roof’s support features. The building did not end up being as tall as hoped, though. The resulting roofline is about 40 feet lower (as compared to the Sheraton’s windows) and is much flatter than portrayed. Overall this is a good rendering, though.
…And then there is the Marriott. When the rendering was published, it was met with a chorus of boos. The insipid design in a prominent location was criticized as a missed opportunity. Critics at least were optimistic about the building’s massing and future contribution to the skyline’s density. In reality the building is an enormous disappointment and shows the rendering’s wild inaccuracies. The Marriott is vastly shorter and farther to the right than anticipated. Its windows are proportionally much smaller, making the building more similar to the high-rise jail than a second rate hotel design. Finally, is it me or does the photo show the hotel leaning to the left, somewhat, compared to One Hannover Square (Bank of America)? While the actual placement of the Marriott’s tower is much farther east than anticipated, the Progress One building is still visible and gives the appearance of more density. Perhaps we are lucky that more buildings appear in the “money shot”. Overall, though, the Marriott rendering turned out to be a poor one.
Another anticipated area this decade has been North Hills. Shown here is the Alexan rendering and a photo taken on February 20, 2008. Like the convention center, is it impressive how many details were included from the streetlight design and Storehouse awnings, to the black oval Alexan sign straight ahead. The artist did not anticipate the site’s terrain, though. In actuality The Alexan sits much farther back from and higher than Lassiter Mill Road. The error is most evident in the stairway that had to be built in front of the Alexan’s first storefront. The rendering shows a quite walkable, seamless site whereas reality offers pedestrians a busy street plus a flight of stairs to continue their experience. This is not a bad rendering, but the terrain issues prevent this from being a great one.
One of Raleigh’s most anticipated projects was the Entertainment and Sports Arena (RBC Center). The 1990s rendering and final product turned out to be extremely similar. There are several fairly minor differences, though. The rendering shows the building’s ovoid shape continuing, unbroken, at the main entrance. Some design changes by The Carolina Hurricanes included a bumped out entrance which allowed space for a ticketing lobby, retail store, club restaurant, Hurricanes offices, and the VIP entrance. The roof ring level is also bumped out, and houses the CanesVision video production studios. Another difference is the green glass and the absence of red in the actual structure. This is the exterior’s big failure . The original plan called for a rose-based smoked glass. Unfortunately the wrong color, green, was ordered and the result is ugly. Finally, high resolution versions of this renderings show multicolored uplighting on the roof’s ring. In actuality this aluminum crown is uplit with disappointing white light. Festive colored lighting (as shown in the rendering) would improve the building’s nighttime appearance. Overall, though, the artist did an excellent job with proportion, scale, and terrain and produced and excellent rendering.
Less Than Jake Coming to Lincoln Theatre
Ska/punk fans rejoice! Less Than Jake is coming to the Lincoln Theatre on May 1. Anyone know the story behind the song "Johnny Quest Thinks We’re Sellouts"?
BAD P.R. Move
Newraleigh.com posted a nice editorial today about the horrible new poster campaign in downtown Raleigh. Posters with this graphic are displayed to remind people to secure their belongings. The message sent, however, is completely counterproductive to everything the City and the Downtown Alliance are trying to accomplish. See the NR editorial for more .
Annie Get Your Gun Opens
North Carolina Theatre welcomes Larry Gatlin and Raleigh native Lauren Kennedy for their production of Annie Get Your Gun. If you haven’t seen Lauren Kennedy live, you really are missing out. That’s all there really is to it. She’s so good, that even the N&O gives glowing praise .
Carolina Chocolate Drops Coming To NCMA
The North Carolina Museum of Art will welcome the Carolina Chocolate Drops ( music link ) to the outdoor amphitheater on August 1. The piedmont-borne Drops have been touring heavily and will surely be glad to be back home in the Summer.
Raleigh Rocks Half Marathon Coming In April
The first ever Bank of America Raleigh Rocks Half Marathon is coming April 5 to downtown Raleigh. Bands will be playing at various points along the course, and Seven Mary Three will play on Fayetteville Street following the race. After the race there will also be a kid’s festival with inflatables and vendors.
In addition to the half marathon, there is a 5K, 1mile run run, and a 100 yard kid’s dash. The half marathon route (.pdf) begins in the Peace area, stretches out to Meredith College, and returns to Fayetteville Street. Registration is now open. Interested runners can register online .
Bloom Coming To Raleigh
Bloom , Food Lion’s techie grocery concept, is coming to Raleigh, according to an article by Sue Stock this morning. The store offers personal handheld barcode scanners that let you scan as you shop with no checkout line. They also are aiming at a totally different feel and experience in their stores. The store will be located in a new strip center at Ray and Strickland Roads ( map it ).
It is surprising that Food Lion took so long to migrate their concept store to our little nerdistan. I am excited about having another shopping option, however the complaint I hear about the store is that it is supplied by the same regional distribution hubs as Food Lion uses for their main stores, so the store’s inventory is not different than a good Food Lion store’s.
RDU Not So ‘Miserable’
A new report by U.S. News & World Report is out ranking America’s airports. RDU ranks 10th out of 47. The survey accounted for flight delays and crowded planes. On average 77.8% of flights were on time and the airport was at a 75.3% full load. See the other airports’ statistics here .
Two Raleigh Bridges Among NC’s Worst
AAA’s latest list of the top 20 worst bridges in North Carolina is out and it contains two bridges in Raleigh. One is the Pullen Road bridge which was built in 1952 ( map it ). Carrying 33,000 cars a day, the bridge ranks 14th on the list, and it not slated for any service.
The state’s 4th worst bridge is the I-440 bridge over Hillsborough Street and the railroad ( map it ). At 47 years old, the bridge carries 84,000 cars per day. Interestingly its status is "Located on widening project in 2009".
I have not heard of specific I-440 widening plans for the western portion of the 440 "loop". The Western Blvd interchange needs to be improved. Unfortunately the state will probably take the easy way out by putting a diamond interchange with dual (artery-clogging) traffic signals on Western Blvd. Stay tuned on this project.
Schoolkids Records To Close in Chapel Hill
Schoolkids Records, Chapel Hill location, will be closing it’s doors in March, 2008. It may be coincidence or not….but after 33 1/3 years, this long playing music retail institution will be closed. All Triangle retail business will be handled in the Raleigh location, which is located at 2712-100 Hillsborough St., while it still maintains a retail presence in Athens, Ga.
The business climate for music retail has changed so drastically since our beginnings, but so has the concept of locally owned businesses. We are faced with many more obstacles, that even 6 years ago were virtually not present. For all those in the Triangle area, who have supported all the Schoolkids Records location throughout the years and especially those in the Chapel Hill area, we would like to extend our many thanks and kudos for helping to keep this institution alive for so many years.
We would especially like to thank the University of North Carolina, the Cat’s Cradle, Local 506, WXYC, WXDU and The Merch, for their continuing support of our Chapel Hill location through the years. Now as we begin to flip the LP to side 2 of our existence, our goals have not changed nor has our commitment. We just hope that music retail will always be a part of your shopping experience, now and in the future.
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