Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Please register for Create A Place by March 30 to get discounted parking, resource guide CD

To be eligible for discounted parking ($8 instead of $14) at the Create A Place conference, please register by noon on Friday, March 30.  Those who register by that time will also receive the 2012 creative placemaking resource guide at the conference  (others will have to wait to receive their copy by email.)

The discounted parking will work at Rutgers Newark Parking Deck II (also called Washington Deck II.  It is at 166 Washington Street (across from the Golden Dome Gymnasium.)  If you have pre-paid for parking, you will receive a parking voucher at the conference.

We are doing this because we have until March 30 to submit requests to Rutgers' parking authority for discounted parking, and we have to make final catering arrangements around the same time.  Thank you for your consideration.

If you have any questions about registration, please contact Richard Rodriguez by email.

Click here for a flyer you can download and share.

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Thursday, March 22, 2012

New Jersey communities can exhibit their creative placemaking work at Create A Place -- free

Let's show 'em how we do creative placemaking in New Jersey.

Arts Build Communities is making up to six exhibit tables available for municipalities, counties or regions that want to exhibit their work on arts and community or economic development.  There is no cost to the exhibitor, but:

--The tables are available on a first requested, first served basis
--Each community can get only one table free
--The request must come from a community representative -- elected or appointed public official or representative of local or county arts agency, who is already registered for the conference.
-- Exhibitors are responsible for setting up their tables by 7:45 am April 4 and cleaning out their tables by no later than 4:30 pm

For more information, or to request a table, please contact Richard Rodriguez by email.

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Arts Build Communities' work in New Brunswick spotlighted in new video




This video describes the work being done by Arts Build Communities and the New Brunswick Cultural Center through a community-university partnership grant provided by Rutgers University.

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Look who's talking at the Arts Build Communities conference

Arts Build Communities just published the complete list of speakers, panelists and moderators for the upcoming conference Create A Place: Arts Build Communities.  The list includes a wide variety of elected and appointed public officials, artists and cultural organization leaders, economic and community development professionals, and urban planners and real estate professionals.

Headlining the list are Newark (NJ) Mayor Cory A. Booker and ArtPlace Director Carol Coletta.

See the list of speakers, panelists and moderators.

The conference is April 4, 8 to 4 pm eastern, at Rutgers University Newark.  Learn more about or register for the conference

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Monday, March 19, 2012

How the Create A Place conference can benefit you


You're probably busy and have a lot of demands on your time. Will going to Create A Place: Arts Build Communities, the annual creative placemaking conference April 4 at Rutgers University in Newark, be worth your time? We think so, and here's why:


You'll get good, useful knowledge about how to connect arts with community and economic development. Some of what you hear may inspire you; some may challenge your thinking. We're going to ask good questions of speakers, and invite you to ask about what you want to know throughout the conference.
create a place vertical

You can get knowledge that others won't have. The complimentary resource guide will have updated numbers about the economic health of the creative sector in New Jersey. And Create A Place encourages the kind of meaningful conversations that can help you get the answers you're seeking. There will be experts on starting, planning and implementing creative placemaking initiatives. Whether you want to learn how to get the ball rolling, or to finally get that arts center built, Create A Place is the place to go.      

You can share your own experiences, which can help you think about your work in  new ways.   Our afternoon peer coaching sessions are designed to help participants learn from one another - and by doing so, help themselves.        

You can make good contacts. There are going to be mayors, funders, nonprofit executives and other decision makers at the conference. It will be a good-sized conference for networking: big enough to help you make a wide variety of connections, and small enough to be manageable.         

If you come with a group from your community, you might leave with a head start for successful creative placemaking. Meet and greet your colleagues on the ride to the conference, go to separate sessions, share what you learned throughout the day, and come up with strategies on the ride back. 

You can eat well. With registration, you'll get breakfast, lunch and an afternoon reception.   

If you're an urban planner, you may be able to get up to 4.5 AICP CM credits. That's how many we requested of the American Institute of Certified Planners.         

You can enjoy yourself.  Nobody hates a dull event more than us at Arts Build Communities. Last year's conference was both fun and informative.  This year, we're working to make it even better.       

You can be part of a professional community of creative placemakers. Creative placemaking is a new field that integrates community, cultural and economic development. Create A Place is the only event in and around New Jersey that brings such a wide variety of professionals together to explore creative placemaking.

Want to learn more or register? Click here.   

Click here for a flyer that you can download and share.

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Thursday, March 15, 2012

New publication: Creative placemaking: Integrating community, cultural and economic development

Arts Build Communities has just published a white paper designed to advance the field of creative placemaking:

Creative placemaking: Integrating community, cultural and economic development

Synopsis:

The purpose of this white paper is to further define the new field of creative placemaking by describing how it promotes sustainable outcomes in communities. This paper expands on such foundational works as Creative Placemaking, by Ann Markusen and Anne Gadwa, which coined the term for the field, and Tom Borrup’s The Creative Community Builder’s Handbook.


Those works and others explain the benefits of creative placemaking: for economic development, they include more jobs and more wealth (by attracting visitors and businesses and keeping more money in the community) and higher property values; for community development, they include more productive civic engagement, bridging cultural divides, and helping youth be better prepared for their futures. The Creative Community Builder’s Handbook also contains steps for creative placemaking and producing sustainable impacts. This white paper provides a theory about why and how communities are impacted by creative placemaking processes.


The problem that this paper is working to address is a number of beliefs and cultural practices within communities that we believe hinder effective creative placemaking. Since 2006, the staff of Arts Build Communities has been studying the elements of creative placemaking. In addition to research on arts-based community and economic development throughout the United States, we interviewed dozens of elected officials, artists, cultural professionals, urban planners and other public affairs professionals. We have also worked formally with several New Jersey communities through our community coaching program, and listened to the concerns, complaints and questions of those who want to do creative placemaking in their towns. Throughout, we came back to the same question: “Why are some communities so much more successful at creative placemaking than others?”


Read Creative placemaking: Integrating community, cultural and economic development

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Number of registrations for Certificate program exceeds expectations

The first class of the Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certificate is, we're glad to say, bigger than we expected.  Arts Build Communities had planned to serve eight to ten participants in the year-long program, which started March 8.We received 14 applications.

The first class is a geographically and professionally diverse group.  They include planners and arts professionals from California, Illinois, Louisiana, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon and Virginia.  They join a community of practitioners and scholars from throughout the United States.

Revenues above those that were expected will be used to support Arts Build Communities' work in research and creative placemaking policy, including leadership in the Sustainable Jersey Arts and Culture Task Force.

Learn more about the Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certificate

The 2012 class is now closed for new admissions, but sign up for our newsletter and get updates on the 2013 class and other ABC programs.

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Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Hang out with ABC at our new Google+ site

Arts Build Communities now has a Google+ site, and we'd like you to join us there.
Please go to: https://plus.google.com/114456227434907116725

We'll be using the Google+ site to help build a community of creative placemakers.

We picked Google+ for social networking because of its videoconferencing feature -- Google+ Hangout.  If we can't all be in the same place at the same time, hopefully we can see one another through videoconferencing.

Like something you see on the site (or not?).  Let us know.

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ABC partners to provide community coaching in New Brunswick


Arts Build Communities and the New Brunswick Cultural Center are spearheading Arts New Brunswick, which is a series of creative place making strategies that will build a strong environment for the growth of the arts and creative industries in the city. ABC and NBCC will bring together New Brunswick artists, businesspeople, organization representatives, public officials and other stakeholders to create a shared and inclusive vision that enhances the arts and its impacts on quality of life throughout the city. 

With assistance from Americans for the Arts, the project will also bring a number of dynamic speakers who are experts on creative place making to inspire our community’s vision for the arts and to provide exciting examples of how other communities benefited by implementing new arts initiatives. ABCC and NBCC will build a team of diverse community leaders to guide the development of the vision help implement the strategies and sustain the ongoing effort.

This project is being led by Rutgers University Professor Norman Glickman and ABC Director Leonardo Vazquez, AICP/PP,  in partnership with Norma Kaplan, Executive Director of the New Brunswick Cultural Center.   It is being funded primarily by Rutgers University through a university-community partnership grant managed by the university's Office of Community Affairs.  Additional support is being provided by the New Brunswick Cultural Center.

Arts New Brunswick is part of a portfolio of community coaching services provided by Arts Build Communities.  ABC has also been providing community coaching in Atlantic Highlands, Perth Amboy, and coastal Monmouth County.

In a typical community coaching initiative, an ABC coach works with a diverse team of community leaders, artists and public officials to address a creative placemaking issue or challenge. As with New Brunswick, ABC can provide additional technical assistance services, such as public engagement, research, community and economic development analysis, preparation of planning and policy documents, and strategic communications. 

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Newark Mayor Cory Booker to speak at Create A Place conference


Newark Mayor Cory A. Booker

Newark (NJ) Mayor Cory Booker will be a guest speaker at Create A Place: Arts Build Communities. April 4, Rutgers University-Newark.

Create A Place is a great place to learn the how to's of building, growing and sustaining creative communities and economies.  $75.  Includes breakfast, lunch, networking reception and a creative placemaking resource guide.  We submitted the event for 4.5 AICP CM credits.

It's a great place to learn and to network with elected officials, cultural organization leaders, urban planners and placemakers.  Hope you can join us there.

To learn more or register, please go to http://policy.rutgers.edu/abc/conference/index.php

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Thursday, March 1, 2012

Application deadline and orientation date for Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certificate Program

The deadline to apply for the 2012  Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certificate Program is now March 12, 2012.

An orientation will be held March 8, 4 to 6 pm eastern, at Rutgers University, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, New Brunswick, NJ.  The orientation is open to applicants and anyone who is seriously considering applying for this year's program.

Learn more about the Creative Placemaking Certificate Program here.

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Creative Placemaking Fellow John Pietrowski honored with state Fellowship


The New Jersey State Council on the Arts awarded the 2012 Individual Artist Fellowship grants totaling $182,600 to 22 New Jersey artists selected from more than 300 applicants in the categories of crafts, sculpture, photography, playwriting and poetry. John Pietrowski, Artistic Director for Playwrights Theatre, was named a winner in the playwriting category. John is part of the inaugural class of the Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certificate Program.

“Research has shown that in addition to helping us stay in touch with our humanity, creativity and imagination, the arts are a proven tool for community development and can be the powerful engine that drives the kind of sustainable economic growth New Jersey communities need,” said Ofelia Garcia, Arts Council Chair. “Artists are at the heart of this important work and it is the Council’s goal to encourage them, assist them to achieve their highest ambitions and help a wider public understand all that artists do to make New Jersey a better place.”

In his first public presentation, the Arts Council’s new executive director, Nicholas Paleologos, praised the Council and the Administration for their strong support for the arts as both “food for the soul and fuel for the economy.”

“It is a real honor to be selected by a jury of my peers, especially since the judging is handled anonymously by the Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation,” said John Pietrowski. “Most of the teaching artists that work with Playwrights Theatre’s New Jersey Writers Project are past fellowship winners, and Cat Doty, a poet who works on the program also won this year, so I feel I am standing in good company.”

About John Pietrowski:
John Pietrowski has been at Playwrights Theatre since its inception twenty-five years ago, and in his current position for the past twenty years. As an actor, he has recently performed as Professor Schrag in David Wiltse’s Sedition, and has played Zeblyan in Seth Rozin’s Two Jews Walk into a War at Playwrights Theatre, NJRep in Long Branch and Shadowland Theatre in Ellenville, NY. He reprised the role of Zeblyan in April 2011 at InterAct Theatre in Philadelphia.

At Playwrights Theatre, most recently he directed Richard Dressser’s The Last Days of Mickey and Jean in a coproduction with The Bickford Theatre in Morristown and The Oldcastle Theatre in Bennington, VT. His latest directing project, Mother Hicks by Suzan L. Zeder is currently running at The Growing Stage in Netcong, NJ. He has directed the Premiere Productions of Mahida’s Extra Key to Heaven by Russell Davis, Augusta by Richard Dresser,  Rising Water by John Biguenet (coproduction with Shadowland Theatre), Where the Sun Never Sets by Robert Clyman, When Something Wonderful Ends by Sherry Kramer,  Whores by Lee Blessing, Big Boys by Rich Orloff and Spain by Jim Knable (all co-productions with NJ Rep), The Good Girl is Gone by D.W. Gregory, Foreign Exchange by Peter Hays, Sally’s Porch and Song of Grendelyn by Russell Davis, I See My Bones by Kitty Chen, Sister Calling My Name by Buzz McLaughlin and three shows in Rowing To America: The Immigrant Project.

He has directed Richard Dresser’s Rounding Third at What Exit? Theatre Company and Shadowland Theatre, More Fun than Bowling by Jeffrey Sweet at 12 Miles West Theatre and Midnight Cry, Our Dad Is in Atlantis and Across the Wide and Lonesome Prairie at The Growing Stage in Netcong, Tammy Ryan’s Lost Boy Found in Whole Foods at Premiere Stages.  He has also directed Max McClean in productions of Acts of the Apostles, Mark’s Gospel, and Genesis at Playwrights Theatre, the latter piece also moving to productions at the Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland and the Lamb’s Theatre in NYC.

Other New York productions include readings of Song of Grendelyn by Russell Davis, at the Public Theatre and Alice’s Fourth Floor, as well as I See My Bones for Urban Stages. He has directed two radio plays for the WNYC Radio Stage Consortium, St. Joe’s Takes the Radio Stage and The Rehearsal, both of which have aired on National Public Radio. He also directed the stage adaptation of The Rehearsal, by J. Rufus Caleb, at the New Harmony Project.

His two plays Black Madonna and The Buda have been performed at Playwrights Theatre, Foundation Theatre, Loaves and Fish Theatre and Arts Club Theatre, and his most recent play, Dura Mater, was workshopped at Johns Hopkins in the fall of 2010. 
Mr. Pietrowski was also the Program Coordinator of the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Theatre Program for Teachers and Playwrights from 1988-94. A graduate of Northwestern University’s Performance Studies Department, he also holds an Masters of Public Administration in non-profit management from Seton Hall University, where his master’s thesis became the basis for New Jersey’s Arts Education Census Project.He teaches theatre history and stage management at Fairleigh Dickinson University, and has taught at Drew University, Seton Hall, Kean University, and Bloomfield College. He is a member of the 2001 class of Leadership New Jersey, Secretary of the New Jersey Theatre Alliance, Treasurer of the Madison Arts and Culture Alliance and the Treasurer of the National New Play Network.

About Playwrights Theatre:
Founded in 1986, Playwrights Theatre is a 501(c) 3 not-for-profit professional theatre and arts education institution dedicated to developing and nurturing the dramatic imagination of artists, students, and audiences. Our New Play Program creates development opportunities for professional writers through readings, workshops and productions, and invites audiences to participate in authentic feedback experiences. Our New Jersey Writers Project, Poetry Out Loud, New Jersey Young Playwrights Contest and Festival, and Creative Arts Academy programs provide a comprehensive and hands-on arts education experience to over 31,000 students, Pre-K through adult.

Writers in the New Play Program are drawn from across the country, including our affiliation with the National New Play Network, a nation-wide group of theatres dedicated to the development and production of new work. Teaching Artists in our Education Programs are professional artists working in their field in the New Jersey, New York, and Philadelphia metropolitan areas. From 2003-2012, we have been designated a Major Arts Institution by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts (along with only four other theatres: The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, George Street Playhouse, McCarter Theatre Center and Paper Mill Playhouse) as “an anchor institution that contributes vitally to the quality of life in New Jersey.”

Funding for Playwrights Theatre activities comes from: the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, the F.M. Kirby Foundation, Inc., Bank of America, Dramatist Guild Fund, Horizon Foundation of New Jersey, The Prudential Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, The Victoria Foundation, and many corporations, foundations and individuals.

Playwrights Theatre is a member of the New Jersey Theatre Alliance, the National New Play Network, and Madison Arts & Culture Alliance.

Note: The above information is from a press release distributed by Playwrights Theater, and used with the permission of John Pietrowski. 

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At least 34 AICP CM credits will be requested for Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certifcate

ABC is in the process of completing the process of requesting AICP certification maintenance credits for the Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certificate.  We plan to request at least 34 credits for the program, as well as another 3 credits for webinars on AICP ethics and land use law that we plan to do by June.  (The webinars will be free to Creative Placemaking Fellows.)

Learn more or register for the Creative Placemaking Master Practitioner Certificate Program.  Application deadline for this year's program is March 12, 2012.

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ABC Board Member Stuart Koperweis joins Millenium Strategies

Stuart Koperweis
Stuart Z Koperweis, a member of the Arts Build Communities board, joined Millennium Strategies as its Senior Vice President of Economic Development and Revitalization.  Stuart previously served as the President of S3X Associates, LLC where he implemented an array of public/private partnerships for local governments and private organizations.

Millennium Strategies LLC provides diverse grant and alternative financing consulting services to public and private sector clients; procuring over $40 million in grant funding since its inception in 2005.  The staff also share over 45 years working in the public sector at the highest levels of local, county, state and federal governments. This experience has afforded Millenium Strategies the opportunity to communicate not only with governmental entities, but also with private corporate and philanthropic foundations, to address our clients’ specific needs. 

Stuart is co-leading the planning and development of Create A Place: Arts Build Communities.


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Create A Place offers discounted fees for parking at Rutgers Newark

Normally it would cost $14 a day to park in the Rutgers University parking garage closest to the Paul Robeson Center.  Now, if you register for the Create A Place conference, it would cost only $8.  The discounted parking rate is available only to those who register before the day of the event.

Payment for parking is optional.  Rutgers Newark is a short walk from the NJ Transit Broad Street Station (see directions). You can also reach it from Newark Penn Station by taking the Newark City Subway (see directions).

If you pay for parking through registration, you will receive your parking voucher by a separate email or by postal mail before the cofnerence.

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Create A Place conference submitted for 4.5 AICP CM credits

Create A Place: Arts Build Communities, our annual creative placemaking conference, was submitted for 4.5 certification maintenance credits by ABC's partner American Planning Association New Jersey chapter.

It normally takes about three weeks for requests for certification maintenance credits to be fulfilled.  The 2011 conference was approved for CM credit.

Learn more or register for Create A Place

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