Posted by staff at 02:20 PM in Green Historic Homes, Historic Preservation, The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by staff at 03:36 PM in Green Community, The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by staff at 02:56 PM in HG People, The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Check out Historic Green featured in Eco-Structure Magazine here. Historic Green Chair and Co-founder Jeremy Knoll is interviewed about HG discussing why we exists and where we are going.
Posted by Curt Rohner at 02:14 PM in Center For Sustainable Engagement & Development, Deconstruction, Events, Great Causes, Green Community, Green Historic Homes, Green Spaces, HG People, Historic Preservation, Holy Cross Neighborhood Assn., Katrina, New Orleans, Sustainable Design, Sustainable Preservation, The Neighborhood, The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by staff at 10:53 PM in HG People, The Neighborhood, The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by staff at 04:47 PM in The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
What a whirlwind this has been! Last night, Andy Baker made a huge batch of crawfish for his bayou volunteers and all other interested neighbors and volunteers – which was originally set to occur at the Bayou platform, but was moved to the Village due to threatening rain – what a scene! Tables surrounded by neighbors and volunteers alike slurping and crunching on massive amounts of delicious, steaming crawfish with potatoes, corn, onions, and garlic – with just enough spice to make your lips burn. At one point, after toasts to several groups and individuals, the entire crowd of 150 or so people started chanting “Mac! Mac! Mac!..” (as Mac was in his office meeting with a youth group interested in partnering with the Village) when he finally heard us. He got a big grin on his face, waved and got back to his meeting. When it was all over and done with, there were a few folks remaining. One volunteer asked me if they could help clean, and within one minute, I had 10 folks cleaning, sweeping, moving trash, spraying tables, etc. Organizing 100+ volunteers during our days here, made a single simple task very easy to get done.
My lovely wife, Sarah, has been such an enormous help to me and us! She has taken on responsibility as the volunteer/project coordinator – the much needed connective role between Susannah and my work! While I run around, answer calls, decide on action, pick up supplies, deliver people, etc – and Susannah works through schedules, lunches, brochures, contacts, etc – Sarah calmly sits by the entrance of the Village, ready to meet and direct volunteers to job sites or necessary time-filling tasks until we decide where to put them for the day. She has really saved us a huge amount of stress and struggle this week, and made volunteers much less impatient. Today, while driving to the Village, Sarah and I fell into a conversation about Mac’s dream of having a basketball court. Andy indicated that there was money leftover from the boil last night, so we started wondering aloud at how much a movable goal would actually cost from Target or somewhere. I spoke with Mac on the subject when we arrived, and he excitedly informed me that someone was bringing him one today or tomorrow! With that said, we had five volunteers today who jumped at the opportunity to clean a section of the floor and measure/research/paint a half-court court onto the Villages gritty concrete floor. No goal or ball yet, but the court is prepped and ready now!
We had 73 (or more) additional volunteers (mostly Hillel and a Christian group) show up on top of our 48 today! Despite wet conditions from last night’s rain, we easily deployed them on over half-a-dozen work sites. That put today’s total number at over 115 volunteers at work in the neighborhood: some working with homeowners, changing bulbs with Greenlight NOLA, installing radiant barrier and weatherization programs with Alliance for Affordable Energy, deconstructing and reconstructing at 5200/5116/5115 Dauphine, sanding/weeding/power-washing the Delery Street Playground, and planting trees in recently cleared lots.
I wish I could write down everything that’s happened, and I wish I had the time and energy to see all of the needed projects through here! It saddens me to know that starting tomorrow I have to make people start bringing tools back from sites and shutting down our great first Historic Green event. The wheels are already turning for next year, and I am seriously considering leading a small troupe of people back in the fall for a smaller and less thoroughly planned volunteer event. This has been everything I dreamed it would be and more: Partnership and Providence in action! Leaving more “dots” connected in our wake than I can count, creating lasting in-roads for people who had not seen a path to assist here, and watching people leave with big plans for their own next steps back to the 9.
By Jeremy Knoll
Posted by staff at 02:01 PM in The Neighborhood, The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The Lower 9th Ward Village just got a fresh, new coat of paint – Spring Green! We're honored to have The Village as our official headquarters for Historic Green 2008, a real home away from home for our volunteers.
Thanks to 44 Elderhostel volunteers, this historic industrial building is getting a much needed makeover all this week. Just one more important step to becoming a new community center for the Lower Ninth Ward.
Posted by staff at 03:11 PM in The Village | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Today went very well, considering. Since Hillel pulled all volunteers to other work, we boosted our partnership with Elderhostel to a larger degree. It pretty much meant that I acted as a shuttle all day long: delivering people, supplies, lunches, bathroom breaks, etc throughout the day. The folks we worked with are great though, and really seemed to enjoy themselves with the work they were doing – especially since they got to work with homeowners more directly than they would have otherwise. I think we’ll do a similar run-around tomorrow, though I won’t send any with Greenlight NOLA tomorrow, as mixing volunteers on faraway work led to hungry folks who didn’t get to all of the assigned houses – bummer.
We also had the “Inconvenient Truth” presentation tonight, which was pretty cool, though our volunteer documenter/reporter, Nicollette, was really turned off by the presentation style.
There was a gas leak at 5115 Dauphine – one of our work sites – requiring everyone to evacuate the block ASAP, until Entergy could come and cap it off while a military-police hummer blocked off the road! We got some folks started on the Delery Street Playground reconstruction, and the North Carolina Krewe got up in some attics doing radiant barrier installation (and seemed to love it!).
Marna David, Reverend Scie and I then toured this group around the neighborhood for awhile after they were finished, based loosely on the scheduled stops and according to their time constraints. We had also three UF med-students who we put to work setting up recycling bins at The Village, followed by sending them on the Ariane’s to do some work. Lots more, but I’m exhausted, and staying the night at Charles Allen’s restored shotgun home for the first time.
Goodnight.
by Jeremy Knoll
Posted by staff at 11:55 PM in Green Historic Homes, Green Spaces, The Village, Volunteers | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Historic Green is really happening! When I landed in New Orleans on Thursday, after a sleepless night of waiver and guidebook printing, the Reverend Scie was waiting for me at the airport. As he drove me to the car-rental place, we spoke of some of the logistics remaining in our planning, and then fell into a more philosophical discussion about the coming 2 week project/adventure/beginning. I expressed a delight in the success of our planning and the fulfillment of many of the original “pie in the sky” goals of this event (several hundred volunteers, music on the levee, a lecture series, and project that will have a lasting affect on over 300 homes). This project relative to the scope of the overall need however, is just a grain of sand in an hour-glass. “It takes every grain of sand, though,” was his reply to this sentiment.
At the Holy Cross neighborhood association meeting that night, there were many people I now recognize after 3 visits, home assessments, planning and coordination, etc. One person in particular stood up and spoke during the Center for Sustainable Engagement & Development’s weekly report, Colin Phillips. This man was a firefighter for 19 years, was injured on the job, and has poured himself into restoring his home to be efficient and “green” as possible (tankless water heater, full wall and attic insulation, window upgrades, low-flow water faucets, etc). He reported that his monthly utility bill more than quadrupelled this month! When he called the power company for explanation, they explained that the City Council had passed new legislation. Over $1200 of his $2300 utility bill (for one month!) was a fee which is being charged to help the company recoup losses from Katrina. He explained to his friends and neighbors that he feels that he is being pushed out of his own city and is unwanted – that he is at the end of his rope. His plight is weighing heavily on me, as he has been a major source of inspiration to the creation of this event, and now is being slowly squeezed out of the neighborhood. – More on this later.
The Village will be the headquarters for our event, and is looking great! Improvements are gradual but substantial, and hopefully our volunteers will make a dent in the vast “to do” list remaining to get it “operational” (as Mac McClendon keeps saying) by May. May will be the date that FEMA recalls all of its trailers, followed shortly by the Military presence in the neighborhood uprooting itself (also discussed at length at the NHA meeting on Thursday. People are extremely concerned about what they are going to do following these events. Thousands are still in trailers with barely enough Road Home money to put a roof back on their homes, and the Military presence in the neighborhood is the only security presence in the neighborhood, as they do not enjoy the “luxury” of strong (or any, from what I can tell) municipal support.
Posted by Jeremy Knoll at 02:26 PM in Holy Cross Neighborhood Assn., The Village | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)