A Parking and Loading Win for Downtown and ArtWalk

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Downtown Vision (DVI) has listened and responded to an important downtown stakeholder: artists. Various loading zone issues and confusion during the December ArtWalk prompted me to email DVI with suggestions for minimizing tickets in those loading areas.

DVI responded with a solution that will help those artists who are part of Downtown Vision and The Cultural Council’s Off The Grid initiative, where artists are paired with empty retail space in the core.

First Some Background

I received a ticket last month while parked in a loading zone at 229 N. Hogan. I was loading my car after ArtWalk with 8 chairs and 4 8-foot tables to get into my wagon. I was there for a total of 15 minutes and I received a ticket. I wasn’t the only one.

It was one of those moments where you see yourself getting the ticket, so you run to explain your situation and that you’re leaving right away. It seemed reasonable I could talk the attendant into tearing up the ticket, but no dice. He politely and calmly explained the protocols of parking in designated loading areas in and around downtown Jacksonville. You must either:

  1. Have a $50.00 parking permit from the City of Jacksonville. This grants you unlimited freight loading and unloading, up to an hour.
  2. Have a magnetic sticker for both sides of your car. These cost about $30 each. When I asked if a handwritten sign would work, he shook his head no.

The COJ website is a little vague on the specifics of the signage use on both sides of the vehicle:

In a Freight Loading Zone: Don’t park in a freight loading zone unless you have company logos on both sides of your vehicle, or a freight permit issued by the Parking Facilities & Enforcement Division. Don’t park for more than one hour. These areas are in very high demand and are strictly enforced.

I’m all for following the rules and they exist for a reason, but it seems risky to ding people with parking tickets who are participating in a Downtown event. That brings me to the recommendation portion of this blog post and Downtown Vision’s solution.

I’d wanted to see Downtown Vision create some type of official signage that can be used the week of ArtWalk for loading and unloading vehicles. They already do so much for the people who participate in the ArtWalk every month, mainly marketing, this could be one more “feature” for participants.

I was sure something like this would be easy for DVI to do and I was right. Here is the DVI response and solution:

Downtown Vision, Inc. will provide each studio/gallery two sets of magnetic signs to allow two cars at a time the ability to load and unload in loading zones. The magnetic signs will be paid for by DVI. If signs are lost, replacement signs will be at the artist’s expense. DVI hopes to have the signs by mid- January.

  • Each set includes two signs.
  • Signs must be placed on both sides of vehicle.
  • These signs will allow a vehicle the use of the freight loading zone for up to one hour.

As important ArtWalk is for Downtown I feel like making the loading process a little more user friendly is a good idea. If you’re at ArtWalk on Wednesday, keep an eye out for Mayor Peyton. He’ll be making rounds at various venues. Stop him and say hi, he’s a nice guy.

Urban Jacksonville Weekly Episode #28

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Special Guest – Terry Lorince of Downtown Vision

Joey – Android is for SUCKAS!

What is Downtown Vision?
non for profit
formed 2000
make downtown premiere place to work, live, visit
get businesses to work together
art walk, hemming plaza market
creating a better downtown experience
Joey – living downtown?
14 downtown ambassadors – report on condition of downtown
contract with Catholic Charities for clean-up
originally, ambassadors picked up trash (insurance/worker’s comp issues)
Joey – hotline?

Questions:

Abel Harding asks With the proposed cuts in funding for public service grants, Jacksonville’s homeless population is likely to be impacted with fewer services available to them. How do you think that will impact downtown businesses?

Terry – see more transients, strain existing shelters
Joey – Is DVI working with groups on the homeless issue?
Terry – Transients are the issue more so than the homeless. Development/climate make Jacksonville popular place for vagrants, makes them more visible.
Tony – Troublemakers aren’t necessarily homeless but they all get lumped together in people’s eyes.

Matt Abercrombie asks how can we expedite getting artists into vacant and underutilized spaces downtown? who are the sympathetic landlords and what can artists do to make contact?

Terry – Vacant stores downtown is an issue. How do we ratchet up the Art Walk? Jim Draper a major voice to bring artists downtown. DVI has relationship with property owners. What to do between now and when the economy picks up. Leasers have conditions for people using space. Lots of interest from both sides. Interested – terry@downtownjacksonville.org

Our role is as matchmaker. Fortunate to have Art Center Cooperative.
Tony – Give it a name. Jim Draper as liaison/face.
Joey – Artists find a way to be recognizable and follow-up.

Matt Uhrig asks Many property owners dropped their venue once the DVI demanded to be placed on liability insurance. What liability does the city have once a person steps off a sidewalk and into a private building?

Terry – city owns the sidewalk but DVI assumes liability during art walk, venue assumes liability once patron enters establishment
Tony – BG’s insurance didn’t go up
Back to artists
Tony – use City Hall Annex

Yvonne asks if DVI would ever consider sponsoring (funding/paying) artists to paint murals on the many vacant buildings in downtown? it would be another appeal of art walk, it’ll also help give more life to downtown.

Terry – Thinking the same thing.
Jack – How does DVI feel about street art?
Terry – If you give an inch, they’ll take a mile.
Jason (ContentDG) – Familiar with the urban face-lift project?
Terry – $100,000 to contribute to Laura St facade improvement. Decorating on a dime. Rethinking spaces is one of the biggest challenges.
Jonathan – Budget?
Terry – Going to be a tough year. About 1.2 million. Looking at 50% budget cut.
Joey/Tony – Have you looked into social networking?
Terry – Facebook page, 2 MySpace pages, mobile website, DVI website

Recommendations

Joey: Content Design Group site and UJ/TT Mixtape Release Party
Tony: Eat Up Downtown and International Dog Day at the Riverside Arts Market.
Jonathan: Last Thirsty Thursday Suns Game
Terry: terry@downtownjacksonville.org and The Sinclair
Jack: Infintesmal BBQ

Music
Wednesday August 19
Club TSI
National Dairy

Thursday August 20
Jack Rabbits
Poison the Well

Friday August 21
Club TSI
Nomadic Sun
Juicy Pony
Honey Chamber

Shantytown Pub
Wudun
Lazerstar
Sleeping In the Aviary

Saturday August 22
Steamworks
EMA
Future Computers
D.M. Waltz

Sunday
Sinclair
Infintesmal BBQ #4

Terry Lorince Tonight on Urban Jacksonville Weekly

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Photo credit: Tiffany Manning

If you have questions for Terry about Downtown Vision or downtown itself, leave a comment. Here is Terry’s bio from the DVI site:

Terry Lorince became the first executive director of Downtown Vision Inc. (DVI) in 2001. She has more than 20 years of experience in the field of economic development, with ten years of specialization in the field of downtown revitalization.

Prior to coming to Jacksonville, Terry was the deputy executive director of the Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership. In the past five years, Downtown Vision has been involved in making Downtown Jacksonville cleaner, safer and more attractive, addressing Downtown’s parking issues, marketing Downtown Jacksonville and becoming an advocate for the interests of Downtown. More recently, Downtown Vision has developed a Downtown Platform to guide the development of Downtown in the coming years.

Terry has an undergraduate degree in Economics from the University of Pittsburgh and a Masters of Science in Management and Policy Analysis from Carnegie Mellon University . She is a Board member of the International Downtown Association, the Florida Theatre and the Jacksonville Film Festival.