Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Summit Brands Expands with Help from City and State


Congratulations Summit Brands!
 
 
Summit Brands President Joel Harter, representatives of Greater Fort Wayne Inc., the City of Fort Wayne and architects and contractors cut the ribbon on Summit Brands new facility.
 
Joel Harter, owner and CEO of Summit Brands, and his family have had a commitment to our city since its founding in Fort Wayne in 1958.  Recently, Summit Brands took that commitment one step further by not only expanding locally but also by taking on the redevelopment of a brownfield site.  On October 10, Summit Brands held a ribbon cutting ceremony celebrating this expansion with the opening of their new 100,000 square foot distribution facility off of Conestoga Drive.

Summit Brands didn’t just take the property and make it acceptable; by developing the project under LEED (Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design) standards, they decided to make it exceptional. LEED projects require sacrifices of both time and money, but by developing this facility under tight environmental restrictions, Summit Brands has demonstrated that sustainability can be a worthwhile endeavor. As a result of the project, multiple steps were taken to reach LEED standards including, but not limited to, the recycling of 605,180 pounds of metal, the installation of two high-efficiency thermo cycler units, and new efficient lighting.
 
The new space will allow Summit Brands to expand their business of marketing and selling highly effective and sustainable consumer cleaning products that solve the toughest rust stain, drain, laundry and appliance cleaning problems with guaranteed results. Top selling brands for the company include Super Iron Out®, Dishwasher Magic, Disposer Care, Drain Out®, White Brite®, Plink, and Woolite® At-Home Dry Cleaner.
 
Summit Brands and its executives had the desire to expand and grow in Fort Wayne, and to do so in an environmentally conscious manner.  Partnerships with state and local government made much of this possible. The remediation for the property, which was once used to manufacture auto parts, was completed under the State of Indiana’s Voluntary Remediation Program; the City of Fort Wayne awarded brownfield grants for both site assessment and remediation through the CEDIT Brownfield Grant Program. Since the property had been vacant for over a year, Summit Brands was eligible to receive a vacant building abatement from the City of Fort Wayne.  A ten year tax phase-in was also provided on their real property investment.
 
The economic development tools of tax phase-ins and brownfield grants allowed Summit Brands the opportunity to do more than might have been possible on their own. The benefits to the public are great – a difficult-to-redevelop brownfield site has been cleaned up and returned to the tax rolls, and a Fort Wayne company has expanded and added new jobs.
 
As a part of the local business community, Summit Brands’ contributions to the Fort Wayne economy have made our city a more desirable place to live.  On behalf of the City of Fort Wayne, we congratulate Summit Brands on their new facility, but more importantly, thank them for their continued commitment to our community. 

Monday, April 29, 2013

Neighborhood Code Corner
April 2013
By Pamela Burns, Neighborhood Code

What does the City of Fort Wayne’s Neighborhood Code Enforcement Department do?
Simply put, Neighborhood Code exists to protect the City, its residents and property values.
Chapter 152.01 of City ordinance provides the Title and Purpose of Neighborhood Code.  The provisions of this chapter are cited as the “Minimum Housing and Maintenance Standards.” This chapter articulates the commitment of the City of Fort Wayne IN, “to protect, preserve and promote the physical and mental health and social wellbeing of the people, to prevent and control the incidence of communicable diseases, to reduce environmental hazards to health and safety and to regulate privately and publicly owned dwellings for the purpose of maintaining adequate sanitation and public health.”
The established legislation provides for the administration and enforcement of minimum property standards and maintenance for the following:
1.       Basic equipment and facilities with respect to mechanicals, light, ventilation and thermal conditions;
2.       Safety from fire and accidents;
3.       The use, location and amount of space for human occupancy;
4.       The determination of the responsibilities of owners, operators and occupants of residential buildings, and mixed-use buildings to maintain their buildings and properties.
This means that Neighborhood Code is charged with inspecting properties and determining if anything about the properties is hazardous, dangerous or unsightly. If anything unsafe is noted, it is then the department’s job to issue citations and follow up with property owners to ensure that local residences and commercial properties are safe and attractive – this helps everyone by maintaining and strengthening  property values.
To help you keep Code Enforcement away – Do a little preservation every day!

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Code Corner: Weed Season is Just Around the Corner

March 2013
Weed Program
By Pamela Burns, Neighborhood Code Enforcement

To avoid the Weed Inspector be your own detector. Now that you know, watch the grass as it grows, you will be fine when you keep it less than nine.  (inches)
The City of Fort Wayne’s Neighborhood Code Weed Program is designed to protect the public’s safety, health, and welfare and to enhance the city by making it unlawful to allow an environmental public nuisance to exist.

Weed season will begin approximately May 6, 2013; due to the recent snow, however, that date may shift.
A property owner is in violation of the weed ordinance if the grass/weeds have attained a height of nine inches or more or other noxious vegetation exists. (i.e. poison ivy)

If a weed violation notice shows up on your lawn, be sure to mow or remove the vegetation within five days of the post. If the posting is disregarded and the weeds are not cut, mown, or otherwise removed within the five day period, NCE Weed Contractors will mow and the actual cost plus administrative fees will be charged to the property owner.
Neighborhood Code asks you to be respectful of the department's Weed Inspectors. Their job is to help make our neighborhoods attractive and welcoming -- and that keeps property values up!

If you have any questions about the Weed Program, please call 311.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

The History of Lafayette Place

Lafayette Place was an innovative development conceived by the Wildwood Builders Company and noted landscape architect Arthur Shurcliff in 1915. 

The Wildwood Builders Company was incorporated in 1910 with Lee Ninde as president.  Lee’s wife Joel Roberts Ninde and architect Grace Crosby acted as the design team for the company.  They were among the earliest women in Indiana to work as architects and developers and the Indianapolis News reported in 1914 that over 300 homes had been built to their designs.  The Wildwood Magazine, published by the company between 1913 and 1917, became a nationally known publication on the subjects of architecture, city planning, and interior design.  By 1915, Wildwood had become eight separate companies, including the Wildwood Magazine, Wildwood Engineering and Construction Company, Wildwood Park Company, North Wildwood Company, and the La Fayette Place Company.

A builder, promoter, realtor, magazine editor and developer, Lee Ninde also became a nationally and regionally significant master proponent of city planning.  An early advocate of city planning, he participated in the broader national movement as a founding Fellow of the American Institute of City Planning, as a member of the National Association of Real Estate Exchanges, president of the Indiana Real Estate Association, and other national professional organizations.  He also served as the first president of the Fort Wayne Plan Commission.  In 1926, local historian Bert Griswold noted: “That Mr. Ninde believes in the beautiful as well as in the practical in the creation of residential subdivisions is shown in the platting of Wildwood Park, Brook View, and Lafayette Place, all planned by the eminent Boston landscape architect, Arthur Shurcliff, and Shawnee Place, his original realty development.  All are striking examples of the best in modern residential developments.”

Arthur Asahel Shurcliff was born in Boston in 1870.  After graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology he studied Landscape Architecture at Harvard University where he later teamed with Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. to found the country’s first four-year landscape program in 1899.  When Shurcliff established his own practice in 1905, he focused on town planning, highway studies for the Boston Metropolitan Improvement Commission, and the development of industrial and residential communities.  He designed three Fort Wayne subdivisions for Wildwood Builders: Wildwood Park in the curvilinear style in 1914, Lafayette Place with an Esplanade, modified grid and formal pattern in 1915, and Brookview which was designed around the Spy Run Creek in 1917.  He was also hired by the Fort Wayne Parks and Recreation Department to complete a master plan for Swinney Park in 1916 and a master plan for Franke Park in 1924.  In the 1930s, he served as the chief landscape architect for the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg. 

In his design for Lafayette Place, Shurcliff suggested that they “take the high strip 216 feet wide and 1,700 feet long in the center of the tract as a park. There is only one other such arrangement in the country and that is in New Orleans. We could call it the Esplanade. Then near the center of the Addition we can lay out the children’s playground so it will easily be reached by every child in the community.”  His plan was adopted and over $50,000 (in 1915 money) worth of property was dedicated to the beautification of Lafayette Place. At that time, the Esplanade was more than twice as wide as Rudisill Boulevard.

The Lafayette Place plan was announced to the public in the Spring 1915 issue of the Wildwood Magazine, which describes the new addition: “The distinctive feature of the plat will be what is known as an Esplanade. This is an unusual feature in Fort Wayne platting, but as this tract is oblong, extending one-half mile north and south, and a quarter of a mile wide, the shape of the ground lends itself perfectly to a street two hundred and ten feet wide, placed directly in the middle of the Addition, extending one-third of a mile nearly to the end. This is the Esplanade. Branching off from each corner of this new thoroughfare is a diagonal street leading out to each of the four corners of the piece.”1

An article in the Summer 1915 edition of the Wildwood Magazine noted: “The Lafayette Place Subdivision marks a definite advance in city planning in Fort Wayne.  This suburban development, which is under the direction of the Wildwood Builders Company, embodies a high degree of community interest with its broad parks and recreative facilities and yet offers the man of moderate means opportunity for home building and investment…The general plan for the subdivision, upon which Mr. Arthur Shurcliff of Boston, Mass., was consultant, gives a distinctive unity to the addition, and at the same time conforms to the surrounding developed property.”  The article also comments on the neighborhood’s easy access from the city; the lack of alleys providing “for a cleaner and healthier community; and the curves and diagonals of the streets resulting in blocks of varying shapes.  “The resulting lots…have no uniform outline…  The range of lot dimensions has produced advantages for special architectural treatment and landscaping which gives a distinctive character to the home site, as well as to Lafayette Place, as a whole.”  Lots were platted to allow for a small yard for gardening and a garage at the rear.

The original recorded plat showed 444 lots, streets, and five tracts of land set aside for a Community Center, a playground area and three park areas. The Community Center was to include a Club House with an adjoining tennis court and elaborate playground equipment. The Club House was to contain “a large assembly room with a big log fireplace across one end – a room in which two or three hundred people may assemble. It should be a fine place to meet one’s friends and neighbors in the afternoon or to enjoy an informal neighborly assembly for playlets or games of bridge.” The tennis court was built, but it wasn’t a very good court, and very few residents played as tennis was just beginning to be popular. So the tennis court was removed. Later three courts were built in Lafayette Park and are still being used today.

After the removal of the tennis court, the area designated for a Community Center became a rose garden with a small pool at the northern end. Water lilies were put in the pool. The pool was eventually filled in as residents felt it was too dangerous for children. No Community Center was ever built. Finally, a decision was made to sell the site. Today, the home at 4431 Marquette Drive occupies the one-and-a-half acre site originally designated for the Community Center.

Local architects and builders were enthusiastic to be a part of Lafayette Place.  One of the original architects, Lloyd W. Larimore was featured in a large article describing the six homes to be built at the Marquette and Calhoun entrance in preparation for the first annual Better Homes Week and Builder’s Expo held June 19-26, 1926 in Lafayette Place. This was Fort Wayne’s first home show.  The article described the six homes and each builder involved:  4307 Marquette, built by Ernest C. Heckman; 4311 Marquette built by John R. Worthman; 4312 Marquette built by Arthur Rodenbeck;  4308 Marquette built by Frank J. Vevia; 4321 Calhoun built by Everett Ellerman; and 120 McKinnie built by brothers Ferman and Ernest C. Haase. The Gunder-Spahr Agency also built several homes in Lafayette Place. By August of 1926, several Fort Wayne builders had moved their own families into Lafayette Place homes, including John Worthman, Everett Ellerman, R.P. Gemmer, William Bowman, Ferman Haase, Frank Vivia and Wayne Ferguson.

The article also mentioned such innovations in amenities as built-in ironing boards, refrigerators with outside icers, Kosy-Kitch complete cabinets and built-in telephone booths!

You will notice that Calumet is the only street in Lafayette Place that runs diagonally through the neighborhood. That’s because it used to be the inter-urban route. The Fort Wayne and Decatur inter-urban ran on tracks down Calhoun Street, along Calumet, across the Park (later the Esplanade) and out Calumet, across Pettit to Decatur, Indiana. The Fort Wayne and Decatur Traction Company released this right-of-way to the City of Fort Wayne in October of 1928.

Two streets have had name changes since the original abstract for Lafayette Place. Sherwood Terrace was originally named Cottage Grove Avenue and Montrose Avenue was originally named Montclair Avenue.

*These historical notes are from the Lafayette Place Magazine, published in 1925 on the occasion of Open House Week, October 24-31, 1925. Thousands of visitors came by streetcar and auto to see the modern homes in Fort Wayne’s foremost new Addition.

Code Corner: Abandoned Vehicles


courtesy: www.stockfreeimages.com

Abandoned Vehicles: Did You Know…
1.    …that Abandoned Vehicles have to go?
Yes. According to the City’s Abandoned Vehicle Ordinance, 90.02 and State Law IC 9-13-1, any potential abandoned or inoperable vehicle located on private property that has been sitting in the same location for more than 20 days is subject to towing.
For the vehicle in question, Neighborhood Code Enforcement (NCE) will prominently place a florescent orange sticker on the vehicle along with a letter of explanation for the vehicle owner.
2.    …that Residential Parking Ordinance 72.23 states that no vehicles are allowed to park on the lawn, on either public or private property?

3.    …that Neighborhood Code Enforcement can help?

If you are a property owner and there is an unwanted vehicle on your property, there is a waiver the property owner can sign requesting NCE to tag the vehicle to notify the vehicle owner that they have three days to remove the vehicle from the property or NCE will have the vehicle towed. And, there is no charge for this!

4.    …that if NCE tows your vehicle and it has been reported as stolen, the Fort Wayne Police Department will notify you of the vehicle’s recovery?

Thursday, January 17, 2013

New Trail Coming to Liberty Mills Road
The Coventry Lane Economic Development Area was confirmed and approved by the Fort Wayne Redevelopment Commission on January 14, 2013. Earlier approvals include those by the Plan Commission and City Council. 
The main project component of the plan is the funding for the construction a multi-use trail along Liberty Mills Road from Falls Drive west to Homestead Road. 
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) improvements to the existing sidewalk along sections of Coventry Lane from Aboite Center Road south to Falls Drive will also be included in the project area. This project will significantly increase safety for pedestrians, bicyclists and motorists and will improve the overall quality of life for this area of the City.
Funding for the project (Approximately $800,000) will be from tax increment generated by the newly remodeled Kroger Marketplace retail development. The first installment of tax increment will be received in mid-2014, however, engineering and design may begin sooner. Partners in the project include Fort Wayne Trails, Inc., the City of Fort Wayne and Councilman Mitch Harper.  
The trail and sidewalk improvements will be constructed in three phases between 2015 and 2019. 

Jefferson Streetscape

Jefferson Blvd gets update!
Jefferson Blvd. improvements near The Harrison and Embassy Theatre are nearly complete. The Jefferson Boulevard Streetscape project design work was given the go-head in March of 2012 by the Redevelopment Commission. 

The work included closing the far south lane of Jefferson between Fairfield and Calhoun to traffic, and adding sidewalks, new lighting, street trees, landscaping and a drop-off lane for the Embassy Theatre. The parking lot between the Courtyard and The Harrison was also re-designed and landscaping and handicapped parking was added. In order to accomplish the above-ground work, a water main and storm sewer were re-located.

The work to "calm" traffic and provide a better pedestrian experience has been part of the City's downtown and overall strategic plans. The Board and staff of the Embassy Theatre have long wished for and needed a safer access for elderly and disabled patrons visiting this iconic downtown venue, and the Jefferson Streetscape work has now accomplished these goals.