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September 18, 2008

3-D Road Rendering for Macon

Filed under: Communities Program, Macon — Kristen Taylor @ 6:23 am

Tuesday, Macon.com posted this story about future planning for Macon roads, mentioning Knight Program Director for Macon, Beverly Blake, and an e-mail she wrote to community leaders.

From the Macon.com article:

With funding from the Knight Foundation, a disinterested third party, Georgia Tech’s College of Architecture IMAGINE Lab (www.coa.gatech.edu/imagine) is being employed to look at the proposed project and present a 3-D rendering that should show the community what the project will actually look like. There are all sorts of rumors of the project’s height and width and how it will interact with the Ocmulgee River. In the letter informing community leaders about the Tech project, Beverly Blake, the Knight Foundation program director, said, “Will it (the I-16/I-75 interchange) provide an orderly set of feeder streets to bring more folks into downtown/intown Macon? Will the time for construction effectively choke off all life to downtown? Are the alternatives worse than the proposed plan?”

The computer generated visuals, she said, will let us “see just exactly what the proposed interchange will look like when completed from different perspectives…”

Blake’s original letter concluded:

They [Georgia Tech’s College of Architecture IMAGINE Lab] are pleased to provide us with a proposal for their work to bring to us the three dimensional view of the proposed interchange; they will need info from Bibb/Macon and also DOT. If the scope is within the financial parameters of the grantmaking of the Knight Fund for Macon at the Community Foundation of Central Georgia, we will ask the Board of CFCG to consider funding of this visual presentation.

I wish to be clear that Knight Foundation does not have a position on this plan-our only position is to support projects and ideas that move forward Macon as a vibrant, progressive community. Our goal is to assist in providing accurate information to our citizens and policy makers.

I welcome your comments and ideas. Kindly respond to all so that we can each be a part of this conversation.

Do you have comments or ideas? Please leave them in the comments below.

August 22, 2008

Milledgeville Municipal WiMax Network

Filed under: Knight Center of Digital Excellence — Kristen Taylor @ 3:07 pm

The Milledgeville Union-Recorder ran a story yesterday about the new Milledgeville Municipal WiMax Network, part of a universal access initiative at Knight Foundation.

Milledgeville Program Director Beverly Blake made clear Knight’s commitment to connect individuals in physical communities through this initiative:

“The Knight Foundation does not come into a community, say we have this great opportunity, realize it and then walk away,” Blake said. “Milledgeville made this happen, we’re here to help you build this plan for the future.”

Find out more about the Digital Access Initiative here; the Milledgeville article is here.

Questions or thoughts on the Milledgeville Munical WiMax Network?

June 7, 2008

Neighborhood revitalization planned for Macon, Georgia

Filed under: Communities Program, Macon — beverly.blake @ 10:14 pm

Editor’s note: Beverly Blake is the Program Director for the Knight Foundation community programs in Columbus, Macon, and Millegeville. Below, she announces a new grant for Macon neighborhoods and invites your thoughts in the comments and by e-mail.

Yesterday, a $250,000 Knight grant was announced for a comprehensive revitalization planning effort in Macon, Georgia–a significant expression of Knight’s confidence in the community to make Macon’s neighborhoods vibrant and welcoming for all people to live, work, play and study.

From the announcement ceremony (video is 11:02):

Macon has eleven historic districts containing more structures of historic significance than either Savannah or Charleston. The successful revitalization of two distressed Macon neighborhoods in 2002 led to a push to reclaim the soul of the intown neighborhoods with beautiful architecture, great history, and forty years of decline.

Mercer University anchors one end of both the downtown and intown historic districts: the downtown area with beautiful boulevards and architecture and the Ocmulgee River at the other end. This revitalization grant will specifically target an area between Mercer University and downtown Macon known as College Hill Corridor.

With a community alliance joining Mercer students, a new mayor, and a reinvigorated city council with existing Macon leaders and residents, we are on our way to transform the physical landscape of Macon’s first neighborhoods and the way we feel about this place we call home.

I invite you to join us in this effort; please let me hear your thoughts by e-mail (blake {at} knightfoundation {dot} org) and in the comments below.

Related coverage: Macon.com, Fox 24, 13 WMAZ.