Sticks and Stones
Musician, instructor and Filipino stick fighter Dean Marcellana
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INSIDE News & Info From: Grandview Heights, Marble Cliff & Upper Arlington Library’s Many Meetings Women’s Self-Defense Superb Sledding Spots
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Inside
VOL. 15 NO. 6
January/February 2015
6 Community Calendar
8 News & Info from Upper Arlington 9 News & Info from
The Village of Marble Cliff
p.16 p.21
10 News & Info from Grandview Heights
12 faces
Keys to Victory
Professional pianist excels in the art of Filipino stick fighting
16 in focus
Standing Tall
Local self-defense classes help women learn how to react to dangerous situations
19 A Multitude of Meetings
A look at some of the groups that gather regularly at the library
21 living Residence, Reborn
Couple’s 1968 house has undergone a thoroughly modern remodel
p.26 p.28
RETURNS TO COLUMBUS FOR OUR 2ND YEAR JULY 27-31, 2015
26 on the table
Heavyweight Hops
Strong beers are the centerpiece of local-focused hootenanny
28 Slip Sliding Away
Neighborhood parks offer snowy slopes for sledding
29 bookmarks
Find Tri-Village Magazine on Facebook and Twitter
On the Cover:
Teacher, musician and Filipino stick fighter Dean Marcellana Photo by Stephan Reed
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
5
community calendar
January - February 2015
Grandview Heights Public Library 1685 W. First Ave., www.ghpl.org
Jan. 1-31
Art Exhibit: Tom Hubbard
Jan. 15
The Folk Ramblers 7-8 p.m.
Feb. 1-28
Feb. 10
Feb. 19
Feb. 12
Feb. 23
The Foodie Life 7-8 p.m.
Music: Sirens 7-8 p.m.
One-Stroke Decorative Painting 7-8 p.m.
Art Exhibit: Ken Claussen
Page to Screen: The Brothers Karamazov 7-8 p.m.
Arts and Entertainment
Jan. 31-Feb. 23
Jan. 7-30
& Business Expo New OSU Location & Photo Ops!
Wednesday, March 11th from 5 – 8 p.m. Come taste local cuisine & vote for your favorites
• Mike Davis, 10TV doing live weather reports! • OSU Men’s Ice Hockey Team! • Photo ops with local celebrities & surprise OSU guests! • Silent Auction • Wine Raffle • Cash Bar • Upper Arlington H.S. art show • Upper Arlington H.S. athletes • Showcase of top local businesses NEW OSU LOCATION! The UA Chamber is partnering with The Ohio State University to host the event at the Nationwide & Ohio Farm Bureau 4-H Center across from the Schottenstein Center 2201 Fred Taylor Drive
FREE EVENT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
come mingle with your neighbors! For more information visit or call: uachamber.org 614-481-5710 6
Eye Candy: A Collection of Portraits Tacocat Cooperative, 937 Burrell Ave., www.tacocatcooperative.com
Collage 2015 Upper Arlington Concourse Gallery, 3600 Tremont Rd., www.uaoh.net
Jan. 13
Paint Easely: Moonlit Winter 7 p.m., Marshall’s Grandview, 1105 W. First Ave., www.painteasely.com
Feb. 1
Grandview High Gravity Hullabaloo 7-8 p.m., 925 W. Burrell Ave., www.grandviewcraftbeer.org
Feb. 13
Erika Hughes & the Well Mannered Rustbelt Rumble Family Band 9 p.m., Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., www.woodlandstavern.com
Feb. 21
Grandview Heights/Marble Cliff Education Foundation Annual Gala Time TBA, Renaissance Hotel, 50 N. Third St., www.ghmcef.org
Feb. 19-22
UAHS Musical: Mary Poppins Thursday-Saturday 7:30 p.m., Sunday 2:30 p.m., 1650 Ridgeview Rd., www.uavocalmusic.org
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
Events Calendar Proudly Presented by
Upper Arlington Public Library 2800 Tremont Rd., www.ualibrary.org
Jan. 3
Feed Down Fines 10 a.m.-2 p.m., all branches
Jan. 8
Live at the Library: The Randys 7-8 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Jan. 22
Live at the Library: The Saturday Giant 7-8 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Jan. 23
Tamara De Lempicka: Art Deco Icon 1-2 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Jan. 29
Live at the Library: The Ramshacklers 7-8 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Feb. 1
Winter Opera on Film 2-4 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Feb. 5
Love Songs for a Valentine’s Concert 7-8 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Feb. 10
The Magic of “And” 7-8 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
columbus/osu
Feb. 12
Live at the Library: Grassahol 7-8 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Feb. 19
Live at the Library: Miller Kelton 7-8 p.m., Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd.
Feb. 12
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
www.grandviewyard.com
Columbus Museum of Art: Columbus Artists 7-8 p.m., Lane Road Branch, 1945 Lane Rd.
7
News & Information from Upper Arlington
insideUPPER ARLINGTON By Hannah Bealer
Musical Menagerie
Jan. 8, The Randys Jan. 22, The Saturday Giant Jan. 29, The Ramshacklers Feb. 12, Grassahol Feb. 19, Miller Kelton
“There are so many talented bands in Columbus,” she says. “But we started by looking at some that play a different kind of music than we focused on last year, and we started inviting them.” Attendees will see one familiar face with the return of the Saturday Giant, a one-man band that Faure says was a favorite last year. Frontman Phil Cogley uses technology to loop music, producing a unique solo act. “I had several requests to invite him back,” she says. All performances start at 7 p.m in the Upper Arlington Public Library’s Friends Theater, 2800 Tremont Rd. The performances are free and open to the community.
Photo courtesy of Mark Elliot
Live music is no stranger at the Upper Arlington Public Library. More than 30 years ago, the library hosted a popular music series focused on classical music with a touch of rock and pop. But in 2009, the library suffered substantial budget cuts, forcing it to close on Friday evenings – which was when the shows were held. The series was canceled. But after last year’s successful reintroduction, Community Engagement Specialist Jennifer Faure says, the music series is back in full swing. On Jan. 8, the library will begin a five-part music series that highlights local talent. “We really enjoyed it, and we had great feedback from everybody who attended, so we knew that we wanted to bring the series back again,” says Faure. Although it was a cold and icy winter, Faure says, the library’s Friends Theater always filled up. It wasn’t easy picking only five bands this year, she says.
George C. Anderson
Library brings in local bands for its live music series
Hannah Bealer is an assistant editor. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup. com.
Photo courtesy of George C. Anderson
Photo courtesy of George C. Anderson
Saturday Giant’s Phil Cogley
The Randys Grassahol
8
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
inside
THE VILLAGE OF
News & Information from the Village of Marble Cliff
MARBLE CLIFF
Let There Be Light
Village undertakes major overhaul of streetlight system By Bill Johannes, Marble Cliff Administrative Assistant Streetlights have been a mainstay of communities from the days of lamplighters attending to gas streetlights. Though Marble Cliff has never had gas lights during its 113-year existence, its original electric streetlight system, once owned by American Electric Power, dates to the mid-20th Century. The system has had few updates over the years and many repairs. Wiring and fixtures have deteriorated, some beyond repair, causing street and sidewalk safety concerns. Hence, the Village has begun a comprehensive update of its electric streetlight system to take advantage of today’s technological advances in streetlighting efficiency and effectiveness. With no financial assessment to property owners, the Village plans to completely replace its system of 79 street-level streetlights, bury all wires underground in conduit and install two centralized light controllers. Overhead lights in the Village that are the property of AEP will not be changed. The project’s completion is estimated for 2015-2016. Phase 1 of the streetlight project in the Village’s Fifth Avenue business district and on Fernwood Avenue is complete. It included installation of electrical wire conduit and 16 new streetlights with LED fixtures. The improvements take advantage of new, energy-efficient LED technologies that use less energy, reducing energy costs. Wires in conduit connected to new central light controllers, rather than individual light sensors, should reduce repair and maintenance costs and improve the system’s reliability. LED bulbs use less energy and can be directed more accurately toward sidewalks and streets, diminishing the annoyance of ambient light shining into homes. In pre-installation tests, residents told Village officials that the LED bulbs, though brighter, shed a “softer” white light than the old “pink” mercuryvapor bulbs. The new streetlights are a “Village-like” design and are painted black in keeping with the Village’s effort to establish
a consistent look and feel for its visible public service equipment, including new black-and-white street name signs and newly painted fire hydrants. Completion of Phase 1 this past fall provides the Village with the opportunity to evaluate the changes made to the system before undertaking the more comprehensive Phase 2 in the Village. “We feel it is important to have a dependable, Village-wide streetlight system to maintain a safe environment for our property owners and those who walk and cycle our Village,” said Mayor Kent Studebaker. “Plus, we should experience lower maintenance and energy costs. Everyone should benefit.”
Tip-Dan Electric workers install the new street lights. January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
9
inside
GRANDVIEW
Right Up Your Street
Getting to know more businesses on Goodale Boulevard Laura Gregory Salon
Open Door Art Studio
How long have you been open? Twelve years, but we’ve been here for six or seven years.
How long have you been open? We opened in Grandview in 2003 and moved to this building in August of 2011.
1090 Goodale Blvd., www.lauragregorysalon.com
Describe the business in one sentence: We’re a hair salon that aims to be warm and inviting. What do you do best? Serve our clients. What do you like about this location? Since moving here, more people notice us while commuting to work. If your business were a snow globe, what would you put inside it? Our salon.
Krema Nut Compnay
1000 Goodale Blvd., www.krema.com How long have you been open? We’ve been open at this location since 1922.
www.grandviewheights.org
Describe the business in one sentence: We roast nuts and grind them into peanut butter.
10
1050 Goodale Blvd., www.opendoorartstudio.org
Open Door Art Studio
Describe the business in one sentence: We provide daytime rehabilitation services for adult artists with disabilities.
What do you do best? Provide a venue for adult artists with disabilities to create exhibits. What do you like about this location? It’s a nice area. It’s a middle point between the busy city and a developing area with more and more traffic every day. If your business were a snow globe, what would you put inside it? It would be filled with art.
David M. Berg, Ltd.
1057 Goodale Blvd., www.davidmberg.com How long have you been open? Twenty-five years, but we moved here nine years ago. Describe the business in one sentence: We are an interior design firm.
What do you do best? We’re best known for our peanut butter. What do you like about this location? We’re well-established, and the people know us. If your business were a snow globe, what would you put inside it? It’d probably have to be a peanut.
What do you do best? Interior design.
Krema Nut Company
What do you like about this location? It’s really convenient for everyone who works here. We come from all over, and this is a nice, central area for all of us.
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
HEIGHTS
News & Information from the City of Grandview Heights
Open Sky Day Spa Open Door Art Studio If your business were a snow globe, what would you put inside it? Our showroom? I don’t know, but whatever it was, it would be tastefully designed.
Open Sky Day Spa
1124 Goodale Blvd., www.openskydayspa.com How long have you been open? We’ve been open for nine years, but we just moved here in October. Describe the business in one sentence: One word: spa. What do you do best? Massages, facials and foot scrubs.
Star Beacon
Star Beacon
What do you like about this location? It’s bigger than our last place, and car traffic isn’t as bad. If your business were a snow globe, what would you put inside it? Hands and a massage table. Maybe it could snow little hands.
1104 Goodale Blvd., www.starbeaconproducts.net How long have you been open? We were Downtown before, but in 1954, we moved here. Describe the business in one sentence: We’re a wholesale school supplies distributor. What do you do best? Selling art and crafts supplies for cheap. What do you like about this location? It’s growing and dynamic. If your business were a snow globe, what would you put inside it? Crayons, markers and paints.
David M. Berg, Ltd. January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
11
faces
Story and photos by Stephan Reed
Keys to Victory Professional pianist excels in the art of Filipino stick fighting
12
Professional pianist excels in the art of Filipino stick fighting
F
or Dean Marcellana, the martial arts are more about philosophy than the fight. For 21 years, Marcellana – also a professional pianist – has practiced the art of Filipino stick fighting, also known as Eskrima and Arnis. This knowledge has allowed him to teach various selfdefense classes in his home city of Grandview Heights and walk with a sense of confidence, knowing he can defend himself if necessary. “My main goal is to promote peace – for yourself, for your family,” he says. “Peace isn’t the absence of conflict, but the ability to cope with conflict. You make situations work for you, whether you’re in the best part of town or the worst. If you’re in a potential altercation with someone, and if you have to go, you go hard. If you can walk away, then you walk away.” January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
Rhythmic motions and the use of weapons act as a signature for Marcellana’s combat specialty. “Eskrima is the most logical form of dirty street fighting,” he says. “It’s all about one-upping your opponent and making sure that, if someone comes at you, they’re not going to come back at you again.” This sentiment is passed on through the lessons he teaches. Instead of going for a knockout blow to an aggressor’s head, he says, target a foundation area, such as the foot or a knee. Keeping distance from an attacker is important, but these target areas can be Bahala Na Multi-Style is the Eskrima studio at which Dean Marcellana trained in California in the 1990s. easily reached when using a household item-turnedlana says. “It may not be felt, but the accuracy of that, but you can easily take weapon, such as a frying pan. person will not be able to come at you. out a knee.” “Even if (the attacker is), hypotheti- I was taught that 12 pounds of force per While his knowledge of self-defense is cally, on something, like bath salts, you square inch is enough to knock the knee great, his ability to avoid physical concan take out the foundation,” Marcel- out of place. I don’t know the complete frontation is even greater.
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“I truly want to teach my family to grow and learn. I want them to find their own way to empowerment.”
The yantok, a rattan stick, is the most common weapon in Eskrima. Here, Marcellana demonstrates the sticks’ use on a heavy bag. 14
“Honestly, I’ve never been in a serious physical altercation, and I hope it stays that way,” Marcellana says. “Things can go wrong within seconds during a fight. I’ve had students who work in the prison system and law enforcement agencies. They have stories in which they had to resort to physical combat, and they couldn’t risk pulling out a firearm.” Throughout his career, Marcellana has won competitions at the Arnold Sports Festival as well as at the Battle of Columbus, part of the World Martial Arts Games, but he insists those accolades can be deceiving. “Everyone has their medals and trophies,” he says. “You have to separate sport and real life. My grandmaster, one of the deadliest people I know, was only 5’3” and was a decorated war veteran. He never won a tournament. All his battle was legitimate. He had to take lives to save his own in World War II.” A trophy room full of medals becomes empty if you cannot defend yourself in real-life scenarios, he says.
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
Dean Marcellana teaches Filipino martial arts at Columbus Health Works on West Fifth Avenue. For private self-defense or Eskrima classes, email keyboardescrimador@gmail.com.
“An award is just a piece of hardware,” Marcellana says. “It doesn’t define who you are or what you’re capable of. Just because you won a fight doesn’t mean you’re going to come out and survive some severe situations. There’s the game, and then there’s life.” The combat specialist respects both the philosophies of the fighting style and its history. During the Spanish occupation of the Filipino islands, the conquistadors were met with a resistance movement by the native people. The Spanish called the unfamiliar way of fighting “Eskrima,” meaning “skirmish.” “During the Spanish Inquisition, they tried to ban the martial arts,” Marcellana says. “The invaders burned the books. They didn’t want (the natives) to have a connection to their past identity. But then the Filipino natives made up these dances that were actually combat training. And they had costumes with elaborate designs; that was their alphabet. They were disguising literature for the martial arts.” His piano-playing career started when he was 9 living in Delano, Calif., while his Eskrima endeavors began after his un-
high. When one area is neglected, he feels the effects throughout other parts of his life. “The two go hand in hand,” he says. “If I feel physically relaxed, it’s easier for me to create. If something is raining down on me or affecting me emotionally, I feel tight physically. I’m not able to be as free or as loose while sparring or teaching.” A freelance musician, Marcellana primarily performs on the piano and keyboard solo and in groups. He attended the Boston Conservatory, where he met his now-wife, Jennifer, who is a Grandview native. The couple have two children. “I truly want to teach my family to grow and learn,” he says. “I want them to find their own way to empowerment.”
dergraduate years at the University of the Pacific Conservatory of Music in Stockton, Calif. “I knew there was a large martial arts community there,” Marcellana says. “At the time, I was taking a classical Chinese/ Japanese style of fighting that translates to ‘the hand of the beautiful spirit.’ My sensei said, ‘Dean, you’re Filipino. Have you talked to any of the other Filipinos here?’ That was my introduction.” Stephan Reed is a contributing writer. The one-two punch of physical motion Feedback welcome at and music keeps Marcellana’s spirits gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com.
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January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
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in focus
By Sarah Sole
Standing Tall
Local self-defense classes help women learn how to react to dangerous situations Classes total 9-12 hours and are broken up over a few days. The first three hours are spent in the classroom, learning about risk reduction strategies. From there, students learn and practice a variety of self-defense methods, including strikes, kicks and making fists to punch properly. Toward the end of this hands-on training, students learn how to get out of chokeholds, bear hugs and wrist grabs, placing emphasis on disengaging from the conflict to seek help. “There’s no foolproof move that is going to immobilize your opponent,” Petty says. For the last three hours, Petty and his students go through different scenarios that mimic altercations without actually putting
O
Photos courtesy of Upper Arlington Jiu Jitsu
nce the “fight or flight” response kicks in, quick thinking and muscle memory can be integral to getting yourself out of a dangerous situation. Luckily, women have the opportunity to train their bodies and minds to properly react to conflict through a variety of self-defense classes offered in the area. The city of Upper Arlington has offered women’s self-defense classes for many years, says Matt Petty, an officer with the Upper Arlington Police Department. The class is generally offered in the spring and is popular with women who are preparing to enter college, though Petty says women of all ages take the class. “No one gets turned away,” Petty says. Instructors try to work around any physical limitations the students may have. The focus is on identifying strengths.
Kathy Feister practices a hip toss on husband Tim Feister, one of the owners of Upper Arlington Jiu Jitsu. 16
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
“If you can stack your strengths against someone’s weaknesses, you’re still going to come out ahead in the game. Maybe you are smaller; maybe you are not as strong, but there are things that you can do where you can tip the game into your favor.” —Dean Marcellana, instructor anyone in danger. Petty tries to raise the intensity level at this point by taking the students out of their comfort zones. “We try to instill confidence and power building,” he says. In one scenario, an instructor might pose as an assailant and try to grab a student’s arm as she walks by. They might also roleplay an ATM scenario, where an attack is made from behind. In another situation, a student might pretend to be on her cell phone. In all cases, Petty says students practice what they’ve learned. Self-defense classes are also offered at Upper Arlington Jiu Jitsu, where trainers similarly emphasize the importance of muscle memory. “To get that, you need to put in a lot of reps,” says Tom Feister, one of the owners. For the past three years, Feister’s wife, Kathy, has taught a one-hour women’s self-defense class at 6 p.m. every Thursday. The program teaches practical defense methods instead of the athletic training more typical of jiujitsu. The Feisters say students of various ages and fitness levels attend. Though the class was started as a six-month revolving curriculum, it is open for drop-in students, Tom says. Cost is $60 per month. Physical techniques include protecting the body from punches and other physical attacks. Students learn methods to free themselves from someone much larger on top of them. “We try to look at the real-life context,” Kathy says. Many scenarios focus on situations in which the attacker might try to take the victim to another location. Because of the intensity of the practice, participants can have the freedom to decide what level of physical activity they find to be comfortable. In some cases, a student
could become effectively paralyzed by fear, halting the class. Kathy experienced that feeling firsthand during a class when her husband was demonstrating a chokehold on her from behind. Though the action was done in a controlled manner, Kathy felt panic begin to cloud her mental state. “I just began to shut down,” she says. That visceral response, she says, highlighted the importance of practicing the defense methods over and over. The class focuses on teaching students how to make their opponents use more energy than they do, Tom says. Students
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
Women’s Self-Defense Class, 6 p.m. Thursdays, Upper Arlington Jiu Jitsu, 1650 Lane Ave. Cost is $60 per month. Visit www.gracieua.com. Women’s Self-Defense Class with Dean Marcellana, 7-8 p.m., Feb. 26, Grandview Heights Public Library, 1685 W. First Ave. Open to females ages 12 and up. Maximum 15 people. Register starting Feb. 12 by calling 614-486-2951. For private self-defense or Eskrima classes, email keyboardescrimador@gmail.com. Upper Arlington will also offer a “Mommy and Me Self Defense” class this winter for mothers and their children ages 3-6 and 6-10. The class focuses on helping children develop agility, reflexes and hand-eye coordination through basic martial arts training. Visit www. uaoh.net to learn more.
17
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18
are taught how to perform chokeholds, using (and) manipulating weapons of shoulder locks and armbars. opportunity,” Marcellana says. “We try to make sure that every stuA pair of glasses or jewelry could dent has a good strategy for self de- even be used in self-defense. If somefense,” Tom says. one is in the kitchen, for example, a fryA similar goal exists across disciplines. ing pan or a can opener could become Though Dean Marcellana trains indi- quick weapons. viduals in Filipino martial arts at Colum“If you can stack your strengths bus Health Works on West Fifth Avenue, against someone’s weaknesses, you’re he sometimes teaches informal, private still going to come out ahead in the defense methods for family or friends. game,” Marcellana says. “Maybe Though his small groups are usually you are smaller; maybe you are not as mixed in terms of gender, Marcellana strong, but there are things that you can has many tips for women. In February, do where you can tip the game into he will share some of his knowledge your favor.” during a free women’s self-defense class at the Grandview Public Library. Sarah Sole is an assistant editor. In the past, when Marcellana taught Feedback welcome at gbishop@ at the Grandview Heights Public Li- cityscenemediagroup.com. brary, women took his class for various reasons. Some had been harassed. Some had restraining orders against people. Others just wanted to learn something different. Marcellana describes his approach as “orthodox” street fighting, and his purpose is to maximize his students’ strengths for self-empowerment. Though a woman might be smaller than a male aggressor, she has various options to bring that person down. She could stomp on an attacker’s foot with the heel of her shoe, for example. “Placed just the right way, the foot has so many bones that could be broken,” Marcellana says. A woman could also kick and aim for the attacker’s knee. She could even punch a person’s throat, aiming for the windpipe. “I try to teach them Kathy Feister, who teaches a women’s self-defense class at Upper Arlington Jiu Jitsu, practices a to become aware of defense technique on her husband, Tim. January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
By Taylor Woodhouse
A Multitude of Meetings
A look at some of the groups that gather regularly at the library
I
f you’ve ever needed to organize a meeting in the Grandview Heights area, you likely know the Grandview Heights Public Library has a meeting room and a conference room available for reservation. What you might not know is how many organizations take advantage of the space. Here are just a few of the groups that rely on the library for regular meet-ups. Service with a Smile The Grandview Civic Welfare Club has served the Grandview community for 94 years. “Our goal is to do things in the community – to promote fellowship and community, and to be engaged in general welfare work,” says Nappy Hetzler, club vice president. The club’s most popular event is its holiday luminary Civic Welfare Club sale, held at the library. The money the sale raises, Though it won’t happen at the library, the club’s 44th anand money raised through donations and fundraising, goes nual Columbus Bottle Show is Feb. 8 at the Doubletree Hilton to scholarships for Grandview Heights High School students. Hotel in northwest Columbus. The club also administers a community fund and a Christmas Highlights will include a handful of displays, including a fund to help community members in need. local milk bottle display, as well as collections of Columbus “We will work with as many families as we have funds for,” bottles and bottle paraphernalia. Attendees are encouraged says Hetzler. to bring their own bottles. The club meets monthly from September to May. For more information on meetings, email civicwelfareclub@gmail.com. Preserving History “We meet at GHPL because it’s a key part of the commuThough it makes the area’s distant past its business, the nity, and we serve the community,” Hetzler says. “It makes Grandview Heights Historical Society has some history of its sense to meet at one of the centers of community activity.” own – it’s been active 40 years and meeting at the library for All Bottled Up Milk bottles, ink bottles, soda bottles – all are fair game for the Central Ohio Bottle Club. The group meets on the last Thursday of each month and plans to use one of the library’s display cases to show off some members’ collections. “The library has been so gracious to us during the years,” says Rojer Moody, club director. Each meeting consists of bottle talk and an informative show-and-tell featuring members’ finds. One set of items that has enjoyed popularity among Columbus collectors has been Peter Schille Soda Company bottles, made by a bottler in German Village for almost 100 years starting in the late 1800s.
much of that time.
All Aboard Ohio
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
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goal is to help bring about a passenger line between Columbus and Chicago, a service that would cut travel time to about four hours, says Ken Prendergast, executive director of All Aboard Ohio. The group is also interested in a light rail line between Port Columbus International Airport and downtown Columbus. In addition to its advocacy, the club gets together to share information, talk about trains and do rail trip reports and critiques. “Our people who attend are from all walks of life,” says Larry Robertson, Columbus coordinator for the group. “We have ex-railroad workers who still have a love for trains, teachers, engineers and a variety of people from all other fields.” Baby Bonding Columbus Babywearing has been providing support to mothers and caregivers in central Ohio since 2004. Columbus Babywearing The practice of “babywearing,” as the group defines it, “We are in a partnership with involves using a sling or carrier the library,” says society Vice on the body to transport a baby, President Win Keller. “They gave hands-free. Meetings are held on us a room around 1980, and the second Sunday and the third we’ve had that room to put our Wednesday of each month and files and collections in. We have are generally attended by regua story time in the library for peolars and caregivers who come ple to come in and talk about for support with their own babytheir times and provide any old wearing or to see demonstrapictures or stories.” tions the group holds. All adults Among the society’s endeavare welcome, as are babies and ors are protecting historical sites, older children. such as the Prescott Bush home “Babywearing is a wonderful and Lindenberg home. The soway for caregivers to bond with ciety hosts a triennial historical a child,” says Jennifer Lawson, a home tour, keeps extensive regroup leader. “The community as cords of the area’s history and a whole is comprised of supportprovides publications that can be ive caregivers who end up formpicked up at the library. ing friendships and organizing “Our goals are much like other play dates with other children.” historical societies: to educate, There is also a Facebook page promote and protect Grandview for those who wish to be a part and Marble Cliff history,” says of the babywearing community society President Tracy Liberatore. but live too far away to particiThe Society recently launched pate, or who just want to keep an online timeline that spans up with the support and advice. from the first settlers of the area “We meet at the Grandview in 1797 to present. The timelibrary because it’s free, someline can be found at www.tikiThe chapter has been in operation what central, and booking for group toki.com/timeline/entr y/348060/ since 1975, and the current group has meetings is allowed six months in adGrandview-Heights-Timeline. met at the library for six years. About 30 vance,” Lawson says. members comprise the club, which meets Getting on Track the second Saturday of every month. Taylor Woodhouse is a contributing Train enthusiasts and advocates Its goal is to promote passenger rail ser- writer. Feedback welcome at unite at the Columbus chapter of All vice. The statewide organization’s current gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com. Aboard Ohio. 20
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
living
By Duane St. Clair
Residence, Reborn
Couple’s 1968 house has undergone a thoroughly modern remodel
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Photos courtesy of Miller Troyer Custom Homes, Amish Cabinetry and Remodeling
atrick and Katie Heublein’s new Upper Arlington home is, in reality, not very new at all. Though the house was built in 1968, it’s been almost completely reconstructed. The brick exterior walls are all that remain of the original house. The new version is white, twice as large and looks completely different, starting at the new concrete driveway. The Heubleins’ and the builder’s stories weave an interesting tale about salvaging, designing and expanding that resulted in a 5,000-squarefoot home instead of a dated, 2,500-square-foot
The centerpiece of the family room is the white wood fireplace front and mantle surrounded by bookshelves.
The hall bath is just one of the rooms demonstrating the house’s “rustic industrial” theme. January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
home with a two-story red brick pillared front porch on threequarter acres on Chartwell Road, close to Lane Road. Charming, attractive, impressive. Any and all might describe the painted white brick house with dormers and country-style porches — prominent architectural features that help subtly incorporate an addition and a three-car garage to the rear. The former Katie Will — who grew up “a couple blocks away,” she says, until her family moved when she was in eighth grade at St. Andrew Middle School – met her husband in Chicago, where she was working as commercial interior design architect. When she decided she wanted to go back home, they moved to a new build in Dublin’s Ballantrae neighborhood 21
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in 2008. After the first two of their three sons arrived, thoughts turned to living in Upper Arlington. That meant remodeling would be likely. Patrick, a commercial insurance salesman able to work from anywhere, met Troy Miller – owner of MillerTroyer Custom Homes, Amish Cabinetry and Remodeling – as Miller worked on his prize-winning BIA Parade of Homes entry in the Meadows at Lewis Center. It was designed to look like a reclaimed mill and featured Miller’s specialty, custombuilt Amish cabinetry and woodwork. The Heubleins bought the vacant UA
house, which had been on the market for several years, and turned to Miller for renovations. The couple were involved in most aspects of the remodeling design, especially Katie, who worked with architect Greg Miller of UA-based New Avenue Architects and Engineers on numerous finishing features throughout the home. Because of her architecture experience, she easily spoke the design architect’s language. Her input included custom cabinets and shelving that are prominent throughout, as well as color, lighting
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
The larger marble slab is one piece. Patrick wired the whole house for a sound system, laid the snap-together floor in the playroom and did all the landscaping. Varied-width reclaimed wood flooring is used throughout the main level. It’s covered with a new product, Rubio Monocoat, which was mixed with a white oak finish and left a hard surface. The family room features an impressive wood coffered ceiling and a white wood fireplace front and mantle with bookshelves on either side surrounding windows. The Heublein house went from 2,500 square feet to 5,000.
and plumbing fixtures — selections that came from a long list of ideas. In November 2013, Troy Miller started on the seven-month project. It entailed removing all but one interior wall, all exterior-wall drywall, wiring, plumbing, heating and air conditioning; tearing off the tall porch roof; building a kitchen addition with an excavated basement; adding dormers and two fireplaces; and installing reclaimed wood floors, including an inlaid herringbone design in the foyer. All rooms upstairs and down are reconfigured or turned to new uses. The original two-car garage is now the family room. The living room is now a study/library with a wall of custom shelves. The dining and family rooms are now the pub and hearth rooms. The pub has a chair-height bar and back wall made of reclaimed Chicago street-paving bricks from the 1800s. The bricks are a back-home connection for Patrick, a Chicago native. A metal and glass wall separates the pub room from the hearth room, where there’s a paving brick fireplace with a couch and two sofa chairs. Katie describes the overall look of the interior as “rustic industrial.” “It’s a little bit modern, but rustic at the same time,” she says. The large, stunning kitchen features dark base cabinets and marble countertops, white wall cabinets and stainless appliances beneath a vaulted ceiling. An oversized 5- by 12-foot island with a twin sink is the work area, and a second chairheight island half as large is for dining. It’s where the kids eat and play. If they use markers to color, “It wipes right off the marble,” Patrick says. January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
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A steam shower with a partial glass wall is one of the most noticeable features in the master bath.
The rebuild included a mudroom, where Miller made four lockers from barn siding. It’s near the back stairs that lead to the upstairs laundry and the playroom. The playroom is plumbed, so it can eventually be converted to a bedroom suite. The laundry room has yellow cabinets and a white countertop. The nearby playroom is decorated with a colorful, child-height sink and brightly colored chairs. The master suite with a vaulted ceiling is above the new, three-car ga-
rage. It’s down a 30-foot hallway from the main house, and its bath includes a pair of vanity counters separated by a standalone tub beneath a window in a niche along the outside wall. The tub is flanked by a large steam shower and partial glass wall. A walk-in closet is to the rear of that. The second floor has three bedrooms, one with its own bath and one with a shared bath. For now, Katie says, two boys sleep in one room, and the room with a bath is for nursery care for their 1-year-old.
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
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Custom cabinets and shelving are scattered through the house.
The rebuilding also went below ground. With additional space under the kitchen addition, the basement was finished, too. There’s a theater with sofa and recliner seating for seven, a full bath and two other rooms not in use yet. The parents probably spend most of their leisure time in the hearth room, Patrick says. There will be more to do outside once the weather is more hospitable. The Heubleins are considering adding a fireplace to the 800-square-foot concrete patio, which has exposed pebble for texture. Miller finished work last July. After just a few months, Patrick says, “We haven’t found a thing we would do differently. We have figured out how to use about every foot.” The house appeared on the NARI Home Improvement Showcase in September. Duane St. Clair is a contributing editor. Feedback welcome at gbishop@ cityscenemediagroup.com. January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
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on the table
By Kyle Banfill
Heavyweight Hops Strong beers are the centerpiece of local-focused hootenanny enjoyed Digfest and its offerings of local craft beer, wine and liquor, they wanted to put on an event that was just craft beer. “The three of us are beer drinkers, and we wanted to put on an event that truly showcased the great beers coming out of central Ohio,” says Laura. Gentry and the Oldhams see the event as a celebration of central Ohio beer culture, and that means it has to have more than just beer. Thus the smoked meats, provided by ManBQue Columbus; the pies and other baked goods from Honeykiss Bakery; the appetizers brought in by Matt the Miller’s Tavern; and the classic arcade games, courtesy of Arcade Super Awesome.
C
Photos courtesy of the Grandview Craft Beer Alliance
raft beer, smoked meats, delicious pies and arcade games will pack the warehouse on Feb. 7 at 945 W. Burrell Ave. That’s when the Grandview Craft Beer Alliance hosts the second High Gravity Hullabaloo. The event runs 6-10 p.m. Craft beer connoisseurs Laura Oldham, Doug Oldham and Jamie Gentry formed the coalition in October 2013. The Hullabaloo was inspired in part by the alliance leaders’ experience at the Grandview Digfest. While they
Appetizers, smoked meats and classic arcade games are all key elements of the High Gravity Hullabaloo.
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January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
A ticket option for designated drivers offers endless play at the arcade games and a collectible pint glass. To correct parking problems that cropped up last year, parking will be available at nearby buildings as well as the warehouse. Guests who want to make the festival into an all-night affair and don’t want to worry about parking or arranging a designated driver for the event can book a night at Hyatt Place Grandview at a discount with a code available at the alliance’s website.
A ticket also buys a collectible tulip glass that can be used for all the beer samples a budding connoisseur can bear. The complimentary cup is just part of what sets the Hullabaloo apart from the next beer festival, Laura says. “So often, you go to a beer fest and Kyle Banfill is a contributing writer. you get a really bad tasting cup,” she Feedback welcome at gbishop@ says. “We wanted to come up with cityscenemediagroup.com. something unique.”
The Saturday Giant
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The collectible tulip glasses are designed to make the beer tasting experience as enjoyable as possible.
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January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
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Nineteen local breweries have signed on to provide their potent potables. All the beers are on the high side in terms of alcohol content – think double or triple IPAs, imperial stouts, and Belgian dubbels or tripels – and many are among the breweries’ lesser-known offerings. Tickets can be purchased at www. grandviewcraftbeer.com. Prices start at $20 for a designated driver ticket, and $60 for beer drinkers. “We didn’t want the type of event where you wait around in lines forever,” says Laura. “We wanted an event where you get your beer and enjoy it. That’s what it’s all about.”
Miller Kelton
Thursday Feb 19 @ 7pm 27
Slip-sliding Away By Sarah Sole
Neighborhood parks offer snowy slopes for sledding
It’s that time of year again – when ordinary landscapes are transformed into sparkling winter wonderlands. If white slopes and rushing, chilly air is what you long for, you don’t have to travel farther than three Upper Arlington parks. All close at dusk.
Sunny 95 Park
Located off of Langston Drive near Greensview Drive, this park is surrounded by a wooded area full of pine trees. Sunny 95 boasts the steepest hill in the three local parks, though only one side of the hill is available for sledding.
Thompson Park
Located by the Lane Road branch of the Upper Arlington Public Library, this park offers a wide hill, though, again, only one side is available for sledding. There are also a few trees that serve as natural obstacles to liven up the fun.
Thompson Park
Northwest Kiwanis Park
This park off Stonehaven Drive near West Henderson Road, which funnels into two baseball fields, offers a wide open, large hill. Sledders can ride down multiple sides of the hill that vary in length and steepness.
Wyman Woods Park
Thompson Park
Wyman Woods Park Sunny 95 Park 28
Sarah Sole is an assistant editor. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com. January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
Photos courtesy of the cities of Upper Arlington and Grandview Heights
Though this park at Grandview Avenue and Goodale Boulevard has been a wellknown destination for sled riders for 40-50 years, extensive renovations have closed it this winter.
bookmarks
Compiled by the Grandview Heights Public Library (Main Branch: 1685 W. First Ave., www.ghpl.org)
Children’s Books
Pardon Me! By Daniel Miyares (ages 4-8) Parrot has barely settled down for a nap on his rock when he is bombarded by other animals wanting to join him. His grouchiness has unintended consequences.
Big Bad Bubble By Adam Rubin (ages 4-8) In the darkness of La La Land dwell fierce monsters who aren’t afraid of anything – except for bubbles.
Bugged: How Insects Changed History By Sarah Albee (ages 8-12) Learn about all of the interesting ways that insects have shaped the course of history. Warning: This book is not for the weak of stomach.
For more book suggestions, visit us online at www.trivillagemagazine.com
The Thickety: A Path Begins By J.A. White (ages 9-12) Kara and her family have been shunned ever since her mother was convicted of witchcraft when she was a little girl. But when Kara discovers a mysterious book in the forbidden forest, she must come to terms with her own power.
Afterworlds By Scott Westerfeld (ages 14-17) In this novel-within-a-novel, read about 18 year old Darcy’s struggle to make it as a debut teen author while following the story of her main character, Lizzie, as she journeys into the underworld.
Adult Books
Clean Slate: A Cookbook and Guide: Reset Your Health, Detox Your Body and Feel Your Best By Martha Stewart Living Magazine At the beginning of the year, everyone has grand plans and resolutions for changing his or her life. This book will help you achieve those health goals with helpful tips for eating “clean” and nutritious foods.
Weight Watchers New Complete Cookbook, Fifth Edition: Over 500 Delicious Recipes for the Healthy Cook’s Kitchen Weight Watchers has a proven history of helping over a million people lose weight since the program was first developed in the 1960s. If weight loss is your New Year’s resolution, check out this updated cookbook, which contains hundreds of recipes to help you craft tasty, yet healthful, menus for your entire family.
The Burn: Why Your Scale Is Stuck and What to Eat About It By Haylie Pomroy So you’ve had some luck losing weight, but then it just stops. You are still exercising, you are still eating right, but no more weight loss. Holly Pomroy’s latest book (after The Fast Metabolism Diet) explains why and can help you get back on track.
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
Sheet Pan Suppers: 120 Recipes for Simple, Surprising, Hands-Off Meals Straight from the Oven By Molly Gilbert What could be more appealing on a cold winter night than roasting, broiling and baking an entire meal on a sheet pan? Easy to put together, easy to clean up, tasty food and a toasty, warm kitchen as well.
Good Health, Good Life: 12 Keys to Enjoying Physical and Spiritual Wellness By Joyce Meyer Well-known televangelist Joyce Meyers brings religion to healthy living with tips to break the bad habits that are adversely affecting your health.
Thinspired: How I Lost 90 Pounds – My Plan for Lasting Weight Loss and SelfAcceptance By Mara Schiavocampo Need some inspiration to meet your weight loss goals? After spending most of her life on an endless roller coaster of fad diets, an eating disorder, diet pills and workouts, ABC News correspondent Mara Schiavocampo lost 90 pounds over a two-year period and found peace and happiness, as well as a healthy lifestyle. 29
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Showcase your home listings to every homeowner in the Tri-Village area. Your listings will also appear in the digital edition of the magazine, hosted on the Tri-Village Magazine home page: www.trivillagemagazine.com Contact Wayne Rolsen today for more information: 614-572-1255 wrolsen@cityscenemediagroup.com Get a great response from your ads in TRI-VILLAGE MAGAZINE! 30
January/February 2015 • www.trivillagemagazine.com
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