Columbus Monthly – October 2018

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COLUMBUS MONTHLY

THe LONg waiT fOr UrBaN MeYer’S faTe || STeak, NOT SUBTLeTY, STarS aT Jeff rUBY’S

brett kaufman’s gravity

s e s i r y t i v a r G Brett Kaufman taKes a Bold risK in franKlinton (and a five-story mural of a Brazilian artist is just the start). “What maKes us Weird is What maKes us Great.”

OctOber 2018 OCTOBer 2018

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Contents

On the cOver: Photo by tim Johnson

OctOber 2018

46

GRaviTy RisEs Can Franklinton’s newest development change the world?

Features 52

MikE DisaBaTO’s WaR A whistleblower battles ohio state—and his own demons.

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in LiMBO aT LOnGaBERGER

Recapturing the drama—and the boredom—awaiting the urban meyer verdict in August

photo: tim johnson

Jon Stommel, one half of the rather Severe team, works on the beginnings of the 70-yard mural at Gravity.

OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Contents OctOber 2018

H H

154 Arch City

Home & Style

Dining

20 development

136 Q&a

154 review

22 altruism

138 products

a desk refresh for fall

inside the making of black radish creamery’s new cheddar

41 perspective

140 featured home

161 product

the fight to save the brewery district’s antique mall

dale jr. makes a friend.

thank you for the barre.

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jane scott hosts a lively debate for 200.

a historic carriage house in clintonville

jeff ruby’s steakhouse: big and rich

158 craft

craft beer is going to the dogs.

140 in every issue

10 FRom thE EDItoR 12 small talk 32 DatEbook 36 PEoPlE 145 toP 25 REal EstatE tRansaCtIons 168 CalEnDaR 176 CIty quotIEnt

photos: left and middle right, tim johnson; top right, jodi miller; bottom right, rob hardin

161 22

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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OCT OCT

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OCT OCT

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HARLEM GOSPEL HARLEM GOSPEL CHOIR CHOIR Lincoln Theatre

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IRON & IRON & WINE WINE Southern Theatre

Lincoln Theatre

Southern Theatre

OCT OCT

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CELTIC X CELTIC THUNDER THUNDER X TOUR TOUR Ohio Theatre Ohio Theatre

OCT OCT

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NOV NOV

Southern Theatre

NOV NOV

AILEY AILEY II II

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DISNEY DISNEY JUNIOR JUNIOR DANCE DANCE PARTY PARTY • ON TOUR! Palace ON TOUR! • Palace Theatre Theatre

NOV NOV

16 Palace Theatre

DEC DEC

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PEPPA PIG PEPPA PIG LIVE! LIVE! Palace Theatre Palace Theatre

CRAIG CRAIG FERGUSON FERGUSON

DEC DEC

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THE THE PIANO PIANO GUYS GUYS Palace Palace Theatre Theatre

Davidson Davidson Theatre, Theatre, Riffe Riffe Center Center

FAMILY FAMILY SERIES SERIES

DEC DEC

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TODD TODD SNIDER SNIDER

Davidson Davidson Theatre, Theatre, Riffe Riffe Center Center

NOV NOV

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DANCE OF DANCE THEATRE THEATRE OF HARLEM HARLEM Palace Theatre

Southern Theatre

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Davidson Davidson Theatre, Theatre, Riffe Riffe Center Center

NOV NOV

WHOSE LIVE WHOSE LIVE ANYWAY? ANYWAY? Southern Theatre

NOV NOV

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I’M WITH I’M WITH HER HER Southern Theatre

SHAWN SHAWN COLVIN COLVIN

Davidson Davidson Theatre, Theatre, Riffe Riffe Center Center

NOV NOV

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Ohio Theatre

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AN AN ACOUSTIC ACOUSTIC EVENING EVENING WITH WITH

Lincoln Theatre

BLACK VIOLIN BLACK VIOLIN Ohio Theatre

OCT OCT

12 LUCIA MICARELLI LUCIA MICARELLI Lincoln Theatre

photos: left and middle right, tim johnson; top right, jodi miller; bottom right, rob hardin

OCT OCT

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DAVE DAVE KOZ KOZ AND AND FRIENDS FRIENDS CHRISTMAS TOUR CHRISTMAS TOUR 2018 2018 •• Palace Palace Theatre Theatre

HIP HIP HOP HOP NUTCRACKER NUTCRACKER •• Palace Palace Theatre Theatre

WITH WITH MC MC KURTIS KURTIS BLOW BLOW

Photos: Photos:Kim KimBlack, Black,Solaiman SolaimanFazel, Fazel,Joseph JosephLlanes, Llanes,courtesy courtesyWhose WhoseLive LiveAnyway, Anyway,Kyle KyleFroman, Froman,Amanda AmandaRowan, Rowan,Stacie StacieHuckeba, Huckeba,Rachel RachelNeville, Neville,Ian IanCunningham, Cunningham,Antonio AntonioDixon Dixon

OCT OCT

“Fall” into great entertainment! Get Get tickets tickets and and learn learn more more at at capa.com capa.com capa.com capa.com •• 614-469-0939 614-469-0939 CAPA CAPA Ticket Ticket Center Center

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HealtH Matters: survivinG Breast CanCer

The Columbus Foundation’s annual report to the community

How Central Ohio providers are helping patients live longer

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Nat Geo Live Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous Friday, October 19 McCoy Community Center for the Arts

still GoinG stronG

Amenities and activities at senior living facilities

RestauRant Guide Best Columbus monthly

WIN TWO TICKETS Aladdin

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Wednesday, October 24 Ohio Theatre

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We rank the city’s essential dining destinations

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WIN A $100 GIFT CARD College Football Road Game November 9-11 East Lansing, Michigan

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Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul Wednesday, November 14 Newport Music Hall

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suBsCriBer Bonus: Columbus Monthly’s annual

Courtesy of

Restaurant Guide is included with the October issue to our subscribers. It’s packed with the most complete directory of area restaurants to reference all year long, plus our annual list of the 10 best restaurants in the city. Call 877-688-8009 to subscribe.

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voluMe 44 / nuMBer 10 Columbus Monthly (Issn 2333-4150) is published monthly by Gatehouse media, llC. All contents of this magazine are copyrighted © 2018, all rights reserved. Reproduction or use, without written permission, of editorial or graphic content in any manner is prohibited. Publisher assumes no responsibility for return of unsolicited materials. Known office of publication is 62 E. broad st., Columbus, ohio 43215. Periodicals postage paid at Columbus, ohio, and additional mailing offices. PostmAstER: send address changes to Columbus monthly, 62 E. broad st., P.o. box 1289, Columbus, oh 43216.

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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There is no routine mammogram. When it comes to mammograms, routine just isn’t enough. That’s because routine applies only to what’s predictable, straightforward and logical. And breast cancer simply isn’t. At The James, our radiologists read only mammograms, all day, every day. They’re trained to detect the nuances that people who don’t read mammograms all day might miss. It’s that level of expertise that results in prevention, detection and peace of mind that are far beyond routine. Don’t get a routine mammogram. Get a James mammogram. To schedule yours, call 800-240-4477 or visit cancer.osu.edu/mammo.

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Subscribe to Subscribe or renew your annual subscription to Columbus Monthly for $18. Go to columbusmonthly.com or call 877-688-8009.

President bradley m. harmon Publisher/general manager Ray Paprocki assOCiate Publisher/advertising direCtOr Rheta Gallagher

EDItoRIAl

editOr Eric lyttle seniOr editOrs Chris Gaitten, suzanne Goldsmith hOme & style editOr sherry beck Paprocki dining editOr Erin Edwards sPeCial seCtiOns editOr Emma Frankart henterly

DEsIGn & PRoDuCtIon

PrOduCtiOn/design direCtOr Craig Rusnak art direCtOr betsy becker assOCiate art direCtOr Alyse Kordenbrock

DIGItAl

editOr Erin Edwards

PhotoGRAPhy

PhOtO editOr tim Johnson assOCiate PhOtO editOr Rob hardin

ADVERtIsInG

seniOr aCCOunt exeCutive holly Gallucci aCCOunt exeCutives michelle Crossman, Kyle nussbaum, Jackie Vosler Classified sales terri tribbie, telana Veil, Amy Vidrick sales assistant lauren transue

mARKEtInG & CIRCulAtIon marKeting manager lauren Reinhard

ADmInIstRAtIon

administrative & finanCial analyst Ryan Koenig

IntERns

Rylan lee, Clare Proctor, lillian van Wyngaarden letters: letters@columbusmonthly.com Calendar: calendar@columbusmonthly.com advertising: advertise@columbusmonthly.com subsCriPtiOns/CustOmer serviCe circsupport@dispatch.com toll Free: 877-688-8009

editOrial/advertising OffiCes 62 E. broad st. P.o. box 1289 Columbus, oh 43216 614-888-4567

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Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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From the Editor

One More for the Road It’s with both sadness and excitement that I write this editor’s note. I’ve spent my entire adult life searching for words. I’ve felt their nuance, heard their rhythms. I’ve seen the way they can be strengthened or weakened by mingling with others. And now, after decades of trying to find just the right word, I’m down to one: goodbye. By the time you read this, I hope to be somewhere in New England, slowing my roll in retirewHaT wE ment and decompressing as I LEaRNED THis watch the leaves turn from MONTH green to red. More hours of my life have the Greater Columbus Antique been devoted to the discipline mall has previously served as a of journalism and the craft funeral home, an Elks lodge and the home of a soap magnate (Page 20). of writing than anything I’ve ever done. I earned my first From July 2017 to July 2018, full-time journalism job in rental rates in Franklinton rose August 1984, writing sports for 12.8 percent—the most of any Centhe former weekly Suburban tral ohio community (Page 46). News chain, and followed that the ohio history Center’s with gigs at The Other Paper, architect, W. byron Ireland, The Columbus Dispatch, and for also worked on the st. louis Gatemore than half of my career, way Arch before founding a firm in writing or editing Columbus Columbus (Page 176). Monthly magazine. I never even sent out a résumé in all those years. Why would I? What other occupation pays you to be curious, to meet fascinating people? To tell stories? What other occupation changes nearly every day? It’s a lucky man who gets paid to do what he loves. But the same curiosity that made journalism so captivating is taking me in a new direction. My wife, Cindy, and I are piling into a big motorhome and heading out to explore America. The only deadlines we need to meet now will be set by our own whims. And as intimidating as it is to leave behind a much-loved, 34-year

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Contributors career, it’s thrilling, and even a little frightening, to be standing at the precipice of a midlife doover that will allow us to spend every day, all day, together, eyes wide open. We’re not running from anything. We’re not searching for anything. We’ve simply made a conscious decision to reallocate our time. Instead of selling it in exchange for a paycheck, we’ve decided to spend it writing a new story. I already have my new lede written: Isn’t it funny how “meander” kind of sounds like “me and her?” Thanks for being a part of my first long ride.

Michelle Herman

is the author of eight books of fiction and nonfiction and an English professor at osu. her first-person piece about finding self-actualization in dance begins on Page 41.

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Eric Lyttle elyttle@columbusmonthly.com

Dave Ghose

is a former senior editor of Columbus Monthly and the current editor of Columbus CEO. his fascinating piece on the complex world of mike Disabato begins on Page 52.

Nicole Rasul

is a regular contributor to our Dining section. this month she provides an insider’s look at the making of black Radish Creamery’s new cheddar, which begins on Page 158.

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photos: clockwise from left, will shilliNG; courtesy michelle hermaN; rob hardiN; courtesy Nicole rasul

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Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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photos: clockwise from left, will shilliNG

TIMELESS DESIGNS FOR EVERY STYLE, ROOM AND BUDGET

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Small Talk DECORATIVE ARTS CENTER OF OHIO PRESENTS

This exhibition was organized by the Massillon Museum, Massillon, Ohio, with support from the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

This exhibition was made possible by the generous support of David and Glenyce Rodenbaugh.

FREE ADMISSION

Tuesday–Friday, 10AM–4PM; Sat & Sun, 1–4PM 12

Hello, Ciao Our August story by dining editor Erin Edwards about Ciao Café, a new gelato shop in Delaware, was one of our most widely shared stories of this long, hot summer, with hundreds of shares on Facebook. It garnered comments in both English and Albanian, the native tongue of owners Etleva Baku and Dritan Berberi. “The best gelato! Also love their tiramisu,” wrote Nicole Reynolds in a public post. “Thankful to live in a town with such unique places!” “Bravoo Tani,” wrote Leonard Lushi, who lives in Montreal, Quebec. (Tani is Berberi’s nickname.) “E meritoni suksesin.” Translation: “You deserve success.”

Jailhouse Rock “Ohio Pen’s Rolling Stones,” Clare Proctor’s story in the September issue about the creative repurposing of stones and other artifacts from the huge prison that was demolished in 1998, inspired David Carroll Jones to send us a photo of his own souvenir from the Ohio Penitentiary. It’s a hefty chunk of masonry from a 60-foot section of the exterior wall that collapsed onto West Street in 1994, crushing two cars. According to Jones, the state gave away pieces of the wall as souvenirs following the incident. One ended up in the WSYX TV newsroom, where Jones directed the 6 and 11 p.m. broadcasts at the time. Jones took it with him when he moved to New York. “I always liked odd things like that, so I took it home with me,” writes Jones. “I’ve had it ever since.” Extra Reading If you’re not following us at columbus monthly.com, you’re missing our web-only content, often about events that reach us too late for our upcoming issues. A good instance occurred last month with an interview with Ron and Ann Pizzuti, who announced on Sept. 7 that they would generously donate their 5-year-old museum, the Pizzuti Collection, to the Columbus Museum of Art. Other web-only stories included a preview of a true-crime event at the Ohio History Connection and conversations with three former OSU athletes whose artworks were included in a new exhibition at the McConnell Arts Center, Varsity Arts. In addition, dining edi-

tor Erin Edwards gives foodies who follow us online the inside skinny on restaurant openings and closings in her weekly column, “The Scoop.” Follow us on Twitter or Facebook to stay updated on when we post fresh content. Correction In our September article about Chris McNeil’s tongue-in-cheek effort to commemorate the Browns’ winless season with a Perfect Season Parade, we got 39-year-old McNeil’s age wrong.

We want to hear from you. send to: Editor, Columbus Monthly, 62 E. broad st., P.o. box 1289, Columbus, oh 43216. or email: letters@columbusmonthly.com. A letter must include the writer’s name, address and daytime phone number. letters will be edited for length and clarity. All letters sent to Columbus Monthly are considered for publication, either in print or online.

FOllOw US! wEB: Columbusmonthly.com Email: letters@columbusmonthly.com Columbus monthly @Columbusmonthly @Columbusmonthly

photo: tim johnson

All Alone by Nelly Toll, 1944, Watercolor and graphite pencil on paper, detail; Image courtesy of Sharon Segall

September 15 – December 30, 2018

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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photo: tim johnson

Columbus, Ohio

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Backyard not included. Drink Responsibly. Bourbon from Watershed Distillery, Columbus, Ohio. Bottled at 45% Alc./Vol.

Backyard. Bourbon.

9/12/18 12:24 PM


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BALTIC MILL WINERY

BARDWELL WINERY

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The Baltic Mill Winery opened in 2014, but the magic inside has been at work since 1908 when the mill was first erected. Once a highly efficient flour mill equipped with three floors of machinery, it has been renovated and preserved into a relaxing winery rich in history. Phenomenal wine for every palette, tours, live music and art classes wrapped in the mystique of one of Ohio’s oldest landmarks in the center of Amish country— what more could you ask for?

Located in the historic Moon Buggy Factory in Brown County, we offer a variety of small batch wines, craft beers and ciders. Check our Facebook page for our live music schedule. Our menu includes everything from hand-cut steaks to our own housemade pizza sauce. Join us for good food and great times.

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111 E. Main St. Baltic, OH 43804 330-365-0524 balticmillwinery.com

716 N. High St. Mt. Orab, OH 45154 513-309-0781 bardwellwinery.com

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BOKES CREEK WINERY

BROTHER’S DRAKE MEADERY

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Delicious wines made from estate grapes and whole fruits grown in Raymond, Ohio. Additional whole fruits are added to ours. We are proud to cultivate, harvest, crush, press and ferment on-premise, free from artificial flavoring and/or coloring.

Bee inspired. Our meads are crafted with locally sourced raw Ohio honey. We curate our space with amazing live music and art. We serve the best Ohio-made spirits at our bar and have the most genuine customer service. Our urban and TV-free space is a comfortable and sexy night spot where the vibe is independent, inclusive and classy. The rest is open for you to create your perfect special event or your favorite local hangout.

26211 OH-31 Raymond, OH 43067 937-358-2401 bokescreekwinery.com

26 E. Fifth Ave. Columbus, OH 43201 614-388-8765 brothersdrake.com

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CLE URBAN WINERY

DALTON UNION WINERY & BREWERY

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Experience some of the best hand-crafted wine, beer, hard cider and mead Central Ohio has to offer! Just a short 25-minute drive from Columbus, we offer a spacious tasting room in a beautiful country setting with live music every Saturday night. Enjoy patio seating when the weather is nice and catch a food truck most Saturdays. A true hidden gem, come experience the Dalton Union difference!

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21100 Shirk Rd. Marysville, OH 43040 937-645-5889 daltonunion.com

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CLE Urban Winery is a working winery and tasting room located in the historic, urban setting of Cleveland Heights, Ohio. We produce and sell wine made from highquality grape juice soured from the US West Coast. Our “Good Wine Made Fun” concept celebrates Cleveland and builds community. We’ll change your mind about Ohio wine!

2180B Lee Rd. Cleveland Heights, OH 44118 216-417-8313 cleurbanwinery.com

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FOX WINERY

GERVASI VINEYARD

Located in Galion, Ohio, we specialize in wine making and offering a full range of wines from sweet to dry. Our winery features a wine-tasting bar, complimentary cheese and crackers, outside patio and private room for tastings that can accommodate up to 16 people. We offer both wine- and beer-making supplies for sale, and you can make your own wine in our customer production room! Open Wednesday through Saturday, 12 p.m.-9 p.m.

Experience Gervasi Vineyard, a beautiful, upscale, Tuscan-inspired winery resort located in the heart of Canton, Ohio, featuring award-winning wines, private winery tours, tastings and pairings, boutique shopping, luxurious villa suites and exceptional cuisine at our upscale Bistro or casual Crush House bar and eatery. New distillery and hotel coming in 2019.

227 Harding Way E Galion, OH 44833 419-468-9463 foxwineryllc.com

1700 55th St. NE Canton, OH 44721 330-497-1000 gervasivineyard.com

HANOVER WINERY

HENKE WINERY AND RESTAURANT

Located in Ohio’s southwest corner, only 10 minutes from Miami University in Oxford. International and Ohio award-winning wines to sample, over 26 varieties produced on-site. Live music and events. Picnics are welcome. Enjoy outdoor seating with scenic views and beautiful sunsets. Visit our website and Facebook page for hours and events. Open all year.

Henke Winery, est. 1996, has been voted a Top Ten Urban Winery in the USA and Best Wine Shop in Cincinnati. Vintner Joe Henke consistently medals high in international and local wine competitions. Visit us to enjoy the full experience of Henke Winery— exceptional wine, cuisine and live music. Cheers!

2165 Morman Rd. Hamilton, OH 45013 513-863-3119 hanoverwinery.com

3077 Harrison Ave. Cincinnati, OH 45211 513-662-9463 henkewine.com

KINKEAD RIDGE WINERY

L’UVA BELLA WINERY & BISTRO

Since its establishment in 2001, Kinkead Ridge Winery has produced a variety of quality wines. Bringing in grapes from Ohio and beyond, we enjoy working with new grapes and blends to create wines that satisfy every taste. We invite you to stop by for a visit. Follow us on Facebook.

L’uva Bella Winery is one of the largest wineries in Ohio, but the only Californiastyle winery providing “Fine Wines, Great Foods and Good Times” at our location in Lowellville and expanding wine distribution. L’uva Bella Juice Company provides grapes, wine-making juice and equipment, wholesale juices and bulk wines.

904 Hamburg St. Ripley, OH 45167 937-392-6077 kinkeadridge.com

6597 Center Rd. Lowellville, OH 44436 330-536-6450 luvabella.com

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THE LUMBERYARD WINERY

PLUM RUN WINERY

The Lumberyard Winery & Supply is situated along the scenic Maumee River in a historic lumberyard in Napoleon, Ohio. Sit down and relax in the tasting room, or in the warmer months our covered patio that was converted from a native timber lumber storage building.

Located in Grove City’s historic Town Center, we offer many varieties of red and white wines, ciders and our own artfully crafted beers, all made on-site. We are open daily at 11 a.m. for lunch and dinner and offer private space for events. (Closed Mondays.)

118 W. Front St., Ste. G Napoleon, OH 43545 419-599-9463 thelumberyardwinery.com

3946 Broadway Grove City, OH 43123 614-991-0338 plumrunwinery.com

ST. IVES WINERY

WAGON WHEEL WINES

Champaign County’s first winery; we’re located in a small area called Cable. If you’re looking for a relaxing place to come and chat, bring your own food, and drink some delicious wine with family or friends, then we are the place for you! Open Friday 5-9 p.m., Saturday 12-4 p.m.

Wagon Wheel Wines is a boutique winery in the heart of historic downtown Canal Winchester. We specialize in seasonal wines, custom labels, wine events and DIY craft events! Check out our mobile wine bar called “Lil’ Cork & Brew” at area wine festivals, and rent it for your next private party.

6932 Cable Rd. Cable, OH 43009 740-649-2832 stiveswinery.com

58 E. Waterloo St. Canal Winchester, OH 43110 740-409-0186

THE WINERY AT VERSAILLES

WISHMAKER HOUSE WINERY

The Winery at Versailles boasts a wine list of over 30 varieties, all made here at our facility, from dry reds to sweet dessert wines. Visit our country setting winery for themed dinner events and much more while you enjoy seating indoors or outdoors on our covered patio overlooking the vineyards.

Our winery and wine bar opened in March 2014 and is currently producing 11 house wines. All of our wines are produced from grapes grown in Ohio or New York. Specializing in regional varietals such as Niagara and Concord, we also serve delicious food with fresh and local ingredients.

6572 OH-47 Versailles, OH 45380 937-526-3232 wineryatversailles.com

116 Main St. Bellville, OH 44813 419-886-9463 wishmakerhouse.com/our-winery

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

VACATIONS AND GETAWAYS

Autumn calls for change! Campus Martius Museum in historic Marietta is proud to open a temporary exhibit from November through January, on loan from the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, entitled Girls to the Front. Three floors of exhibits encompass pioneer times through 20th century and includes daily tours of the nationally known 1700s Rufus Putnam house that rests on its original foundation. Campus Martius is a must-see in any season. Friends of the Museums Campus Martius Museum Ohio River Museum

Gervasi Vineyard Experience an upscale, Tuscan-inspired winery resort featuring 28 varietals of award-winning wines—including three estate wines—a state-of-the-art winery, tours, tastings and culinary classes. Escape for “a night in Tuscany” in a luxurious Villa suite in our boutique inn. Dine in two distinct restaurants featuring exceptional cuisine—the rustic, upscale Italian Bistro or casual, contemporary dining at The Crush House Wine Bar & Eatery. Coming soon to Gervasi Village: a new distillery and boutique hotel!

601 Second St. Marietta, OH 45750 740-373-3750

1700 55th St. NE Canton, OH 44721 330-497-1000 gervasivineyard.com

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Visit Greater Lima

Want the recipe for a perfect weekend getaway? How about a destination full of diverse dining, craft cocktails and microbrews, live music, exciting attractions and a vibrant arts district? You’ll find all of that and more as you discover the urban DNA of Greater Lansing—the essence of Downtown Pure Michigan. We want you to #lovelansing like a local, so book your weekend getaway today!

A priceless trip doesn’t always have to be expensive. Let us show you that FUN looks good on you. In Lima/ Allen County, you will find the excitement of larger cities without the cost. Allen County awaits, so come have some fun and find your style.

Greater Lansing Convention & Visitors Bureau 500 E. Michigan Ave., Ste. 180 Lansing, MI 48912 888-252-6746 lansing.org

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ArchCity Development p. 20 | transit p p. 24 24 | sports p. 26 | people p. p. 36

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rock ’n’ roll rulings

A music exhibit at the supreme Court of ohio highlights the building’s wealth of art.

Photo by tim johnson

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The Greater Columbus Antique Mall

A Bulldozer in an Antique Shop Who has the right to raze this classic building? By KaThy Lynn GRay

Should the historic Greater Columbus Antique Mall just south of Downtown Columbus be demolished to make way for a drive-thru restaurant? Or should the former Brewery District mansion—now resembling a five-story attic filled with kitschy collections of glass salt and pepper shakers, luxurious full-length mink and fox coats and 2-foottall rooster lamps—be saved because of its architectural significance? 20

You might think the building’s owner, Fred Altevogt, would play the role of stubborn savior, fighting to stop the demolition, especially once you learn that he’s spent 38 years of his life in love with antiques. You’d be wrong. “If you own something I think you should have the right to tear it down,” Altevogt says. But it’s not up to him; instead, the building’s future appears to be in the hands of

the Brewery District Commission, which must approve demolition, and of the potential buyer, Schiff Properties, which told the commission in April that the building can’t be salvaged. The developer has repeatedly put its demolition request on the commission’s agenda and then postponed it, most recently in early September. And the company has been unresponsive to requests for comment. Preservationists have vigorously opposed the demise of the building, a 12,000-squarefoot red brick Victorian Italianate at 1045 S. High St. that once drew busloads of antique enthusiasts. Columbus Landmarks included it on its 2018 list of endangered buildings. Matthew Leasure, advocacy chairman for the preservation group, says the building has no major deterioration or structural problems and has significant historical value and architectural character. “The more of these you lose, the less of that historic character exists,” he says. The 129-year-old building began as the home of Bavarian immigrant George Janton Sr., a soap and candle manufacturer. The Janton family owned it until 1924, when it became a funeral home, and then, from 1952 until the 1970s, an Elks Lodge. The antique mall opened in 1979, and Altevogt, 63, began working there a year later on his days off from the Hamilton Township Fire Department. By 1993 he was the sole owner. “In our prime we had sales up near threequarters of a million [dollars] a year,” he says, “which I thought was pretty good for what I jokingly called a mom-and-pop junk store.” Now sales have fallen to about $300,000 annually, and Altevogt has had to borrow to keep the enterprise afloat. Still, he hadn’t thought of selling until last year when a Realtor wrote and asked him to consider an offer. That fell through, but then Schiff Properties came calling. “Business has gotten so lousy the last several years that keeping it open any longer is not economically viable,” says Altevogt, who’s been in a wheelchair for more than a year because of neurological problems. “I’d like to see it go for 50 or 60 more years, but the times don’t call for that.” The Brewery Commission, he says, shouldn’t have the right to waylay Schiff’s plans and, as a result, his sale of the building to the developer. Gerald Simmons, commission chairman, says the group’s decision to allow or veto demolition, now scheduled for Oct. 4, will be based on what’s best for the neighborhood. “We’re not the taste police; what kind of business would go in there is not in our jurisdiction,” Simmons says. “We’re just an architectural review committee.” ®

photo: tim johnson

Arch City Development

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Tower Trouble Historic review and modernity make expensive bedfellows. licking County residents may have been surprised this summer to learn that 22 native American tribes charged the county a total of $14,150 in fees to review its plan for a new 911 communications tower in heath. but county officials had encountered such fees before. the review is triggered any time federally funded or licensed construction will disturb land that might contain evidence of settlements by native tribes. Commissioner tim bubb says the county is “ground zero” for such artifacts because of the many flint deposits in the region. For millennia, tribes would visit the area to mine the stone then camp or build villages nearby to fashion arrowheads and other implements. ben barnes, second chief of the shawnee tribe, points out that the large number of tribes with links to the area reflects the way they fractured in the wake of their forced removal from ohio in the 1830s.

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several tribes actually waived fees in light of the tower’s public purpose. In the first round of reviews, four eligible tribes declined fees totaling $1,900; several more later returned approximately $4,500, according to sean King, the director of the communications center. he’s pleased the process did not delay the tower, which will be completed in november. Cell service providers are more upset. In February, sprint complained to the Federal Communications Commission that historic review has cost the company $23 million nationally and caused many delays. the FCC responded by lifting the requirement for smaller towers that companies plan to build as they roll out 5G service. About 20 tribes are fighting the change in federal court. —Suzanne Goldsmith

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Arch City altruism

The Ballad of Maddie and Dale A legendary NASCAR driver met an outgoing girl on a trip to Columbus in 2015. Three years later, an extraordinary friendship has taken root.

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By ChRis GaiTTEn

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. takes a selfie with Maddie Delaney to send to his wife, Amy.

the Delaneys’ trips: selling one of his cars at the annual Barrett-Jackson auto auction in Arizona, cheering for Junior at the Quaker State 400 in Kentucky and relaxing at the sprawling North Carolina estate of Dale and his wife, Amy. At Nationwide Children’s in early August, Dale talks fondly about their travels together. “To take her outside of that [hospital] environment and do things that are normal—that felt great for me, and I think it maybe helped her understand that the friendship was genuine and real.” Those times aren’t always easy to come by. For the people gathered on the ninth floor— hospital staff, Nationwide reps, the media— his presence is a public relations affair. He appears uncomfortable with all the attention even after two decades in the spotlight. He’s

most at ease talking quietly with kids—hunkering in a corner chair, lowering his voice, shunning the guise of NASCAR Champion Dale Earnhardt Jr. to just be Maddie’s friend Dale. They discuss camping—the Delaneys are going straight from the hospital to a long weekend retreat. Then Maddie hands him a huge gift bag containing a blanket that Nickole made for Dale’s 13-week-old firstborn child. The whirlwind tour ends too soon. He says goodbye but continues chatting about camping as he waits for the elevator. He has a 21-foot Airstream but says Amy thinks it’s too cramped. “Use the bus!” Maddie calls out, referencing the replica of the bus from the movie “Bull Durham” that Dale keeps on his property. He breaks into laughter. It’s something only a friend would know. ®

s s

photo: tim johnson

The nurse’s station on the ninth floor of Nationwide Children’s Hospital is crowded with people awaiting the arrival of Dale Earnhardt Jr. just before noon on Aug. 2. Twelve-year-old Maddie Delaney, clad in the retired NASCAR driver’s No. 88 jersey, sits in her neon pink-framed wheelchair next to her parents, Nickole and Kevin. Junior rounds the corner accompanied by an entourage equal to the crowd. All eyes are on him. It’s his fifth visit to the hospital, thanks to his relationship with racing sponsor Nationwide. He’s here for the unveiling of the renovated Dale and Amy Earnhardt Activity Room, where he met Maddie in 2015 during his first tour. She was born with spastic diplegic cerebral palsy and was recovering from back surgery at the time, and they bonded over video games. (“I lost miserably,” Maddie says.) The kids Dale meets on these visits are often too shy to come out of their shells, he says. Not Maddie. She was eager to talk, and they clicked easily. A couple of weeks after Dale’s August visit, Maddie recalls their initial meeting. “I wasn’t like, ‘Oh my gosh, he’s famous,’ and all that crap,” she says, then she hedges a little. “At first I was, but not really now.” Inside the Delaneys’ Galena home, she readies her backpack for the first day of seventh grade while her parents discuss her years-long friendship with the beloved racecar driver. “They have this really strange, special bond that you wouldn’t expect them to have, but they do,” Nickole says. Maddie surprised Dale by showing up for his second hospital visit for a rematch—she got revenge in a boxing video game—and eventually she and Dale began hanging out elsewhere. Among Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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100% TBDBITL tbdbitl.osu.edu/give

photo: tim johnson

Join us as we march toward the end of the 100% TBDBITL campaign, which will provide scholarship support for all band students, now and in the future. Recognizing the contributions these talented students make to Ohio State, the university will match the distribution on the first $6 million of eligible gifts given by Dec. 31, 2018.

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Supporting

100% of students who give

100%

on the field and in the classroom

9/12/18 12:31 PM


Arch City transit

We Tried It: Scootin’ This summer, Central Ohio was beset by a flock of Birds, followed shortly by a bevy of Limes. Like them or loathe them, electric scooters had arrived in Columbus, and I couldn’t wait to take one for a spin. I’ll be the first to admit I wasn’t using the Lime-S scooter properly. But I had somewhere to be and a vehicle that had run out of fuel mid-trip, so, armed with a can of gas and my own hubris, I set off into the bike lane on Summit Street. I was flying full speed— maybe 17 mph, thanks to a slight downhill slope or a tailwind—between Campus and Italian Village when the bag carrying my gas can and iPad, balanced precariously on the scooter’s footboard, ripped under the weight of its contents. My stuff went flying and I braked. Hard. There was a flicker of realization that I’d screwed up before I launched forward into nothingness, hit the pavement and skidded to a halt. I bloodied my knee—the pavement cheese-gratered right through my jeans and the top layer of skin—and I sprained my ankle. My calf sported a gnarly bruise the size of my hand. 24

A week later, I was standing outside Little Palace with a co-worker, watching someone brave a downpour on a scooter. As he attempted to transition from the sidewalk to the bike lane on Fourth Street, he hit a puddle and face-planted. At least I know I’m not alone in my struggle. Safety has been a major concern among city leaders and residents since Lime and Bird scooters suddenly proliferated around Central Ohio this summer, prompting Upper Arlington and Bexley officials to remove them from city streets. Columbus has allowed the scooters, with a few caveats. The details seem to change almost daily, but Columbus set ground rules regarding the number of companies that can operate in the city and how many scooters they can deploy. Other regulations about payment options and parking restrictions are also pending. And in early September, Mayor Visit columbusmonthly.com/scooters for a crash course—pun intended—on using electric scooters.

Andy Ginther announced a temporary “emergency” rule banning scooter-riders from the sidewalks. Kyle Bivenour, Lime’s Central Ohio operations manager, has a few safety tips. “We encourage everybody to ride the scooters like you would a bicycle,” he says. “Use the roadways, use bike lanes when possible, and make sure that you’re adhering to all traffic laws.” He advises riders to signal turns the way they would on bikes and to use helmets. Bird is also working toward a safer scootering environment. The company distributes free helmets to riders upon request, provides an in-app tutorial on using the service and displays safety information on the device itself, according to a Bird spokesperson. As for me, I’m not quite ready to swear off scooters yet, despite the insistence of colleagues and friends who think I’m simply too clumsy. Ignoring their admonitions, I recently rode one for a half-mile Downtown. I carried only my secured backpack and a healthy respect for safety precautions. I’m happy to report that despite wearing heels, I made it to my destination without incident. ®

illustration: dave urban

Emma Frankart Henterly gives trendy last-mile transportation a shot.

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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illustration: dave urban

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Arch City sports

Bio in Brief

The Backup’s Backup Meet the Blue Jackets’ safety netminder. Each morning at the Columbus Blue Jackets’ “pre-practice,” Bailey Seagraves is one of the first players to take the ice. His job is simple, but daunting. It’s his responsibility to take the punishment that coaches would prefer bigger names like Sergei Bobrovsky or Joonas Korpisalo not take. So for 30 minutes before regular practice begins, Seagraves stands in net and blocks shots that approach 100 mph. He isn’t paid for that privilege. He isn’t an official Blue Jacket and has never made an NHL appearance. So why get up each morning to be pelted by hard rubber pucks? “It’s for the love of the game,” assistant coach Kenny McCudden says. Seagraves has a unique job in American sports. He’s the Blue Jackets’ emergency goalkeeper, an official role that doesn’t come with a paycheck or a roster spot but that puts him in Nationwide Arena for every game. Seagraves must be ready to defend the crease in the unlikely scenario that both of the team’s goalkeepers are unable to play. 26

By AndREw King

NHL teams typically only keep two goalies on their active rosters and can be left without a healthy body on rare occasions. But, as they say, dreams do come true. Last season, 36-year-old accountant and rec-league goalie Scott Foster was called into action for the Chicago Blackhawks after the two game-day goalies ahead of him were unable to play. Foster took the ice for the final 14 minutes, turning away all seven shots he faced. The emergency role isn’t usually that glamorous, but Seagraves, 21, sees it as a fun chance to work on his skills and to further his career. “I took it as an opportunity to get some looks,” he says. “And then, hopefully, down the line I’ll get a professional opportunity, whether it’s with the Blue Jackets organization or a minor-league team or even overseas. I’m still pretty young, so I’ve got a lot of hockey left in me.” Seagraves spent the 2017 season, his first with the Blue Jackets, sitting in complimen-

tary seats for each home game and staying hydrated in case he got the call, which has yet to come. And while he doesn’t hope for the worst for his teammates, he says he’d be thrilled by the chance. “You never want to wish any injury or bad luck,” he says, “but things happen in pro sports.” Seagraves has played at several levels of professional and semi-professional hockey. Now, he makes a living by helping coach young hockey players with St. Charles Preparatory School, St. Francis DeSales High School and soon with Jackets star Cam Atkinson’s training facility, Battery Hockey Academy in Plain City. McCudden says Seagraves is “the perfect fit of a guy” and believes he uses his emergency goalie in practice more than anyone else in the NHL. He doesn’t expect the young goalie to work unpaid for long; he thinks Seagraves will soon find a place somewhere like the third-tier East Coast Hockey League. For now, Seagraves is just enjoying his idiosyncratic role. “I feel like I’m on the verge of being able to do something special with this and play somewhere else,” he says. “But right now, I love being at the rink and being with the Blue Jackets.” ®

photo: tim johnson

name: bailey seagraves Age: 21 High school: hilliard Darby game-night meal: Anything clean and healthy: “no concession food or anything.” Favorite childhood sports teams: pittsburgh steelers, pirates and, yes, even the penguins.

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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WHEN YOU RAISE A GLASS WITH FRIENDS, LET THEM KNOW IT’S

P R O U D LY F R O M T H E

M I DD L E WEST C E L E B R AT I N G 1 0 Y E A R S

photo: tim johnson

O F L I F E W E L L- L I V E D

MIDDLEWESTSPIRITS.COM

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Arch City arts

The Supreme Museum The mammoth gavel sculpture outside the Supreme Court of Ohio is one of the best-known public art displays in Columbus, but it’s just a hint of the artistic treasures inside. Past the metal detectors, the

By ChRis GaiTTEn | PhoToS By Tim jOhnsOn

state troopers and the courtroom itself, the high-ceilinged neoclassical building has become home to hundreds of works, many by acclaimed Ohio artists.

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the judicial building (65 s. Front st.) and the law library are open to the public weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Guided tours are available, and walk-ins are welcome; groups of more than eight are encouraged to call ahead, 614-387-9000.

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Sara Stiffler, the court’s manager of civic education and outreach, credits that trove to former Chief Justice Thomas Moyer, an ardent supporter of art in public buildings. Moyer, who died in 2010, was also responsible for the building’s renovation before the court moved there from Rhodes Tower in 2004. “When the chief [picked] this building, I thought, ‘You’re bonkers. This building is falling apart, and we could’ve just had a new building built,’” says Michael Bradshaw, an assistant in the court’s library. “But he was absolutely right because then they restored it, and it’s like wow—it’s like working in a beautiful museum.” Bradshaw oversees one section of the judicial center’s art: a law-themed multimedia exhibit on the 11th floor in the law library. The display changes several times per year, and the exhibition that concluded on Sept. 7, I Fought the Law, highlighted how legal concerns shape the music industry, from obscenity to sampling to copyright protection. 1

the first display case for I Fought the Law sits just below “Dethroning the monarchy,” one of six panels in Ron Anderson’s History of the Rule of Law mural series.

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bradshaw’s display featured two albums deemed obscene in 1966. one includes only percussion and the sound of bed springs; the other features Claude Debussy’s classical compositions accompanied by French poetry, which makes Ed sheeran sound like 2 live Crew.

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the exhibit has an entire section on copyright infringement by led Zeppelin because there were so many lawsuits against the british rock “pioneers.”

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“lady Justice leading the People,” the final panel in Anderson’s mural, depicts the modern u.s. from the civil rights movement to present day.

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A seven-panel mural in the library’s reading room portrays the history of the printed word. Completed in the 1930s during the original construction, they were covered by layers of cigarette smoke until the building was renovated.

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the music exhibit touches on cryptomnesia—memories that artists believe are their original ideas. “I don’t think [George harrison] purposely ripped off a 1960s song by the Chiffons,” bradshaw says of the 1976 court ruling that found “my sweet lord” subconsciously plagiarized “he’s so Fine.”

DON’T MISS A WORD THIS SEASON. On the field. In the locker room. On the recruiting trail. If it’s happening in Scarlet & Gray, it’s happening here.

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Arch City Image

Jake Rehl dances with his daughter Ellie at Oktoberfest at the Ohio Expo Center on Sept. 7. PhOtO by tim johnson

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Arch City EDItoRs’ PICKs

Datebook Things to See and Do

see Page 16 for a full list 8 things to doof this month.

FAsHion wEEk Columbus Oct. 14–20

by now, you know that Columbus ranks third in the country in resident fashion designers. Amid a scene that includes mainstream fashion behemoths like Abercrombie and Victoria’s secret, Fashion Week Columbus seeks to strengthen individuality and creativity in the growing independent design community. Events citywide will include a high tea runway show at the Columbus museum of Art and a discussion of fashion and philanthropy at CCAD. fashionweekcolumbus.org

CosI’s year-old partnership with the American museum of natural history, which brought us the Dinosaur Gallery and the Silk Road exhibit, brings another unique offering with the opening of the Amnh’s Power of Poison exhibition. Poison can be a weapon or a cure, and has been viewed throughout history as having magical properties to be used for good or ill. Explore poisoning mysteries, learn the evolutionary role of natural toxins, marvel at venomous creatures and wander through a diorama of Colombia’s Choco Forest. cosi.org

“AlAddin” Oct. 24–Nov. 4

the story of Aladdin and the magic lamp began as a syrian folk tale and gained popularity in the u.s. as an Academy Awardwinning Disney animated film before spawning this hit broadway show. this production was designed by a slew of renowned stage, lighting and costume designers and incorporates the music that won the film an oscar for best original score. Its local debut will open CAPA’s broadway in Columbus season with a limited run at the ohio theatre. Follow Aladdin’s adventures as a single lamp and three wishes sweeps him into a world of danger, adventure, comedy and lots of catchy songs. capa.com

HArlEm GospEl CHoir Oct. 5

lEonArd bErnstEin CEntEnniAl CElEbrAtion Oct. 12–13

black gospel music is rooted in the tragic history of American slavery, but its glorious sound and ecstatic energy are anything but depressing. one of the genre’s most famous performing groups, formed in new york’s harlem neighborhood in 1986, will raise the roof at the lincoln theatre for one night as part of the citywide series, I, Too, Sing America: The Harlem Renaissance at 100. capa.com

the late, great American composer, conductor and educator leonard bernstein once said, “I’m not interested in having an orchestra sound like itself. I want it to sound like the composer.” the Columbus symphony orchestra will seek to meet that challenge when it celebrates bernstein’s centennial with a presentation of his most popular broadway works, including “Candide” and “West side story.” capa.com

Give Back HAbitAt For HumAnity: womEn build Through January

this fall, habitat for humanity midohio is sponsoring a new construction project focused on women volunteers. Join in any tuesday, thursday or saturday from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. to help build a new home for a needy family. skills training included. habitat.midohio.org 32

All HAllow’s EvE At oHio History ConnECtion Oct. 13–20

Dress in period costumes and interact with visitors at ohio Village’s Victorian-era All hallow’s Eve celebration. Assist with games and greeting guests. non-costumed opportunities are also available. Kids 12–13 welcome with a parent, 14–17 with parental consent. ohiohistory.org

Columbus mArAtHon Oct. 21

nationwide Children’s hospital is the beneficiary of the Columbus marathon and half marathon, which has raised $7 million over seven years to help find cures and save kids’ lives through the hospital’s programs. Run, walk or sponsor a participant to help. columbusmarathon.com

photos: clockwise from top, Deen van meer; paul De hueck, courtesy of the leonarD Bernstein office; ©2018 thinkstock; amnh/D. finnin

Power of Poison Oct. 20–Jan. 13, 2019

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photos: clockwise from top, Deen van meer; paul De hueck, courtesy of the leonarD Bernstein office; ©2018 thinkstock; amnh/D. finnin

NEW CLASSIC MODERN LIVING FALL 2018

SPECIAL SAVINGS GOING ON NOW

MCVAY’S AN AUTHORIZED ETHAN ALLEN RETAILER WORTHINGTON 6767 NORTH HIGH STREET 614.888.8865 MON., WED. 10-8 TUES., THURS., FRI., SAT. 10-5:30 SUN. NOON-5 Sale going on for a limited time. Exclusions apply. Ask a designer or visit ethanallen.com for details. ©2018 Ethan Allen Global, Inc.

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The world is changing. Medicine is changing. We’re leading the way. Our patients are highly satisfied with their care

While no one ever wants to be in a hospital, our patients tell us time and time again they’re glad The Ohio ner State University Wexner Medical Center is there for them. From delivering a baby, to wellness checkups, he to joint implants, to the ng most delicate life-saving procedures, the healthcare teams at thee er Wexner Medical Center get high praise from grateful patients. Phrases like “the most caring and competent physicians,” “the nursess were outstanding” and “I would recommend them for everything” are compliments we humbly hear every day. It’s proof we’re carrying out our mission to improve people’s lives in Ohio and around the world through innovations in research, education and patient care. Here’s more proof: The Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems is a federal survey that measures patients’ perspectives of hospital care. In 2017, we achieved our highest yearly score ever, placing in the 89th percentile, with nearly 8 in 10 patients surveyed (79.3%) giving us the highest marks, well above the national average. Quality health care is important to you and us. And so is earning your trust and satisfaction.

Federal research grants increasing In a time when federal research funding has been flat, our scientists are bringing in more grants from the Nat o a Institutes st tutes of Health (NIH) (NIH than ever. In the past National yyear, there were nearly 2250 awards totaling w well over $100 million, up nearly 10 percent ffrom the previous year. Th This funding means: • Dr. Peter Shields can study the safety of electronic cigarettes and determine whether they are potentially damaging to e-smokers. As of now, little data exists on the direct health ff t off th d effects these products. We all need to know more. • Researchers such as Peter Mohler and his team can identify emerging genetic causes of deadly irregular heartbeats, then design specific strategies to treat them. The Mohler lab is internationally known for solving medical mysteries that have plagued families for generations. • It means Ajit Chaudhari can figure out why runners often have chronic back pain. So far, his research shows runners with weak deep core muscles are at higher risk of lower back pain. He has already used a set of exercises to help runners improve their deep core strength and performance. All of this, and much more, is possible with NIH funding.

We have great talent and it just keeps getting better Some of the world’s best researchers and physicians are choosing Ohio State as their new home for learning and discovery. Here they work with our dedicated staff to pioneer life-changing healthcare solutions. Most recently, the Wexner Medical Center recruited three highly respected surgeons to lead significant initiatives to enhance patient care, team practices and teaching. • Dr. Timur Sarac is the new chief of vascular surgery and founding director of the Aortic Center. At the new center, he’ll establish teams of vascular and cardiac surgeons to repair the most challenging aortic aneurysms. Sarac returns to Ohio from Yale University. He was previously a surgeon at the Cleveland Clinic. • Dr. Amalia Cochran specializes in burn treatment and research. She joins the Wexner Medical Center after 19 years at the University of Utah. She’ll serve as director of the Comprehensive Burn Center, the region’s only adult burn center. • Dr. Heena Santry specializes in trauma and critical care. She joined Ohio State to start a Center for Surgical Health Assessment, Research and Policy. A self-described “half surgeon, half social worker,” Santry is a pioneer among surgeons for her consideration of biopsychosocial factors that influence surgical outcomes. Highly talented healthcare providers and medical researchers have their eyes on Columbus and the Wexner Medical Center. Dr. Sarac summed it up when he said, “With the amount of investment in this already outstanding institution, seeing them work to take it to the next level, how could you not want to be a part of that?”

Record performance makes record investment possible It’s a simple fact: going to the next level, making healthcare discoveries and improving people’s lives can’t happen without funding. We’re fortunate and grateful that, in a time when some hospitals are cutting back or closing, the Wexner Medical Center is financially strong. Through a combination of record numbers of people seeking world-class care, and being responsible with our resources, we just had our best year ever.

As part of our strategic plan, we’re investing in our communities with new outpatient care centers. These state-of-the-art facilities will bring a comprehensive list of world-class services into neighborhoods where people live and work. They’ll allow us to work even closer with communities to support their health and wellness goals. We’ll continue our long-term investment in free health clinics, free wellness screenings and other needed resources in underserved communities in and around Columbus. We’re investing in talent, hiring more highly skilled doctors, nurses and healthcare providers to best serve our patients, while bringing more of the best scientists and educators to the city.

A new hospital, medical school and research center will ensure national success It’s a bold vision that began with a new 21-story tower dedicated to the best cancer treatment and research, a new emergency department that spans the length of two Buckeye football fields, and a new brain and spine hospital researching and performing the newest neurological treatments. That would be a lifetime of achievement for most medical centers. For us, it was just Phase 1. The Wexner Medical Center is adding a new 840-bed hospital tower, with state-of-the-art equipment designed to serve our patients. Its leading-edge technology will advance care and teaching, and define the future of health care. Our country needs more physicians. Our College of Medicine is among the best places anywhere to become a doctor. Last year, more than 7,200 students applied for just 207 seats in our classrooms. We are investing in a modern health sciences center and a new College of Medicine to bring together students from all areas of health care. They’ll learn, as teams, how to take on our global healthcare challenges and prepare for futures that can truly make a difference.

At Ohio State’s Wexner Medical Center, heart doctors and engineers are working together to save lives by creating 3D printed aortas. The future is now Doctors and engineerss working together to d save lives might sound unusual, but at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, we’ll o do whatever it takes to stay at the forefront off medicine. We are now working with our College of Engineering to adapt 3D printing to medicine. Before performing a complicated aortic valve replacement, cardiologists like Dr. Scott Lilly partner with engineers to make 3D printed aortas and computer models

Our mission is clear. We are committed to it. We won’t stop, stand still or rest, ever.

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

that exactly match the patient’s anatomy. “We connect it to a simulator to replicate what happens in the left ventricle of the patient’s heart,” says Prasad Dasi, a biomedical engineer at The Ohio State University College of Engineering. “We pump a blood-like substance through the simulator, controlling the contraction, expansion and pressure to match the patient’s conditions.”

Science, not science fiction Using lasers and a high-speed camera on the model, Dasi and his team can see things that can’t be observed by physicians on medical scans or during the valve

replacement procedure. They can test and observe which type of valve and specific placement work best, with the least chance for complications such as leakage, clotting or obstruction. They meet with the physicians to decide together what’s best for the patient. “The ability to predict which valve will fit most effectively, have the least amount of leak and not impinge upon adjacent structures is critical,” says Lilly. “These 3D models and discussions directly inform how we approach many valve replacement procedures for our patients.”

And we don’t stop there The engineering research team also creates computer models to capture the data from each simulation. Long-term, they want to understand each patient’s anatomy and blood

flow without the 3D printed model to speed personalized treatment decisions.

There’s more Right now there are few options for artificial aortic valves. Mechanical valves are used in open heart surgery, but require patients to take blood thinners for life. Valves that are deployed through a small catheter have leaflets made from cow or pig tissue, but they don’t last as long. So Dasi’s lab is hard at work creating a better replacement heart valve with engineered material enhanced with biomolecules. That could make future transcatheter heart valves more durable and more blood compatible, potentially eliminating the need for blood thinners for these patients. Through this unique collaboration, Ohio State physicians and research engineers are at the forefront of a new era in heart valve replacement.

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An Ohio State nurse just developed an innovative app to help heart patients. She had an idea she believed could help heart patients. We listened. We thought she was on to something big. We were right. It could truly improve patients’ lives. Right now, at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, a unique collaboration between a cardiovascular nurse and a team of digital developers is helping heart patients take control of their health. Rose Chumita, a registered nurse at Ohio State’s Richard M. Ross Heart Hospital, knew that her heart patients were eager to control their symptoms, but didn’t have the appropriate resources to keep themselves accountable and monitor progress. “After surviving a heart attack, many patients go through cardiac rehabilitation for three months,” Chumita says. “When they leave rehab, it can feel like they’ve lost the close relationship with their care team. Some patients travel long distances to see us at the Ross Heart Hospital, sometimes with six months between appointments. That’s a long time to wait to check on their progress.”

Chumita decided to fill that time gap with an app. Her design could monitor health habits through interactive messaging and other personalized technology. Patients using the app are better equipped to lower blood pressure, weight and cholesterol. Plus, treatments often end up costing less. Chumita’s development team anticipates that the app also will lead to reduced hospital readmission rates among these patients. ded Chumita was awarded h M. Ross the annual Elizabeth Nursing Fellowship to reation. facilitate the app’s creation. art of The fellowship is part ment a $1 million endowment made possible by a generous donation to support new efforts of Ross Heart Hospital nurses.

A software engineering team in The Ohio State University’s Department of Biomedical Informatics joined Chumita to bring her idea to life. Led by Puneet Mathur, the research and development group combined its technological know-how with Chumita’s insight into patient behavior to create the MyHealthTrack mobile app. The app is uncomplicated, presenting users with minimal buttons to input blood pressure readings and weight, as well as fluid and sodium intake throughout the day. A grant from The Ohio State University College of Nursing’s Innovation Studio enabled the purchase of wearable activity trackers for the pilot program. This allows patients to connect the wristbands with the app to track their daily steps alongside other health metrics. “The design was created for a patient population on the older side of the age spectrum,” Mathur says. “They don’t want to have to look around for many buttons.”

While patients log data into the app, Chumita and other healthcare providers back at the hospital are able to view their patients’ numbers and offer more individualized suggestions to each person. An “insights” view within the app shows users their numbers over time. It gives both patients and their local primary care providers a wider, clearer picture of their day-to-day health than the numbers gathered at just one visit to the doctor. MyHealthTrack currently is available to a limited group of Ross Heart Hospital users, but soon the app will be more widely available. The team’s long-term goal is to make the app downloadable to anyone, both in the Apple App Store and in the Google Play Store.

Patients using the app are better equipped to control blood pressure, weight and cholesterol.

Mathur hopes to make the app’s framework available to wider patient populations with other chronic conditions, such as diabetes.

“This type of collaboration is one other institutions can struggle with. Their clinicians may have great ideas, but they don’t know how to implement them,” Mathur says. “The Ohio State University Wexner

MyHealthTrack warns users when their numbers fluctuate too high or too low, and it gives immediate feedback and suggestions. Patients can easily make cause-and-effect connections between their blood pressure and diet that day, for example.

Medical Center is self sustaining, with the resources to generate these ideas, bring them to life and stay one step ahead.”

“This app gives patients something self-motivating and tangible that isn’t dependent on the heart care team,” Chumita says. “It’s a way for them to contribute to their own better health.”

Chumita is just one of more than 5,000 Wexner Medical Center nurses dedicated to improving the lives of patients through compassionate, high-quality, innovative care.

Cardiac kills ne 10 victim Today, O Wexner Center people those o an inno emerge respon

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

This is what real progress looks like. For the past few months we’ve been telling you about all the progress being made at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. U.S. News & World Report’s latest ­ we’ve been saying all along. These results demonstrate the strong commitment of our entire medical center team to becoming a preeminent destination for health and to serving the healthcare needs of the people of Ohio and beyond with expert care. Congratulations to all!

Ohio State drives breakthrough innovations in Alzheimer’s and dementia research. If you’ve ever known anyone suffering from Alzheimer’s, you know it can be a devastating disease for patient and caregiver alike. Despite tremendous medical advancements in the past century, scientists are still uncovering the mysteries of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia, which affect millions of Americans. One life-changing breakthrough came out of a study at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center using a brain pacemaker to slow the deterioration of problem-solving and decision-making skills in Alzheimer’s patients. The deep-brain stimulation device sends signals to a patient’s frontal lobe through surgically implanted wires. That region of the brain is responsible for organization and planning skills and for making good judgments. Stimulating the frontal lobes of Alzheimer’s patients appears to

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stave off the decline in those key cognitive abilities, says Dr. Douglas Scharre, co-author of the study. “We already have medications that treat other symptoms of Alzheimer’s, such as memory and abnormal behaviors,” he says, “but the findings in our study with Alzheimer’s patients suggest that deep-brain stimulation could be able to treat their impairments in decision-making, problem-solving and focused attention.” Scharre, the director of Ohio State’s Center for Cognitive and Memory Disorders, has also led endeavors to diagnose dementia patients as early as possible. One of these innovations is the Self-Administered Gerocognitive Examination (SAGE), designed to allow earlier treatment options

for people showing cognitive changes associated with Alzheimer’s and other conditions. “I was seeing too many individuals with cognitive impairment that were being identified so late that management options were less effective,” Scharre says. The SAGE test is available for free at wexnermedical.osu.edu/sage. A collaboration with The Ohio State University’s Technology Commercialization Office produced an app version, BrainTest, for Apple and Android tablets. SAGE is now used worldwide to give individuals a practical way to detect impairment and track changes in their cognitive ability. On average, patients using the test are diagnosed at least six months earlier than those using other clinical assessment tools. Diagnosing cognitive impairment earlier and more accurately, Scharre says, equals earlier treatment and intervention, and it leads to more appropriate supervision of patients. It allows them to continue living independently longer. It can reduce emergency room visits and hospital admissions as well as incidents of poor judgment with finances, driving and medication.

“It may improve quality of life for both patients and caregivers,” Scharre says. “If patients can learn their diagnosis early and accurately, they can gain more control, better manage their symptoms, start treatments earlier and be eligible for potential clinical trials at a stage that these experimental drugs appear most effective.” Early disease identification may also help reduce caregiver burden and chronic stress and, through planning, may lessen the financial strain on patients, families and the healthcare system. To contribute even more game-changing dementia and cognitive disorder research, the university is expanding the number of faculty dedicated to studying these topics. A monumental initiative is underway to hire at least 15 more faculty members across different colleges to work under one roof and be solely focused on the systems, molecular and cellular mechanisms of dementia. By gathering experts from different scientific backgrounds to focus their efforts on neurodegeneration and Alzheimer’s disease, we’ll speed up discovery and treatments not just for local patients, but also for those with cognitive disorders around the world.

Ohio State surgeons pioneer new ways to repair ailing hips and knees. Sports medicine experts at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center are pioneering better methods for treating and preventing the injuries that can sideline the athlete in all of us. Among their recent breakthroughs is a procedure to help patients avoid hip replacement surgery by strengthening and preserving their original hip joints. The bone-hardening method traditionally had been used in knee surgery, says Dr. Kelton Vasileff, an orthopedic surgeon at the Ohio State Wexner Medical Center. “We want to preserve the native hip, because once you have a hip replacement, there’s no

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

going back,” he says. “Hip implants have a potentially finite lifespan, and problems down the road could mean more surgery, which is always more difficult than the first surgery.” During the procedure, a bone substitute material is injected into the hip joint, filling tiny gaps in the bone. Over time, a patient’s body replaces that substitute with their own healthy bone.

They were the first in the U.S. to use a plastic meniscus implant that could reduce the need for knee replacement surgeries nationwide. In this unprecedented procedure, physicians created a custom-fit plastic device that replaces a patient’s own meniscus (the fibrocartilage between the thigh and shin bones). “We’re hoping it can not only alleviate pain, but also help patients delay or avoid a knee replacement surgery altogether,” says Dr. Christopher Kaeding, the executive director of Ohio State Sports Medicine. “Otherwise, once the meniscus is damaged, pain often sets in and can lead to arthritis and the need for knee replacement.” On the heels of that trial’s development arrived another advancement for patients with knee damage: Ohio State surgeons became the first in Ohio to treat knee cartilage damage using healthy cartilage regrown from a patient’s own cells.

Dr. David Flanigan, the orthopedic surgeon who spearheaded the procedure, says that using this cartilage implant could improve long-term outcomes for patients who otherwise would have undergone microfracture surgery. While microfracture surgery may improve symptoms for a time, it doesn’t create healthy cartilage that withstands everyday movement long-term. “The hope is that embedding patients with their own cells will lead to a more durable replacement of the lost cartilage and improve patient outcomes,” Flanigan says. These innovative treatments are just the beginning. Sports medicine physicians, orthopedic surgeons, nutritionists and other medical specialists are collaborating every day at Ohio State to discover new ways to return their patients safely to the activities they love.

“In the past, a replacement would’ve been the only long-term option for many patients,” Vasileff says. Ohio State physicians also have developed innovative alternatives for treating common knee injuries.

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The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center “Best in Ohio” for heart and liver transplants.

“It’s like finding a needle in a haystack,” said one of our doctors. But finding the right match for someone in need of an organ transplant is a critical, life-changing job, and we dedicate ourselves to it all day, every day.

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center Comprehensive Transplant Center has been providing exceptional care for organ transplant patients for 50 years, and we’re among the best and busiest centers in the nation. We’re 15th in the country by number of transplants performed, and in the top 10 percent for number of kidney transplants. We’re above the national average in all transplant patient survival rates, and “Best in Ohio” for heart and liver transplant survival rates. In April, during Donate Life Month, the colorful pinwheels adorning our front plaza represented the 9,000 organ transplants performed to date at Ohio State.

Expert kidney transplants

As a major academic medical center, Ohio State has the resources, the commitment and the capability to identify matches and find new ways to make the most of every gift of organ donation. We’ve completed several chains of paired kidney donation surgeries, including two with six donors and six recipients, which are the largest chains performed in Ohio.

Expert heart transplants We’ve performed nearly 500 heart transplants since 1986, and our extensive and successful mechanical assist program helps patients stay alive while waiting for a new heart. We are one of the nation’s leaders in treating heart failure, with numerous clinical trials, including testing the new devices, drugs and other therapies that can improve lives and, in some cases, even eliminate the need for a heart transplant.

Expert liver transplants Patients needing a liver transplant now have another option at Ohio State – receiving a portion of a liver from a living donor. The liver is the only organ that can regrow, and our technological advances now allow the possibility of a partial liver transplant. “It’s a challenging procedure that few transplant centers are capable of,” says Dr. Kenneth Washburn, executive director of the Comprehensive Transplant Center and director of the Division of Transplantation Surgery. “We’re fortunate to have a highly skilled team that gives our patients a real chance at living a quality life.”

A major challenge Transplant-suitable organs are always in critically short supply. At any time, there are approximately 115,000 people in need of an organ transplant. Annually 8,000 die waiting their turn.

Our team is working hard to advance organ perfusion, the ability to rehabilitate organs that were once considered unusable. We’re the first transplant center in Ohio to perform ex-vivo lung perfusion. In our organ assessment and repair center, donated lungs are placed in an incubator-like dome and attached to a circuit that removes excess water, ventilates and repairs the lung tissue. Ohio State has perfused kidneys for years, and we’ll soon begin testing this method on livers. Our scientists are also researching ways to improve immune system acceptance of new organs, surgical outcomes and the molecular biology behind organ injury and repair. All of this is happening now. It’s remarkable, and it’s becoming remarkably routine. As a major academic medical center, we have a unique opportunity to collaborate across the many disciplines at Ohio State and make extraordinary things happen for our patients.

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Cardiac arrest kills nearly 9 in 10 victims. Today, Ohio State Wexner Medical Center is helping people beat those odds with an innovative emergency response effort.

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Our new approach is called an ECPR (Extra-Corporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation) alert. Today, when a cardiac arrest victim’s heart stops, if they’re not inside a hospital, the chance of survival is less than 10 percent. The new ECPR alert is changing that. “For people who are in ventricular fibrillation or refractory ventricular tachycardia, which are irregular heart rhythms that don’t sustain life and resist being shocked back to normal, this can be the difference between life and death,” says Dr. Ernest Mazzaferri Jr., medical director of Ohio State’s Richard M. Ross Heart Hospital. “Typically, if they were unresponsive to shock, the patient would die, simply because we didn’t have any further options that might save them. Now, under the right conditions, we do.”

Our heart doctors work with Columbus Division of Fire on a carefully planned chain of events.

Here’s how it works 1. First responders follow their protocol for sudden cardiac arrest. 2. If the deadly heart rhythm remains, they call an ECPR alert to Ohio State. al 3. Medics use a mechanical CPR device on the patient and head straight to the cardiac catheterization lab, where Ohio State’s team is ready and waiting. “Between the field and the cath lab, it’s critical to have good CPR to keep blood and oxygen moving to the brain and essential organs,” says Dr. Konstantinos Dean Boudoulas, director of interventional cardiology at Ohio State. Doctors connect the patient to an external system that takes over for the heart and lungs. This seamless process from the field to the cath lab gives doctors a chance to fix

what caused the cardiac arrest – a chance they didn’t have before. “It’s exciting, and very few programs are doing it,” Boudoulas says. 68-year-old Mark Bradford became the first ECPR alert patient in Columbus when he collapsed while on his morning walk. He woke up p days y later after treatment in the hospital. “Without that protocol, I wouldn’t be alive. I’m very fortunate that they were trained in it and used it,” Bradford says. So far, available data shows an increase in survival from under 10 percent to about 40 percent. We’re still testing, but Ohio State doctors are already helping other hospitals launch their own ECPR alert programs. The benefits are far too important not to share. Our hope is this treatment plan will eventually become widespread, allowing more people to survive cardiac arrest and get back to a meaningful life. A life they might never have had, but for this groundbreaking work.

A test developed at Ohio State Wexner Medical Center’s James Cancer Hospital improves detection of cancer-causing genes, aiding in the treatment and even prevention of some cancers. At The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James), cancer is never routine. Our oncologists and cancer researchers are developing prevention strategies and treatments that target each person’s specific cancer. Thanks to a genetic screening method developed at OSUCCC - James, thousands could receive the diagnoses needed to treat their cancer more effectively than ever.

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

members that have this genetic disorder and are unaware of their cancer risks.” The new test looks for Lynch syndrome while simultaneously screening for other mutations associated with cancer. These additional mutations can help determine what therapy might work best for each particular cancer. The innovation could also uncover genetic information in time to help doctors prevent some cancers from developing at all. Researchers at OSUCCC - James tested a one-step process for determining whether someone has a gene mutation that causes Lynch syndrome, an inherited disorder that dramatically increases the likelihood of developing colon cancer, uterine cancer and several other types of cancer.

It also produces results faster and more accurately than the current tumor screening process, which can involve up to six tests. The OSUCCC - James study used gene sequencing to test 419 unselected tumor samples, in addition to 46 tumors from patients known to have Lynch syndrome, accurately identifying 100 percent

Gathering data for every gene in a tumor helps cancer treatment teams target a patient’s cancer more precisely. And if this screening becomes standard among healthcare providers, its benefits will reach far beyond colon cancer treatment. “This test is really the future for treating not just colon cancer, but likely all cancers,” Hampel says. Hereditary syndromes that cause other cancers, such as hereditary breast-ovarian cancer syndrome, could also be diagnosed using this test. The previous screenings could detect only Lynch syndrome. That’s why researchers and oncologists at OSUCCC - James study the unique genetic make up of each patient’s cancer. These discoveries deliver the most advanced targeted treatments, leading to better outcomes, fewer side effects and more hope for cancer patients in Ohio and beyond.

“Identifying Lynch syndrome allows us to save lives by beginning more frequent cancer screenings and prevention options for those who have the gene mutation,” says Heather Hampel, a genetic counselor at OSUCCC - James. “Correctly identifying Lynch syndrome is critical because the associated cancers are extremely preventable. And these patients likely have children, siblings or other family

of the Lynch syndrome cases. The previous standard screening tests for Lynch syndrome identified only 90 percent of the cases.

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

Breakthrough by Ohio State researchers improves lung cancer survival A new approach to treatment called immunotherapy is providing hope to many lung cancer patients, thanks to researchers at The Ohio State University ty Comprehensive Cancer Center – ncer Hospital and Arthur G. James Cancer Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James).

““Cancer cells develop aall the time, and the body’s immune system b eeliminates them,” says Dr. David Carbone, D director of The d OSUCCC – James O Thoracic Oncology Center. Th However, cancer cells H aare able to produce a “force field” around d these the h growing clusters of mutant cells, protecting them from the immune system and allow-ing for uncontrollable growth.

Our oncologists and cancer researchers are developing prevention strategies and treatments that target each person’s specific cancer. And using this approach to fight lung cancer is particularly important, because lung cancer is the number one cancer killer among men and women. About 224,000 people are diagnosed with lung cancer each year, and most are diagnosed at a late stage, making them more challenging to treat.

In recent years, doctors and scientists such as Carbone and his colleagues at the OSUCCC – James have developed ways to re-energize the body’s immune system, defeat “force fields” surrounding cancer cells and enable the immune system to seek out and destroy these rogue cells.

This is called immunotherapy, and it’s one of the most promising areas of cancer research and treatment. Think of cancer research as completing a vvery complicated puzzle, with many people contributing vital pieces. The basic science work of Carbone and his lab team was one piece, but another key piece of the puzzle helped make the picture complete. “Researchers found an important immunologic checkpoint protein called PD-L 1,” Carbone says. “It acts like a force field around the cancer cell. If you have a drug that blocks PD-L 1, a checkpoint inhibitor, it allows the immune system to see and kill the cancer.” These new immunotherapy drugs have improved Carbone’s ability to treat and prolong the lives of his lung cancer patients, especially those whose tumors have a high level of PD-L 1. That’s about 30 to 35 percent of his patients.

“The response is up to 50 percent in patients with the highest PD-L 1, which means major shrinkage or total elimination of the tumors,” he says. In April 2018, researchers announced that combining immunotherapy with traditional treatment for localized lung cancer doubles the likelihood of survival. And these gains are just the beginning with immunotherapy, which Carbone says is still in the early stages of development. “Building on these results, we’re looking at new therapies for lung cancers involving gene-modified cells and custom vaccines,” Carbone says, noting that the OSUCCC – James has clinical trials underway for cell-based treatments as well. That’s why researchers and oncologists at the OSUCCC – James study the unique genetic and immune makeup of each patient’s cancer. Their discoveries deliver the most advanced individualized treatments, leading to better outcomes, fewer side effects and more hope for cancer patients and their families in Ohio and around the world.

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Central Ohio’s “Best Hospital” Nationally ranked in 10 specialties (only 26 hospitals out of more than 4,500 can claim 10 or more)

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As a nationally ranked heart and vascular center, we’re among a few places in the country leading the way in cardiac arrest care. We’re testing new ways to treat the condition, and we’re getting results. More people are leaving the hospital to return to their loved ones, their work, and their lives.

U.S. News & World Report “Best Hospitals” rankings 2018-19

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What’s happening here at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center is remarkable.

Moving up in rankings are: - Ear, Nose & Throat #4 - Cancer #20 - Pulmonology #20 - Diabetes & Endocrinology #21

- Orthopedics #33 - Urology #43 - Geriatrics #46

Also ranked: - Nephrology #22 - Neurology & Neurosurgery #22

- Cardiology & Heart Surgery #24

Recognized as high-performing: - Gastroenterology & GI Surgery

- Rehabilitation

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway Breakthroughs and solutions treatments never before thought possible - all in a day’s work for Ohio State Ear, Nose and Throat specialists. The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center ENTs are ranked first in Ohio and sixth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. What’s happening here is remarkable and beautiful. It’s important and it matters. Joshua Fellows knows firsthand what it means. Fellows always had plenty of reasons to smile. A 2008 procedure at a different hospital left one side of his face paralyzed. A smile became impossible. In late 2016, ENT surgeon Dr. Leslie Kim, director of Ohio State’s Facial Plastics Division, accepted Joshua as a patient. “Restoring his smile was complicated,” Kim says. “Smile muscles can atrophy irreversibly when they’ve been paralyzed for years.” But at Ohio State, the only central Ohio institution performing facial reanimation

surgery, Kim’s team was able to transplant a muscle from Fellows’ leg to replace his smile function. That’s right—they used a leg muscle to restore the smile function. By February 2017, Fellows could smile for the first time in nearly nine years. It restored his confidence, and his young children got to see their dad grin for the first time in their lives. Adverse facial effects also have been dramatically reduced for patients at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James), where surgeons have revolutionized the removal of skull base tumors. “Skull base tumors can often require incisions to the face, the side of the nose and the roof of the mouth,” says Dr. Daniel Prevedello, director of Ohio State’s Minimally Invasive Cranial Surgery

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Until Moberly’s study, most research on cochlear implant success focused on device signal quality. But he’s studying how patients’ cognitive skills come into play.

Program and one of many neurosurgeons who collaborate with ENT teams for state-of-the-art care. The OSUCCC – James procedure blends minimally invasive robotic surgery with endoscopic endonasal surgery, combining the expertise of brain surgeons and ear, nose and throat surgeons to remove such tumors through the nose or mouth. Patients experience quicker recovery and are spared the pain and scarring that comes with open facial surgery. “To our knowledge, we were the first to combine these two techniques in patients,” says Dr. Ricardo Carrau, an otolaryngologist/head and neck surgeon at the OSUCCC – James. Behind the scenes of life-changing procedures, ENT specialists are driving research in other areas. One growing area is cochlear implants, which are becoming more common as our population ages and is treated more often for acquired hearing loss. Ohio State otolaryngologist Dr. Aaron Moberly is investigating why people with cochlear implants have varying success rates in understanding speech.

“If we can predict who’s likely to need extra help,” Moberly says, “we can intervene with other therapies, potentially improving quality of life dramatically for those affected by severe hearing loss.” Meanwhile, researcher Irina Castellanos leads a team that’s partnered with Nationwide Children’s Hospital to examine quality-of-life outcomes for preschoolers who have the implants. The first-ofits-kind study will reveal how delays in language and executive functioning skills help explain and predict psychosocial development. Understanding individual children’s different neurocognitive factors can help healthcare teams provide better care for the whole person—not just for the ear—in childhood and beyond. All of this is remarkable, and it is changing lives for the better. Ohio State is home to the most advanced, comprehensive ENT care in the region and some of the best specialists in the nation. And they’re making a difference.

The opioid epidemic is one of the great challenges of our time. Here’s what the Ohio State Wexner Medical Center is doing about it.

Opioid addiction has swept America, hitting Ohio especially hard. Many people who became dependent on opioids were first exposed to the drugs when they were prescribed for pain relief. A critical first step in reducing the dependence on opioid pain medications can start by reducing healthcare providers’ dependence on prescribing them. Ohio State physicians, nurses, pharmacists and experts from every medical specialty have collaborated to create pain management plans with wider ranges of medication and therapy options. One shift began in 2016 with a new protocol helping patients manage post-surgical pain without relying on narcotics. First used in microvascular breast reconstruction surgeries, the protocol swaps opioids for non-narcotic pain medicine before surgery. Long-acting narcotics are avoided in the operating room. And instead of administering pain medication throughout the entire body, surgeons place infusions of local anesthetic near incision sites to numb the area following surgery. After surgery, patients can take acetaminophen or ibuprofen, with the option of an occasional low-dose opioid for sudden spikes in pain. “Our cornerstone goal was to reduce the need for opioids after surgery,” says Dr. Michelle Humeidan, an Ohio State anesthesiologist who led the initial protocol. “But we also wanted to shorten the time patients needed to spend in the hospital and the time it took for them to be able to move after surgery.”

“Breast cancer patients’ satisfaction already was high, but providers who follow up in clinics report that post-surgery recovery has improved remarkably, and patients are pleased they can have good pain control without using narcotics.” In February 2017, a similar protocol was implemented in colorectal surgery, where early data suggests it could be even more successful – the average length of hospital stay, for example, has been cut nearly in half. The protocol expanded recently to bariatric surgery and abdominal wall reconstruction. More services will continue to adopt the techniques as surgery teams individualize strategies for patients’ unique needs. Meanwhile, surgeons at Ohio State’s Hand and Upper Extremity Center have developed several strategies to combat the opioid epidemic, including a method called “WALANT” (wide-awake, local anesthesia, no tourniquet). It’s used in simple surgeries, such as carpal tunnel procedures, as well as more complex operations. The anesthesia option provides shorter recovery times, fewer side effects and limited reliance on opioids during and after surgery, says Dr. Hisham Awan, a hand and upper extremity orthopedic surgeon. “Patients who choose WALANT have been very satisfied with all aspects of the procedure,” he says. Awan and orthopedic surgeon Dr. Kanu Goyal also led the creation of a patient calculator that builds more individualized plans for pain medication

prescriptions after surgery. Thanks to their efforts, 63 percent fewer opioids have been prescribed at the Hand and Upper Extremity Center, 58 percent fewer opioids have been consumed after those surgeries and opioid waste has decreased by 62 percent – all without compromising patients’ satisfaction or pain control. In the coming months, many hospital patients will benefit from opioid-reduction efforts developed by Ohio State’s House Staff Quality Forum, a resident-run, multidisciplinary committee. The pilot program incorporates more accurate pain assessment scales and a process to gauge patients’ expectations for pain and pain management methods. Easy-to-read cards get that information to care providers, and a documentation process allows d physicians and nurses to p ccommunicate better when it comes tto prescribing pain medication.

One in 10 Americans has diabetes, and another one in three people are well on their way to getting it.

““A busy overnight resident covering a hospital patient who needs pain rrelief might have the initial rreaction to prescribe an opioid,” ssays Dr. Chelsea Horwood, an Ohio State surgical resident who helped develop the program. “But this quickly shows appropriate alternatives to prescribe.”

Diabetes happens when the body either can’t produce enough insulin or can’t use insulin efficiently to process food for energy. As a result, there’s too much sugar in the blood. Diabetes also contributes to other major health problems: heart disease, kidney disease, nerve damage and eye disease.

Dedicating time and resources to develop efficient solutions is a priority to staff at every level. “Lack of commitment is a barrier we don’t have at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center,” Humeidan says. “The support we have collaboratively and from hospital leadership is one of the reasons our efforts to reduce opioids are successful.”

The average hospital stay for those patients has been reduced by about 25 percent. Post-surgery opioid use was reduced, with some patients never receiving opioids after surgery. The goals were reached, but patients also are overjoyed, Humeidan says.

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center wages war on diabetes.

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

That’s why diabetes is a high priority at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. Our diabetes and endocrinology experts are nationally recognized for delivering the highest quality of care. We have sub-specialists who focus on type 1 and type 2 diabetes. With a personalized approach, our doctors, nurses, dietitians and certified diabetes educators team up with

individuals to find the right lifestyle changes, medications and tools to effectively manage the disease and its symptoms, avoid complications and achieve each person’s wellness goals. Ohio State’s Diabetes and Metabolism Research Center is focused on creating a world without diabetes. So we’re diving into the disease itself. We’re learning, on a molecular level, why and how diabetes affects us, and we’re finding new ways to treat and prevent it. One of our trials is looking at how cells communicate to cause inflammation and insulin resistance during weight gain. This can help scientists better understand the process that happens in type 2 diabetes, so someday they could stop the inflammation from developing. Another trial is testing stem cell treatment for people with type 1 diabetes. If this

experimental treatment works, it could mean some patients could go from several injections per day to potentially none. We’re one of only five hospitals in the U.S. and Canada enrolling people for this trial. Just recently, Kristin Stanford, an assistant professor of physiology and cell biology with the Diabetes and Metabolism Research Center, led a study looking at the effects of exercise on metabolism at the cellular level. Her group learned a specific signaling lipid, or lipokine, increases right after exercise, and it comes from brown fat. Unlike ordinary white fat that expands when we gain weight, brown fat can generate heat. Babies have a lot of it to help them stay warm, and adults retain a certain amount in their bodies. “This study shows that brown fat and this lipid, in particular, play an important role in the beneficial effects of exercise on our

metabolism,” Stanford says. “The brown fat tells the muscles to take up more fatty acids for fuel. This highlights a new role for brown fat in response to exercise.” Next, Stanford wants to determine the mechanism by which this lipokine works. One day, she hopes this work could lead to developing new medications to lower blood lipid levels and burn more energy to help treat obesity and type 2 diabetes. These are just a few of the many examples of how Ohio State diabetes and endocrinology experts are at the forefront, helping patients take charge, manage their disease and improve their quality of life with the latest discoveries.

wexnermedical.osu.edu/leadingtheway

9/12/18 12:33 PM


Arch City PEoPlE

Short North Gala the 12th annual short north Gala was held in April at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. more than $50,000 was raised by those in attendance, to be used to support beautification and public art programs in the short north Arts District. the event featured dishes from 14 short north restaurants, a silent auction and performances from mojoFlo and members of the Columbus symphony orchestra.

photos: Kedia Mascaro

1 Xenia Palus, Dara Jackson 2 sangeeta lakhani, Carly sirfitt 3 shawn henderson, laura harter 4 Elyse Jergens, britney heffelfinger, Austin Ackerson, Kellee marker 5 Daniel and Aden biru 6 Connie Klema, Jeffrey hissem, Karla Rothan, linda schuler 7 David and tracy harrison 8 Emille Williams, belinda taylor 9 Randy malloy, Jami Goldstein 10 Charly bauer and Jeni britton bauer

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PROTECT OUR DEMOCRACY “Protected by Muslims During World War II” is a fascinating and true account of how Muslims saved and protected Jews throughout World War II. The book describes the protection of Jews by Turkish diplomats in France and the island of Rhodes; the safekeeping of Jews by Albanian and Bosnian Muslims; the rescue of a Jewish family by an Egyptian physician in Germany; and how the Republic of Turkey employed German, Austrian and Czech professionals after the rise of Hitler. These stories of brave Muslims are too often forgotten or overlooked under the rise of the far-right political influences. Why such fear, disdain and prejudice against immigrants to the United States who have made positive contributions to our country? Why such admiration for the Russians who intend to destroy our democracy? Do you see that a Genie has escaped from a golden vessel and is now in Washington, D.C.? Do you listen to his rhetoric? • The media is the enemy of the people • Fear is good. Darkness is good • Immigration and terrorism are linked • Racism is acceptable • Opposition to this philosophy is treason • Make America White and Christian again • A global existential war against Islam will be necessary

photos: Kedia Mascaro

Remember the words of President John Adams: “There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide.” The Genie intends to assist in that suicide.

“Protected by Muslims During World War II” is a must read. Shop Amazon or Barnes & Noble today to get your copy.

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A. Robert Neurath

9/12/18 12:33 PM


Arch City PeoPle

COSI Blast About 600 people attended blast, the Center of science and Industry’s annual fundraiser, earlier this year at CosI. the so-called big science bash raised more than $180,000 to help further CosI’s efforts to inspire interest in science and encourage people to learn about the world around them. Guests enjoyed live music from the Conspiracy band as well as small plates from more than 20 of Central ohio’s finest restaurants.

photos: Robb MccoRMick photogRaphy

1 Richard blunt, laurel beatty blunt, Frederic bertley 2 Amy Walters, Courtney White, beth sparks, Rebecca bailey 3 marty and brody mcDonald 4 Christina Cheng, manju and shankar sankarappa 5 Azuka mumin, Paula Wilkins, stephen White, mary howard 6 James Forrest, brent bahnub, sesa Forrest 7 Jim and Annette Fusco 8 mike and Angela mahaffey, Ian and Katya Czaja 9 Christy Zistler, Jan Kobus 10 Priscilla and Jeffrey hammonds

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photos: Robb MccoRMick photogRaphy

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Arch City PersPeCtive Michelle Herman

Thank You for the Barre A writer learns to dance.

photo: tim Johnson

BY MiChEllE hERMan

In my living room in Clintonville, all of the furniture has been pushed back so that there’s room for my friend Judith and me to practice fouettés on the wood floor. We work on them— “whipped” turns—and on the two jump-spins with outstretched arms that lead into them, plus the little phrase (both of us muttering arm, arm, left leg, right leg, shoulders) that comes right afterward, until neither of us makes a mistake. Then we do it again. And again (10 times, 12 times, 20 times—I lose count), trying to get it not just memorized but good, before we move on to another part of the four-minute contemporary piece. This time only Judith mutters (ankle, knee, hand, left leg, head-hand, right leg, shoulders, turn) while I sing the lyrics that go with these 10 seconds of choreography: and the rest of our lives will the moments accrue. We practice for an hour. Then we put our shoes on and walk down the street to the dance studio for a real rehearsal, then a ballet class.

Just to be clear: I am not a dancer. I’m a 63-year-old novelist and college professor, a lifelong life-of-the-mind type who has spent decades sitting at one desk or another all day long, seven days a week. But for a year now, I’ve also been devoting part of nearly every day to dance. And last July, for a few weeks, dance was virtually all I did as I prepared for my first public performance along with nine other adult beginners. Besides Judith, an epidemiologist from Los Angeles who is a decade older than I am, there’s Youji, from Korea by way of China, who’s majoring in art at OSU and is 41 years younger. There’s Karina, who is in Columbus doing research on plant molecular biology and will soon return to Brazil, and Rian, a part-time fashion model from Indonesia who’s just gotten a job as an assistant manager at Kroger. Holley’s a speech-language pathologist. Doug’s a video producer, Mela-

nie’s an academic librarian, Gail’s an occupational therapist, Charles a retired engineer. I take four ballet classes a week. At the barre, doing tendus and ronds de jambe, I concentrate as hard as I ever have on anything—extending my leg just so, pointing my foot, “presenting” my heel, one arm à la seconde (talking myself through it: elbow lower than my shoulder, wrist lower still but no, don’t drop that hand—now rotate the whole arm). It’s not only that I’m in my body—as I never am, otherwise—and not in my head. It’s also that I’m learning a new discipline, a new vocabulary, a new way of seeing myself and expressing myself. Sometimes it seems like I’m learning a new way of being myself. There’s a well-known aphorism, attributed to Freud and widely disseminated by psychologist Erik Erikson in the 1970s, about what it takes to have a meaningful and happy life. Love and work—a simple formula. I’m lucky. I’ve known since childhood what I wanted my life’s work to be. In my sixth-grade autograph book, I confidently filled in “author” in the space for “future profession.” But I worried in my 20s and into my 30s how I’d make a living, because hardly OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Arch City PersPeCtive anybody makes a living only writing books. By 30, I’d already cycled through a good halfdozen jobs like Goldilocks trying to find the perfect fit before I eventually stumbled onto my second vocation: teaching. The occupation even ultimately fulfilled the “love” half of Freud’s happy-life equation, since I met my husband through it after years of misbegotten, ill-advised romances. But as it turns out, I want more. The psychologist Abraham Maslow describes a hierarchy of human needs that starts with life’s physiological requirements— air, food, water, sleep—and moves up through security and safety (a roof over one’s head, a way to earn a living) to “love and belonging” and then what Maslow calls “esteem” (respect, recognition, dignity, appreciation, selfrespect). But he proposes something beyond that—beyond survival, satisfaction, success and even happiness. It’s what he calls “selfactualization,” which he defines as becoming more and more of what one is—becoming everything that one is capable of becoming. Balancé, balancé, tombé pas de bourrée, piqué arabesque—we are dancing across the floor from the corner: Sophie, an accountant, and Jiung, a pianist. Kate, a physicist-

turned-banker, along with Judith, Karina and Rian, who never miss a ballet class, and Madeline, a musician and farmer who travels 80 miles each way to take class with us. After class, those of us who are rehearsing will stay and dance some more. Our teachers, Filippo Pelacchi and Russell Lepley, are from Florence and Hilliard, respectively, and I’d like to say that when they decided to give up their positions in a European dance company to make new work of their own and open a dance studio, they flipped a coin and Ohio won (too bad, Italy)—but really, I know that it was a pragmatic decision, financially and otherwise. Columbus, which has been attracting young artists and entrepreneurs at an astonishing rate over the last several years, was exactly the right place for this venture. They also chose Columbus over Florence because while civil unions are legal in Italy, same-sex marriages are not, and the Lepley-Pelacchis married in 2016. From the day it opened, Flux + Flow, a studio with a focus on adult beginners and those with experience who want to make dance a part of their lives again, attracted a devoted following that’s only strengthened

by the owners’ kind, compassionate, funny, charming personalities. A year in, there’s a solid community of dancers (and “dancers”), and every new person who turns up is welcomed like a long-lost member of a big extended family. There’s a lot of laughter during classes (which, I am assured, is not customary in ballet). Russell laughs at my visible delight when we do our forward port de bras (a simultaneous lift and dive, bringing the arm along toward the floor) in relevé— which is to say, on one’s toes—which is my favorite thing to do at the barre. Or no—it’s grand battement, in which the “working” leg is thrown high into the air, that’s my favorite. Except I am also sad when we begin grand battement, because immediately afterward, I know, either Russell or Filippo—they take turns teaching this class—will say, “Thank you for the barre,” which signals that this portion of the class is over. And I am happiest at the barre, which I suppose real dancers must regard with boredom: The barre is only preparation, practice, readiment. But I like preparation, practice, readiment. I like repetition and precision, doing something carefully, focusing on getting it right. Or righter, anyway.

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What in the world is happening? We mean that less in the exasperated/ hypothetical sense of the phrase, and more as an actual question we’re happy to answer — every single day. Get answers — real, truthful, curated, vetted and professionally attained answers — from The Columbus Dispatch.

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Arch City PersPeCtive I like that ballet requires so much effort. Even standing still in first position takes effort—and you wouldn’t know it just to look at it. I like it when things look easy when they’re not. Like writing—which is, I realize, what this reminds me of. Except writing is lonely. And dance—dance is the opposite of lonely. The contemporary piece we’re working on was originally choreographed by Russell for Filippo and five BalletMet dancers for the FluxFlow Dance Project, the company Russell and Filippo have created here. Obviously Russell has had to adjust his expectations in remaking the piece with us. In the final days of rehearsal, he is so patient with us it sometimes brings me to tears. We forget what he’s just told us, we don’t point our toes when we’re supposed to, we can’t seem to get the lift and drop of a leg into synchronization. One of us—a different one each time—accidentally skips a crucial transition. Many of us literally stumble (once, I actually fall down while executing a turn—and Russell expresses admiration because I seem to have fallen into a nearperfect split). The first time we rehearse a part of the piece we affectionately call “the

It’s not work, either. It’s concentrated effort toward something hard, knowing that it’s not attainable, and not caring that it’s not— and still trying, anyway.

clump,” Judith and I have a giggling fit as we are squished together, chest to chest. Gail notes that this gives new meaning to the phrase “bosom buddies.” The clump—all 10 of us pressed close— moves forward and back together, a 20-legged creature. This feels like a metaphor: We have become one. But it’s not just a metaphor. In the world outside of the studio, none of us are ever in such intimate physical contact with anyone except our romantic partners, if we have them, or our children, if they’re still young enough to want to snuggle. And at first, being in the clump—sweaty skin to sweaty skin, breathing into one another’s faces, depending on each other to keep from tipping over— feels weird, embarrassing, uncomfortable. “Get closer,” Russell says. “No. Closer.” We get closer.

People ask me what it’s all about—my spending so much of my time in the dance studio. “It’s not really a hobby, is it, if you’re working so hard?” It’s true—it’s not quite a hobby. But it’s not work, either. It’s concentrated effort toward something hard, knowing that it’s not attainable, and not caring that it’s not—and still trying, anyway. Plus: I am so happy the whole time I am doing it. When we finally perform the piece, it isn’t perfect. But by then, the 10 of us have learned to pay attention to each other without seeming to, so that we can truly move in unison, and we all remember every bit of Russell’s brilliant, beautiful choreography. For the moment—the four minutes we are onstage— all of us are more than we were before. Or rather: We are all becoming more and more of what we are. ®

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The Power of Poison is organized by the American Museum of Natural History, New York (www.amnh.org).

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The Power of Gravity By Eric Lyttle

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Photos by Tim Johnson

Brett Kaufman believes his new Franklinton development can change the world. “What makes us weird is what makes us great,” he says.

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duardo Kobra’s first visit to Columbus was brief—less than a week long. It didn’t allow much time for exploration. When asked what he saw during his stay, Kobra struggles to remember. “The only place is a bridge that has, like, a deer,” he replies in his native Portuguese, recalling the bronze sculpture of a deer on the Rich Street Bridge overlooking the Scioto River. It’s safe to say Kobra left a much bigger impression on Columbus than Columbus left on Kobra. In less than a week, the internationally renowned muralist from Brazil created what quickly became the most visible, most vibrant and most talked-about piece of public art in the city. The fivestory self-portrait is almost hidden amid a stylized kaleidoscope of bright triangles and squares that surround it, the geometric lines broken only by the heart the artist appears to be spray-painting on the sky—and his bearded, fedora-bedecked face smiling out over West Broad Street and into Franklinton.

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The artist, whose many-storieshigh murals have appeared in 17 countries on five continents, specializes in portraits of historic figures who have inspired peace, love and creativity: Nelson Mandela in Rome, Alfred Nobel in Sweden, Anne Frank in Amsterdam. His portrait of Michelangelo’s David appears on the side of a mountain in Carrara, Italy—the very mountain that produced the marble from which Michelangelo carved his masterpiece. But here in Columbus, Kobra has produced a self-portrait— his first. And he did so, surprisingly, at the request of a real-estate developer. “I usually don’t accept when people tell me what to paint,” Kobra says with the help of a translator following the completion of his mural on Aug. 24. “Art, in painting—it’s like you’re giving your own life,” he says. “You have to find what has meaning to you and then give that message to the world.”

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Developer Brett Kaufman, outside one of Gravity’s office spaces.

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Eduardo Kobra’s five-story self-portrait (left) is Gravity’s homage to Franklinton’s artistic roots, while an adjacent wall (above) will be covered in foliage to create a “living wall” by next summer.

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inding what has meaning and giving it to the world was exactly what Brett Kaufman had in mind in 2015 and 2016 as he made the rounds trying to turn potential investors into believers. It would be, he told them, a project unlike any the city had ever seen; a project Kaufman had been working toward his entire life. He called it Gravity. Sitting, as it does, at Franklinton’s front door, Gravity has the potential to be Central Ohio’s most transformative development since retail billionaire Les Wexner told his friend Jack Kessler, “I want to build a house in the country.” Though it’s just a long par-3 from COSI, the new National Veterans Memorial and Museum and the redeveloped Scioto riverfront, it’s a giant step for a neighborhood that, for more than a century, has been little more than a red-headed stepchild referred to as “The Bottoms.” But progress knows no boundaries, and city developers have long known that eventually someone was going to take a chance and go west, young man.

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Kaufman is taking that chance, plunging the first tall stake in Franklinton’s inviting ground with a development that will eventually encompass about 5 acres on either side of West Broad Street. It’s a massive footprint in a neighborhood that, for decades, has been counting out time in baby steps. Gravity will be a large, mixed-used development with 50,000 square feet of office space, more than 200 apartments, 30,000 square feet of retail/ restaurant space and a 564-space parking garage taking shape on the north side of Broad, with an even larger sister project to follow across the street— one that could rise 12 stories and fill an entire city block with offices, residential spaces, street-front dining and retail, another parking garage and maybe even a hotel stretching south all the way to West State Street by the time it’s finished in 2020. This Reader’s Digest version of the story is impressive enough. But that doesn’t even begin to describe what Kaufman has in mind for Gravity. This is something different, hinted at by the name itself—Gravity, an invisible force by which things are brought together. Further evidence of the project’s uniqueness comes in the 56-page “Ethos Document” that defines Gravity’s lofty ideals. “Our purpose,” it says, “[is] to elevate humanity by inspiring, connecting, and empowering individuals and communities.” And later in the document: “We celebrate and nurture the authentic self—sharing our unique gifts with the world.” To help accomplish those consciousness-raising goals, Kaufman intends to activate the space with programming to keep both residents and office tenants—and in some cases the city at large—engaged. A 42-page “Life at Gravity” document is filled with ideas and possible partnerships for creative events. A full-time events staff is being hired to ensure the programming’s viability and sustainability. Proposed events range from large, annual conferences and festivals to more intimate and more frequent lectures, speakers, workshops and pop-ups, nearly all geared toward health, creativity and philanthropy. Off-site excursions are included in the mix, both out-of-state (think Burning Man) and out-of-country (think the Egyptian pyramids). Kaufman also plans to fill it with art. Lots and lots of art, including more than 14,000 square feet of murals, from Kobra’s self-portrait to a 70-yard-wide rain-forest-looking mural on a wall of the parking garage at the back of the development done by Rather Severe, a pair of Columbus College of Art & Design graduates now living and gaining a following in Portland, Oregon. Ninety percent of the art at Gravity will be created by local artists. “The amount of art that we’re about to place in such a visible way—that doesn’t exist in any real-estate development in the city,” Kaufman says. Even the way Kaufman and the members of his hand-picked Gravity team talk about the project is different. To them, these are not just buildings with construction timetables and pro forma financial statements. They talk of Gravity as a living entity, something that, at a certain point, will be “set

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free” to blossom into a fully realized community. When asked by his team for direction on development strategies or challenges, Kaufman has been known to reply, “What would Gravity do?” “Gravity is a concept more than a project,” Kaufman says. “An experiential concept. “What makes us weird is what makes us great,” he says.

The members of Kaufman’s Gravity team: (from left) Mike Schott, Ian Labitue, Jess Matthews, Brett Kaufman, Frank Sasso, Patrick Cline, Steve Welker and Brian Suiter on one of Gravity's rooftop patios.

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cynic might roll his eyes at the notion of a building with an ethos, much less one that claims so boldly its intention to change the world. “We believe Gravity can be harnessed as a force for the development of unique communities; bringing like-minded people, programs and physical spaces together,” the ethos document says. “In that way, a collective consciousness forms that positively impacts the world at large.” Kaufman doesn’t suffer the cynics. “We shouldn’t be ashamed to do great stuff, no matter where it comes from,” Kaufman says. “Boundaries make us small.” Kaufman is a believer in the notion of “purposeful living,” and yoga, meditation, running and exercise are all crucial parts of his life. There’s often a guitar within arm’s reach, and he has a studio inside 400 West Rich, where he “throws paint on canvases,” he says. “I put on some music, change my

clothes and cover up the walls and just go crazy. For me, it’s really about finding creative outlets outside of work.” He’s grown up around smart, successful people. His stepfather, who was Kaufman’s true father figure, is Gary Schottenstein, CEO of Schottenstein Real Estate Group, where Kaufman got his start in development before branching off to start his own company in 2010. His father-in-law is Michael Weiss, the former Express CEO. But he’s also created his own success. His projects include a pair of 12-story, mixed-use developments on either side of the Columbus Commons—80 on the Commons and 250 High. Kaufman also added 69 apartments and eight penthouse condominiums inside the LeVeque Tower. Not every venture took hold though, as last year, he pulled his plans for a 10-story project in Victorian Village when some residents opposed the project’s height. “Brett is, by nature, aspirational,” says friend and Gravity investor Christopher Celeste, co-owner of the nearby Columbus Idea Foundry and son of former Ohio Gov. Dick Celeste. “Brett could have stayed in the cushy fast lane that his family afforded him. But that’s not Brett. Instead, he’s constantly pushing himself, constantly challenging himself to get better, to do more.” Kaufman loves to immerse himself in the company of big thinkers, whether it’s through the pages of a book or flying around the globe to be inspired at events where “big ideas” are shared, like Summit Series in Utah, the Landmark forums, Strategic Coach, Abundance 360 or the Esalen Institute. Locally, he’s found inspiration in the organic, creative community that has taken hold in Franklinton, from Lance Robbins converting a shuttered factory into the co-working arts space of 400 West Rich to Alex Bandar’s makerspace at the Idea Foundry to the folks like Adam Brouillette, Timothy Wolf Starr, “Downtown” Mike Brown and organizers of events like the Independents’ Day festival, which ended its 10-year run on a high note in 2017. “When I went to my first Independents’ Day and met those guys and experienced what they were doing, it was energizing,” Kaufman says. “It was like walking into the art room for the first time when I was like 15. I was like, ‘Whoa. These are my people.’” OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Gravity boasts the largest mural in Columbus, done by the Rather Severe duo on one wall of the parking garage. The white rectangle in the middle is where movies will be projected.

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project this big and this ambitious is bound to attract a lot of attention—especially in a neighborhood that has been downtrodden for a century and only recently started to pick itself back up by the bootstraps. Kaufman knew he had to prove himself before he could put a shovel in the ground. In March 2016, Kaufman invited the neighborhood’s stakeholders—artists, residents, business owners, government officials and potential investors—and laid his idea for a new kind of “enlightened” development. He even brought renderings of what the development might look like. “There was an architect in San Francisco that I’d kind of fallen in love with,” Kaufman says. “I worked with him for about six months. He came up with these beautiful drawings of a round, Apple headquarters-looking structure. And the community immediately said, ‘You’ve closed out the neighborhood.’ And they were right. I ate the cost of those drawings and it was worth it. I hired NBBJ and started all over.” “That original idea was less than desirable,” says Jim Sweeney, who, as director of the Franklinton Development Association for 14 years, was instrumental in helping guide the neighborhood’s rebirth. “We were all delighted when they took another swing at it.” A.J. Montero, a partner at NBBJ Design, remembers walking the site that Kaufman was piecing together, tucked between May Avenue, Broad Street and the Norfolk Southern railroad tracks, where Wasserstrom’s National Furniture Warehouse was shuttered and neighboring Phillip’s Original Coney Island owner Nick Manus was just waiting for offers. “The site had obviously seen better days,” Montero says. “It’s real. It’s really real. The question, then, is, do we want to alter that course, or do we want to tap into whatever that DNA there is? Brett wanted to figure out that secret sauce.” The design NBBJ created is among the most striking in the city, looking almost like a bicycle wrench angled to Broad Street, creating lots of corners that tempt the eye to peek around, permitting views into an outdoor kitchen and lounge area or a yoga class taking place on the lawn or a movie showing on the giant parking garage wall. “Part of what we were trying to accomplish was to have the architecture go away,” Montero says, “to break down the architecture so that it was approachable, allowing views of the public spaces inside that people on Broad Street could interact with. It’s very unique. I wish we could take

all the credit, but it was Brett and his team, pushing us, asking, ‘What if?’” People have also been asking “what if” about Franklinton for a long time. Founded in 1797 by Lucas Sullivant, its location on the Scioto River floodplain proved its downfall. Every time Franklinton would start to take hold, it seemed a flood would come along and wash away the progress. The 1913 flood killed nearly 100 and left thousands homeless. The construction of Rt. 315 in the 1960s did more damage, splitting Franklinton in half. Much of the population of Franklinton has since lived west of the highway, with the east side dedicated to manufacturing and warehouses. Franklinton’s fate was once again sabotaged when, in 1983, the Federal Emergency Management Agency declared Franklinton a floodplain, demanding stricter building codes and higher insurance rates. Progress, essentially, was stymied until 2004, when the Franklinton Floodwall was completed. The 11-year project effectively abated the threat of flooding and removed the federally mandated building restrictions. Franklinton waited patiently for opportunity to knock. Growth came slowly, thanks in part to an economic recession that followed. But a character began to develop—a creative character—as long-closed warehouses were converted into inexpensive artist studios and co-working spaces like 400 West Rich, or makerspaces like the Idea Foundry. “Franklinton has become a neighborhood of creators,” says Gravity director Mike Schott. “There are people creating physical things at places like the Idea Foundry, or people creating art in a variety of mediums at 400 Rich. People are creating companies, they’re creating beer, they’re creating nonprofits, they’re creating social enterprises. And I think that makes it the perfect place to build a bigger canvas for people to come paint on. I think Franklinton was the perfect place at the perfect time.” Apartments in the first phase of Gravity range from 416-squarefoot, one-bedroom, one-bath units that rent from $835 a month to 1,174-square-foot, two-bed, two-bath units for $1,940 a month. Most (164 of the 234 apartments) rent for $1,430 or less. Gravity’s second phase, on the

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south side of Broad Street, will potentially include a six-story co-living space, which would include private bedrooms with shared common areas aimed at the post-graduate or creative types who want a more collaborative and communal living environment, with rents starting around $500. According to Zillow, median rental rates in Franklinton in July 2018 were $839 per month, most of which were for single-family rental homes. It should also be noted that Franklinton rental rates rose 12.8 percent yearover-year, more than any other Central Ohio community. “Yes, we need affordable housing in Franklinton,” Sweeney says. “But not every project needs to address that. There’s so much undeveloped vacant land in Franklinton. We have the opportunity to serve a lot of different needs here if we all work together—the residents, the developers, the elected officials and the banks. But I think Gravity fits well with the neighborhood it’s in and fits well with where the community wants to go. I like that it’s bold. I like that it’s experimental. I like that there will be a variety of reasons to be there.” Doug Ulman agrees. That’s why the CEO of Pelotonia, which has raised

$174 million for cancer research, was the first to reserve space at Gravity. The Pelotonia offices will occupy about 4,500 square feet on the ground floor, toward the back of the eastern side of the development near the courtyard. It’s more than twice the space that Pelotonia currently occupies in the Arena District, where their lease expires in March. What excites Ulman and his 18 Pelotonia employees about the new space is that it will allow more interaction and opportunity for the annual event’s riders and volunteers. “We’re super excited,” says Ulman. “I first heard about the vision for Gravity at least two years ago. From that point on, I was interested. They’re about how to bring people to a space to create community and create impact. I see such a similarity to our mission. We want our headquarters to be the community’s space, to come out and make it their own.” “Partnerships externally are crucial for Gravity,” Kaufman says. “There are people and organizations out there that will make this better than we will alone. Pelotonia exemplifies that. They inspire. They raise the quality of life in our community. They make the world a better place.” It’s something Kaufman believes in completely—the power of community to make the world a better place by providing a space for people to come together through wellness, creativity, sustainability and philanthropy. It doesn’t take Sir Isaac Newton to understand the power of Gravity. Kaufman says he’s done the math. “If we own 1,000 units, and the national average is that 50 percent of those are going to turn over every year, that means I’m serving 1,500 people a year. And so over 10 years, that’s 15,000 people. And that’s not counting people who are driving by or coming here to meet a friend or engaging with the businesses that locate here. And then we layer in events throughout the year. And what if what I do here at Gravity catches on and other people want to do it, too? “That’s not nothing. That’s a big impact,” he says. “I believe we can create this place under one roof where people can elevate each other and inspire one another, and then go out in the neighborhood, the city, the world. I believe we can raise the quality of life on earth through the expansion of consciousness.” ®

renderings: courtesy Kaufman development

Far left, Eduardo Kobra; left, the block party for the unveiling of the Kobra mural; bottom, artist renderings of Gravity’s first phase, on the north side of Broad Street (left) and the second phase (right) across the street.

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Mike By Dave Ghose

disabato’s

The scenario sounded eerily familiar to Mike DiSabato. A team doctor who took advantage of vulnerable young athletes. Sexual misconduct masked as legitimate medical treatment. A lack of oversight by collegiate administrators. As he learned more about Michigan State University physician and USA Gymnastics team doctor-turned-sexualpredator Larry Nassar in the fall of 2017, DiSabato had a shocking realization: He was a sex-abuse victim, too. DiSabato suddenly recalled some peculiar physical examinations as an Ohio State University wrestler from 1987 to 1991 by team doctor Richard Strauss. No matter the ailment, Strauss seemed to include a thorough inspection and handling of DiSabato’s genitals. And like Nassar, Strauss used his status and authority as a medical professional to quash the suspicions of his victims. DiSabato couldn’t help but see himself and his fellow OSU wrestlers 52

in the more than 160 dancers, softball players, swimmers, Olympic gymnasts and other women who came forward to accuse Nassar of abuse. “That’s us,” he told a former OSU wrestling teammate. In the spring of 2018, DiSabato went public with his claims. He reported the abuse to Ohio State officials and then shared his experiences with The Columbus Dispatch, putting additional pressure on the university to act. That initial complaint has metastasized over the past six months, spawning three lawsuits, two investigations and reams of news coverage. Amplified by the #MeToo movement, it even cast a shadow over another Ohio State controversy that emerged in its aftermath: the suspensions of Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith and football coach Urban Meyer for their mishandling of domestic violence allegations against former assistant football coach Zach Smith (see story on Page 58).

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Mike DiSabato in his garage office space OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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As “victim No. 1,” DiSabato—a mile-aminute mouthpiece for the case—has continued to shape the media narrative since then, pushing the story into the cable news stratosphere with accusations that U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, a candidate to be the next speaker of the House and a former Ohio State assistant wrestling coach from 1986 to 1994, ignored Strauss’ abuse. DiSabato also has organized conference calls with attorneys, hounded investigators and university officials and listened to the stories of dozens of victims who’ve confided in him since he first came forward. (OSU investigators so far have identified 145 victims of Strauss, who was associated with Ohio State from 1978 to 1998. Strauss killed himself in California in 2005 at the age of 67.) 54

Fiery and combative, DiSabato is a sports marketer who’s waged many scorchedearth battles with his alma mater, including a behind-the-scenes role in Buckeye football legend Chris Spielman’s 2017 lawsuit that accuses the university of exploiting the commercial rights of former players. Most of these crusades haven’t worked for DiSabato, often disintegrating in litigation, broken promises and nasty accusations. The Strauss scandal gave him a bigger platform, and suddenly, the university had to take him seriously. “It was sitting in front of my face all these years,” he told me in early April. We were talking just a few days after the Strauss story broke, one of many conversations we’ve had over the past three years, and DiSabato was hell-bent for both revenge and

«««««««««« I met DiSabato about a decade ago, when I wrote an article for this magazine about his thorny relationship with Ohio State. Afterward, we’d chat maybe once or twice a year, usually when I was looking for a colorful quote. DiSabato is a perceptive and informed observer of the business of sports, even if he looks like the rapper Pitbull and swears like a cast member from The Sopranos. Yet when he called me in November 2015, DiSabato sounded different. He was reflective, polite, calm—in other words, the oppo-

photo: Columbus monthly File/JeFFry Konczal

DiSabato in 2008 at Emilio’s, his family’s West Side pizzeria and bar

reform. At his self-aggrandizing best, DiSabato vowed to use the Strauss case to tear apart a system that he believes victimizes collegiate athletes. “I’m the right guy at the right place to change this plantation, to burn it down,” he said. He promised to punish the university that he’s held a grudge against since it booted him from its lucrative licensing program more than a decade ago. “This Ho Chi Minh has a nuclear bomb,” he declared. He even called the Strauss case “a blessing.” Those comments highlight DiSabato’s complicated nature. Under the glare of the Strauss scandal in recent months, DiSabato emerged as a controversial figure. His enemies—and he has plenty—question his motives and values. They say he’s a bully, not a victim; a loose canon, not a change agent; a man with a vendetta, not a friend to the powerless. In August, a Marysville Municipal Court jury convicted DiSabato of a misdemeanor count of telecommunications harassment. The charge stems from DiSabato’s bitter feud with Columbus sports agent Bret Adams, a former friend and business associate who also filed a defamation lawsuit against DiSabato in Union County. DiSabato faces nine additional misdemeanor counts of telecommunications harassment in connection to emails and text messages he sent to Matt Finkes, a former Ohio State football player and second cousin of Jim Jordan. For his part, DiSabato seems to relish the hatred and infamy, calling himself the “Notorious MHD” (his initials) and inviting reporters to cover his recent harassment trial in Marysville. He’s a man of many contradictions: an idealist and an opportunist, a mystery and an open book, a loyal friend and a terrible foe, a man at war with the world and himself. DiSabato doesn’t seem to care if you think he’s unstable, arrogant or self-destructive. He’s got more enemies to taunt, more publicity to court, more wrongs to right. Justice isn’t always pretty.

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photos: left, Kevin schlosser; right, courtesy miKe disabato

Chris Spielman photo banner with Honda advertising

site of his usual bomb-throwing persona. What changed? He said he’d just come out of a major depressive episode earlier in the year that kept him in bed for nearly two months and caused him to lose some 50 pounds. The experience made him rethink his life. “I see my depression as a positive,” he says. “It humbled me. It made me see what was important.” He decided to return to his first professional love: providing fair representation to former collegiate athletes. After his years in the wilderness selling wrestling and mixed martial arts apparel, DiSabato had a new idea: a group-licensing program called the College Football Players Club, which would give former athletes a share of royalties, just like his pioneering Legends of the Shoe program did in the early 2000s for former Ohio State football players before the university shut it down. What’s more, two of the biggest former Buckeyes, Chris Spielman and Archie Griffin, both of whom were part of the Legends of the Shoe program, had signed on as not only participants in the College Football Players Club but as equity partners in the overall business, the Profectus Group. “I want to be a steward of the future and do some good work and put the past behind me,” DiSabato said in November 2015. His idea intrigued me, as did his new vulnerability. We agreed to stay in touch. Over the past three years, we spoke for about 12 hours in some 20 interviews, from quickie phone conversations to marathon sessions at his dining room table. He also supplemented those interviews with dozens of emails. That access gave me an up-close perspective of his bumpy personal and business journey over the past three years.

With the backing of Spielman and Griffin, DiSabato began to make peace with Ohio State, which had cut him loose from its lucrative licensing program in 2006 after he made disparaging comments about OSU’s plans to hand over its jersey program to Nike. DiSabato had cordial meetings with two longtime foes, athletic director Gene Smith and Rick Van Brimmer, the director of Ohio State’s trademark and licensing office, and negotiated with university business partners Nike and IMG. OSU officials seemed interested in his idea, recognizing the changing business dynamics of collegiate sports. All of that changed in November 2016, however, when DiSabato attended his first Buckeyes football game in several years. Walking through the Ohio Stadium concourse, DiSabato was surprised at what he saw: 64 giant Honda-sponsored banners featuring photos of former Buckeye greats, including Griffin and Spielman. DiSabato texted a photo of a banner to Spielman, who, along with all the other ex-Buckeyes, received no compensation for the use of his name and image. From the perspective of DiSabato and the former players, the banners were a breach of trust. After the university rejected an offer to settle the matter for about $1 million, Spielman, urged on by DiSabato, sued the university in July 2017. (The Profectus Group was also a plaintiff in the original suit, but it was removed in an amended complaint filed a few months later.) “Ohio State never believed that Chris Spielman was going to put his name on a lawsuit against his university, no matter what they did or how bad they mistreated him,” says Bret Adams, Spielman’s longtime agent.

DiSabato at Bishop Ready High School with his parents

Adams has had a long and volatile relationship with DiSabato. They met about 30 years ago, when DiSabato took Adams’ sports management class at Ohio State. The pair is more than a little alike—both can be ornery, outspoken and combative. Adams says they had a falling out around 2011 over an unpaid legal bill, but when Spielman wanted to move forward with the Profectus Club partnership, they made up. “Oh yeah, we’re back,” DiSabato told me in December 2015. “We’re like brothers.” The feeling seemed to be mutual. In an email sent to Griffin, Spielman and DiSabato in January 2016, Adams praised DiSabato for some surprising restraint in negotiations with Ohio State. “The fact that Mike took my advice is scaring the crap out of me,” Adams wrote, adding, “With some newly discovered diplomacy from Mike, he can put up some big numbers with this program.” Their relationship, however, soured after the Spielman lawsuit was filed. First, they clashed over legal and public relations strategy, Adams says, along with how much money DiSabato might receive as part of any settlement. Then, DiSabato took the dispute up a notch, according to court records. During a September 2017 conference call with Griffin and Spielman, DiSabato raised concerns about financial and legal issues involving Adams, accused him of sending racist and sexist tweets to a potential investor in the Profectus Group and called for the severing of ties with Adams. Instead, DiSabato ended up on the outs. Spielman immediately sided with Adams, who vehemently denied the allegations, secured affidavits from two witnesses supporting his claims and filed a defamation lawsuit against DiSabato in response. (Spielman declined to comment OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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«««««««««« Despite his confessional tone during our December 2017 talk, DiSabato did withhold something from me on that day. He didn’t tell me about Richard Strauss, even though he’d already begun to think about his experiences with the late doctor. “It took me a couple of months to really get comfortable with the fact that I was sexually abused,” he told me later. Following his realization, DiSabato started contacting his former teammates, other OSU wrestling alumni and athletes from other sports. As a longtime board member of Ohio 56

State’s Varsity O Alumni Society, he has lots of contacts. He heard story after story of inappropriate conduct by Strauss. He also heard descriptions of a sexually exploitative atmosphere at Larkins Hall, the now-demolished gymnasium and natatorium, where the wrestling team worked out. Once he went public, Strauss victims started contacting him. He estimated he’s heard from people in 15 sports. “I’ve kind of become ground zero,” he says. He decided to document the stories in a video that he shared with Ohio State officials and the media. The nearly 11-minute recording features DiSabato, former Ohio State wrestling coach Russ Hellickson, former OSU wrestler and UFC champion Mark Coleman and a former OSU nursing student named Brian Garrett. Their testimony was graphic and emotional, describing “hands-on” physicals, unnecessary genital examinations, even an incident in which Strauss brought a patient to orgasm during an examination. Strauss also had voyeuristic tendencies. He’d take long showers with the wrestling team, sometimes multiple times a day, his accusers said. And he wasn’t the only deviant at Larkins Hall. “I caught people having sex in our wrestling room, in our stairwell to the wrestling room, in the bathroom adjacent to our wrestling facility,” recalled Hellickson, who coached the OSU team from 1987 to 2006. “And I caught people masturbating. It became a real problem because it affected the mental state of a lot of our wrestlers.” DiSabato said athletes needed to pass through a “gantlet of sexual deviancy” to reach the showers. Why didn’t the students speak up? They were embarrassed, scared and didn’t want to cause trouble, which they feared could cost them their scholarships. “I never saw myself as a victim,” said DiSabato in the video, choking up. “It’s hard for me to sit here today.” DiSabato says his Ohio State crusades come down to power. He says collegiate athletes lack a voice. And when they don’t have a voice, they can be exploited, whether that be by a sexual predator or a profit-hungry corporation. What does he want to see happen at Ohio State? He shoots back right away with a list of demands: “transparency, accountability, justice, regime change and systematic educational change.” (Ohio State officials declined to comment for this story.) It’s hard to disagree with the gist of DiSabato’s argument. Inequity and hypocrisy taint college sports, and power is almost always at the root of sexual abuse. What’s less clear is whether DiSabato—with all of his flaws and grudges—is the right person to deliver the message.

Mike DiSabato does a momentary meditation in his garage office space after a conference call with a lawyer.

After the Strauss scandal ensnared Jordan, a collective of DiSabato foes led by Adams launched a PR counterattack. George Pardos, a former Ohio State wrestler, posted a video online of a laughing DiSabato dropping his pants on a bus in April while saying, “Doc Strauss in the house.” Finkes, the former OSU football player, posted on his Twitter feed a mug shot from DiSabato’s arrest in the harassment case involving Adams. Probably the most effective critic has been Karen Mendoza, the wife of Ray Mendoza, DiSabato’s former OSU wrestling teammate and a Marine Corps major who died in Iraq in 2005. Her dispute with DiSabato stemmed from his management of a nonprofit created to honor her late husband. She says she was forced to send DiSabato a cease-and-desist letter to stop him from using her husband’s name after DiSabato refused to answer questions about how he was disbursing funds.

photo: tim johnson

through Adams, while Griffin didn’t respond to a message.) DiSabato discussed these matters with me during a rambling, 90-minute interview at his house a few months later. He was in a manic state, restraint and diplomacy a thing of the past. His train of thought veered from a favorite song from “La La Land,” to a documentary about music producer Jimmy Iovine, to his views on wealth accumulation. “When you have money, people want to take your money, and there are more takers in this world than there are givers.” He paused for a moment, then added, “What was I saying, Dave?” Several times during the conversation, DiSabato left the room to smoke marijuana, something I’d never seen him do before. DiSabato, 50, says he started using pot in his early 40s after seeing how it helped MMA fighters and other athletes recover physically, mentally and spiritually. “It just makes me a nicer person,” he says. DiSabato’s wife, Trish, walked in on our dining-room table conversation, and DiSabato asked her to talk with me while he left the room. They’ve been married for 25 years, and she’s been there through all of his ups and downs. “He’s very passionate,” she said, tears in her eyes. “He wants to do good, and it’s infuriating when there are so many blockades.” When DiSabato returned, he was even more revved up. He urged me to read a text message sent to Spielman. “I’m telling everyone he’s putting his head in the sand.” “It’s confusing,” his wife said. “It’s not confusing. It’s a con,” DiSabato countered. “Has he been talking like this the whole time?” Trish asked. She urged him to calm down. “I know it’s very upsetting,” she soothed. It didn’t work. His voice kept getting louder and louder. “Poor Dave doesn’t need to be screamed at, Mike.” DiSabato smiled. “You’ve got to put on a show,” he said.

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“He was threatening to me,” she says. “He was intimidating to me. He bullied me.” That combativeness can annoy even his supporters. “Personally, I love Mike’s style,” says former OSU wrestler Dunyasha Yetts. “I love the way he wants to go forward. But sometimes, I get frustrated with him.” DiSabato has pushed hard against university officials, as well as his own lawyers. In fact, DiSabato says his demands caused one attorney, Rex Sharp, to drop him as a client, declaring DiSabato “adverse.” Says Yetts: “I tell him, ‘You got to calm down. You got to slow down. You got to let these people handle it.’” Garrett, the former nursing student, offers a different take on DiSabato’s flaws. “The problem with Mike is that he’s very vocal,” Garrett says. “But … unless a very vocal person like him would have pushed the envelope at Ohio State, then Ohio State would still be covering this up.”

DiSabato’s fierce competitive streak might be traced back to childhood. He and his five brothers comprised one of the state’s greatest high school wrestling dynasties, winning 11 high school state titles, a record for one family. But in his case, it’s also pushed him into silly squabbles that inflict more harm on him than his opponents, like the telecommunications harassment conviction in the Adams case, as well as the new slate of charges he faces after he was accused of flooding Finkes with unwanted emails and text messages. During an interview in late July, DiSabato was more blatant with his marijuana use, smoking all through the more than twohour conversation. He also was even more combative—and decided to pick another unwinnable fight. DiSabato has a bitter rivalry with Rudis, the Marysville wrestling apparel company owned by former Ohio State wrestler Tommy

Rowlands, a one-time business protégé of DiSabato, and Jeff Jordan, the brother of Jim Jordan. DiSabato loathes both Rowlands and Jordan. He also extends his animosity to Nancy Schultz, an investor in the company. Schultz is the widow of Dave Schultz, the Olympic gold-medal-winning wrestler whose killing at the hands of millionaire philanthropist John du Pont inspired the movie “Foxcatcher.” DiSabato doesn’t let Dave Schultz’s tragic story prevent him from hounding his wife. In April, he sent her an email that called Rudis a “bastard brand” and included a photo of her husband’s killer. “Poor Nancy Schultz,” DiSabato said in July, his voice filled with disdain. “Don’t talk bad about her,” said a friend, sitting in on the interview. DiSabato didn’t seem to care. He ignored the advice and kept on talking. He won’t be silenced. ◆ OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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l i m b o at

longaberger

Inside Urban Meyer’s 13-hour judgment day and the media circus that consumed Ohio State football By ChRis GaiTTEn

Photo: Eric AlbrEcht

Daybreak is sunny anD clear, warm but not hot. Football weather. The Ohio State Buckeyes’ season opener is only 10 days away, but it may as well be an eternity. Today is not for sport. Today is a spectacle. Local media and outlets from around the country have descended on the Longaberger Alumni House on the north side of campus to follow the fate of head football coach Urban Meyer at today’s meeting of the OSU Board of Trustees. For a month, the university has been consumed by allegations of domestic violence levied against former assistant coach Zach Smith by ex-wife Courtney Smith and whether Meyer turned a blind eye. Rumors of his punishment—ranging from a light slap to a sharp ax—are swirling. TV cameras are set up inside the Longaberger House before 9 a.m. on Aug. 22—a whole arsenal of them pointed toward an empty horseshoe of tables at the far end of the Sanders Grand Lounge. OSU president Michael Drake and the trustees file into the room, which is quiet except for the clicking of cameras. Chairman Michael Gasser starts the meeting and offers his gratitude to Mary Jo White and David Sarratt from Debevoise & Plimpton, the New York Citybased law firm hired to investigate the actions of Meyer and the OSU athletics department.

Gasser then calls the board into executive session, and the trustees file out. I came to see if the open meeting would provide anything interesting. No such luck. The tripods stay, and I follow the crowd to the lobby. “So now we just wait?” a woman asks a colleague. Yes. We wait. Everyone hopes for a conclusion to the high-profile saga, but no one is sure when it’s coming. The doors to the Grand Lounge are closed, and an OSU police officer stands guard outside, along with cops and security personnel at the building’s front and back doors, with a few more patrolling the second floor where the executive session is being held in a closed boardroom. Drake and the trustees mull over the investigative report produced by the law firm, deciding what mistakes, if any, were made. The futures of Meyer and his boss, athletic director Gene Smith, hang in the balance, as do, apparently, the emotions of many Ohio State fans. At 10:19, a tweet. Eleven Warriors, a Buckeyes fan site, reports that the judgment will come today. About 30 minutes later, more breaking news from Eleven Warriors: Meyer has arrived and is parked near a garbage bin by the loading dock. Thus begins a daylong stakeout at the dumpster behind the Longaberger House.

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This is noT a fooTball sTory. It’s a story of failure: the failures of an institution, of management, of an employee. It’s about society’s failure to address the problem of domestic violence, or even to fully understand its nature. But first came the failure of a marriage. It was a tumultuous eight years for Courtney and Zach Smith. The first allegations of violence occurred in 2009 while Zach was on Meyer’s staff at the University of Florida. He was arrested, but she eventually declined to press charges. It was the first of many such claims, though he was never arrested again or charged with a crime. In 2011, Meyer landed the head coaching job at OSU and hired Zach to coach the wide receivers. Meyer had a soft spot for Zach, he later admitted, because Zach was the grandson of former Buckeyes coach Earle Bruce, who’d mentored Meyer. He never informed his new bosses of Zach’s previous arrest, because by then he doubted the veracity of Courtney’s claims, according to OSU’s investigative report. On Oct. 25, 2015, she called the police in Powell and made her final allegation of physical abuse against her husband. A few weeks later, she filed for divorce.

Above, trustees enter the Grand Lounge at the Longaberger House before going into executive session to deliberate the fates of Urban Meyer and Gene Smith. Below, Zach Smith

tinizes those cases closely and asks for corroborating evidence, only taking on defendants she believes are innocent. “Some of it is a sixth sense about interviewing someone and making a determination as to whether he or she is telling you the truth,” she says, “and that’s as frail as human nature is frail.”

difficult to parse, and this one was made more complex by competing media accounts. On July 23, former ESPN reporter Brett McMurphy broke the news—on Facebook—that on July 20 the Delaware County Domestic Relations Court had issued an ex parte domestic violence civil protection order against Zach, based on Courtney’s testimony. He was fired by Meyer within 10 hours of McMurphy’s report. A day later, at Big Ten Media Days, Meyer was asked about the 2015 incident and said he knew nothing about it. From then on, McMurphy’s Facebook reportage painted Meyer as a hypocrite and a liar, publishing photos of Courtney’s injuries and screenshots of text conversations to show that Meyer’s wife, Shelley, had known of the allegations. Sportswriter Jeff Snook posted a counternarrative, also on Facebook, writing that Courtney’s own mother, Tina Carano, disputed the abuse claims, stating that her daughter was attempting to get revenge against Zach for alleged infidelity. In early August, Courtney was interviewed for the sports website Stadium, which subsequently hired McMurphy. She said she believed Meyer knew of the alleged abuse. 60

Two days later, in an ESPN interview, Zach denied all of the domestic violence allegations and said the injuries documented in her photos were the result of his “defensive movements” during disputes. (Courtney and Zach later stopped talking to the media, and their lawyers didn’t respond to interview requests for this story.) The seesaw reporting underscores the public’s struggle with domestic violence: credibility. Nancy Neylon, executive director for the Ohio Domestic Violence Network, says it’s important to take claims seriously, even if the story is confusing. “Every batterer is going to minimize, every batterer is going to deny, every batterer is going to denigrate the victim and blame the victim and try to deflect the problem.” In her 30-year career, she says she has never come across a case in which a victim falsely claimed abuse. Marty Anderson, a family law attorney with local firm Sowald, Sowald, Anderson & Hawley, primarily represents victims but has defended the accused on occasion. She scru-

insiDe The longaberger lobby, the breaking news of the past month has dried up. With the trustees sequestered, information is scarce. That hasn’t sated the outside world’s appetite for updates. So, in a day bereft of news, food fills the void. ABC6 reports that the trustees were served boxed lunches from Easy Living Catering, owned by former OSU kicker Vlade Janakievski. A couple of hours later, an OSU staffer is filmed setting out Adriatico’s pizza for the journalists, and later she tells a coworker that more than 7,000 viewers already watched it on Twitter. Journalists stave off the boredom any way possible—discussing movies, checking retirement plans, tweeting prolifically, nodding off. They also trade stories about covering the demise of previous coaches. Were you here for Tressel? What about Earle? The dearth of information continues, and every VIP who enters causes a commotion. Shelley arrives around 2:30 in the afternoon and parks her white Mercedes Benz SUV by the dumpster. Gene Smith and his wife breeze through the doors, walk past a makeshift

Photos: toP, Eric AlbrEcht; bottom, AdAm cAirns

DomesTic violence cases are noToriously

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than a pretense for keeping a championshipwinning coach at the expense of a battered wife, a contingent of diehard loyalists felt the whole scandal seemed like an attack— by Courtney, ESPN, the #MeToo movement or McMurphy. They felt like the university’s investigation was caving to baseless outside pressure. If the police didn’t charge Zach Smith, why should Urban Meyer take the fall? Large public institutions like OSU, with abundant resources and compliance departments, frequently investigate employees’ actions, says Fred Gittes, a local employment attorney and principal of The Gittes Law Group. Common sense dictates that OSU investigate, he continues, because people are fired all the time for conduct that doesn’t rise to the level of criminal behavior. It’s

normal for people in positions of authority, like Gene Smith and Urban Meyer, to have stringent reporting requirements beyond law enforcement’s decisions. As for why an arrest wasn’t made if Courtney’s claims were valid, Anderson says officers are generally more responsive if the alleged abuser is still on the scene and there’s fresh evidence. In 2009, when Courtney called the police in Florida, Zach was still in their home, and there were signs of a struggle. He was arrested. In October 2015, Courtney filed a police report at the station and offered her digital and photographic evidence the day after the alleged incident. No arrest was made. There are also persistent misconceptions about domestic violence. It isn’t just physical

At 8:29 p.m., the crowd of fans by the dumpster is growing anxious.

This scandal’s developing sToryline—the

Photo: Chris Gaitten

Photos: toP, eriC albreCht; bottom, adam Cairns

security checkpoint and disappear. Their presence causes speculation—here and online—about what it means for Meyer’s fate. Shelley came—that can’t be good. Gene is here: Maybe he’ll face the firing squad instead. Give the man a cigarette. At one point, Cleveland.com’s Doug Lesmerises follows someone out the front door and onto the sidewalk. A few other reporters trail behind, and eventually a large portion of the press corps is outside. It turns out Lesmerises was following a Papa John’s delivery guy. There’s desperation for something meaningful. Instead, a biker couple wanders in, looking like they took a wrong turn on the way to Sturgis. They’re not interested in an Urban update—they just need to find a bathroom before the Journey and Def Leppard concert. Early in the evening, a few trustees emerge sporadically from the executive session boardroom and walk to another room on the building’s east side. Attorney Alex Shumate makes the walk. So does TV basketball analyst Clark Kellogg. Alex Fischer, CEO of the Columbus Partnership, makes several trips. Drake walks back and forth, back and forth. Are they negotiating terms with Meyer or Gene Smith? Hammering out statements? Performing the world’s least creative interpretive dance? Others begin to notice the movements. “There’s dueling rooms,” one cameraman says, looking upward. “In a day when breadcrumbs are all you eat ... ” says a thin, blue-suited, on-air talent. Lori Schmidt, reporting for 105.7 The Zone in her trademark fedora, watches the scene nearby. “What’s going on at the loading dock?” she wonders. Someone jokes that the decision will be announced by puffs of white smoke, like the naming of a new pope. Eleven hours in, the crowd near the dumpster has grown by several dozen. There are students, a few people on Bird scooters and a young kid perched on his mom’s shoulders. Underneath a tree on the lawn, one man sits alone in a folding chair, blaring the fight song from a portable speaker.

ceaseless stream of new and sometimes contradictory information, the social media tit for tat, the sheer volume of reporting—made it easy for Meyer’s supporters and detractors alike to cherry-pick or disregard whatever evidence they pleased. It was a Rorschach test: digital inkblots onto which people could project their preexisting beliefs. While critics questioned whether OSU’s 14-day investigation would be anything other OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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violence, Neylon says; it’s also emotional and psychological abuse, financial control, threats, intimidation and stalking—all of which Courtney claims she’s experienced. “I have said over and over again, I don’t think the people at Ohio State understand what domestic violence is,” Neylon says. “I don’t think they understand the power and control.”

Minutes before 9 p.M., a dozen hours after the

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Jennifer Maskarinec, a medical student at Ohio State University, sits outside of the Longaberger Alumni House during the press conference to announce the investigation’s findings.

sage he has for her. He mulls his answer but seems unsure what to say to someone whose credibility he has privately questioned. He apologizes to everyone else instead. The press conference concludes. I walk outside into the darkness and wait on the steps. Trustee Alex Fischer leaves, and a camera crew rushes up to get a comment. The decision was unanimous, he tells them. Days later, Tracy reports that trustee Jeff Wadsworth stepped down within an hour of the announcement, believing the punishment was too light. Wadsworth didn’t return calls for this story, but he told Tracy he was the lone voice of dissent.

Many hoped the day would provide definitive answers and closure. Instead, over the ensuing weeks, the investigation, the report and the statements of those involved were rehashed, dissected, debated and maligned. Meyer released a mea culpa for his shaky press conference performance and apologized to Courtney. That sent Zach into a spiral of angry tweets, while his mother, Lynn Bruce, vilified the university on Facebook. Meyer issued another statement taking the media to task for what he felt was inaccurate reporting about the investigation’s conclusions. Several online petitions from Meyer loyalists called for Drake’s ouster. The controversy roiled in part because OSU didn’t release the full investigative report until after the press conference, and it included new revelations that merited questioning. It revealed that Meyer had memory problems, sometimes caused by medication, and investigators didn’t believe all of his statements.

They weren’t able to retrieve his texts that were more than a year old, and they discovered he had a conversation with chief of football operations Brian Voltolini about erasing older messages after McMurphy’s story broke. No texts from Voltolini, Gene Smith or Zach Smith were retrievable. Those concerns remain, and new answers are scarce. OSU didn’t make Drake or Meyer available for this story, and trustees contacted didn’t return calls or emails. In late August, Cleveland.com reported that, according to anonymous sources, Meyer didn’t negotiate his suspension with the board but was “periodically kept in the loop throughout the day,” which may explain the movements back and forth between rooms on the second floor of the Longaberger House that evening. In early October, Courtney and Zach are scheduled to have a full evidentiary hearing in Delaware County regarding the civil protection order, which Zach is contesting. He also has filed a motion for contempt against Courtney in their divorce case. Maybe those cases will yield some clarity, or maybe just more speculation and debate. The day at Longaberger didn’t provide a full resolution, but it may have offered a preview of things to come. Ohio State football has always been a crucible, and even the school’s coaching legends have met ignominious ends. The last man to walk away on his own terms and improve his career was Paul Brown in 1945—and that required a world war and a stint in the Navy. Urban Meyer will continue coaching the Buckeyes this season. But for the first time in seven years, it’s not so hard to imagine Ohio State without him. ◆

Photo: Brooke LaVaLLey

day began, a crush of fans pushes toward the closed doors of Longaberger’s Grand Lounge. The university just announced a press conference to discuss the verdict, and the people gathered by the loading dock rushed inside to witness the end of this strange day and the month-long saga. It feels more like a rally than a media event. Someone yells out Jeff Snook’s name. Another person calls out “O-H!” He gets an “I-O” in response, but it’s tense rather than celebratory. One fan holds up a tablet with “Free Urban” scrawled on it. Inside the lounge, OSU communications staffers scramble to hand out summary documents announcing the decision: Urban Meyer is suspended for three games and will forgo six weeks’ pay; Gene Smith is suspended without pay for just over two weeks. The press conference begins, and the room is hushed except for the unwavering voice of lead investigator Mary Jo White. Students and fans remain quiet throughout. For the first time during a day of boredom and absurdity, the heaviness of the moment settles on the room. White outlines the findings, which point to several failings by Meyer and Gene Smith. Ultimately, though, investigators determined that Meyer didn’t “deliberately lie” or cover up the alleged domestic abuse. Still, White says, more should have been done. “In the domestic violence context especially, there are many cases in which abuse takes place but there is no arrest or criminal prosecution, and so simply relying on law enforcement to take action in the face of such allegations is not, in our view, an adequate response,” she says. Drake, Gene Smith and Meyer answer questions from the dais. Marc Tracy from The New York Times raises the specter of a university in crisis when he asks about this controversy against the backdrop of other ongoing abuse scandals, like that of former OSU physician Dr. Richard Strauss (see Page 52). Several times, Gene Smith and Meyer directly address and apologize to so-called Buckeye Nation, but they never mention Courtney Smith. Near the end, an ESPN reporter asks Meyer what mesColumbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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“Indispensable” Columbus Monthly has been named

BEST CITY MAGAZINE in the country for its circulation size by the City and Regional Magazine Association.

Featuring a remarkable breadth and depth of coverage, Columbus Monthly creates a rich sense of place and gives voice to the full spectrum of its citizens’ experiences and interests. Never resorting to superficiality or boosterism, this magazine is an indispensable resource for connecting with a diverse, vibrant region and its people. — CRMA judge’s comment

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#MoreGenerous Do More. Give More. Be More.

SPE CI A L C OM M U N I T Y R E P ORT FOR C OLU M BUS MON T H LY R E A DE R S

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Table of Contents 4

A Message to the Community

6

Philanthropy Award Winners

8

Featured Donor Stories and Initiatives

38

2017 Financial Highlights

40

How to Get Involved

42

Center for Corporate Philanthropy

44

2018 Governing Committee

SPE CI A L C OM M U N I T Y R E P ORT FOR C OLU M BUS MON T H LY R E A DE R S

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The Columbus Foundation is committed to helping you help others. It’s what we do. It’s what we’ve done for the past 75 years, since, in the midst of the turmoil and strife of WWII, a group of brave and committed citizens from our community gathered together to say “yes, we can, and, yes, we will do more to help each other.” Since our founding in 1943, our mission has been to help you realize your charitable potential: to help you help others in the most effective way possible. It’s our passion, and it’s what we will continue to do for the next 75 years, with Columbus and for Columbus. Together, we will realize our full potential to do more for others, to give more of ourselves, and to be #MoreGenerous.

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F ROM T H E C H A I R M A N A N D PR E SI DE N T A N D C E O OF T H E C OLU M BUS FOU N DAT ION

A Message to the Community Picture yourself in Columbus in 1943, our soldiers bravely fighting—many sacrificing their lives—for freedom as WWII raged in the Atlantic and in the Pacific, and as our economy suffered the lingering effects of the Great Depression. It would have been understandable if you were to hunker down and focus on self-preservation. Thankfully, a small group chose a different path, one that has made a remarkable and indelible difference in our community over the years— and is poised to do even more in the decades ahead. Yes, at that time in 1943, there was a group of folks who refused, however bleak and worrisome the news of each day, however remote the prospect of better days ahead, to think small or selfishly. Instead, they

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came together often around local leader Harrison Sayre’s dining room table 75 years ago to think about what they could do to lift up the lives of people in our community who most needed help, and to encourage and celebrate generosity. From those worst of times was built one of the most enduring of vital community assets, The Columbus Foundation, founded 75 years ago at the end of this year. Which brings us to the present. We owe you a report on our progress, which is what is contained in this report to our community. We are proud to announce that in 2017, the Foundation and its donors set records in their support of central Ohio. Grants paid reached a remarkable all-time high of $213

million to benefit more than 3,900 nonprofits and the hundreds of thousands of individuals they serve. Since our founding, the Foundation has awarded $2.27 billion in grants to a wide range of causes, including social services, the arts, health, education, and more. Gifts made to new and existing funds and Supporting Foundations in 2017 totaled $205.3 million— the fourth highest amount of gifts received in our history. As of December 31, 2017, the assets of the Foundation stood at $2.27 billion, held in 2,587 charitable funds and 30 Supporting Foundations. In this report, you’ll see stories of our work with nonprofit partners and donors who offer innovative, promising ideas to make an impact

The Columbus Foundation Community Report

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FROM LEFT: Matthew D. Walter,

Chairman, and Douglas F. Kridler, President and CEO.

Photo by EclipseCorp

in our often-changing environment. You’ll see an example of how companies in our community are stepping up to provide assistance to their employees during times of need. You will also see generosity in action in compelling and nationally best-of-breed ways. By giving, participating in kindness initiatives, and engaging with others through conversations, you are helping us build a vibrant, flourishing region. From supporting The Big Give, the Foundation’s online giving rally that leveraged a record $18 million for 906 nonprofits in just 26 hours, to facilitating and encouraging community conversations at The Big Table, a day when more than 5,000 people came together to strengthen and

connect central Ohio through dialogue, the generosity of central Ohioans once again demonstrated a collective commitment to creating a better tomorrow. The Foundation matches your commitment and strives to make community knowledge accessible for residents and visitors alike. Better Together is the Foundation’s new crowdfunding platform in The Giving Store that rallies our community to fulfill critical needs of local nonprofits. We thank our exceptional Governing Committee for its extraordinary leadership, as well as the efforts of our committee volunteers, professional advisors, and our dedicated staff. The Columbus Foundation embraces philanthropy as a

collaborative practice—it is The Columbus Foundation Way. It’s about acting together to help those in need. We are committed to adding value to each donor’s philanthropic passions to strengthen central Ohio for generations to come. Join us in showing the world that Columbus has been and always will be a #MoreGenerous community.

matthew D. walter Chairman

Dougl as F. KriDler President and CEO

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2018 Philanthropy Award Winners

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t h e h a r r is on m.

t h e colu m bus

s ay r e awa r d

fou n dation awa r d

Founders of The Women’s Fund of Central Ohio

Community Development for All People and Rev. John Edgar, Executive Director

The Harrison M. Sayre Award, given in honor of the Foundation’s founder and 25-year volunteer director, recognizes leadership in philanthropy in central Ohio. As Mr. Sayre so well stated, “The best way to extend your life is to give to the community.”

Created in 1986, this award recognizes organizations that have made a difference in the quality of life in our community. As the recipient of the 2018 Columbus Foundation Award, the Foundation is proud to present Community Development for All People with a $25,000 grant.

The Columbus Foundation Community Report

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2018 Civic Awards

t h e spir it of colu m bus awa r d The Columbus Foundation named 10 leaders of the central Ohio arts community as the 2018 recipients of The Spirit of Columbus Award at an event in April. This year’s honorees are: Suzan Bradford Kounta, choreographer and dancer, founder of the Thiossane West African Dance Institute Queen Brooks, painter, co-founder of Creative Women of Color Duarte Brown, mixed media painter, master artist with Transit Arts William Evans, writer, founder and editor-in-chief of Black Nerd Problems Corey Favor, designer, co-founder of Creative Control Fest

Sheri Neale, founder of Maroon Arts Group Marshall Shorts, designer, co-founder of Creative Control Fest Cristyn Steward, director of the Columbus Black International Film Festival Carnell Willoughby, artist, founder of Willowbeez Soulveg Scott Woods, writer and poet, founder of Streetlight Guild and Writer’s Block Poetry

5 non profits to watch—2 018

In March, The Columbus Foundation announced its 5 Nonprofits to Watch in 2018, recognizing innovative central Ohio organizations poised for an exceptional year of growth and progress. The organizations selected for 2018 are:

City Year Columbus Columbus Humane CompDrug Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption Per Scholas Columbus

Past and present Spirit of Columbus honorees gathered at The Columbus Foundation: First row (l–r): Barbara Fant (staff), Tanny Crane (2016), Michelle Alexander (2017), Suzan Bradford Kounta, Scott Woods, Sheri Neale, Cristyn Steward, and Duarte Brown. Second row (l–r): Michael B. Coleman (2015), Mark Lomax (staff), Carnell Willoughby, William Evans, Jane Grote Abell (2016), Corey Favor, Jeni Britton Bauer (2013), Marshall Shorts, and David Brown (2013). Photo by Rick Buchanan. 7

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Photo by EclipseCorp 8

The Columbus Foundation Community Report

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THE NINA WEST FUND

G   enerosity embraces belonging “I  think it’s really important that everyone understands they do have a seat at the table and, regardless of identity or difference, they do belong.” —a n dr e w l e v i t t

Andrew Levitt has a booming voice and a big heart to match. From volunteer opportunities and service projects in high school and college, to becoming involved in the community during his adult life, helping others was, and is, an important part of what makes him who he is today. A native of North Canton and graduate of Denison University’s theater program, Andrew has called Columbus home since 2001. Looking for an opportunity to be onstage, his friend, drag queen Virginia West, suggested he try drag. “I think I saw an opportunity to use my platform to provide a voice for those who needed it,” Andrew said. “When I started, I didn’t see myself in the current culture of drag. I wanted to allow people who were like me to know they also had a place in it as well.” Nina West, Andrew’s drag persona, is truly just an extension of himself.

DONOR ADVISED fuND EStAblIShED 2015

PICtuRED : Andrew levitt

in the Short North.

“Nina is a funny, witty, sassy, larger than life, big kid at heart,” Andrew said. “She’s not different than I am. She’s a part of me. She’s just louder and larger. It’s just me on a different scale.” Nina West has grown into a legendary figure, allowing Andrew to use his platform to support LGBTQ organizations. He’s done thousands of shows, participates in hundreds of appearances each year, and has given generously in time, talent, and treasure to the community. The charity performance he does at the end of each big show averages about $1,500—an incredible testament to his passion, and the generosity of his audience. “It’s mind-blowing to know how giving people are. It’s just amazing to me,” he said. “Columbus is a really giving community and it speaks to how close-knit and tight our LGBTQ community is.” In 2015, Andrew established The Nina West Fund at The Columbus Foundation to support local nonprofits that provide services for the LGBTQ community, including Kaleidoscope Youth Center, which has a special place in Andrew’s heart. “I think part of the reason why an organization like Kaleidoscope has resonated with me is because that kind of resource wasn’t available when I was struggling with coming out and telling people who I was,” Andrew said. In addition to Kaleidoscope, his fund has helped support the Ronald McDonald House, Equitas Health, Planned Parenthood, Family Pride Network, and the ACLU. “I keep my giving located in central Ohio so I can see the dollars that people give go to work firsthand,” he said. “That’s important for me.” While he loves his life onstage, Andrew also appreciates the role he plays in the broader community. “One of my favorite things about what I do, now more than ever, is making a connection with families, kids, and LGBTQ families and their children,” Andrew said. “I did a library reading at Westerville Public Library. Giving families access to the art of drag is pretty powerful and awesome.”

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DOROTHY S. AND RODNEY L. BEEHNER FUND

PLANNED GIFT EsTAbLIshED 2013

PICTURED : Dorothy and Rod

beehner at their home in Columbus.

“The   Columbus Foundation supports organizations that we believe in.” —d oro t h y be e h n e r

G   enerosity shapes the future In 2006, a chance to help those affected by Hurricane Katrina sparked a passion for giving back in Rod and Dorothy Beehner that continues today. A neighbor asked the couple to travel with her and other realtors to Louisiana to help in the rebuilding efforts a year after Hurricane Katrina. Both Rod and Dorothy enjoy working with their hands, and they appreciate the camaraderie of doing projects with others. They joined the group, and ended up in Slidell, about 30 miles northeast of New Orleans, across Lake Pontchartrain, building a house with Habitat for Humanity. “At that time, Slidell was still not back to pre-Katrina. There were a lot of housing needs,” Rod said. The first house they worked on helped reunite a family that had been scattered since the hurricane hit. The next year, on what became an annual trip to help those in Slidell, they drove back through the neighborhood and were excited to see Halloween decorations up and bicycles in the yard. “A week doesn’t mean much, but it adds up,” Dorothy said. “It’s really cool to go back and see the houses we’ve worked on and talk to the people.” The couple, married 36 years, was bitten by the travel bug early. “We started Labor Day after we got engaged and we haven’t stopped traveling since,” Dorothy said. 10

“We spent a month traveling around Europe for our honeymoon and then 20 years driving around the country, sleeping on the floor of our minivan.” They upgraded to a small RV a few years back, which has everything they need as they continue their road trips. Rod and Dorothy do a lot of overseas travel as well. A retired federal employee, Dorothy volunteers at Riverside Methodist Hospital, and has donated her time to the Physicians Free Clinic for 16 years. “The Physicians Free Clinic does amazing work. If you need it, they get it done for you. You get done at the end of the day there and you feel like you’ve done something. They are a big, important part of what I do,” she said. Rod, an architect, started a cabinetry business following his retirement in 2004 and has been doing various woodworking projects for the past 10 years. His beautiful work, from tables and chairs to ornamental pieces, can be seen throughout the couple’s home. The fund that will be established by their estate, the Dorothy S. and Rodney L. Beehner Fund, will directly support an organization they care about, and will also be devoted to unrestricted grantmaking by the Foundation. Unrestricted grantmaking provides the Foundation with the flexibility to respond to changing and emerging needs and opportunities in the central Ohio community.

The Columbus Foundation Community Report

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The Columbus Foundation Community Report

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MY SPECIAL WORD FUND

DONOR ADVISED fuND EStAblIShED 2016

PICtuRED : Dwight Smith with

students from St. Anthony School.

“Don’t   let others define you; define yourself.” —dw igh t sm i t h

G   enerosity inspires greatness There’s a saying that hangs on the wall of Dwight Smith’s home office. Our children’s lives are in our hands. Our future is in their hands. Not far from that is a map of the world with pins where Dwight’s program, My Special Word, is changing children’s lives. The pins stretch from North America and Europe to Africa and Asia. Dwight explains that the premise behind My Special Word is simple. Teach children about the importance of positive, encouraging, inspiring words—and have them choose a word that describes them. My Special Word puts the power of words in the hands of the children themselves—how do they want to be seen? Used in schools, camps, and afterschool programs, My Special Word addresses the negativity in today’s world and empowers children to take action, defining themselves first. “I want to have young people stand up with pride and excitement and say ‘this is who I am.’ And then I want to catch them living out their word,” Dwight said. In 2016, Dwight and his wife Renée established the My Special Word Fund at The Columbus Foundation to help cover the cost of the program for those who participate. Many friends have donated to the fund, allowing it to expand to reach children around the world. In 2017, a picture book, My Special Word, and the first in a series of chapter books, What’s My Word, were

released, and 20 partners shared the program, including The 2nd and 7 Foundation, KIPP Columbus, United Schools Network, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Ohio, and Boys & Girls Clubs of Columbus. “The idea is that we can create a conversation in a non-intimidating fashion,” Dwight said. “I believe in general that if we change the words we use, we can change the conversations. If we change the conversations, we can change behaviors. And if we change behaviors, we can change the world.” As the program continues to expand, Dwight hopes the roots of the program grow deep. “I want to reach as many children as I can in as meaningful a way as possible. It’s not just broad, but it’s deep. I want kids to get so excited that they want to tell their stories to others.”

What’s Dwight’s Special Word? SOLD “S stands for silence (be careful with the words you use); O stands for obedience and I desire to be obedient to Christ; L stands for leverage—to whom much is given, much is required; and D stands for discipline.”

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DEBELLIS FAMILY FOUNDATION – SUBURBAN STEEL SUPPLY EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE FUND

emeRgenCy assisTanCe pRogRam esTablished 2017

G   enerosity is a helping hand “This   fund is a vehicle that allows us to help good, hardworking people if something unfortunate happens.” —m a r k d ebe l l i s

Mark DeBellis wants to see his employees succeed— not just now, but later in life. He stresses the importance of looking to the future, and it’s rubbing off on his 80 employees. His Gahanna-based company, Suburban Steel Supply, has a 100 percent participation in the company’s 401K, and he regularly provides resources on financial literacy. But, even with the best of planning, things can go wrong. Mark has seen his employees struggle when a car breaks down, a spouse loses their job, or someone in their family becomes ill. The company’s CFO, Jenny Demko, heard about the Emergency Assistance Program at The Columbus Foundation and suggested the company consider establishing a program to help employees in need. The DeBellis Family Foundation – Suburban Steel Supply Emergency Assistance Fund was established

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piCTURed : mark debellis at

suburban steel supply.

to support eligible employees who experience financial difficulties from an unexpected emergency hardship or qualified disaster. Employees can apply online through The Columbus Foundation, or access an application to submit via email, fax, or mail. Applications are reviewed by program administrators who are part of the Foundation staff. The employee remains anonymous to the company. If approved, grants from $250–$2,500 for food, shelter, and other basic needs are awarded. “This program that the Foundation offers is just perfect for us,” Mark said. “It allowed us to say ‘if something bad happens to you, we can help so it doesn’t spiral into something worse.’” Mark and Cindy DeBellis grew up in Columbus. High school sweethearts, they married in 1979. “The world wasn’t as big to us then,” Mark laughed. But, he said, moving was never appealing to them. They love Columbus and are proud to call it home. They raised two sons, both now involved in the family business, and still have a large extended family in the area. After starting his career at the Federal Reserve Bank, Mark worked for Borden and then joined Crane Plastics in 1983. When Crane acquired Suburban Supply Steel in 1995, leaders at Crane felt Mark had the right skill set and gave him the opportunity to run the new business. He worked for Crane until he purchased Suburban Supply in 2012. Mark credits two men for providing inspiration on the importance of being charitable—his father and Jim Crane. “Both of them have lived this philosophy—a major reason to be successful is to help others.” Mark hopes grants from the fund will help employees overcome the speed bumps life offers, and that they in turn will help others when they can. “Our goal is to impact these 80 people in the hopes they will impact another 160 people—we’re going to do it from the ground up,” Mark said. “We would like this business to be family-owned, family-controlled, and wouldn’t it be nice if, in many years, when we are long gone, we are still able to help people who are working here.”

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Photo by EclipseCorp 15

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Photo by EclipseCorp 16

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JIM AND FRANCIE HENRY FAMILY FUND

G   enerosity’s roots run deep

“We   grew up understanding the importance of helping others.” —f r a nci e h e n ry

Jim and Francie Henry both grew up in modest, middle class families where helping others was not the exception, but the norm. With strong, diverse cultures (Jim is Scottish/Irish and Francie is Greek) they gravitate toward supporting nonprofit organizations that appreciate gender, cultural, and ethnic differences. “We were always taught these differences are what provide the spirit and vitality of a community,” Francie said. Immigrants from Greece, Francie’s parents settled in Mt. Vernon, Ohio, where her mother and father owned a restaurant. “We didn’t have a lot, but we were taught there’s always a way to use your talents to give back to those less fortunate,” Francie said. “The church was important to us, and our car always smelled like Greek chicken and

DONOR ADVISED fuND EStAblIShED 2016

PICtuRED : the henry family in their

New Albany home.

lemon potatoes because my parents would cook all the time, taking food to the church for fundraisers.” Jim, a native of Cincinnati, grew up with four siblings. His experience was similar. “One thing I did know was the importance of contributing what we could,” he said. Early in their careers, both worked for Fifth Third Bank in Cincinnati. They moved to Columbus in 2003 to raise their children, Charlie and Alexandra, in New Albany. Their jobs offered an opportunity to become involved in the central Ohio nonprofit community. This knowledge took Jim’s career into the nonprofit world, where he worked for Children’s Hunger Alliance and The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute. “This involvement opened our eyes to the needs of the community, and we feel that’s important to pass along to our kids. We’ve tried to instill in them that, as a family, we give back what we can and help others,” Jim said. In 2016, the couple established the Jim and Francie Henry Family Fund at The Columbus Foundation to facilitate their family philanthropy. Both teenagers are actively involved in the discussions surrounding what organizations to invest in. The family’s current areas of interest include behavioral health, education, the LGBTQ community, and wellness. Today, Francie is Regional President for Fifth Third Bank, and Jim serves as Director of Sales, Great Lake Region, for SCG Fields, LLC. They are both still actively involved throughout the community, with Francie serving as chair of the Ohio Foundation of Independent Colleges Board, as a board member for Flying Horse Farms and STAR at The Ohio State University, and on the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium’s Operating Board, among others. Jim serves on the Zoo Association Board and the board of Ohio Campus Compact. The family loves Columbus, and the collaborative spirit that brings its residents together. “That’s what makes this town great. It’s generous, diverse, and people rally around causes. And it’s all in the right spirit, for the betterment of the community we live and work in, and for the next generation,” Francie said. 17

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We introduce the first crowdfunding platform for central Ohio causes. Better Together connects you to real-time projects creating good in our community. The Columbus Foundation’s new crowdfunding platform makes it easy to support nonprofit projects by credit card, starting at just $20. With credit card fees covered by The Columbus Foundation through the end of 2018, 100% of your investment goes directly to the project goal. And the local processing of your gift ensures organizations receive the money when they need it, not months down the road. In other words, your gift goes further, faster. FInd A projeCT ThAT speAks To your pAssIon AT

columbusfoundation.org/bettertogether

JOin us tOday, and let’s be better tOgether!

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the giving store: your one-stop shop for charitable giving What’s in The Giving Store? The Columbus Foundation developed The Giving Store at columbusfoundation.org as a one-stop shop for easy, effective online charitable giving.

Donor Dashboard

Nonprofit Directory

As your personal center for charitable giving, easily track your giving, give again, and retrieve tax receipts for multiple years.

The Giving Store’s directory makes it easy for you to find and give directly to nonprofit organizations that serve the causes you care about.

Charitable Gift Cards

The Giving Store’s crowdfunding platform Better Together, along with The Gifts of Kindness Fund, help you identify timely needs and give your charitable dollars where they are needed most.

Spread your love for the community by giving the gift of good with Charitable Gift Cards, redeemable with any nonprofit organization listed in The Giving Store.

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

The Big give 2017 Was Bigger and BeTTer Than ever! PICTURED : Columbus

Foundation staff and collaborators at The Big Give results announcement.

Photos by Rick Buchanan Photography

BIGGEST TOTAL YET!

The Big give, The Columbus Foundation’s signature community giving event, was held on October 10–11 to support area nonprofits. The 26-hour online event raised an incredible $18,003,826 to support 906 central Ohio nonprofits. A record 30,279 donations were received. Donations came from 49 states, the District of Columbia, and 7 countries. All donations received during The Big Give were eligible for Bonus Pool Funds on a pro rata basis, giving everyone who participated the opportunity to have their donation(s) amplified. In addition, all credit card fees were covered by The Columbus Foundation, so 100 percent of donations went to the nonprofits selected by you, our donors. BIGGER REACH THAN EVER For the first time, The Big Give was expanded beyond Franklin County to include nine additional central Ohio counties in the 20

“The   Big Give inspires kindness, generosity, and lively conversation across our community. Cathy and I love the opportunity to be part of lifting up the critical work of our region’s nonprofits. And, it provides the nonprofit community with a great platform to make their case for support.” — J e f f Ly T T L e , C oLu m B u s f ou n dAT Ion d on or

Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA): Delaware, Fairfield, Hocking, Licking, Madison, Morrow, Perry, Pickaway, and Union. As a result, 172 nonprofit organizations in these counties collectively benefited from nearly $1.2 million. BIGGER IMPACT FOR NONPROFITS A total of 906 nonprofit organizations received donations through the 2017 Big Give. This is an incredible 54 percent increase over the number of nonprofits that received donations during the 2015 Big Give.

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“We   are so grateful for the generosity of the central Ohio community. Last year, Mid-Ohio Foodbank distributed enough food for 155,000 meals each and every day—half of which was fresh. Yet, there is still a gap across our neighborhoods, including one in four children who do not know where their next meal will come from. The Big Give has been a powerful partnership within the community to help fill that gap. On behalf of our neighbors who are struggling to make ends meet, thank you.” — M aT T H a B a s H , P r e s i de n T & C e O, M i d - OH iO F O OdB a n k

BIG SUPPORT! Special thanks to our Bonus Pool Contributors and Promotional Partners who helped make everyone’s donation go further! 2017 BIG GIVE BONUS POOL CONTRIBUTORS

AEP Foundation

Lassettre Family Fund

Blom Family Fund

L Brands Foundation

Central Benefits Health Care Foundation

Licking County Foundation

Chlapaty Family Fund

Marsh Family Foundation

Tanny Crane and John Wolff Fund William H. Davis, Dorothy M. Davis and William C. Davis Foundation Delaware County Foundation Paul G. Duke Foundation Walter and Marian English Community Needs Fund Michael and Denise Glimcher Family Fund Hinson Family Trust Ingram-White Castle Foundation The Big Give was expanded beyond Franklin County to include nine additional central Ohio counties.

Kramer-Celeste Family Fund

John H. McConnell Foundation Meuse Family Foundation Nationwide Insurance Harold C. Schott Foundation Siemer Family Foundation Seanna C. and Matthew D. Walter Fund Margaret and Robert Walter Foundation Robert F. Wolfe and Edgar T. Wolfe Foundation Worthington Industries

2017 PROMOTIONAL PARTNERS

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In March 2008, The Columbus Foundation held its first communitywide day of giving, a revolutionary effort to support local nonprofits.

The History of the Giving Day that Changed Online Giving in America

It was so successful that another day was held again that November, and then, in November 2011, the Foundation launched The Big Give, a 24-hour marathon of giving with a $1 million bonus pool that made every donation go further. The Foundation became a leader in the community foundation field on giving days, and many foundations reached out to learn the recipe for success in harnessing community spirit for an incredible day of giving. Fast forward to 2018, and thanks to your extraordinary generosity and enthusiasm, and the partnership of nonprofits, the results of these six events over the past decade are phenomenal—all because of you.

HisTory —THe BiG Give

$

Giving Day

Giving Day 2.0

The Big Give

March 2008

November 2008

2011

816,880

240 nonprofiTs receiveD DonaTions

22

$

1,265,554 258 nonprofiTs receiveD DonaTions

$

8,524,928 501 nonprofiTs receiveD DonaTions

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The BiG Give 2008–2017

10

6

99

YEARS

GIVING DAY EVENTS

HOURS

$

1,500 NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS BENEFITED

$

54 M R AISED

The Big Give

The Big Give

The Big Give

2013

2015

2017

10,656,494 569 nonprofiTs received donaTions

$

15,015,821 587 nonprofiTs received donaTions

$

18,003,826 906 nonprofiTs received donaTions

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

WHEN THE VOICES IN OUR COMMUNITY COME TOGETHER, BIG THINGS HAPPEN PICTURED : Big Table

conversations were held throughout central Ohio on May 17, 2017.

Photos by Rick Buchanan Photography and Kathryn D Studios

“Great   ideas have grown out of the conversations that happened at the first two Big Tables, but the most important thing that has come from those conversations so far is the participants’ willingness to continue reaching out to the people around them.” —K e l l e y Gr i e sm e r On May 17, 2017, approximately 5,000 people gathered around more than 450 tables across the central Ohio region to participate in The Columbus Foundation’s second Big Table. The Big Table launched in 2016 as a way to bring people together to broaden perspectives and strengthen our community. “The power of The Big Table is its ability to create authentic human connection. It’s a space where people can be vulnerable with each other—sharing their own unique stories and perspectives on how we can positively impact our community together,” said Kelley Griesmer, Sr. Vice President and Manager, Walter Family Philanthropy at The Columbus Foundation. Participants of all ages discussed a wide variety of topics, from economic issues and poverty to education and human rights. 24

Big Tables were held at offices, homes, schools, churches, libraries, restaurants, and even at John Glenn Columbus International Airport. At the end of each conversation, participants completed commitment cards that captured ways in which they were inspired to personally better the community moving forward. Kelley stresses The Big Table experience is as much, if not more, about listening as it is about talking. “The idea is to walk into a conversation ready and willing to listen to what others have to say and learn from them. It’s not about needing to change your mind, but it is about a willingness to possibly broaden your perspective by listening to and learning from the perspectives and experiences of others.”

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Frequently DiscusseD topics at the Big taBle 2017

community engagement

economic issues & poverty

children & Family

nonprofits & philanthropy

education

community Development

89%

96 %

84 %

learned something new at their conversations

were very or somewhat satisfied with their experience

discussed an idea that they thought had the potential to make their community better

97

86

%

said they would continue having conversations about the community

%

didn’t know some or all of the people at their table before the Big table

taBle siZe (by number of people)

1–5

8% 6–10

49% 11–15

26% 15+

17%

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

turning talk into action PICTURED (l–r): Blair Beavers, Leigh Ann Simms, Stephen Garland, Amy Gillespie, and Ann Matarrese outside of The Hardy Center in Linden.

Photo by Lynsey Pipino

the Big table brings ideas to life! this is one example of how conversations are sparking change in our community. When Leigh Ann Simms hosted more than 20 people at her Big Table conversation in 2016, she thought it would be a terrific platform to discuss challenges facing our community. “I wondered why there are so many nonprofits in our city with services and programs, and so many people who need them. Where’s the disconnect? Why aren’t these people getting the help they need?” That initial conversation at her home included nonprofit representatives from throughout the city, as well as community leaders from neighborhoods like Milo-Grogan, Franklinton, Hilltop, and North Linden. Collectively, they agreed that there are gaps in our city—but they also felt it is the responsibility of those doing well in the community to help lift others up. Energized, Leigh Ann asked those who attended if they would like to keep the conversation going. Those who did meet again discussed ways they could work together to make a positive impact on Columbus.

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“the   work leigh ann and her group are doing to make a difference is a terrific example of how the Big table can have a lasting effect. People walk away from conversations inspired to find ways to lead and create impact.” — k e l l e y gr i e sm e r , sr . v ic e pr e si de n t, t h e c olu m bus fou n dat ion

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“We believe every problem has a solution. That is our philosophy,” Leigh Ann said. “You just have to find it—and sometimes you have to start really small.” One suggestion was to find a way to help kids thrive. Leigh Ann invited a few people working with kids in the Linden area to the next meeting. One of those people was Stephen Garland, founder of The Hardy Center. After learning more about The Hardy Center, and the needs of the kids in the neighborhood, the group took the center under its wing. Established in 2007 with 23 neighborhood kids, The Hardy Center today serves hundreds of children from Pre-K through 8th grade during its summer camp, and has grown to include an afterschool program as well. In addition to providing reading classes, outdoor activities, and sports, the center offers opportunities for kids to learn new things like how to unicycle, fence, act, and play chess, as well as visiting new places—to “re-see” their lives outside of a neighborhood that for many is filled with fear and violence. “We have to get them before they establish their heroes—and instill an appreciation for accomplishment,” Stephen said. After providing some small items and supplies, Leigh Ann asked Stephen what the center really needed to make a difference. He shared that during the summer months he and staff members transported kids to The Hardy Center daily in two deteriorating vans, one of which was literally held together by duct tape. The Big Table group helped the center secure a grant for two safe vans in 2017, thanks to a Columbus Foundation donor. The group held a dinner and silent auction that enabled them to feed 200 people at the holidays last year, making sure each child and family had enough food while they were on break from school. They also gathered enough gifts to give each child two presents for Christmas. In addition to donating food and supplies to the center, the group is helping with building renovations.

“People   want to help, and they want to do good things—they just don’t know how to get started. So we’re making it easy for them by giving them an opportunity to be involved in this endeavor.” —l e igh a n n si m m s

Labor and supplies to renovate the restrooms at The Hardy Center were donated by Buckeye Construction Systems, Bolon’s Plumbing, Drain Logistics, and Carr Supply, and a kitchen renovation is planned to provide nutritious meals onsite, as well as help teach the kids how to prepare vegetables grown in the center’s community garden. Today, Leigh Ann’s group has about eight members and meets every other month. “Our goal is to support groups that are in the business of helping children,” Leigh Ann explained. “We’re starting at The Hardy Center. It’s going to take a few years. It’s not something that is going to happen overnight. But it’s definitely doable. We’re just regular people who are going to get this done.”

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

Creating a Community that thrives on Kindness PICTURED : Kindness

Matters at Otterbein launched in 2017 with the support of The Columbus Foundation’s initiative Kind Columbus.

Photo courtesy of Otterbein University

the Columbus Foundation’s Kind Columbus initiative has inspired thousands throughout central ohio to cultivate kindness. One positive example of the kindness culture alive and well in our community was last year’s launch of Kindness Matters at Otterbein University. Otterbein’s Kindness Matters initiative, made possible with support from Kind Columbus, gives students and faculty on its Westerville campus opportunities to showcase kindness in their everyday lives—and encourages others to make an effort to practice kindness. As one of the lead universities in this regional kindness effort, Otterbein’s pledge is that its students, alumni, donors, friends, and employees will help realize gifts and acts of kindness that make a difference. The campus community has shown kindness through efforts big and small. At its annual Welcome Week “President’s Convocation,” more than 300 plants featuring messages of kindness were given to

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faculty and staff—with a request to give the kindness away to another colleague, acquaintance, or neighbor. The kindness rippled from the start because a local greenhouse owner and alumnus donated the flowers. The kindness continued through Welcome Week as incoming, first-year Otterbein students received hand-written notes from members of six different Westerville church congregations to personally welcome the students to their new community. “I remember feeling very welcomed and encouraged by the kind and meaningful notes we received. It meant so much to me that people took time to write to people they had never met. Their kind words even encouraged me and many others to carry out our own acts of kindness throughout the year,” said Megan Rumbalski, Class of 2021.” It was a special day, one that I will never

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forget. To feel completely welcomed in a strange and new place meant the world to me and started my college journey in such a positive way.” Many other kindness-centered events and programs have occurred since Kindness Matters’ initial launch in spring 2017. From surprise smiley face cookies and kindness bookmarks to hosting a penny war to raise money for a scholarship fund and a pop-up burrito drive to support food pantry donations, Otterbein’s focus on elevating and encouraging kindness is an inspiration to the entire central Ohio community.

Photo courtesy of Otterbein University Kindness Matters distributed more than 300 plants to faculty and staff during Otterbein University’s Welcome Week in 2017.

A Kindness Think Tank, held at Otterbein in October, brought together high school and college students, Otterbein employees, and community members for sessions that revolved around kindness in classrooms, neighborhoods, and how to harness kindness for the good of others. “Otterbein is an institution where our students actually talk about kindness, are proud that their institution celebrates kindness, and understand that it’s part of our identity, our character, and our DNA. Compassion, servant leadership, and an outward-focused commitment to others are traits woven into Otterbein’s moral fabric,” said Kathy A. Krendl, Ph.D., Otterbein President Emerita.

WHAT IS KIND COLUMBUS? The mission of Kind Columbus, an initiative of The Columbus Foundation, is to build community through acts of unconditional kindness. By amplifying and enabling empathetic and compassionate actions, Kind Columbus will create a ripple effect of kindness that continuously inspires and fuels community members to do more good for each other and the community at large.

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

kindness benefits our community’s youth PICTURED (l–r): Huckleberry House staff members Amanda Leclerc, Kyra Crockett Hodge, and Melanie GlennGunther

Photo by Lynsey Pipino

the Gifts of Kindness Fund was established at the columbus foundation in 2014 as a way to provide emergency, one-time grants to those in need, and promote acts of kindness throughout our community. Grants, most ranging from $500– $3,000, help provide a lift when individuals and families need it most. The Foundation collaborates with 26 nonprofit partner agencies to identify individuals in urgent need of help with housing, transportation, utilities, and basic household necessities. Huckleberry House is one of the nonprofit partners. Since 1970, Huckleberry House has been a safe place and a source of support for young people in central Ohio struggling with homelessness and family crisis. The organization helps thousands of young people each year through four major programs: 01

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Crisis Shelter, where youth can show up 24 hours/day and have a safe place to stay for a short-term period;

02

Transitional Living Program (TLP), an independent living program for transition-age homeless youth;

03

Family Support Program, which bridges gaps between youth and their families through counseling; and

04

Youth Outreach Program, which is dedicated to reaching at-risk youth in their neighborhoods.

While the programs may differ, the collective goal is the same—to connect at-risk young adults to the support services they need to get and stay off the streets, and to be there to guide them during the process. Melanie Glenn-Gunther, Team Leader for the Crisis Shelter, knows the importance of making a connection with teens at the shelter, as many have no one else to count on.

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“Our center is very kid friendly, so we are pretty unique in how we engage and build relationships quickly,” she said. In addition to a place to stay, youth ages 12–17 meet with case managers and counselors, and families are brought in to talk about hard topics. Ideally, the youth return home with the supportive services they need. Young people from both the TLP and Youth Outreach Program have benefited from Gifts of Kindness grants— helping them address an immediate financial need so they can keep moving toward long-term sustainability. TLP works with men and women ages 17–21 for 12–18 months, providing safe, furnished apartments for participants and their children. This time period gives these young adults an opportunity to work on life skills such as cooking, cleaning, shopping, and living on a budget. A special program for domestic violence offers counseling to address trauma and help them begin rebuilding their lives.

“Grants   like this don’t exist. There are so many limitations for funds that are available.” — A m A n dA L e c L e rc , H uc k L e be r ry House

“A lot of kids are wanting more and have a strong desire for change, but do not have the support and resources needed to make that happen,” said Amanda Leclerc, LSW, Transitional Living Program Team Leader. Amanda explained that domestic violence victims often suffer financial ramifications when they flee an abusive situation. If rent or utilities are in their name and go unpaid, it can lead to evictions that tarnish their record and prevent them from renting in the future. “You have a young person who had the courage to flee, who potentially would exit back into homelessness even though they have worked harder than I can

From its inception through June 2018, the Gifts of Kindness Fund awarded 805 grants totaling $1,366,361.

imagine,” Amanda said. “These grants have prevented homelessness—allowing these individuals to do their healing while having the stable housing needed to provide for their family. It’s life changing.” The Youth Outreach Program’s “YOP Shop” on 11th Avenue is a walk-in center where youth can learn about services and programs. Many are dealing with family struggles, mental health issues, violence, and a low sense of self-worth. Kyra Crockett Hodge serves as the Youth Outreach Program Team Leader. She’s inspired by kids who are able to turn their lives around. “To see someone on that continuum, who’s getting ready to fail, and nurturing and loving them and giving them the support they need as we watch them climb up, that’s what keeps me here,” Kyra said. You, too, can spread Gifts of Kindness. Join us in helping families with an emergency need. Anyone can make a gift to the Gifts of Kindness Fund using a credit card through The Giving Store at columbusfoundation.org.

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

COLLABOR ATIVE EFFORT PROVIDES HOPE FROM LEFT: Andrew

Moss, Director of Stabilization Services and Shawn Holt, President and CEO of Maryhaven.

Photo by EclipseCorp

The 55-bed Maryhaven Addiction Stabilization Center (MASC) on Columbus’ South Side sits at ground zero for the opiate crisis in Franklin County. As opiate overdoses continued to skyrocket, Shawn Holt had been Maryhaven’s President and CEO for only months. Working closely with the Alcohol, Drug and Mental Health Board of Franklin County (ADAMH) and other partners on the front lines of the crisis, they came up with an idea to create an innovative new treatment option for clients battling opiate addiction. Maryhaven was already leasing building space at 1430 South High Street, primarily to treat clients on an outpatient basis. “We took a look around and said, we can turn this into at least a 50-bed facility,” Shawn said. The partners worked together to create MASC, a center that provides immediate stabilization to those who overdose—helping cut down on the strain the crisis is putting on hospital emergency rooms, and offering an opportunity for access to care and treatment right away.

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“Some   of these folks would be dead today if it weren’t for the center because of how rampant the crisis is and how prone people are to re-overdosing.” —A n dr e w Mo s s , M A ry h Av e n

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ADAMH reached out to others who could benefit from a stabilization center specifically designed to give clients who overdose an option other than going to the emergency room. Those partners included representatives from hospital systems and area addiction support providers, as well as the City of Columbus, Franklin County Sheriff’s Office, and the Columbus Divisions of Police and Fire. “The really nice thing was the ADAMH board served as the convener,” Shawn said. “They brought together everyone they thought would touch this program. By the time it opened, everyone was on board and knew what was going on.” In January 2018, MASC opened its doors. “I think the biggest success to date has been the collaboration with the community partners, and how much investment those partners have had,” said Andrew Moss, Director of Stabilization Services for Maryhaven. “That’s what’s groundbreaking about this.” The Columbus Foundation awarded a grant of $150,000 to support the new center, thanks to funds raised during a Critical Need Alert at the end of 2016 created to support the needs of the community as it faces the opiate crisis. The Ingram-White Castle Foundation, a Supporting Foundation of The Columbus Foundation, also awarded a grant for $23,575 to support the effort. “Maryhaven’s role of serving the community through this center is greatly appreciated and much needed,” said Dan Sharpe, Vice President for Community Research and Grants Management at The Columbus Foundation. “The center fills a gap within the prevention and treatment continuum—and serves individuals, families, and the community at a critical juncture for addiction and recovery.” The decision as to whether someone is brought directly to MASC as opposed to the emergency room following an overdose is both symptom- and conditionbased, Andrew explained. If they have an uncomplicated

overdose, they can come directly to the center. Some clients need to be observed in a hospital setting to make sure they are stable first. At the end of the day, it’s the client’s choice whether to seek treatment at MASC or be treated and released from an emergency room—at which time, many unfortunately will return to the cycle of addiction. “We’re willing to walk through that decision-making piece with the client,” Andrew said. “Sometimes they come and they’re on the fence and not really sure if this is for them. We offer so many different options. You aren’t signing up for 30 days of treatment. You’re signing up for whatever works best for you.” Andrew developed the program keeping in mind that each patient is unique, and what works for some may not work for others. “We thought it was important to have different levels of care,” he said. “We wanted, in terms of medical care, to have the flexibility to be patientcentered. This is a more responsive protocol than I’ve seen before.” The Addiction Stabilization Center has three specific levels.

01

Admission and Triage (4–23 hours / 5 beds available)

02

Detoxification Treatment (3–7 days / 20 beds available)

03

Long-term Residential Services (14+ days / 30 beds available)

“We have offered hundreds of people a different option than what they had,” Shawn said. For now, that option remains focused on hope for the future. “There’s a growing energy around the Addiction Stabilization Center. Now that people see it and it’s real, people want to get even more engaged than they were before. It’s momentous,” Andrew said. 33

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

NEW RENOVATIONS PUT THE SPOTLIGHT ON ANIMALS PICTURED : Rachel

Finney, Chief Executive Officer of Columbus Humane.

Photo by EclipseCorp

Founded in 1883, Columbus Humane, formerly known as Capital Area Humane Society, is passionate about its mission to “fight animal cruelty, help animals in need, and advocate for their well-being.” In addition to serving as a shelter and providing veterinary care at its onsite hospital, Columbus Humane handles thousands of animal cruelty investigations each year, partnering with law enforcement agencies and departments of health, among others, to intervene and keep animals safe and healthy until they are adopted into a forever home. The organization has been headquartered in Hilliard since 1992. With 30,000 visitors a year, a steady stream of animal lovers make their way through the doors every day. However, the building’s outdated design was inefficient and not conducive to the needs of visitors or animals. “We had a lot of space that could be better purposed to provide good care for our animals,” said Rachel Finney, Columbus Humane’s CEO. In December 2016, Columbus Humane’s board voted to engage an architect to begin thinking about re-envisioning the space. Five 34

days later, the building was damaged as a result of a ruptured sprinkler pipe. A third of the building was destroyed. Before tackling a renovation, the organization had to address rebuilding its hospital, which had been completely ruined. Re-opened in the fall of 2017, today the hospital is a state-of-the-art facility. In early 2017, as the hospital rebuild began, Columbus Humane kicked off a capital campaign to address its other pressing needs. With a huge open entryway, and a long walk to the reception area, Rachel said visitors could be well inside the building before seeing any animals. It had the space— but needed to be reconfigured. Construction began in February 2018 and is expected to be complete by the end of the year. “With the renovation, animals are the showcase,” Rachel said. “It’s a much more welcoming experience for visitors, too.” One of the most significant changes

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benefits cats at Columbus Humane. With the renovation, the organization is dramatically increasing the amount of square footage per cat, from a 2' x 2' stainless steel cage to almost 18-square-feet with multiple levels. This gives cats the opportunity to have sleeping spaces, eating quarters, and litter boxes in different places. They are also the centerpiece of the new entry to the building. For dogs, the renovation means a better environment to meet and get to know their new families. The building previously had one bonding room for dogs to get to know potential new owners—now it will have five. “We have a tremendous success rate with dog adoptions, particularly,” Rachel said. The new bonding rooms will allow the dogs and the people to focus on one another, and block out other stimuli.

2017 COLUMBUS HUMANE STATS

32 Species served

8,000+ Homeless, abused, and unwanted animals served

21 Average number of animals admitted each day

1,100+ Animals admitted in cruelty investigations Rendering courtesy of Columbus Humane

In 2017, a $50,000 grant to support the capital campaign was awarded to Columbus Humane thanks to the Samuel A. Keller Fund and the Funds for Columbus, unrestricted funds comprised of donations from generous donors that help address emerging needs in the community. “Columbus Humane is not only an adoption and medical resource, but it serves as the law enforcement and cruelty investigation entity for the community,” said Dan Sharpe, Vice President for Community Research and Grants Management at The Columbus Foundation. “The facilities need to advance and evolve with the important work of the staff and organization. The renovation will yield dividends for the animals and the humans seeking to provide their forever homes.”

210 Average animals in care each day

45,000+ Hours of service given annually by more than 500 active volunteers

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FEATURED INITIATIVE

healthy living for all people PICTURED : This

summer, volunteers painted a mural on the side of the All People’s Fresh Market.

Photo courtesy of Community Development for All People

With a community mural on its north wall and patio tables surrounded by brimming flower boxes out front, it might be difficult to tell that only a year ago the all people’s fresh Market was an abandoned drive-through liquor store. “It needed a lot of work,” said Erin West, Healthy Eating and Living and Fresh Market Director at Community Development for All People (CD4AP). After outgrowing the market’s original location, CD4AP looked for a larger space where people could feel in community with one another. “While the drive through didn’t have heat, water, or a ceiling when we got it, we knew we could turn it into everything we needed.” Wanting to open the Fresh Market’s doors in the spring of 2018, but searching for additional funds to complete the building’s renovation, CD4AP submitted a project “quick pitch” to The Columbus Foundation’s new online crowdfunding platform, Better Together. “Better Together helped us amplify our message,” said Katelin Hansen, Ph.D., Strategic Initiatives Director at CD4AP. “We had never done crowdfunding before, and having the support

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of The Columbus Foundation was helpful in that it allowed us to amplify the energy around the Fresh Market campaign.” While the initial goal of the campaign was to raise $14,000, the community went above and beyond by donating more than $19,000 through Better Together. These funds were used to make plumbing improvements, install a new HVAC system, make repairs to the exterior, and more. With renovations complete, the Fresh Market opened on March 8, 2018, and in the first four months of operation, it provided fresh food and perishables free of charge to more than 17,000 people. Currently serving people at and below 200 percent of the Federal Poverty Guideline, the market’s mission is to build community by sharing nutritious food and

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Photo by Lynsey Pipino

“The   support from Better Together helped us make the Fresh Market possible. I would definitely recommend it to other nonprofits.” —k at e l i n h a n se n, ph . d., c d 4 a p

to bring people together to engage in healthy living activities. In addition, the market partners with Local Matters’ Cooking Matters program to host cooking demonstrations once a week. Each class focuses on using a specific ingredient in multiple recipes to show people how they can make creative and nutritious meals on a budget. The market truly is a community endeavor with support coming from nonprofits, businesses, and community gardens throughout the city. Mid-Ohio Foodbank supplies the Market with more than 100,000 pounds of fresh produce per month, while Kroger and Walmart each donate an additional 1,500 pounds of produce per month. Community gardens, including the South Side Settlement Garden, the Mike

The All People’s Fresh Market provides thousands on the South Side with fresh produce.

Photo by Lynsey Pipino

Dyle Community Garden, and Local Matters’ gardens also provide produce to keep the shelves stocked. “Some people are amazed that the market is available and think that there should be Fresh Markets all over the city,” said Erin. “Other people tell me how they come to the market before going grocery shopping to help their food budget. Some have even said they’ve lost weight because of the healthy food they’ve been eating.” Managed by CD4AP staff, the market is always looking for new volunteers. The sign-up process is quick and easy. Simply stop in and fill out a short form. After a brief orientation, volunteers are ready to hit the ground running. “The support from Better Together helped us make the Fresh Market possible,” said Dr. Hansen. “I would definitely recommend it to other nonprofits. The legitimacy and visibility of the platform helped us get in front of audiences who otherwise would not have seen us.” Join our growing community of champions building a stronger central Ohio with Better Together and find a project that speaks to your passions at columbusfoundation.org/bettertogether.

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2017 Columbus Foundation Financial Highlights

3B $  2.27 B $ 

Total Gifts Received Since 1944

Total Grants Awarded Since 1944

$

212,997,884 Total Grants Paid to 3,961 Nonprofit Organizations in 2017

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$

205,317,126

Total Gifts Made to New and Existing Funds and Supporting Foundations in 2017

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8

188 New Funds Established in 2017

$

Asset Ranking Among More Than 750 Community Foundations in the United States

2.5M+

$

Total of Scholarship Grants Awarded in 2017

$

29,453,467 Planned Gifts Communicated to Us in 2017

th

2.27 B

Total Assets Held in 2,587 Funds and 30 Supporting Foundations

$

946,753,230 Total of Future Planned Gifts Documented to Date

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Get Involved

Whether giving to your favorite nonprofit or getting involved in your community, The Columbus Foundation helps you help others through the most effective philanthropy possible.

9 Ways to Get Involved with The Columbus Foundation:

1

Become a donor:

Giving creates extraordinary opportunities for your community, for your family, and for your legacy. Our role is to help you make the very most of your gifts, now and in the future. Learn more at columbusfoundation.org/donors.

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check ouT BeTTer ToGeTher:

Join other passionate community members to connect with real-time needs of local nonprofit organizations to help strengthen our community. With no credit cards fees through 2018 and local processing of donations, your gift goes further, faster. Find a project that speaks to your passion at columbusfoundation/bettertogether.

3

explore The GivinG STore:

The Giving Store is central Ohio’s onestop shop for easy, effective online charitable giving. This next-generation digital hub is taking philanthropy to a new level of personalization to help you achieve your charitable goals conveniently and effectively. Visit columbusfoundation.org/ thegivingstore to get started.

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4

Spread kindneSS wiTh gifTS of kindneSS:

The Gifts of Kindness Fund provides onetime, life-changing grants between $500 and $3,000 to individuals and families who have experienced an unforeseen setback. Give the gift of kindness by visiting columbusfoundation.org/thegivingstore and donating to the Gifts of Kindness Fund.

5

Search for ScholarShipS:

Our generous donors have created hundreds of scholarship opportunities to help students pursue their educational dreams and prepare for their future careers. Search, access information, and apply for more than 200 scholarships by visiting columbusfoundation.org/students.

6

apply for a Summer fellowShip:

Become a nextgeneration leader in the nonprofit sector through the Foundation’s 10-week paid Summer Fellowship Program. Learn more at columbusfoundation.org/students/ summer-fellows.

7

Join The Big TaBle®:

The Big Table strengthens and connects central Ohio through conversations. Deepen your understanding of your community and its needs by talking with fellow members of it. Read about this year’s Big Table at columbusfoundation.org/ thebigtable.

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parTicipaTe in The Big give:

Created to support nonprofits working to strengthen and improve our community, The Big Give is a day-long online giving marathon where our community shows its generous spirit by giving to their favorite central Ohio nonprofits. Find 2017 results at columbusfoundation.org/big-give and check back for the next Big Give.

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connecT wiTh uS online:

Stay up to date on Foundation news by signing up for our email updates at columbusfoundation.org/contact and connect with us on social: @TheColumbusFoundation @colsfoundation @colsfoundation The Columbus Foundation

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Center for Corporate Philanthropy

The Columbus Foundation’s Center for Corporate Philanthropy is designed to help both established and new central Ohio businesses make their charitable investments as cost effective and efficient as possible. Tailored to each unique business, and offering expert community

knowledge, the Center helps businesses develop and implement a custom corporate giving program that reflects the values and passions of the business. Some of the services include Emergency Assistance Programs, matching gift programs, and grant assistance.

Alignment

Return on Investment

Engagement

Shared Knowledge

Create a philanthropic plan that aligns with your company’s values and business strategies. Choose giving investments that you and your employees care about most.

Match intended results with meaningful impact by creating benefits that resonate for both your business and the community it serves.

Offer an easy and inspiring way for company employees and leadership to give to others, including employees in need.

Communicate and promote your company’s giving program and volunteer efforts.

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Center for Corporate Philanthropy Partners As of 7/31/18

Anonymous (2)

Diamond Hill Capital Management

Merion Village Dental

889 Global Solutions

Donaldson Plastic Surgery

MES, Inc.

Abercrombie & Fitch

Easton Town Center

MGF Sourcing

AEP Ohio

e-Cycle

Nationwide Insurance

Air Force One

Elford, Inc.

NetJets

Alliance Data

ELK Promotions, Inc.

Nina West LLC

Atlas Butler Heating & Cooling

Epcon Communities

NorthSteppe Realty

Balanced Yoga

Fast Switch

ODW Logistics, Inc.

Barbasol

Feazel

The Ohio Machine

Battelle

Fifth Third Bank

PDS Planning

Benefactor Group

Fishel Company

PetPeople

Big Lots

Flexco Fleet Services

PNC

Big Walnut Grill

Geotechnical Consultants, Inc.

Print Syndicate

Bob Evans Farms

Gideon Development Partners

R & L Carriers

Bopp-Busch Manufacturing Company

Grange Insurance

RAMA Consulting

Budros, Ruhlin & Roe, Inc.

GREENCREST

Rev1 Ventures

The Candle Lab

Happy Chicken Farms

RG Barry Brands

Capital Asset Management, Inc.

HER Realtors

Rocky Fork Company

CD102.5

Homeside Financial

Rusty Bucket Restaurant and Tavern

Central Ohio Primary Care Physicians

Huntington Bancshares, Inc.

Central Ohio Urology Group, Inc.

IGS Energy

Schoedinger Funeral and Cremation Services

City Barbeque

IMB iX

The Champion Companies

Interim Healthcare

CMAX Advisors

International Risk Consultants

Columbus Board of Realtors

Integrated Leadership Systems

Columbus Eyeworks

The Jeffrey Company

Columbus Radio Group

Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams

Commonhouse Ales

JPMorgan Chase

Compass Financial Group

Kaufman Development

Continental Building Systems

Kayne Law Group

Cramer & Associates

Kegler Brown Hill + Ritter

Crane Group

Kroger

Crow Works

L Brands

Daimler Group

Lightwell

Dawson Companies

LIT Love Life + Yoga

Design Group

Medical Mutual of Ohio

Scotts Miracle-Gro Company Smart Business Network Suburban Steel Supply Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP Thirty-One Gifts Tri-W Group, Inc. Tween Brands, Inc. Waller Financial Planning Group WesBanco Bank, Inc. Westwater Company White Castle System, Inc. Worthington Industries Yoga on High

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2018 Governing Committee

A Governing Committee of nine volunteers provides stewardship for The Columbus Foundation and its charitable activities.

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Matthew D. Walter Chairman

Nancy Kramer Vice Chairman

George S. Barrett

Joseph A. Chlapaty

Michael P. Glimcher

Lisa A. Hinson

C. Robert Kidder

Katie Wolfe Lloyd

Dwight E. Smith

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The Columbus Foundation Staff As of 7/31/18

Office Of the President

Douglas F. Kridler President and CEO Kelley Griesmer, J.D., CAP® Senior Vice President and Manager, Walter Family Philanthropy Renilda Marshall Executive Secretary to the President and CEO

cOmmunicatiOns and marketing

Natalie Parscher Director of Communications and Marketing Kate Clements Communications and Marketing Associate Lynsey Pipino Content and Digital Engagement Manager Amy K. Vick Associate Director of Communications and Marketing

suPPOrting fOundatiOns

Tamera Durrence Vice President for Supporting Foundations Gretchen Brandt Supporting Foundations Grants Management and Outreach Coordinator Tracey De Feyter Supporting Foundations Administrator Stacey Morris, CAP® Associate Director, Supporting Foundations and Information Management Robin Wolff Supporting Foundations Grants Manager

cOmmunity research and grants management

dOnOr services and develOPment

finance and administratiOn

Dan A. Sharpe Vice President for Community Research and Grants Management

Angela Parsons, J.D., CAP® Vice President for Donor Services and Development

Scott G. Heitkamp, CPA Vice President and CFO

Amy Acton, M.D., M.P.H. Community Research and Grants Management Officer Barbara Fant Nonprofit Outreach Administrator Nancy Fisher Grants Manager Mark Lomax, II, D.M.A. Community Research and Grants Management Officer Matthew Martin Community Research and Grants Management Officer Melissa Neely Grants Management Coordinator Lee Pepper Community Research and Grants Management Administrator Joyce A. Ray Associate Director, The Giving Store and Knowledge Management Emily Savors Director of Grants Management Hailey Stroup Community Research and Grants Management Associate Officer

J. Bradley Britton, J.D., LL.M. Director of Planned Giving and General Counsel Jeffrey Byars, CAP® Associate Director for Donor Services and Development Carrie Carmody Donor Services Gifts Assistant Rachelle Gorland Scholarship Assistant Carter Hatch, CFP® Associate Director of Corporate Philanthropy and Impact Investing

Amy T. Cintron Support Services Coordinator Carey E. Dailey Director of Network Services Diana DaPore Receptionist/Secretary Amber J. Erickson Senior Accountant Susan C. Hazelton Events and Facility Manager Donald P. Ludwig Senior Accountant Pamela S. Potts Senior Accountant

Lisa M. Jolley, J.D., CAP® Director of Donor Services and Development

Kelly Schleppi Senior Financial Reporting Accountant

Donna Jordan Donor Services Assistant

Pamela S. Straker Director of Human Resources

Jane Landwehr Donor Services Grants Assistant

Brenda Watts Systems Analyst

Lisa J. Lynch, CAP® Associate Director for Donor Services and Development

Kristen Wood, CPA Controller

Chris Kloss Executive Assistant for Donor Services and Development Caroline Max Donor Services Fund Assistant Steven S. Moore Director for Donor Services and Development Hilary Stone Manager of Donor Stewardship, Research, and Analytics Alicia Szempruch Scholarships Officer

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Together, we will build a brighter tomorrow.

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As we continue to celebrate the successes of our community and address the challenges we face, we look forward to working alongside you to strengthen and improve central Ohio. From The Big Give to The Big Table, you inspire us with your everyday acts of kindness and generosity, and remind us why Columbus is an amazing place to call home. Thank you for all you to do make Columbus a #MoreGenerous community.

T h e G ov e r n inG Com m iT T e e a n d STa ff of T h e Colu m buS fou n daTion

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There’s inspiration and generosity all around Columbus, from workplace volunteering and mentoring students to supporting your favorite cause. Where do you see it?

Snap a photo, tag #MoreGenerous, and share it with @colsfoundation to spread the good.

1234 East Broad Street | Columbus, Ohio 43205-1453 Phone: 614/251-4000 | Toll free: 1-866-263-6001 | Fax: 614/251-4009

columbusfoundation.org

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special advertising section

Beating Breast Cancer Four key ways Central Ohio health care providers are helping breast cancer patients live longer and better lives. By Brooke Preston

photo: ©2018 thinkstock

Sadly, the oft-recited statistic hasn’t budged: In the U.S., around 1 woman in 8 will have breast cancer in her lifetime. In fact, breast cancer is the second most commonly diagnosed cancer among American women; only skin cancer is more common. In the U.S. alone, that amounts to an estimated 266,120 new cases of invasive breast cancer this year. (While men can also have breast cancer, that ratio hovers closer to 1 in 1000, according to the National Breast Cancer Foundation.) But while diagnoses haven’t changed, treatments and outcomes have improved dramatically in just one generation. In fact, the American Cancer Society reports that the number of women who died from breast cancer dropped a staggering 40 percent in the past 25 years. These gains are widely attributed to improvements in the way we prevent, screen for and treat breast cancer. We asked Central Ohio breast cancer specialists and patients to share more about these advances.

OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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special advertising section

Shop with Purpose

Mitigating Risk Factors

Early Detection

Women can’t do much to reduce their top two risk factors for breast cancer: being assigned biologically female at birth and advancing age. But a number of risk factors can be mitigated. Dr. Kristine Slam, a breast surgeon with the Mount Carmel Health System, says that genetic predisposition accounts for fewer than 8 percent of all breast cancer cases. “It’s actually a minor component. You can’t ignore the genetic aspect of it, but by far, more breast cancers are either a sporadic function of age, gender and bad luck, and obviously, the modifiable things like obesity, physical inactivity, smoking and alcohol consumption,” she explains. “The biggest things that continue to wash out as risk factors are obesity and physical inactivity. Those factors [are linked to] 40 percent of the [breast] cancers that are diagnosed right now.” She adds that obesity also increases risk of recurrence and death in breast cancer patients. To combat this factor, Slam counsels women to shoot for 150 minutes of moderate physical activity per week, which works out to 30 minutes per day, five days per week.

Let’s be honest: mashing your breasts into a machine in front of a stranger is no one’s favorite errand. Still, early detection through a timely mammogram could save your life, or at the very least, reduce the severity and duration of needed cancer treatment. While mammograms and self-exams don’t necessarily reduce one’s risk of developing cancer, Dr. Joe Hofmeister of Columbus Oncology and Hematology Associates points out that the early detection they enable do reduce a woman’s risk of developing a more serious form of breast cancer. “Screening is the No. 1 way to detect breast cancer at the earliest stages,” he says. Contrary to popular belief, self-exams should look for more than suspicious lumps. “Examine yourself sitting up [and] lying down,” suggests Slam. “Is there an area that slightly indents or feathers a little bit when you move your arms up? What does the nipple look like—is there a rash or is there discharge? Has that recently changed at all?” All of those signs could indicate that a more extensive exam by a medical professional is needed. And although regular self-exams are important, physicians emphasize that mammograms can catch problems even sooner.

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Current national guidelines recommend yearly mammograms for women beginning at age 40 (though women with known elevated risks may be encouraged to begin sooner). If you’re worried about the social or physical discomfort of a mammogram, there are steps you can take. “Number one, talk to your mammogram tech. Let them know your fears up front and just say, ‘I’m a little bit more worried about this,’ ” Slam suggests. She also recommends premedicating with Ibuprofen or Naproxen, which can reduce pain, aches and inflammation. And while it can be tempting to put off a temporary discomfort, Slam stresses that early detection can save you from needing longer or more intensive treatment if cancer is found later. While standard mammograms will catch approximately 85 percent of breast cancers, the test has limitations, particularly for women with dense breast tissue, which can look like cancer tissue in a scan, says Hofmeister. And while the newer 3D mammography may produce better results for some, ultrasound and MRIs are increasingly being used as alternatives for dense breast scans, as the scan results don’t vary by density. “For very high-risk patients, I’m very specific,” says

photo: ©2018 thinkstock

In 2007, inspired by her mother’s struggle to find fun bras after a bilateral mastectomy, Bethany Golden decided to purchase the local hair and wig boutique where her mother’s cancer support group met. Since then, Golden has grown the business beyond just wigs. The Over My Head boutique, located in the OhioHealth Bing Cancer Center, is now dedicated to bettering women’s journey through cancer and recovery from all angles. In addition to wig fittings, clients come for cold caps, skin care, specialty bras, bra inserts and more—and Over My Head is accredited to bill insurance companies directly for items that qualify. Throughout the year, Over My Head also hosts numerous free events—which Golden calls “feel-good events”—for patients, such as a recent makeover and photo shoot. Golden donates a portion of proceeds from purchases made at these events, as well as all of the shop’s ribbon merchandise sales, back to cancer organizations. —Rylan Lee

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BECAUSE THERE ARE COUNTLESS REASONS TO GET A YEARLY

MAMMOGRAM. This is the time of year when we put an extra focus on the fight against breast cancer — which makes it a good time to schedule a mammogram with Mount Carmel. Our dedicated team of breast health specialists provides the highest level of skill in screening mammography, diagnosis, and when necessary, individualized treatment and therapy. Mount Carmel offers the most advanced screening options, including 3D mammography. And we were the first in Central Ohio to offer Automated Breast Ultrasound, or ABUS, which can enhance detection by up to 35%. We do it for the same reason we do everything at Mount Carmel. Because of you.

photo: Š2018 thinkstock

Schedule your mammogram at mountcarmelhealth.com or by calling 614-234-2900.

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special advertising section

Special advertising opportunities coming in Columbus Monthly

JANUARY Super Lawyers 2019

Columbus Monthly magazine will announce the Super Lawyers in Central Ohio by publishing a listing of over 500 lawyers from more than 70 practice areas rated within specialty areas by their peers.

Vacations & Getaways

Columbus Monthly’s active readers are always looking for new getaway ideas. Whether your vacation spot is a weekend escape or a trip that provides a lifetime of memories, this is a prime opportunity to reach an interested audience.

January Issue Closing: November 23

This annual guide is the one-stop resource for health and wellness information in Central Ohio. Readers will find a mix of in-depth reports and quick reads on tips, trends and issues relevant to leading a healthy lifestyle in Columbus. Columbus Monthly Health will also include resource directories of medical facilities and senior living options, listings of the area’s top health providers, including doctors, dentists and chiropractors, and more. Columbus Monthly Health will be sold on newsstands and mailed to Columbus Monthly subscribers with the January issue.

Medical Profiles Deadline: November 9 Display Ad Space Closing: November 16 For complete information call (614) 888-4567 or email advertise@columbusmonthly.com

BEST CITY MAGAZINE IN AMERICA, 2018 CITY AND REGIONAL MAGAZINE ASSOCIATION

BEST MAGAZINE IN OHIO, 2017 THE SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS

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Hofmeister. “Intensive regimens with MRIs are becoming more of a standard approach for those patients.”

Support Group Solutions Support groups are widely available through hospitals and independent organizations. But while the term may conjure images of circledup participants sharing feelings, today’s breast cancer support groups are designed to support mind, body and spirit by connecting patients and families with practical education, resources and networks. A wide variety of tailored support groups and resources are available, so patients can utilize what fits their life stage best, such as the Young Survivors’ Coalition, a group for patients 40 years and younger that covers a wide range of subjects. The American Cancer Society’s two-hour “Look Good, Feel Better” program helps patients adapt their skincare and beauty regimens to mitigate the side effects of breast cancer. Still other groups focus on specialized nutrition, yoga, fitness or other important supplemental education. “Just having that buddy system support to encourage you and say, ‘Hey, we’re doing this together,’ really has the potential to change a person’s life trajectory,” Slam says. Lynn Price can personally attest to the value of support groups. After being diagnosed with breast cancer in the fall of 2008, Price underwent chemo, a lumpectomy surgery (with preventative removal of some surrounding lymph nodes) and radiation. She

was six years into remission when she woke up during a Nashville road trip to find her hand and arm were so swollen, she couldn’t make a fist. While this would be cause for alarm for many, the knowledge gleaned in a past support group kept Price calm. “Everybody’s panicking and I just said, ‘It’s lymphedema, of course,’ ” she recalls. “My doctor had encouraged his breast cancer patients to go to this program that he and one of the physical therapists at Mount Carmel had developed specifically for breast cancer patients, and I remembered that they had talked about it, what it was and the symptoms. So I knew what it was.” While it may look alarming, lymphedema—a common side effect of patients who have had lymph nodes removed—is not life-threatening.

What’s New, What’s Next Thanks to a wealth of breast-cancer-specific research and fundraising, health care providers are developing a number of promising new treatments designed to improve and prolong patients’ lives. “Novel cancer treatments are being discovered at an accelerated rate. Many, many new medications and treatments are becoming available,” notes Hofmeister. He cites a rise in immunotherapy treatments, which stimulate the patient’s own immune system to find and eradicate cancer cells. Surgery procedures are also constantly evolving. For instance, Slam has seen more

photo: ©2018 thinkstock

Columbus Monthly Health Magazine

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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photo: ©2018 thinkstock

special advertising section demand for oncoplastic breast surgery, which combines breast conservation surgery with a simultaneous plastic surgery procedure to help maintain a normal appearance. Dr. Roman Skoracki, division chief of oncologic plastic surgery with the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute, adds that as long-term breast cancer survival rates continue to tick upward, many novel treatments now focus on improving patient quality of life. For instance, Skoracki has helped pioneer new microsurgeries to relieve lymphedema. While lymphedema is traditionally managed with a combination of physical therapy and compression, Skoracki and his colleague Dr. David Chang were the first U.S. surgeons trained to perform relatively new lymphovenous bypass and vascularized lymph node transfer procedures, which involve rerouting lymphatic channels to help relieve limb pain and swelling. The procedures Skoracki learned and honed at the James are now beginning to be adopted around the country. “I began to recognize how significant a problem lymphedema is; it’s a very underserved population,” he says. “Surgically, there was very little offered at the time in terms of treating lymphedema other than compression. And this was sort of a sub-specialty of the work we were already doing; it wasn’t something completely different from the microsurgeries we already perform.” Price is an enthusiastic example of how this novel treatment can improve quality of life. After her onset of lymphedema, she first tried the traditional treatments. “It was under control, and then it just got worse and worse,” she recalls. “When I went for my regular checkup, I said, ‘This is really tiresome. It’s getting to the point where it wears me out because my arm is so heavy.’ And [my doctor] mentioned the vascular transfer surgery.” She decided it was worth a shot. Immediately before the surgery, Price’s right arm was swollen to roughly three times the size of her left. She was pleased to find that, even immediately post-surgery, the volume was significantly diminished. And while her affected arm remains slightly swollen (which is common—the surgery is not designed as a total cure for most patients), Price says her quality of life has improved. “It doesn’t wear me out. I don’t get pain. I’m not afraid to use my arm anymore.” She laughs, adding, “It’s still nice to have my husband around to open jars for me, but I’m getting better.”

SETTING THE STANDARD

of EXCELLENCE in Cancer Care

Sonia Abuzakhm, M.D.

Scott Blair, M.D.

Kavya Krishna, M.D.

Shabana Dewani, M.D. Christopher George, M.D. Andrew Grainger, M.D. Joseph Hofmeister, M.D. Peter Kourlas, M.D.

Erin Macrae, M.D.

Nse Ntukidem, M.D.

Emily Saul, D.O

Thomas Sweeney, M.D. Jennifer Seiler, CNP

Columbus Oncology and coainc.net

Hematology Associates

AN OHIO ONCOLOGY & HEMATOLOGY, LLC PRACTICE

810 Jasonway Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43214 For general cancer information please call OhioHealth’s Cancer Call (614) 566-4321

coainc.net

Tel: (614) 442-3130

ALL PHYSICIANS ARE BOARD CERTIFIED

A Cancer Care Boutique, specializing in the needs of women touched by cancer. Professional bra, mastectomy and wig fittings available by appointment. Accredited by ABCOP and Medicare, in-network with most insurance companies.

Call to schedule a fitting 614.566.4700 www.overmyheadboutique.com Proud to be a Women Owned Business Columbus Business First recognized owner Bethany Golden in the 40 Under 40 Class of 2018

Located in the Bing Cancer Center 500 Thomas Ln, Columbus , Ohio 43214 OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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COLUMBUS

2018 FIVE STAR AWARD WINNERS

Featured winner from our Five Star Professional section

“Your heart has to be

“Make sure you’re

in the right place — you have to genuinely desire to make a difference in your clients’ lives.”

dealing with someone who is knowledgeable and ethical.” — Five Star award winner

— Five Star award winner

“Work with a

professional who takes the time to understand your unique situation.” — Five Star award winner

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We do research to find and recognize outstanding: • Wealth Managers • Investment Professionals

“Always be honest.

It can take a lifetime to build a reputation, but it can only take a second to destroy it.” — Five Star award winner

For our complete list of award winners in your area, go to www.fivestarprofessional.com

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FIVE STAR PROFESSIONAL COLUMBUS

A SELECT AWARD Finding a wealth manager who suits your needs can be a daunting task. In fact, many consumers have a hard time figuring out where to even begin. Sometimes, a few simple questions can set one off on the right path. Asking a wealth manager what makes working with him or her a unique experience can help you understand how they work and if their style meshes with your own. Furthermore, asking a financial adviser to talk about any specialties they may have can help uncover skills you may find useful. Ultimately, how do you find an experienced wealth manager who you feel comfortable working with? One who has high retention rates? One who has undergone a thorough complaint and regulatory review? One who has tenure in the industry? Five Star Professional uses its own proprietary research methodology to name outstanding professionals, then works with publications such as Columbus Monthly to spread word about award winners who satisfy 10 objective eligibility and evaluation criteria. Among many distinguishing attributes, the average one-year client retention rate for this year’s award winners is more than 96 percent. Although this list is a useful tool for anyone looking for help in managing their financial world or implementing new aspects into their financial strategies, it should not be considered exhaustive. Undoubtedly, there are many excellent wealth managers who, for one reason or another, are not on this year’s list. For more information on how we name outstanding wealth managers, as well as a complete list of winners and our research methodology, go to www.fivestarprofessional.com.

Five Star Wealth Manager Criteria Determination of Award Winners Award candidates who satisfied 10 objective eligibility and evaluation criteria were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. Eligibility Criteria – Required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative. 2. Actively employed as a credentialed professional in the financial services industry for a minimum of five years. 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review. 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal firm standards. 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation Criteria – Considered: 6. One-year client retention rate. 7. Five-year client retention rate. 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered. 9. Number of client households served. 10. Education and professional designations. 1,165 award candidates in the Greater Columbus area were considered for the Five Star Wealth Manager award. 67 (approximately 6 percent of the award candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers.

RESEARCH DISCLOSURES In order to consider a broad population of high-quality wealth managers and investment professionals, award candidates are identified by one of three sources: firm nomination, peer nomination or prequalification based on industry standing. Self-nominations are not accepted. Columbus award candidates were identified using internal and external research data. Candidates do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final lists of Five Star Wealth Managers. • The Five Star award is not indicative of a professional’s future performance. • Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their clients’ assets. • The inclusion of a professional on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the professional by Five Star Professional or Columbus Monthly. • Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any professional is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected professionals will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. • Five Star Professional is not an advisory firm, and the content of this article should not be considered financial advice. For more information on the Five Star Wealth Manager award programs, research and selection criteria, go to fivestarprofessional.com/research.

Five Star Investment Professional Criteria Determination of Award Winners The investment professional award goes to estate planning attorneys, insurance agents and select others in the financial industr y. Eligibility Criteria – Required: 1.Credentialed with appropriate state or industry licensures. 2. Actively employed as a credentialed professional in the financial services industry for a minimum of five years. 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review. 4. Accepting new clients. Evaluation Criteria – Considered: 5. One-year client retention rate. 6. Five-year client retention rate. 7. Number of client households served. 8. Recent personal production and performance (industry specific criteria). 9. Education and professional designations/ industry and board certifications. 10. Pro Bono and community service work. This year, we honored one Columbus-area investment professional with the Five Star Investment Professional award.

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G2 Capital Management Left to right: Two-year winner Jeff Gomez, CPA, CFP®; Brooke Dunlap; 2018 year winner Greg Grabovac, JD, CPA (inactive); Nick Rinker, CFA®, CPA (inactive); Jamie Graver 1600 West Lane Avenue, Suite 270 • Columbus, OH 43221 Phone: 614-484-1400 jgomez@g2capital.net • ggrabovac@g2capital.net www.g2capital.net

Transforming the Financial Lives of Our Clients From Complicated to Clear G2 Capital Management is a fee-only investment, wealth management and family office advisory firm. We are independent. We are a fiduciary. We believe that clients should get more from their financial advisors. We are driven to transform the financial lives of our clients from complicated to clear. We provide conflict-free investment and financial planning advice to high net worth individuals and families, including executives, professionals and business owners. Rankings and/or recognition from unaffiliated ratings organizations or publications should not be construed as an assurance or guarantee of investment performance and/or financial results by G2 Capital Management. Additionally, this award is not an endorsement of G2 Capital Management by any of its prior or current clients. Rankings and/or recognition from unaffiliated ratings organizations or publications typically base their results on information provided by the recipient company.

The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus-area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners.

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WEALTH MANAGERS All award winners are listed in this publication.

Financial Planning Scott Armstrong ∙ Signature Financial Group Mark Beaver ∙ Keeler & Nadler Financial Planning and Wealth Management

Russell J. Fish ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Page 9

Margaret Elizabeth McLurg ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Page 9

Investments

Milt Fullen ∙ Fullen Financial Group Page 7

Shaun Patterson ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Page 9

Richard Clemens ∙ Hawk100

Jeff Gomez ∙ G2 Capital Sean Buckley ∙ Buckley Financial Management Page 3 Amy Kelly ∙ Budros, Ruhlin Planning & Roe Page 5 Lori L. Eisel ∙ Arcadia Financial Partners Jason Eliason ∙ Waller Financial Planning Group Page 9

Richard J. Martin ∙ Blue Stone Wealth Partners

Geoffrey R. Biehn ∙ Trinity Financial Advisors Page 6

Richard L. Pierce ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Page 8 Susan Hays Robenalt ∙ Stratos Wealth Partners/LPL Financial Page 8

Rodney Friedman ∙ Wells Fargo Financial Network Greg Grabovac ∙ G2 Capital Management Gregory Munster ∙ Munster Financial/Wells Fargo Financial Network Lis McNealey Spaine ∙ Wells Fargo Financial Network Continued on FS-10

Looking for Other Great Professionals?

Go to www.fivestarprofessional.com · Real Estate Agents · Mortgage Professionals · Home/Auto Insurance Professionals Professionals interested in learning more about Five Star Professional, please call 888-438-5782.

The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners.

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WEALTH MANAGERS

Budros, Ruhlin & Roe, Inc.

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YEAR WINNER Left to right: Back row: 2018-winner Michael Kline; Five-year winner John McHugh; Five-year winner Daniel Due; Two-year winner Daniel Roe; Five-year winner Aaron Armstrong Front row: Two-year winner John Schuman; Five-year winner Amy Kelly, Five-year winner Andrea Ellis, Four-year winner Jessica Lee; 2018-winner Scott Kidwell

HIGHLIGHTS CEO Peggy Ruhlin named InvestmentNews’ Alexandra Armstrong Lifetime Achievement award winner, 2017 Budros, Ruhlin & Roe named to Financial Times’ Top 300 Registered Investment Advisers list, 2017

CIO Dan Roe named to Forbes Best-in-State Wealth Advisor list, 2018

Building Money Towards Meaning Budros, Ruhlin & Roe, Inc. is an independent, fee-only wealth management firm serving clients in a fiduciary capacity. The company, based in Columbus, Ohio, manages over $2 billion of assets for clients throughout the country. Built on a foundation of trust and understanding, our firm successfully provides portfolio and wealth management services to high-net-worth individuals. Our firm also manages investment portfolios for foundations, endowments and employee retirement plans. We bring a unique, proactive and collaborative approach to wealth management, which has helped individuals, families and institutions accomplish their financial goals for more than three decades.

C O N TA C T

FOLLOW

1801 Watermark Drive, Suite 300 Columbus, OH 43215 Office: 614-481-6900 info@b-r-r.com www.b-r-r.com

Twitter: @budrosruhlinroe LinkedIn: Budros, Ruhlin & Roe #BRR

Rankings, awards and/or recognitions by unaffiliated organizations and/or publications should not be construed that a certain level of results will be achieved if Budros, Ruhlin & Roe, Inc. is engaged to provide investment advisory services, nor should they be construed as an endorsement of Budros, Ruhlin & Roe by any of its past or current clients. Rankings are generally based upon information submitted by the advisor. A copy of Budros, Ruhlin & Roe’s written disclosure statement is available at www.b-r-r.com/disclosure. Wealth Manager Award Winner

The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus-area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners.

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WEALTH MANAGERS

Trinity Financial Advisors, LLC

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YEAR WINNER

Left to right: Clay Acer; Jennifer Metz; 2016 – 2018 winner Geoffrey R. Biehn, CPA, CFP®

Helping Clients Invest in What Matters

HIGHLIGHTS Wealth management services, helping individuals and families grow and protect their wealth

At Trinity Financial Advisors, we work hard to earn the trust of clients by adhering to what we and our clients value: integrity in our relationships and across all situations, discipline in our methodology and approach and excellence in all aspects of our work. As a fee-only firm, we act in our clients’ best interests at all times.

Comprehensive investment and portfolio management

Our goal is to help clients achieve their financial goals — while being a truly generous business and encouraging that same spirit of generosity — by helping them invest in what matters. True wealth management involves more than a financial plan or an investment portfolio. It requires coordinating all aspects of your financial life. We build trust by building comprehensive plans to help clients achieve their desired outcomes. We assist clients preserving and growing their wealth through disciplined, globally diversified, low-cost and flexible investment portfolios. We derive great satisfaction in helping our clients incorporate tax efficient charitable giving into their plans — helping clients to invest in what matters most to them.

Business owner planning and advisory strategies We are a fee-only, independent advisory firm, acting in our clients’ best interests at all times

C O N TA C T

FOLLOW

760 Communications Parkway, Suite 200 Columbus, OH 43214 Phone: 614-848-7667 gbiehn@tfadvisors.com www.tfadvisors.com

www.linkedin.com/in/ geoffreybiehn

Rankings and/or recognition by unaffiliated rating services and/or publications should not be construed by a client or prospective client as a guarantee that he/she will experience a certain level of results if Trinity Financial Advisors, LLC is engaged, or continues to be engaged, to provide investment advisory services, nor should it be construed as a current or past endorsement of Trinity Financial Advisors, LLC by any of its clients. Rankings published my magazines, and others, generally base their selections exclusively on information prepared and/or submitted by the recognized advisor. Rankings are generally limited to participating advisors. Wealth Manager Award Winner

The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus-area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners.

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WEALTH MANAGERS

Fullen Financial Group, Inc.

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YEAR WINNER Left to right: Back row: Paula Miller; Joe Fullen, CFP®; Jodi Murray Front row: Three-year winner Milt Fullen, CPA, CFP®, ChFC®, CLU®, CASL®; Kevin Fix, CPA, PFS (Not pictured: Lisa Bushman)

When Only a Fiduciary Will Do

Financial and retirement planning: We develop customized, adaptable plans using a proven process and collaborative technology Investment management: Our distinctive approach is guided by your particular goals and position, not sales quotas, emotions or guesswork

Fullen Financial is an independent, fee-only registered investment advisory firm. We represent our clients, and only our clients, in a fiduciary capacity. Because we are fiduciaries, Fullen Financial is required to put the needs of our clients first. Our clients’ goals are supported by individually designed and regularly monitored financial plans that are updated regularly for continued relevance and success. We provide our clients with state-of-the-art technology platforms, regular investment oversight and education. Our competitive management fees are designed for the needs and pocketbooks of individuals, families and small businesses, wherever life may take them.

C O N TA C T 3720 North High Street • Columbus, OH 43214 Office: 614-372-5430 • milt@fullenfinancial.com www.fullenfinancial.com

Tax strategies: Sound tax planning can significantly extend the longevity of your investment portfolio Wealth Manager Award Winner

The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus-area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners.

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WEALTH MANAGERS

Susan Hays Robenalt Founding Partner

C O N TA C T 9961 Brewster Lane, Suite 200 • Powell, OH 43065 Office: 614-610-4213 • Cell: 614-208-8069 srobenalt@stratoswp.com • www.stratosretirement.com

6

YEAR WINNER

Independent, partner-owned and -operated financial services

2013 – 2018 winner Susan Robenalt, Founding Partner

After 15 years as a wealth advisor with Prudential Securities and Morgan Stanley, Susan arrived at Stratos Wealth Partners in September 2010. Her success is the result of her proactive and collaborative approach to providing comprehensive, objective advice of the highest caliber that is customized to each client’s unique objectives and personal risk tolerance. Susan generously shares her talents and expertise in her community. She was selected from hundreds of nominations for her selfless contributions and energetic passion for community spirit. She is a past president of the Dublin AM Rotary, a past assistant district governor for Rotary District 6690 and a past president for Leadership Dublin. Susan is currently on the board of trustees for The Community Foundation of Delaware County and chair for the Dublin AM Rotary Foundation. In 2016, Susan was selected to be one of 20 W.I.S.H. Women in central Ohio to grant a wish for a child through the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Susan is very passionate about helping others. Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC, Investment advice offered through Stratos Wealth Partners, a registered investment advisor and separate entity from LPL Financial. Wealth Manager Award Winner

Richard L. Pierce CRPC®, APMA®, Financial Advisor Comprehensive financial planning approach Wealth management strategies Retirement plan strategies

5

Estate planning strategies

YEAR WINNER 2014 – 2018 winner Richard L. Pierce, CRPC®, APMA®, Financial Advisor, Managing Partner

Small-business strategies Helping you reach your financial goals is my priority. Today’s financial environment is complicated. We will work together to help you gain confidence to navigate through what happens today so that you can reach your dreams tomorrow.

An Ameriprise Platinum Financial Services® practice of Amerprise Financial Services, Inc. 8008 North High Street, Suite 150 • Columbus, OH 43235 • Office: 614-310-0501 richard.l.pierce@ampf.com • ameripriseadvisors.com/richard.l.pierce Investors should conduct their own evaluation of a financial professional as working with a financial advisor is not a guarantee of future financial success. Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., Member FINRA and SIPC. Wealth Manager Award Winner

The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus-area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners.

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

WEALTH MANAGERS Shaun Patterson

Russell J. Fish

CFP®, Financial Advisor, Managing Director

CRPC®, Private Wealth Advisor

655 Metro Place South, Suite 450 Dublin, OH 43017 Office: 614-726-3417 spatterson@ampf.com ameripriseadvisors.com/ shaun.d.patterson

6

YEAR WINNER

8425 Pulsar Place, Suite 420 Columbus, OH 43240 Office: 614-846-7193 russell.j.fish@ampf.com ameripriseadvisors.com/russell.j.fish

6

• Five Star Wealth Manager, 2013 – 2018

I take the time to include you during the planning process so that we can make informed recommendations to track your progress over time.

Patterson & Associates, a financial advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Investors should conduct their own evaluation of a financial professional as working with a financial advisor is not a guarantee of future financial success. Investment advisory products and services are made available through Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., a registered investment adviser. Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC. Wealth Manager Award Winner

Over 15 Years of Experience

YEAR WINNER

• Five Star Wealth Manager, 2013 – 2018 • Estate planning strategies

Margaret Elizabeth McLurg

• Saving for education • Retirement planning and income strategies

I am passionate about working with clients to help them meet their financial needs and plan for the future. I will look at your entire financial picture, including cash reserves and debt management, investments, protection and taxes. I also ask the right questions and listen closely to your answers. That way, you can feel confident that the advice I provide reflects your personal dreams and goals. Sandstone Financial Group; a private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Investors should conduct their own evaluation of a financial professional as working with a financial advisor is not a guarantee of future financial success. Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., Member FINRA and SIPC. Wealth Manager Award Winner

CRPC®, APMA®, Financial Advisor, Business Financial Advisor

6265 Emerald Parkway, Suite 150 Dublin, OH 43016 Office: 614-389-5017 margaret.e.mclurg@ampf.com ameripriseadvisors.com/ margaret.e.mclurg

6

YEAR WINNER

Our process starts with a comprehensive approach to planning to gain in-depth knowledge of each client’s financial situation and personal goals. Our goal is to help preserve and build our clients’ wealth over time with integrity, clarity and personal attention. Five Star Wealth Manager award winner, 2013 – 2018. Investors should conduct their own evaluation of a financial professional as working with a financial advisor is not a guarantee of future financial success. Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., Member FINRA and SIPC. Wealth Manager Award Winner

Jason Eliason Partner, CFP®, ChFC®, CFA

941 Chatham Lane, Suite 212 Columbus, OH 43221 Phone: 614-457-7026 jeliason@waller.com www.waller.com

5

YEAR WINNER

• 20 years of experience • Fee-only and transparent

“What matters most is

how you recover from setbacks.”

Jason’s primary responsibilities include client service, advanced planning and investment research. Jason serves as the chief investment officer and chairs the investment committee. Jason is president and board member of the Stratford Ecological Center.

— Five Star award winner

Wealth Manager Award Winner

“Remember your goals and don’t let emotions make the decisions.” — Five Star award winner

The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus-area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners.

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special advertising section

stIll goIng strong Amenities and activities at senior living facilities add dimension to the golden years. By Tami Kamin Meyer

photo: ©2018 thinkstock

ImagIne you are a resIdent of a Central Ohio senior living facility, and you’re in the mood to see a movie, play billiards or enjoy an adult beverage. If you happen to live at Parkside Village in Westerville, you won’t have to travel far to enjoy those on-site amenities. According to Kristel Smith, director of admissions and marketing at Parkside Village, the facility aims to offer meaningful life enrichment programs. “In addition to all-day, restaurant-style dining, other amenities available to residents include entertainment, happy hour, card and book clubs, writers’ groups, choir practice and arts and crafts classes,” she says. “Moreover, transportation to doctor’s appointments, grocery stores, shopping and crafts stores are also available.” Parkside Village also serves residents impacted by Parkinson’s disease and other movement disorders. When the facility’s latest expansion opens next year, the community will begin offering a new movement

specialty program. That exercise regimen, based on a curriculum developed by NeuKinetics—a provider of online courses in the legal, supply chain and health and wellness fields—is designed to improve balance to prevent falls and other mishaps. “In joining forces with the Westerville Library, My Very Own Blanket, David Myers Art Studio & Gallery, Title Boxing and the Columbus Zoo, to name a few, we are able to bring Westerville and Columbus to our residents here,” says Katherine Benalcazar, director of life enrichment at Parkside Village. “We also go out and about to participate in programs at the Metro Parks, museums, historical city tours, fine restaurants and much more.” Similarly, programming at Wesley Glen Retirement Community (in Clintonville), Wesley Ridge Retirement Community (in Reynoldsburg) and Wesley Woods at New Albany focuses on all dimensions of wellness, OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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D A i c t

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the Bexley Public Library is also available, as are bereavement and other support groups. Creekside residents are welcome to invite family and friends to enjoy meals with them in the facility’s accommodating dining room, which also offers private dining spaces for special occasions. The Geraldine Schottenstein Cottage at Wexner Heritage Village is a private residence for 18 individuals living with dementia. There, activities are designed to be dementiafriendly and include music, art therapy, dance and yoga, says Rabbi Deborah Lefton, who presides over Jewish religious observances at the Village. Activities also include specialized practices and partnerships, like Urban Zen—a multi-modal therapy that addresses a variety of physical and mental ailments through yoga,

breath work, aromatherapy and Reiki—and Music & Memory, a nonprofit organization that aims to improve lives through digital music technology, Lefton adds. Not sure how to know a facility is right? When the time comes to select a facility for yourself or your parents, there are countless considerations to keep in mind. Enrichment activities are a key factor, along with the facility’s location, reputation and cost. “When selecting a senior living campus, I always advise families to look at the mission, vision and quality of care,” says Lefton. “I also suggest visiting and watching the staff care for members and members thriving on campus. We stress that if you don’t love people and working with seniors, this is not the place for you to work.”

photo: ©2018 thinkstock

says spokesperson Kayla Statema. That includes the emotional, environmental, financial, intellectual, occupational, physical, social and spiritual aspects of a person’s life. Residents in independent living housing at Wesley Communities properties also are privy to team sports, concerts, live theater and opera, as well as continuing education classes through a partnership with Otterbein University. Meanwhile, programming for assisted living residents includes attending the Ohio State Fair, a senior prom, campfires and other outings. And while those living in memory care units can’t participate in the same levels of activity, they are exposed to stimulating activities individualized to each resident’s specific needs and interests. Because sensory stimulation is important for memory care residents, music, pet visits and aromatherapy are offered to all, while life enrichment activities may relate to each resident’s previous profession, taste in music or favorite films. No matter what the event, programming at Wesley Communities properties is designed to encourage social interaction and a sense of community among residents, says Statema. That means group activities that all residents, from independent living to memory care, can enjoy. “For example, residents from various levels of care will often attend a Sunday service in the chapel or an exercise class in one of our fitness centers,” Statema explains. “They also do seasonal activities such as luaus, Oktoberfest, Christmas parties and more.” Wexner Heritage Village, located just south of Bexley, offers several senior living environments on one large campus. While the properties were founded in the Jewish religion, the facilities are home to a wide variety of demographics. Therefore, Jewish and Christian holidays are observed and respected. Secular programs include bingo, cooking classes, art therapy, music, singalongs, visits from local students ranging from preschool to high school, movie outings, gardening and even a resident’s council. Wexner Heritage Village’s Creekside property features well-appointed apartments for both independent and assisted living residents. Activities there include lectures, summer cookouts, outings to museums, live theater and symphonic performances, dinner clubs and art classes such as beading and painting. Walking clubs and yoga groups meet regularly, and residents can take advantage of the on-site private gym as well. A large library featuring computers and a revolving collection of books and magazines from Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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Experience the Danbury Difference Danbury Senior Living features Central Ohio’s most dynamic retirement communities providing Independent Living, Assisted Living, and a specialized Memory Care Program. We recognize that individuals have different backgrounds, interests, hobbies, and health care needs. We understand that those needs may change over time. That’s why we have created communities that tailor services to each person without the need to move to another apartment. Check us out today and see for yourself how Danbury Senior Living has set a new standard of senior living! Featuring: • Spacious floor plans including studio, one and two bedroom apartments • 24-hour on-site licensed nurse, support staff and emergency response system • Restaurant style dining designed by an Executive Chef • Weekly housekeeping with linen and laundry service • All utilities including local & long distance telephone service AND a premium cable package

Ask about our • Scheduled Transportation exceptional • Pet friendly atmosphere move-in • Daily activities, social events sp ecials! and recreation • Flexible monthly rental options, s, fees with no entrance or communityy fees • Amenities including pub, fitness center, library, movie theater, craft room, beauty salon and much more…

Visit our two communities...to learn more visit DanburySeniorLiving.com

photo: ©2018 thinkstock

New Movement Specialty Program Coming Soon!

Columbus 730 N. Spring Rd., Westerville, OH 43082

(614) 794-9300

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2870 Snouffer Rd. Columbus, OH 43235

(614) 339-0459

9/12/18 12:57 PM


special advertising section

Senior Living Directory

Complied by Tami Kamin Meyer

Finding the right senior community can be a daunting task. We’ve compiled details on some Central Ohio facilities to help you in your search. ABBINGTON ASSISTED LIVING

ARROW SENIOR LIVING

abbingtononline.com Abbington of Arlington 1320 Old Henderson Rd., Upper Arlington; 614-451-4575 44 assisted living units Abbington of Pickerington 9480 Blacklick-Eastern Rd., Pickerington; 614-577-0822 48 assisted living units Abbington of Powell 3971 Bradford Ct., Powell; 614-789-9868 48 assisted living units Windsorwood Place 255 Browns Ln., Coshocton; 740-623-4600 50 assisted living units

Carriage Court Senior Living 3570 Heritage Club Dr., Hilliard; 614529-7470, carriagecourthilliard.com 82 assisted living units, 20 memory care units

BICKFORD SENIOR LIVING enrichinghappiness.com Bickford of Bexley 2600 E. Main St., Bexley; 614-235-3900 33 assisted living units, 20 memory care units

54 assisted living units, 27 memory care units

BROOKDALE SENIOR LIVING SOLUTIONS 844-440-1626; brookdale.com Brookdale Chestnut Hill 5055 Thompson Rd., Columbus 105 assisted living units, 25 memory care units Brookdale Cooper Road 690 Cooper Rd., Westerville 75 assisted living units, 20 memory care units

Bickford of Scioto 3500 Riverside Dr., Columbus; 614457-3500 53 assisted living/memory care units

Brookdale Lakeview Crossing 4000 Lakeview Crossing, Groveport 68 assisted living units, 14 memory care units

Bickford of Worthington 6525 N. High St., Worthington; 614-846-6500

Brookdale Muirfield 7220 Muirfield Dr., Dublin 53 assisted living units, 30 memory care units

Live the retirement you’ve imagined! You’ll find a home to suit your lifestyle at Friendship Village Columbus. FVC is a Life Plan Community offering independent and assisted living, memory care, short-term skilled rehabilitation and long-term care. Plan, live and love your retirement at FVC.

2018

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Call (614) 245-3931 or visit fvcolumbus.org to schedule your tour and learn more about the Village life.

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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special advertising section Brookdale Pinnacle 1305 Lamplighter Dr., Grove City 90 assisted living units, 24 memory care units Brookdale Trillium Crossing 3500 Trillium Crossing, Columbus 60 assisted living units, 153 independent living units Brookdale Westerville 6377 Cooper Rd., Columbus 31 assisted living units, 12 memory care units

CAPITAL SENIOR LIVING The Woodlands of Columbus 5380 E. Broad St., Columbus; 866-8860819, capitalsenior.com 93 assisted living units, 17 memory care units

CENTURY PARK Mayfair Village 3011 Hayden Rd., Columbus; 614-8896202, centurypa.com 85 assisted living units

Retirement living. Upper Arlington style.

DANBURY SENIOR LIVING danburyseniorliving.com Columbus Danbury 2870 Snouffer Rd., Columbus; 614339-0459 68 assisted/independent living units, 33 memory care units Parkside Village 730 N. Spring Rd., Westerville; 614794-9300 105 assisted/independent living units, 30 memory care units (69 additional units coming late 2018) Feridean Commons 6885 Freeman Rd., Westerville; 614-8987488, feridean.com 58 assisted living units, 40 independent living units

FIRST & MAIN firstandmain.us First & Main of Lewis Center 8875 Green Meadows Dr. N, Lewis Center; 740-513-2270 60 assisted/independent living units, 44 memory care units First & Main of New Albany 245 E. Main St., New Albany; 740513-3044 60 assisted/independent living units, 44 memory care units

FIVE STAR SENIOR LIVING

Look forward to tomorrow with excitement. Look back on yesterday with pleasure. And embrace today with a passion. That’s life at The Fairfax at First Community Village. When it opens in 2021, The Fairfax will offer 70 contemporary spacious apartment homes in the English Country Manor style behind a gated entrance in Upper Arlington. All that along with the security of lifelong healthcare. And the best time to secure your place in the next generation of retirement living is right now. LEARN MORE & SECURE A PLACE ON OUR PRIORITY LIST. 844.388.7778 I TourTheFairfax.com 1800 RIVERSIDE DRIVE COLUMBUS, OH 43212

The Forum at Knightsbridge 4590 Knightsbridge Blvd., Columbus; OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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special advertising section 614-451-6793, fivestarseniorliving.com 90 assisted living units, 143 independent living units, 25 memory care units, 57 nursing units

TELL YOUR STORY

Friendship Village of Dublin 6000 Riverside Dr., Dublin; 614-764-1600, fvdublin.org 23 assisted living units, 238 independent living units, 23 memory care units, 50 nursing units

Custom Publishing

HAWTHORN RETIREMENT GROUP Amber Park Pickerington 401 Hill Rd. N, Pickerington; 614-3213176, seniorlivinginstyle.com 86 assisted living units

HOLIDAY RETIREMENT The Worthington 1201 Riva Ridge Ct., Gahanna; 614-7050721, holidaytouch.com 134 independent living units

A speciAl Advertising section

Ganzhorn Suites 10272 Sawmill Pkwy., Powell; 614-3569810, ganzhorn.com 64 memory care units 001-032_Scotts.indd 1

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LUTHERAN SOCIAL SERVICES LSS Kensington Place 1001 Parkview Blvd., Columbus; 614252-5276, lssnetworkofhope.org 117 assisted/independent living units, 11 memory care units

special advertising section

dedicated to improving communities and the lives of ohioans JobsOhio_2018_GREY.indd 1

an ing ce Makact sin imp 2011

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THE MACINTOSH COMPANY macintoshcompany.com Canal Winchester Rehabilitation Center, Skilled Nursing & Assisted Living 6800 Gender Rd., Canal Winchester; 614-834-6800 49 assisted living units, 75 nursing units Mill Run Rehabilitation Center, Skilled Nursing & Assisted Living 3399 Mill Run Dr., Hilliard; 614-527-3000 35 assisted living units, 66 nursing units

Work with our award-winning team at Dispatch Magazines to produce custom sections to reach our affluent, engaged and influential audiences, as well as overruns for spreading your message. Contact us at custompubs@dispatch.com or 614-461-8723.

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Monterey Rehabilitation Center, Skilled Nursing & Memory Care 3929 Hoover Rd., Grove City; 614-875-7700 41 memory care units, 114 nursing units New Albany Rehabilitation Center, Skilled Nursing & Assisted Living 5691 Thompson Rd., Columbus; 614855-8866 36 assisted living units, 67 nursing units West Park Rehabilitation Center, Skilled Nursing & Memory Care 1700 Heinzerling Dr., Columbus; 614-274-4222 100 memory care/nursing units

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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special advertising section Whetstone Rehabilitation Center, Skilled Nursing & Assisted Living 3710 Olentangy River Rd., Columbus; 614-457-1100 60 assisted living units, 145 nursing units

MEMORY CARE THAT INSPIRES

NATIONAL CHURCH RESIDENCES nationalchurchresidences.org First Community Village 1800 Riverside Dr., Columbus; 614324-4455 38 assisted living units, 149 independent living units, 36 memory care units, 102 nursing units Inniswood Village 1195 North St., Westerville; 844-841-5770 82 assisted living units, 120 independent living units, 20 memory care units National Church Residences Mill Run 3550 Fishinger Blvd., Hilliard; 888-211-3477 46 assisted living units, 43 memory care units Stygler Commons Assisted Living 165 N. Stygler Rd., Gahanna; 614-342-4588 32 assisted living units

OHIO LIVING

Respite Care Available The Ganzhorn Suites is a Specialized Memory Care community with a focus on innovative design, technology and advanced dementia care. • Dr. Douglas Scharre, a nationally renowned neurologist with Ohio State University, is our Medical Director • • • Advanced safety and monitoring technologies • A purpose-built design with four distinct households

(614) 356-9810

10272 Sawmill Pkwy. | Powell, OH 43065

ohioliving.org Ohio Living Sarah Moore 26 N. Union St., Delaware; 740-362-9641 38 assisted living units, 28 nursing units Ohio Living Westminster-Thurber Community 717 Neil Ave., Columbus; 614-228-8888 49 assisted living units, 205 independent living units, 21 memory care units, 128 nursing units

PEREGRINE HEALTH SERVICES peregrinehealth.com Columbus Alzheimer Care Center 700 Jasonway Ave., Columbus; 614459-7050 99 memory care/nursing units The Convalarium of Dublin 6430 Post Rd., Dublin; 614-761-1188 45 assisted living units, 45 nursing units Summit’s Trace Healthcare Center 935 N. Cassady Ave., Columbus; 614252-4987 Assisted living, memory care and nursing (numbers not available)

SENIOR LIFESTYLE FAMILY-OWNED COMMUNITIES seniorlifestyle.com

Th li The lif lifestyle festtyle l you seek, seek k th the care and security you need, and the dignity you deserve. First & Main’s premier assisted living and memory care communities serving the greater Columbus area are designed to provide an active lifestyle for you and your family.

CALL TODAY TO SCHEDULE A TOUR AND ASK ABOUT OUR MOVE-IN SPECIALS!

800-648-0040

8875 Green Meadows Drive Lewis Center, OH 43035 FirstAndMainLewisCenter.com

ALF ID #2770R

800-653-4219

245 East Main Street New Albany, OH 43054 FirstAndMainNewAlbany.com

ALF ID #2771R

OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Carriage Court of Grove City 2320 Sonora Dr., Grove City; 614-871-8000 45 assisted living units, 16 memory care units

SENIOR STAR Dublin Retirement Village 6470-6480 Post Rd., Dublin; 614-7642800, seniorstar.com/dublin 60 assisted living units, 134 independent living units, 39 memory care units

STORYPOINT StoryPoint Grove City 3717 Orders Rd., Grove City; 614-5324385, storypoint.com/grove-city-oh 35 assisted living units, 116 independent living units, 48 memory care units

Village at Westerville Retirement Center 215 Huber Village Blvd., Westerville; 614882-3782, villageatwesterville.com 48 assisted living units, 77 independent living units

WALLICK COMMUNITIES wallickcommunities.com Ashford at Sturbridge 3700 Sturbridge Ct., Hilliard; 614633-4811 124 assisted living units (opening late 2018) Oakleaf Village of Columbus 5500 Karl Rd., Columbus; 614-461-1739 121 assisted/indpendent living units

SUNRISE SENIOR LIVING

THE WESLEY COMMUNITIES

sunriseseniorliving.com Sunrise of Dublin 4175 Stoneridge Ln., Dublin; 614-524-5654 56 assisted living units, 34 memory care units

thewesleycommunities.com Wesley Glen Retirement Community 5155 N. High St., Columbus; 614-888-7492 74 assisted living units, 153 independent living units, 21 memory care units, 65 nursing units

Sunrise of Gahanna 775 E. Johnstown Rd., Gahanna; 614-524-5662 60 assisted living/memory care units

Wesley Ridge Retirement Community 2225 Taylor Park Dr., Reynoldsburg; 614-759-0023

60 assisted living units, 100 independent living units, 40 memory care units, 24 nursing units Wesley Woods at New Albany 4588 Wesley Woods Blvd., New Albany; 614-656-4100 16 assisted living units, 73 independent living units, 20 memory care units, 16 nursing units

WEXNER HERITAGE VILLAGE 614-559-5500, whv.org Creekside at the Village 2200 Welcome Pl., Columbus 83 assisted/independent living units Geraldine Schottenstein Cottage 1149 College Ave., Columbus 18 assisted living/memory care units Wexner Heritage House 1151 College Ave., Columbus 115 nursing units Worthington Christian Village 165 Highbluffs Blvd., Columbus; 614-8466076, wcv.org 38 assisted living units, 107 independent living units, 50 nursing units

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION Continued from FS-4

Wealth Managers David Alspach ∙ Wells Fargo Financial Network Aaron Armstrong ∙ Budros Ruhlin & Roe Chris Philip Bardos ∙ Ascend Advisory Group Thomas Bates ∙ Thomas R Bates

James Bowman ∙ Raymond James & Associates Cort Bradbury ∙ Heritage Wealth Partners James Cain ∙ Robert W Baird & Company Kevin Clark ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc.

Michael Beers ∙ Morgan Stanley

Mark Coffey ∙ Summit Financial Strategies

Daniel M. Betzel ∙ Betzel Wealth Advisors

Karen Cookston ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc.

Ryan Bibler ∙ UB James Bishop ∙ Morgan Stanley

James Cox ∙ McCarthy & Cox Retirement & Estate Specialists Daniel L.. Due ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe

Andrea Ellis ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe

William C. Kay ∙ Edward Jones

Jason Farris ∙ Waller Financial Planning Group

Scott Kidwell ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe Katherine Kincaid ∙ Waller Financial Planning Group

Mark Finney ∙ McCarthy & Cox Retirement & Estate Specialists

Michael Kline ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe

Stephen Frank ∙ Frank Wealth Management Group

Jessica A. Lee ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe

Eric Friedman ∙ Wells Fargo Financial Network Debra Gordon ∙ Wesbanco Securities Jonathan Gurney ∙ Gurney Financial Steve Henderly ∙ Nvest Wealth Strategies Ted Inbusch ∙ Ameriprise Financial Inc./The Schumacher Group

Joseph Lotozo ∙ Edward Jones Timothy Mardas ∙ Wells Fargo Advisors Shawn Mathis ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Jordan Matola ∙ Wells Fargo Advisors

Tom A. McCarthy ∙ McCarthy & Cox Retirement & Estate Specialists John Mchugh ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe Ryan Mickelson ∙ McCarthy & Cox Retirement & Estate Specialists Joseph Panfil ∙ UBS Mark Randall ∙ Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Timothy Roberts ∙ Wells Fargo Advisors Daniel B. Roe ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe Christopher H. Rohan ∙ Lifetime Financial Growth John W. Schatz ∙ Lincoln Financial Advisors

John Schuman ∙ Budros, Ruhlin & Roe Shawn Sentz ∙ Sentz Financial Services David Slates ∙ Wells Fargo Advisors Gary L. Vawter ∙ Vawter Financial Gary L. Vogelgesang ∙ Charles Schwab & Company Thomas Wyatt ∙ Lifetime Financial Growth

Investment Professional Faye Danielle Cox ∙ Schulze, Howard & Cox Law Firm

Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. owns the certification marks CFP®, Certified finanCial Planner™ and federally registered CFP (with flame design) in the U.S., which it awards to individuals who successfully complete CFP Board’s initial and ongoing certification requirements. The Chartered Financial Consultant credential [ChFC®] is a financial planning designation awarded by The American College. The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dba Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria. Eligibility criteria – required: 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively licensed as a registered investment adviser or as a principal of a registered investment adviser firm for a minimum of 5 years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (As defined by Five Star Professional, the wealth manager has not; A. Been subject to a regulatory action that resulted in a license being suspended or revoked, or payment of a fine; B. Had more than a total of three settled or pending complaints filed against them and/or a total of five settled, pending, dismissed or denied complaints with any regulatory authority or Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process. Unfavorable feedback may have been discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint process; feedback may not be representative of any one client’s experience; C. Individually contributed to a financial settlement of a customer complaint; D. Filed for personal bankruptcy within the past 11 years; E. Been terminated from a financial services firm within the past 11 years; F. Been convicted of a felony); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal standards; 5. Accepting new clients. Evaluation criteria – considered: 6. One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional designations. Wealth managers do not pay a fee to be considered or placed on the final list of Five Star Wealth Managers. Award does not evaluate quality of services provided to clients. Once awarded, wealth managers may purchase additional profile ad space or promotional products. The Five Star award is not indicative of the wealth manager’s future performance. Wealth managers may or may not use discretion in their practice and therefore may not manage their client’s assets. The inclusion of a wealth manager on the Five Star Wealth Manager list should not be construed as an endorsement of the wealth manager by Five Star Professional or this publication. Working with a Five Star Wealth Manager or any wealth manager is no guarantee as to future investment success, nor is there any guarantee that the selected wealth managers will be awarded this accomplishment by Five Star Professional in the future. For more information on the Five Star award and the research/selection methodology, go to fivestarprofessional.com. 1,165 Columbus-area wealth managers were considered for the award; 67 (6 percent of candidates) were named 2018 Five Star Wealth Managers. 2017: 828 considered, 71 winners; 2016: 712 considered, 112 winners; 2015: 1,257 considered, 107 winners; 2014: 1,333 considered, 133 winners; 2013: 968 considered, 97 winners. This year, we honored one Columbus-area investment professional with the Five Star Investment Professional award..

FS • 10

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Home&Style Q&A p. 136 | produCts p. 138 | home p. 140 | top 25 p. 145

140 Living History

A charming Clintonville carriage house is updated.

Photo by rob hardin

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Home & Style Q&A

Grace Under Fire Jane Scott hosts a lively debate for 200 or more every week.

“It’s not about the kind of clothing people wear, it’s how they wear it,” says Jane Scott, president and CEO of the Columbus Metropolitan Club. “Our speakers are secure in their skin, they exude intelligence and professionalism. The clothing each chooses reflects his or her self-confidence.”

By ShERRY BECk PaPROCkI

More than 15 years ago, Jane Scott became president and CEO of the Columbus Metropolitan Club, which hosts a lunch-and-learn forum each week involving more than 200 people at The Boat House. Founded in 1976 by 13 active Central Ohio women, CMC was created to discuss and debate prominent issues of the day. These robust events under Scott’s watch have continued, regularly featuring guests who range from Gov. John Kasich and representatives of U.S. Congress to scholars, authors and various city leaders.

You grew up on a 190-acre beef and grain farm in Logan County. Does your upbringing affect the way you manage your job? Certainly. CMC needs constant care and feeding just like my dad’s cattle did. The strong work ethic I learned from my farmer parents has always served me well. You have to finish the chores before you can go out to play or meet up with your friends. At CMC, our chores may not be as demanding as feeding livestock daily, but the idea of finishing the chores still applies. It seems you’re the epitome of grace under fire. What is your secret to staying so calm as you oversee a staff and create this swirl of people, events and activity every week? Our motto at CMC is, “Blessed are the flexible, for 136

they shall not be bent out of shape.” Seriously, my public relations education included extensive training in crisis management and crisis communication. When I worked in the agricultural industries, my PR role occasionally required me to face true emergencies where employees’ lives were at risk. When you’ve dealt with a life-threatening situation, anything that might seem like a crisis at CMC is just an inconvenience. Some say that we are living in one of the most divisive eras in U.S. history. Does this make your job more difficult at CMC? We at CMC are committed to providing the community with balanced discussions that present many perspectives of any given issue. During this time of divisiveness, CMC has an even more important role, a responsibility to present an

environment where civility is expected and civil discussions take place. Let’s talk about your personal, professional style. how would you describe it? Nuovo thrift? True confession time. I grew up with hand-me-downs and clothes my mother sewed. I love nice clothes but have never been able to afford my taste. Over the years, I’ve discovered how much fun it is to rummage around in thrift stores and consignment shops. It’s not only relaxing, it’s like treasure hunting to find a beautiful designer jacket or dress for just a few dollars. I get such a kick out of wearing these finds with a piece of jewelry I’ve purchased on a trip to London or Mexico or during some other vacation. It’s all about balancing my taste with my budget and my priority for saving money for travel. ®

photo: tim johnson

What’s the most challenging part of putting on such an event every week? My biggest challenges come before CMC presents any forum. The challenges and the fun come in helping our vice president of programming, Andy Campbell, and our 30-member program committee, identify the most pressing issues and newsworthy topics to provide meaningful community conversations. Once we’ve committed to a forum topic, Andy identifies the best speakers and Lanie Cuthbert (who is vice president of member and sponsor relations) and I recruit sponsors to support the programming. It’s a huge Rubik’s Cube matching topics, dates, speakers and sponsors.

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Home & Style style notes

Instant style

photos: from left, courtesy rachel; courtesy becca; courtesy anastasia

Fashions of the 1990s are back in a big way. Animal prints, skirts and overalls are statement pieces popping up in fall collections all over town. Jewel tones and diverse textures are guaranteed to stick around through the upcoming winter months, becoming excellent cold-weather staples. —Chelsea Savage Moss

Rachel ∙ @hersey.kiss Clintonville Rachel is rocking the skirt trend. A denim skirt is a versatile piece that does not break the bank to be in style. Pair it with a form fitting, tucked-in shirt.

Becca ∙ @girlwithoutfilter Downtown Columbus layering an off-the-shoulder top under a jumper or dress is the outfit we never knew we would love so much. becca demonstrates a great way to keep summer pieces relevant during the cooler temps of autumn.

Anastasia ∙ @nukacolaa Easton the early fall look that will never go out of style: a long-sleeved dress and booties. Anastasia’s neutral color palette is easy to recreate and can be dressed up or down for both work and date night.

Envision Your Home at

Serving Central Ohio since 1993. We are dedicated to providing the total customer experience from initial consultation through installation.

Call Us Today! 614-505-7336 photo: tim johnson

E V E RY H O U S E WA I T S T O B E A

Marvin Home OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Home & Style ProduCts

Desk Refresh

2

With fall activities well underway, it’s time to focus on the home office. Spiff up your domestic workspace with a modernized desk and some new, atypical accessories designed to cheer you on. Whether you work from home, need a space to collect your thoughts or supervise the kids’ homework, create a place where refreshing and resetting is easy for everyone. —Ana Piper

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photos: 1, 2, 5 and 8, courtesy paper source; 3 and 6, courtesy crate & barrel; 4 and 9, courtesy olivergal.com; 7, courtesy williams sonoma

1 Leatherette pencil cup, $6.95 2 Clipnote gold organizer, $12.95, both at Paper Source 3 Pilsen brass desk with glass top, $399 at Crate & Barrel 4 Wood-framed whiteboard by Oliver Gal, $143 at OliverGal.com 5 Positive pen set, $12.95 at Paper Source 6 Kids’ navy blue campaign desk, $399 at Crate & Barrel 7 Sullivan task table lamp, $550 at Williams Sonoma Home 8 Tortoise stapler, $32.95 at Paper Source 9 Good Vibes Only wall art by Oliver Gal, $312–$1,242 at OliverGal.com

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JOIN I N C E L E B R AT I N G

CAMERON MITCHELL R E S TA U R A N T S ’ 25TH ANNIVERSARY!

We’re offering the first 200 Columbus Monthly subscribers a $25 Cameron Mitchell Restaurants’ gift card. Plus, be entered to win a private dinner for four at Cameron’s American Bistro. To subscribe, visit

Subscribe.ColumbusMonthly.com/CMR

photos: 1, 2, 5, 7, 9, 10 courtesy paper source; 3 and 6, courtesy crate & barrel; 4 and 8, courtesy nordstrom

The first 200 Columbus Monthly subscribers (one year at $18) will receive a $25 gift card. Cameron Mitchell Restaurants’ promotional gift cards are valid for food only and have no cash value or expiration date. Gift cards cannot be used towards alcohol purchases or gratuity, and they are not valid with any other discount or offer. No purchase necessary for the dinner for four at Cameron’s American Bistro. Contest expires 11/30/2018. Contest rules at ColumbusMonthly.com/CMRules

36 MILLIO N GU E STS I 2 5 Y E ARS 1 AM AZ I NG C I T Y

We’re proud to celebrate our silver anniversary with the city we love.

Thank you, Columbus. CameronMitchell.com

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Home & Style home

Living in History 140

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a carriage house restoration is finished in clintonville. By TERESa WOODaRD Photos By ROB haRDin

this unique city dwelling is a former carriage house and barn that was built as part of a Clintonville estate. the original estate home, which was nearby, was demolished by a fire in 1906.

Suzanne and David Fisher were in the middle of a home-decorating project at their 120-year-old carriage house in Clintonville when they noticed some structural issues after moving their china cabinets to make room for new furniture. The floor was sinking and walls were cracking. Suzanne called their decorator Donna Rosenthal and said, “I think you better come over here.” “The floors were sinking, there were cracks in the wall, art was shifting on the walls and the second-story floor started bowing,” says Suzanne. The Fishers called on friends in the construction industry and a state-wide barn preservation group, and all encouraged them to move forward with saving the historic carriage house and barn. “So many people came to help, offer advice and encourage us to work toward a solution,” says Suzanne. The result was a 16-month reconstruction project that started with installing temporary supports, ripping out rotted foundation rafters, pouring new concrete footers and installing a new frame of beams and supports throughout the first and second floors. In the process, they also updated the heating system with a more efficient one and expanded ductwork to the second floor. The reconstruction work was led by contractor Ron Brofford, who is their sonin-law’s father. “It never was a question if we wanted to give up,” says Suzanne,78, who also endured shoulder surgery and some heart issues during the renovation. “We knew it would get done eventually, since we had a wonderful group of people to get the job done.” The Fishers are no strangers to historic properties. In fact, they founded 49-year-old F&W Properties, which owns and manages rental units in many historic buildings in Olde Towne East, Marble Cliff, Clintonville and Woodland Park. OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Home & Style home

Charming, historic details are apparent in the home’s original design, as well as in the brick patio and tree house added by the current owners.

When the couple purchased the carriage house in 1974, they were drawn to the property’s rich history. As Suzanne turns the pages of a scrapbook filled with old blackand-white photos passed along from a previous owner, she shares its history. In 1895, the Evans family built a grand mansion, known as Oak Hall, with an elaborate carriage house that included horse stables, a hayloft, storage space for tack and carriages, and living quarters for a barn manager. The carriage house’s exterior was finished in wood siding and cinder-block walls covered with a heavy stucco. Its steeply pitched roof was shingled in slate at the time and was outfitted with a charming cupola to circulate air in the hayloft. The original estate house burned in a fire in 1906, but the carriage house was spared. The Evans family moved on to Hollywood, California, to join their son Nelson who owned a celebrity portrait studio. In 1929, the property was subdivided to sell. The Pavey family bought the carriage house and five lots in 1930 and turned the carriage house into their residence, even adding elements such as ornate trellis panels reclaimed from a Cleveland Avenue mansion. Decades later when the Fishers were introduced to the home by a real estate agent, they were surprised to find it, down a lane off of North Broadway and hidden by mature trees. “We had lived around the corner on Indianola for seven years and didn’t realize this was here,” says David. “When we first drove back the lane, we said, ‘this is it.’” Before moving in with Suzanne and their young children, David’s first task was to refinish the original pine floors. “For the first three years, the radial saw sat in our dining room,” says David. He first renovated the small galley kitchen and bathroom then converted the third floor to living space for his two sons. In 1998, the couple decided to build a twostory addition with an expanded kitchen on the lower level and the master bathroom upstairs. They also added a garage. “When you own an older home, you’re never done working on it,” says Suzanne. Outside, the couple transformed the nearly one-acre wooded property into a 142

shady haven for hostas, flowering dogwoods, allium bulbs and a variety of shade perennials including bleeding heart, ferns and Solomon’s seal. The Fishers collected more than 200 hosta varieties as they swapped with friends, traveled to a national hosta convention in Raleigh, North Carolina and participated in area hosta swaps. Their collection goes beyond the classic green hosta foliage with unique varieties such as ‘Deep Blue Sea’ that has blue corrugated leaves and ‘Designer Genes’, with yellow leaves and red stalks. They personalized the gardens with a charming treehouse, sculptural art and vintage finds, including an assemblage of a friend’s old organ pipes and a clever ornamental fence of hay hooks. Along the back side of the property, the couple added a patio featuring an impressive collection of old bricks, primarily made in Ohio. David says some were found on the property, while others were collected at brick swaps and salvaged from old sites. David recalls making multiple trips to an old East Side firehouse to gather as much brick as possible in three days before its demolition. “At the turn of the century, Ohio had hundreds of brick companies to supply paving bricks for streets and sidewalks,” says David as he walks along the patio pointing out bricks from Hocking Block, Star Brick, Athens Block, Nelsonville Block and others. The Fishers eventually got back to their home redecorating project in 2017 once the structural repairs were completed. Rosenthal helped the couple choose new flooring and wall finishes, before finishing the project. She also helped the Fishers select new rugs, upholstered furniture, a custom entertainment center, accent pieces and lodge-style light fixtures to complement the space and the couple’s antiques and Southwestern art pieces. On the first floor, the original front barn door opens to shared living and dining spaces. Working together with Rosenthal, the couple chose a neutral color palette with offwhite stucco walls and dark brown, paneled accent walls and ceilings. New, gray-stained oak floors cover the repaired foundation. A faux finish painter dressed the new structural beams with a leather-like texture.

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The home’s decor reflects much of its history from its heavy barn beams to rich wooden paneling. Recent detailing with new lighting and other fixtures emphasizes the dwelling’s uncommon character.

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Home & Style home

Guests are greeted at the barn’s original front door, freshly painted in white and featuring heavy iron hinges. Above, the home’s newer kitchen and an adjoining breakfast nook were created as part of a a two-story addition in 1998. The master suite is on the addition’s second floor.

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In the kitchen, the original sliding barn door adds plenty of style to the updated space. Cabinets were repainted gray and outfitted with new pewter hardware and quartz counters. An added island features a textured granite top. The breakfast nook’s large windows are trimmed with new window treatments to frame the views of the gardens. On the walls of a nearby guest bathroom, Rosenthal cleverly arranged Suzanne’s collection of more than 20 crosses purchased at antique stores and on trips to Santa Fe, Austin and Sedona. The upstairs is accessed via a narrow staircase featuring a stained-glass window from an old Bexley home. Second-floor updates include two guest rooms, a book loft and the Fishers’ master suite. The original time-worn pine floors remain in the master bedroom, while new Berber carpet was added to the other bedrooms. The centerpiece of the master bedroom is an impressive Eastlake-style antique bed set, an heirloom from David’s grandmother. The highly geometric style was introduced by British designer Charles Lock Eastlake, reflecting his aversion to over-the-top styles of the Victoria era.

“We had to hoist it up through the barn loft opening,” says Suzanne, referring to the original opening still present in the master bedroom’s floor as she explains that the home’s staircase is too narrow to accommodate large pieces. “A lot of furniture has gone up through there over the years,” she adds. A large entertainment unit to furnish a guest bedroom was also recently hoisted through the opening. To complete the master bedroom, Rosenthal selected a classic floral rug, lamps, botanic-print Roman shades and a large, slipcovered chair and ottoman. For the adjoining master bath, she worked with local artisans to create a custom vanity with antiqued black cabinets, copper sinks, copper wall panels and trim. Two copper mirrors are hung with leather straps. Other updates include a walk-in shower and marble floors. The Fishers are grateful to have the project now completed. “I’ve got my 10-year, 20-year and 25-year projects finished now,” says David. “Over the years, I’ve never found a place I like as much as this or with as much character as this,” he adds. “So, we’re settled and here for good.” ®

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Home & Style toP 25

Top 25

real estate transactions

Luxury properties offered by Alan Hinson

JULY 1–JULY 31, 2018

PRICE

ADDRESS

BUYER/SELLER

$1,860,000

2284 Club Rd., upper Arlington

mcClain, John D. & Abigail Erford from Real land Investments llC

$1,645,327

2020 upper Chelsea Rd., upper Arlington

Veitinger, nicole A. & Flaherty, James m. from michael Edwards building & Design Inc.

$1,600,000

1 miranova Pl., unit 2325, Columbus

Weiss, Arlene, trustee, from mcFate, James

$1,570,000

3406 olentangy River Rd., Delaware

Frecka, Jordan W. & Ashley A. from Donahue, Kenneth

$1,505,000

7448 Whirlaway Cir., Powell

mapes, michael & Rebecca A. from boroff, Ainslie A.

$1,500,000

7240 lambton Park Rd., new Albany

Golis, matthew & traci, trustees, from Rabe, steven D.

$1,400,000

4100 belmont Place, new Albany

Wong, Daniel from slusser, brian W. & Patricia J., trustees

$1,255,000

470 tucker Dr., Worthington

marx, Jane higgins from Kennemer, Andrew m. & Elisa K.

$1,203,700

275 beck st., Columbus

hilt, James & brown, Derek from neibart, Alexa J. & barry, Jeffrey scott

$1,100,000

1987 upper Chelsea Rd., upper Arlington

miller, Frank C. V. & samantha D. from sheets, michael D. & Jodi l.

$1,090,000

363 n. Drexel Ave., bexley

stein, Diana b. & marcus, David m. from hecker, Donna Johnson, trustee

$970,000

1441 Kearney Way, Delaware

Frecka, David Allison from smyth, Andrew & Courtney

$970,000

2147 Elgin Rd., upper Arlington

Weinberg, matthew & snigdha from Devine, steven m. & hollie b.

$935,000

2838 margate Rd., upper Arlington

stieg, John-Charles Jr. & Cravens-stieg, Caroline from boyle, Frederick J. & theresa E.

$897,250

10 stonegate Village Dr., Grandview

merkle, Peter C. & Arnold, mary Kathryn from backes, Carl R. & Winifred A.

$864,000

2224 tremont Rd., upper Arlington

Curtin, James b., trustee, from Whitson, bryan Alan & Amy Knutsen

$860,000

8298 Chippenham Dr., Dublin

schmidt, thomas G. & Connie s. from moberger, William A. & sandra W.

$851,000

4873 Chevy Chase Ave., upper Arlington

Greene, Jessica s. & Jared A. from ohlinger, mark A. & belinda m.

$850,000

2131 tewksbury Rd., upper Arlington

Wofford, Garrett & Andrea F. from humphreys, Ann larose

$849,900

481 Glyn tawel Dr., Granville

spiker, Jeffrey A. & Erin C. from Penland, Christopher morand & Kerry shea

$847,500

9810 Riverway Run, Powell

himmelstein, John m. & Gail m. from Dean, matthew s. & Cory I.

$846,811

8387 Albanese Cir., Dublin

Pigman, Carolyn R., trustee, from bob Webb lewis Center llC

$830,000

7781 Pembrooke Pass, new Albany

White, John b. & Kathryn s. from Pendrey, thomas G.

$815,000

7737 Fenway Rd., new Albany

thorne, Kevin F. & Jean m. from Ware, Jason & Julia

$810,000

2626 Camden Rd., upper Arlington

Petras, Robert J. Jr. & tricia l. from Devoe, Carolyn n.

As provided by The Columbus Dispatch research team. statistics are gathered from the greater Columbus area, including Franklin and parts of other surrounding counties.

7271 Lambton Green N $1,575,000

3 Edge of Woods $1,195,000

7348 James River Road $699,800

Alan Hinson Representing Buyers and Sellers in central Ohio for 23 years

614.348.8000 alanh@newalbanyrealty.com newalbanyrealty.com OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Jill Beckett-Hill

Jan Benadum

Mike Carruthers

Realty Executives Decision BeckettTeam.com (614) 457-4000

Coldwell Banker King Thompson JanBenadum.com (614) 206-3373

Coldwell Banker King Thompson MikeCarruthers.com (614) 324-4321

Alli Close

Amy Conley

Jean Ann Conley

Keller Williams Consultants Realty TheCloseConnection.com (614) 726-9070

Cutler Real Estate ConleyandPartners.com (614) 792-7500

Cutler Real Estate ConleyandPartners.com (614) 792-7500

CENTRAL OHIO

LUXURY HOME NETWORK

Bruce Dooley

Sarah Eagleson

Kathy Faust

Keller Williams Classic Properties Keller Williams Classic Properties Keller Williams Consultants Realty DooleyCo.com ColumbusClassicProperties.com Fausts.com (614) 297-8600 (614) 804-8470 (614) 402-4107

Phil Giessler

Cheryl Godard

Doug Green

Cam Taylor Company CamTaylor.com (614) 888-0307

Keller Williams Classic Properties CherylGodard.com (614) 353-8711

Cutler Real Estate DougGreenRealtor.com (614) 893-8772

Kathy Greenwell

Traci Kaniaris

Brian Kemp

HER Realtors KathyGreenwell.com (614) 818-7210

New Albany Realty NewAlbanyRealty.com (614) 286-2590

Keller Williams Capital Partners RelocateColumbus.com (614) 825-0288

WHEN THE STAKES ARE HIGH, IT’S IMPORTANT TO KNOW YOU HAVE ASSOCIATED WITH THE VERY BEST! Our team of certified luxury home specialists formed the Central Ohio Luxury Home Network to bring you the most qualified Realtors to serve you better. While we are competitors, we understand the importance of co-operation and with this in mind, we joined forces to bring the most exposure for your home to this elite group. Each month we tour our listings of luxury homes, share ideas on marketing and network our buyer leads to bring the most qualified prospects to your home! Call one of us and begin working with all of us-today!

Jon Kirk

Jane Kessler Lennox

Stacy McVey

ReMax Premier Choice CalltheKirks.com (614) 791-2011

New Albany Realty NewAlbanyRealty.com (614) 939-8938

Keller Williams Classic Properties TheMcveyTeam.com (614) 206-3003

Jill Rudler

Jeff Ruff

Penny Smith

Marilyn Vutech

Keller Williams Excel Realty AllAboutColumbusOhio.com (614) 939-7400

HER Realtors Vutech-Ruff.com (614) 255-0660

NextHome Real Estate (614) 805-9162

HER Realtors Vutech-Ruff.com (614) 255-0600

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5900 ALICE DRIVE, WESTERVILLE

WOODED SANCTUARY

Private drive and minutes away from New Albany. Secluded 6.7 ac. setting. Open floor plan features 1st floor owner’s suite, gourmet kitchen with high end appliances, large island, granite counters, hardwood floors, eat-in space leading into the four season room. The 2nd floor has 3 bedroom suites, loft and laundry. Outdoor entertaining spaces with built in hot tub and multi-level paver patios. Finished lower level with full bedroom suite/bath, bar/kitchen, game and rec. room. Oversized 1st floor laundry/pantry and storage space. 3 car attached garage. New Albany Schools $949,000

JILL BECKETT-HILL

jill@becketteam.com • 614.563.9819

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON STUNNING AMBERLEIGH HOME!

26 Acre Country Estate– Custom Built Brick Home–6 BRs–4 ½ Baths–8,266 SqFt– Open Floor Plan–3 Possible Living Quarters–3 Kitchens– Separate In-Law Suite– Abundant Greenspace, Pond, Creek, Woods–Phenomenal Views–Large Tiered Deck w/ Fire Pit–3 Car Attached Side Load Garage–Mint Condition– Equestrian Potential!

MIKE CARRUTHERS

mike.carruthers@kingthompson.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON OLENTANGY RIVER ROAD

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS REALTY

Majestic Georgian Estate. Hoover Reservoir 16.76 acre Waterfront Estate. Manicured gardens surround the elegant brick architecturally designed one owner home. Luxurious inside and out, slate roof, copper downspouts and gutters. Amazing water views and heavily wooded private setting. $2,695,000

PR

CONLEY & PARTNERS

CONLEY & PARTNERS

amy@conleyandpartners.com • 614.792.7500

CUTLER REAL ESTATE

CUTLER REAL ESTATE SHORT NORTH

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ALLI CLOSE

thecloseconnection.com • 614.726.9070

4348 SUNBURY ROAD

ED

UC

ED

R ICE

Gorgeous yard! Plenty of room throughout for music, billiards, a private office or gaming! The gourmet kitchen has cherry cabinets, new lighting, SS appliances, & granite island/seating. Upstairs are the huge kid suites! 2 room suites with baths attached. Owner’s suite with sitting area, updated bath, & an enormous closet with room for endless storage! The walkout LL was custom designed and features a bar/ kitchenette plus room to play! Enjoy summer nights dining on the back deck, and follow up with a swim in the neighborhood pool! $694,900

amy@conleyandpartners.com • 614.792.7500

Incredible condo in the heart of the Short North! Secluded location, but close to everything. Modern, open floor plan w/ lots of natural light & soaring ceilings that follow the saw tooth roof line w/ exposed wood trusses. Unique spaces, contemporary, high-end finishes including steel-wood stair casings & railings. Kitchen has custom cabinets, large island w/ “leathered” granite counters & walk in pantry. Owner’s suite has lg walk in closet, double sinks, soaking tub, & large walk in shower. 2 interior court yards - 1 off the owner’s suite & 1 off the great room & kitchen/ dining areas. 2 add’l on suite BRs, media rm, & den. Huge 2 car garage. $1.275mil

JAN BENADUM

janbenadum@gmail.com • 614.206-3373

REALTY EXECUTIVES DECISION

5590 WATERLOO ROAD

Kensborough Village, a tranquil setting enclosed by private gate off scenic Olentangy River Rd. Architecturally exquisite inside and out with unrivaled attention to detail, finest building materials. Incredible views, secluded & surrounded with nature ponds, fountain, moat and stone arched bridge. Words cannot do it justice, come see for yourself. 4 bed, 4 1/2 bath $1,250,000

Quality custom home on wooded, ravine half acre in Highland Lakes area, completely remodeled in 2017 with gorgeous new kitchen featuring custom white cabinetry, and baths, including heated porcelain tile flooring and steam shower in master. An absolute showplace with open floor plan, spectacular views and top-quality, finishes. 4 BR, 3 full and 2 half baths, finished lower level, sunroom. 4085 sq. ft. $545,000.

UPPER ARLINGTON

BRUCE DOOLEY

bruce@dooleyco.com • 614.297.8600

KELLER WILLIAMS CLASSIC PROPERTIES

Appealing open floor plan offering an abundance of light & windows. Two sty great rm w/ frplc adjacent to island kitchen. Lovely owner suite w/huge bath featuring shower, soaking tub & double vanity; 3 more BRs w/lg closets + 2 more baths. More fun in fin. LL w/ bar, flex rm & bath. Recently constructed customized coach house, separate but attached, architecturally seamless & is handicapped & pedestrian accessible. $1,159,000

SARAH EAGLESON

SearchColumbusProperties.com • 614.804.8470

KELLER WILLIAMS CLASSIC PROPERTIES

9/12/18 12:48 PM


6477 QUARRY LN, DUBLIN

7717 SEMINARY RIDGE

WORTHINGTON 1 ACRE ON THE RIVER, AMAZING YD & VIEWS, 5889 finished sq.ft., including Walk Out LL, 5BR, 3.5BA, 4 frplcs., 4 season rm, den, sitting rm., loft, grt rm., 3+ car gar, easy access to shopping, parks, downtown, airport +. Wonderful opportunity.

On the Scioto with boat dock and gorgeous pool and gazebo overlooking the river. Amazing open floor plan made for entertaining. First floor master. Private, gated community - 20 minutes to downtown. Contact Todd Berrien at 614-403-3307.

phil@camtaylor.com • 614.888.0307

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS Remodel by Behal Sampson Dietz includes the best craftsmanship and finishes throughout. Updated and meticulous, you will find a transitional open floor plan, spacious yet cozy rooms, and windows across the back allowing tons of light. The kitchen with abundant cabinetry and honed granite features a double island, baking station, and Wolf/ SubZero appliances. Wonderful 4 season sun room and custom wine room are especially unique and the large great room and dining room are enjoyed with family or when entertaining large gatherings. Fabulous!

CAM TAYLOR CO. RELOCATION 2077 ELGIN ROAD UPPER ARLINGTON

CHERYL GODARD

cherylgodard@kw.com • 614.353.8711

In the heart of the prestigious Scioto Country Club historic area! Enjoy the elegance of a 1920’s home with all of the modern amenities of a Michael Edwards complete renovation. Great attention to detail, while maintaining the original timeless architectural integrity of this historic home. Wonderful spaces, Three car detached garage. $1,350,000. For details www.DougGreenRealtor.com or email for a private tour.

KELLER WILLIAMS CLASSIC PROPERTIES

IRRESISTABLE PRICE!

R h c S p C F o

DOUG GREEN

dgreen@cutlerhomes.com • 614.893-8772

CUTLER REAL ESTATE

2 U

N M e o i t P t H 1 e r p l s l

Stunning custom home offering an open floor plan, oversized windows and spacious bedrooms. Offering price $545,900

KATHY GREENWELL

TRACI KANIARIS

www.greenwellgroup.com • 614.818.7210

tracikaniaris@hotmail.com • 614.286.2590

HER REALTORS

NEW ALBANY REALTY 7271 PALMER COURT

3088 SCIOTO ESTATES COURT

3

Tartan Fields executive home with great outdoor living space. Over 8800 square feet of finished space. Move right in. See more photos at www. CallTheKirks.com. $1,499,000

KEMP GROUP

office@relocatecolumbus.com • 614.450.0082

KELLER WILLIAMS CAPITAL PARTNERS

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PLANTERS GROVENEW ALBANY

Masterful estate home located on a .94 acre cul-de-sac lot. 5 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 7 plus car garage, indoor pool and a remarkable walkout lower level on a golf course. Breathtaking water views! $999,900

Privacy and seclusion on a mature wooded and award winning landscaped lot. This home is perfect for entertaining. Large Great Room and Dining Room both with fireplaces. Many recent updates and improvements. Newer Kitchen appliances and counters. Updated Master Bath. Huge walk in closet. Tons of outdoor spaces, decking, gazebo, fountain and firepit. Fully irrigated and incredible landscape lighting. Quiet street yet close to many amenities. Finished lower level with exercise room, theater room, wet bar and bedroom and full bath. Easy access to downtown, OSU and the airport.

S D A & C a F W p s r y h s a

PHIL GIESSLER

KATHY FAUST

team@fausts.com • 614.206.4881

2441 WENBURY

2 D $

D

L SO

C C S A B F F C R o M B

JON & PAM KIRK

www.callthekirks.com • 614.791.2011

RE/MAX PREMIER CHOICE

9/12/18 12:48 PM


2335 LANE WOODS DRIVE $4,675,000

Spectacular Estate for the Most Discriminating Buyer looking for a One Of A Kind Home with Only the Finest Finishes & Amenities! Across from Scioto Country Club ~ 12,000sqft. custom home on 2.5+ acres along the Scioto River w/UA schools! Fabulous home to entertain family & friends. Whether watching movies on the big screen, playing golf at Pebble Beach on the golf simulator, sipping wine in the wine cellar or relaxing by the fireplace on the screen porch, you’ll never want to leave! Attached 1800sqft heated & cooled garage provides flexible space for a car collection or hobbies. Best of all you’re minutes to downtown.

MEDALLION ESTATES

JANE KESSLER LENNOX

janel@newalbanyrealty.com • 614.939.8938

NEW ALBANY REALTY

ORIGINAL CRAFTSMAN CHARM

PENNY SMITH

pnnysmt@aol.com • 614.805.9162

NEXT HOME EXPERIENCE

KELLER WILLAMS EXCEL REALTY

Private European country estate in Wingate Farms. Incredible landscaping, stone walkways, pond & water features w/back drop of mature trees surround this exquisite stone/masonry home on 3.39 acres. Beautifully appointed w/highest level of custom finish. Owner reworked every space & room-shows like from pages of Architectural Digest w/fresh paint & new custom lighting throughout. Totally renovated in 2000 with new additions to the home including a family room w/ vaulted ceilings. Includes 3 parcels for a total of 3.388 acres! $1,795,00

MARILYN VUTECH AND JEFF RUFF realtors@vutech-ruff.com • 614.255.0600

HER REALTORS

726 N. MCMAHILL RD. MILFORD CENTER

2800 S. DORCHESTER ROAD, UPPER ARLINGTON

MARILYN VUTECH AND JEFF RUFF realtors@vutech-ruff.com • 614.255.0600

HER REALTORS

309 N PARKVIEW AVE

Only 20 minutes to Dublin. 2007 custom designed with a modern perspective. Floor to ceiling windows, open floor plan. The 4 sided marble fireplace anchors the first floor with 13’ vaulted ceilings, gourmet kitchen with 6 burner gas range, double ovens, microwave, 2 burner induction top and refrigerators, Amish cabinetry throughout, 24’’ Italian marble flooring and Murano lighting. Over 9200 sf. of living includes 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 4 car att. garage, finished lower level with theatre, rec. room with bar, billiards room, fitness room and storage. Two level patio with built in fireplace. $1,199,900

JILL BECKETT-HILL

jill@becketteam.com • 614.563.9819

REALTY EXECUTIVES DECISION

2371 COMMONWEALTH PARK SOUTH

Custom Built 2005 Brick & Cedar Shake 3 Sty House Situated on 3.39 Acres Abutting Creek–6 BRs–7 ½ Baths–9,000 Sq Ft w/4 Finished Levels-Open Floorplan w/11’ Ceilings– Chef’s Kitchen-LL Workout Room-Separate In-Law Suite over 3 Car Attached GarageMint Condition–Possibility of 2 Buildable 1 Acre Lots

Magnificent Brick & Stucco 1 ½ Story–$800,000 in Total Renovations–1st Floor MBR–5 BRs–4 New Full Baths & 2 New Half Baths– 6,095 Sq Ft–Grand Foyer– New & Expanded Chef’s Kitchen w/Marble Surfaces & High End Appliances–34’ LR–4 Car Heated Rear Load Garage–Shows Better than New!

MIKE CARRUTHERS

mike.carruthers@kingthompson.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

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JILL RUDLER

www.allaboutcolumbusohio.com • 614.939.7400

1994 WINGATE DRIVE, SOUTHERN DELAWARE

Rare opportunity to own a historic home in a half acre close to Creekside Gahanna. Separate building with possible artist space too! Charm and quality throughout. Four bedrooms including one on first floor. $335,800

NEW PRICE! Fabulous new construction Mid Century in Canterbury - this is truly an exceptionally well executed home that offers unmatched quality and style incorporating finishes with modern timeless design. Under the guidance of Paul + Jo Studios, every detail brings thoughtful consideration to each space. Highlights include a stunning kitchen with 15 foot island seating at least 10, expansive first floor master, 2 story living room, 3 family suites, 2nd story family/ play room, 1st floor media room, lower level ‘’au pair’’ suite or exercise room, screened porch - all situated on a beautiful lot with room for pool. $1,595,000

Sellers have updated kitchen with Granite Counter tops and SS Appls!! Stunning custom home with 2 story great room situated off the golf course in Medallion Estates. Gorgeous gourmet kitchen features tile floors and large eating space surrounded by windows. Highly desirable 1st fl owner’s suite w/ trey ceiling and private bath. Dining room, den, and 1st flr laundry. Great room boasts wall of windows, brick fireplace, and open staircase. 2nd fl features 3 lg BRs w/ closets with private en-suites. Finished LL offers an enormous amount of entertaining space. Outdoors enjoy the beautiful landscaping, and private views of the golf course. 3 car side load garage! $549,900

MIKE CARRUTHERS

mike.carruthers@kingthompson.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

9/12/18 12:48 PM


81 N. DREXEL AVE.BEXLEY LANDMARK PROPERTY

17 N. PARKVIEW AVE.

Totally Private 2.11 Acre Parklike Bexley Estate–Stately Brick 3 Story–8,112 Sq Ft-5 to 6 BRs–9 ½ Baths–French Doors & Hardwood Floors-2 Circular Gated Driveways–3 Car Detached Garage Carriage House w/ Lg Apt– Private Heated Inground Pool w/Pool House & Patio-Excellent Condition-Rare Opportunity

The Huntington House-Over $1,000,000 in Total Renovations-Architectural Integrity-9 BRs-6 Full & 2 Half Baths-9,454 Sq Ft Plus Finished 3rd Flr-New Chef’s Kitchen w/White Marble Countertops-Great Room w/ 28’ High Ceiling-Lg Proportion Rooms-Once in a Lifetime Opportunity

MIKE CARRUTHERS

MIKE CARRUTHERS

www.mikecarruthers.com • 614.620.2640

www.mikecarruthers.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON 112 ASHBOURNE ROAD

83 S. COLUMBIA AVE.

Brick Georgian Colonial Revival-5 BRs-4 Full & 2 Half Baths-6,450 Sq Ft–4 Finished Levels & Open Floor Plan– Chef’s Kitchen Open to Breakfast Area & Spacious FR–2 Stairways–2nd Floor Laundry–LL 2nd FR w/Add’l Kitchen-3 Car Side Load Garage w/Covered Breezeway & 2nd Floor Finished StudioExcellent Condition!

MIKE CARRUTHERS

MIKE CARRUTHERS

mike.carruthers@kingthompson.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON Highly Desirable Lyonsgate Development – 3BR – 3 Full & 2 Half Baths – 4,400 SqFt $600,000 in Renovations – Chef’s Kitchen w/Granite Countertops & SS Appliances – 1st Flr Master – Great Room w/ Cathedral Ceiling – Open Floor Plan – Finished LL w/ Game Room & Wine Cellar – 2 Car Attached SideLoad Garage – Mint Condition

Tranquil and Private ParkLike 17.71 Acre Equestrian Estate – 2 Fenced Pastures – 4 Stall, Full Service 3,000 SqFt Horse Barn w/ Apartment & Access to Hunting Trails – Renovated 5 BR 3.5 Bath Home – Approx. 3800 SqFt – 1st Flr Master – Finished LL – 2 Car Attached Side-Load Garage – Extensive Landscaping

M o M p o a c F c p c e t $

MIKE CARRUTHERS

MIKE CARRUTHERS

mike.carruthers@kingthompson.com • 614.620.2640

www.mikecarruthers.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON 2296 E. BROAD ST

395 S. DREXEL AVE

Perfectly Located on Bexley’s Desirable Drexel Ave – Renovated Brick 3 Story Home – 4 BR – 3.5 Baths – Nearly 3,000 SqFt – Family Room w/ Abundant Natural Light – Newer Chef’s Kitchen w/ Granite Countertops & Huge Window Overlooking Large Park-Like Backyard – Porte Cochere & 2 Car Attached Garage – Extensive Landscaping – Excellent Condition

MIKE CARRUTHERS

mike.carruthers@kingthompson.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

S p f t f r f g E o t f c a r f

M

5 LYONSGATE ROAD

3698 ALWARD ROAD SW

T s s E w g o o d s 2 h m L b n a $

E D

Stately Stone 2 Story– 4 BRs–3 Full Baths & 2 Half Baths–6,044 Sq Ft– Architectural Integrity & High Quality Finishes–Newer Chef’s Kitchen w/Sitting Area–Lg MBR w/Huge WalkIn Closet–Second MBR/Guest Suite–Attached Three Car Garage–Excellent Condition & Location–A 10+

www.mikecarruthers.com • 614.620.2640

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Best Location on Broad Street in Bexley–Stately Brick 2 Story–4 BRs–4 Full & 2 Half Baths–4,690 SqFt–10’ 1st Floor Ceilings–Large Living Room w/ Wood Burning Fireplace–Formal Dining Room–Sun Room–Large Master w/ Walk-In Closet & Updated Master Bath–2 Car Attached Garage–Extensive Landscaping–Private Inground Pool–3 Blocks from 30 Acre Wolfe Park & Bexley’s Jeffrey Park

C

A d 2 D t n K 6 b r $

MIKE CARRUTHERS

www.mikecarruthers.com • 614.620.2640

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

9/12/18 12:49 PM


GLENEAGLES

ASHFORD

This incredible Muirfield estate showcases a grand foyer with bridal staircase and crystal chandelier. Everyone will love the great room with wood beams, stone fireplace, granite bar and windows overlooking the indoor pool that opens up to a new outdoor Trex deck. LL features an exercise room, sauna, bath and recreation area. 2nd floor hosts a owner’s suite with huge W/I closet, 4 more BDs and 3 more BAs. Separate entrance from LL leads to bonus room/5th bedroom making it perfect for nanny/home office. Enjoy the peace and serenity of this wooded retreat! $739,900

This home is simply stunning. From the 2 story entry to the fireplace in the DR, and 2 room closet in the owner suite. Gorgeous woodwork frames the windows and accents the 4 fireplaces. A screened porch overlooks the private backyard and patio(room for a pool!). White trim and cherry cabinetry throughout. Upstairs is a large bonus/game room with a pool table and plenty of space for more fun! All bedrooms are huge! Plus a workout room in the lower level & a 4 car garage! $850,000

ALLI CLOSE

thecloseconnection.com • 614.726.9070

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS

ALLI CLOSE

thecloseconnection.com • 614.726.9070

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS REALTY

Sellers have painstaking redone every bit of this custom home since 2013. Pull in to one of your 4 car garages and be welcomed by hardwood floors and 10’ or two story ceilings throughout. New Miller custom cabinetry in the kitchen. Walls of windows let you enjoy the huge backyard that overlooks the 3rd green of the MVGC. Huge bedrooms with a potential of 8 bedrooms available on all three levels, including the first floor. The lower level walkout is stunning & opens to a large patio. The detail in this home is what sets it apart. Must see to appreciate! $1,440,000

ALLI CLOSE

thecloseconnection.com • 614.726.9070

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS

24 SESSIONS

MUIRFIELD ESTATES

Prestigious gated Bexley Sessions Village, a French Country stone & stucco home completely renovated with gourmet kitchen opens to recently added family room, LL Rec Room, office and exercise room. All bedrooms are en suites. LR with built-in bar opens to paver patio, fireplace and private yard. $1,495,000

Magnificent walk-out ranch overlooks the 2nd hole of MVGC. An open floorplan with picture windows means views of the trees, in-ground pool, and grounds. Soaring vaulted ceilings through main level. Fabulous updated kitchen with custom cabinetry, wood-fired pizza oven, gas range, and 3 convection ovens. The glass enclosed sunroom is a special treat with an elevator. $1,399,000

ED

UC

ED

R ICE

PR

CONLEY & PARTNERS

ALLI CLOSE

amy@conleyandpartners.com • 614.792.7500

thecloseconnection.com • 614.726.9070

CUTLER REAL ESTATE

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS REALTY 2376 ANDOVER ROAD

COMING SOON!

All brick country French designed home on stunning 2.7 acre riverfront lot in Dublin! Spectacular finishes throughout the home & neutral, tasteful décor. Custom Kitchen opens to family room, 6 bedrooms, 5 full and 3 half baths, walk-out LL and bonus room above garage. $1,395,000

CONLEY & PARTNERS

amy@conleyandpartners.com • 614.792.7500

CUTLER REAL ESTATE

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KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS

EXQUISITE RESERVE HOME

EXQUISITE ITALIAN DESIGN Stunning home backs to a heavily treed preserve in Corazon! Step through the front door to hdwd floors throughout the main level. The open floorplan features wooden arches and a lg great room that opens to the gourmet kitchen featuring top of the line SS appls, granite counters and custom cabinetry. Enjoy complete privacy while you relax on hot summer nights or in the rain on the covered back porch-complete with fireplace. First floor bdrm can be converted to the owner suite. Upstairs are 5 lg bedrooms and a recently renovated Owner suite. A unique home fit for a lifestyle of luxury! $950,000

ALLI CLOSE

thecloseconnection.com • 614.726.9070

Often admired, beautiful 1930’s Tudor, South of Lane! This renovated home by All in Wood includes 3800 sq.’ of finished living space and features Wolf/ SubZero/Viking Kitchen with island seating open to Breakfast Room and Great Room. LR, DR, Mud Room, attached 2 car Garage and new 4 season office/sun room complete the first floor. Spacious finished Basement is freshly painted with new carpet. Four large bedrooms and 3 full baths up. Large entertaining Paver Patio is surrounded by gorgeous landscaping, privacy fence and spacious backyard. Walk to schools, parks, Lane Avenue shops & restaurants! $895k

CHERYL GODARD

cherylgodard@kw.com • 614.353.8711

KELLER WILLIAMS CLASSIC PROPERTIES

9/12/18 12:49 PM


5025 SLATE RUN WOODS UPPER ARLINGTON

Gorgeous 6,000+ sq.’ Bob Webb custom built home on over 1/2 acre in Upper Arlington! Updated and in meticulous condition, this 4 BR, 3.5 BA, open floor plan with floor to ceiling windows overlooks mature trees and ravines and features a first floor owners’ suite, 2 story great room, and fabulous walk-out lower level. Minutes to freeways, OSU and downtown! $1,085,000

GERMAN VILLAGE 1027 CITY PARK Gorgeous home overlooking Schiller Park. Recently renovated complete with newer addition that includes a spacious gathering room and full rec room in lower level. In ground pool w/ stone patio and lush landscaping. Private and fenced grounds. 2 car gar w/ carriage room above. 2 FPs, Truly Stunning! $1,349,000.

CHERYL GODARD

DOUG GREEN

cherylgodard@kw.com • 614.353.8711

dgreen@cutlerhomes.com • 614.893-8772

CUTLER REAL ESTATE

KELLER WILLIAMS CLASSIC PROPERTIES HISTORIC COUNTRY ESTATE Situated 30 minutes south of Columbus along the banks of the Scioto River lies this prestigious iconic 1905 landmark. 9 landscaped acres with Stately Historic Home, Slate Roof Barn, Out Buildings and Pool. Additional surrounding farm acreage is available. Amazing “Norman Rockwell” Picturesque setting for all your social gatherings! $1,100,000. A unique opportunity for a rare find ! Additional 250+ acreage available. www.DougGreenRealtor.com

7860 COOK ROAD

Dublin Schools. Your private resort home with in ground pool, summer kitchen and huge family room with bar & billiard room. A unique guest barn for a business, studio or elderly parent. See more photos at www.CallTheKirks. com. $1,285,000

www.callthekirks.com • 614.791.2011

RE/MAX PREMIER CHOICE

CUTLER REAL ESTATE 7824 BRANDON ROAD, NEW ALBANY $1,980,000

305 N. PARKVIEW AVENUE, BEXLEY $1,795,000

Custom Estate by Architect John Behal has the Perfect Balance of High-Level Finishes & Casual Comfort. Fabulous Hardwood Floors. 5331sqft & 11’ Ceilings. Dramatic Windows provide plenty of Natural Light & a Massive Butcher Block Island firmly establishes this Custom Kitchen as heart of the home. Most extraordinary is the privacy enjoyed on this 1.79 Acre ‘’Park-Like Lot’’ abutting Alum Creek while remaining conveniently located in Bexley. 1st Flr Owner’s Suite. 2 2nd floor BRs plus Carriage Suite. Flagstone Patio, New Cedar Roof in 2016.

JON & PAM KIRK

DOUG GREEN

dgreen@cutlerhomes.com • 614.893-8772

JANE KESSLER LENNOX

janel@newalbanyrealty.com • 614.939-8938

NEW ALBANY REALTY

Elegant 7400sqft Custom Georgian situated on Over 2 Acres of Landscaped Gardens & Lawn in an Exceptional NACCC Location & Setting. 5 Bedrooms Each with own Bath & Heated Floors(3 in center of house, 1 in carriage suite & 1 in lower level), Beautifully Designed Chef’s Kitchen, Timeless Finishes, Gorgeous Hardwood Floors, Lower Level Walk-Out with Recreation Rm, Media Rm & Wet Bar. Style & Livability combine to offer a Warm & Stunning Residence.

JANE KESSLER LENNOX

janel@newalbanyrealty.com • 614.939.8938

NEW ALBANY REALTY

WHEN THE STAKES ARE HIGH, IT’S IMPORTANT TO KNOW YOU HAVE ASSOCIATED WITH THE VERY BEST!

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Dining

review p. 154 | short order p. 156 | produCt p. 161 | let’s eat p. 162

158 Cheddar 101

inside black radish Creamery’s cheese cave

Photo by tim johnson

OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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153

9/13/18 12:21 PM


Dining REviEw

Filet mignon, paired with red wine

Big and Rich Jeff Ruby’s Steakhouse is over the top, but it’s tough to argue with the quality steaks. By BailEy TRask | PHotoS By Tim JOhnsOn

The loss of many traditional high-end eateries in the recent past—Handke’s Cuisine, The Clarmont and Bexley Monk—left a void in Columbus that Jeff Ruby’s Steakhouse seems happy to fill, barreling onto the dining scene late last year with white tablecloths, elaborate décor and nods to another era—as well as outrageously priced food. At first, restaurateur Jeff Ruby’s Cincinnati-based steakhouse chain, situated near the Greater Columbus Convention Center on Nationwide Boulevard, may feel like an awkward fit for Columbus. Our palates have become more sophisticated and adventurous since those aforementioned mainstays shuttered, with focus shifting to global flavors and New American cuisine. Jeff Ruby’s, with its logo-adorned everything, is a brand mainly focused on red meat. The culinary trends of the current day are absent here: no sous vide, no kale, no foam. 154

But about those steaks. The petit filet ($44) is enough to make someone quit vegetables. The exterior was crispy, the inside pure umami. The steak prices jump to as high as $115 (for a 30-ounce, dry-aged tomahawk rib-eye), but the restaurant has a few options to get around the pricing, including a loyalty club and off-the-menu specials offered only on Facebook. This summer, those in the know could order two lobster tails and two 8-ounce filet mignons with small portions of grilled asparagus and house-made mashed potatoes for $99 (a $207 value). While the charred lobster meat was perfectly cooked, the juicy steak with its signature, salted seasoning stole the show. Jeff Ruby’s steaks can be served with a variety of toppings—which can make or break the meal—for an extra charge. One order of the 14-ounce New York strip ($49) topped with mushrooms and onions ($4) was unremarkable. The vegetables were overcooked, a little

Jeff Ruby’s Steakhouse

89 E. nationwide blvd., Downtown, 614-6867800, jeffruby.com Hours: 5–10 p.m. mon–thu; 5–11 p.m. Fri–sat Price Range: $9–$48 appetizers; $22–$92 entrées Reservations: Accepted In Short: this Cincinnati-based steakhouse chain, the first Columbus location from restauratuer Jeff Ruby, offers top-flight steaks, a la carte sides and sushi in an over-the-top atmosphere. the wine list is extensive, ranging from $9 pours to $500 bottles of Cabernet sauvignon, and the service is formal, with flourishes like bananas Foster served tableside. you should go see Jeff Ruby’s to believe it, but let’s hope someone else is picking up the bill. HHHH (Excellent)

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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9/13/18 4:49 PM


too sweet and had a hummus-like consistency. But on a second try, the crispy garlic butter topping ($4) made for a lovely sharp flavor and a variety of textures. Bread and butter are served complimentary with every meal. Warm slices of rye and sourdough come to the table with a pâté-like selection of two butters (truffle and regular) and a parchment circle with Jeff Ruby’s logo on top—just so you don’t forget. From the appetizer menu, the seared scallops ($22) were perfectly cooked and served with all the best flavors: cucumbers, avocado and lime juice. And while the raw bar is a spectacle to the eyes, the reality of its breadth is sometimes a letdown. During one visit, only one variety of specialty oysters ($4.50 each) was available. Unlike some traditional steakhouses, this one has a sushi chef and offers a menu ranging from sashimi ($4–$10 apiece) to specialty rolls ($18–$42) to entrées like the Chirashi, a 12-piece chef’s selection with “enhanced presentation” for $64. I tried the Hamachi Tataki ($26), which was fantastic. A beautiful fan of thin, seared yellowtail tuna slices in a bath of miso ponzu were joined by black and white sesame seeds floating atop. Accompanying it were a snow-like pile of shredded radish, a nest of seaweed and bright green onions. The only downside was that the dish was served without a spoon, meaning the piquant broth, as much of a draw as the tuna, was unreachable. Sides are served a la carte and can be shared with the table. The award-winning baked macaroni and cheese ($13) came highly recBananas Foster

ommended. Cavatappi meets super-creamy cheese (the menu promises “six imported cheeses”) and a crispy top. Tangy Gruyere stands out, adding depth to the richness. Another promising side is the sweet truffle creamed corn ($13). Served in a small castiron pan, it takes the traditional Thanksgiving recipe and adds pieces of truffles and fresh parsley. The sweet corn is an ideal complement to Jeff Ruby’s steaks. Should there be room for dessert, the Bananas Foster for Two ($18) is an excellent close to a meal. One part performance and one part educational experience, the bananas are flambéed on a tableside cart with Disney-like flair. The ambiance? It’s about as subtle as the menu. From its stained glass bar ceiling to its velvet walls, uncountable chandeliers, glass jellyfish lamps and celebrity photos, the décor is a mish-mash of what might happen if someone with unlimited cash Googled, “What do rich people like?” Grabbing a seat in the bar is the simplest way to get a table without reservations, which are essential for the formal dining room and the basement, with its private seating for parties. In the bar, the giant, book-like menus are a bit unwieldy to navigate while seated at the smaller bistro tables. The restaurant places a heavy emphasis on wine (no surprise there) with a list—to give you an idea of its depth—that includes its own contents page. The selection is impressive, and the prices are hefty, with no bottles listed below $40, though half-bottles are appreciated. In addition to a beer list that includes

several Ohio brews, there is a sizable scotch selection and a handful of cocktails, like the Orange Cream Old-Fashioned ($13), which has the ability to pull you back to a different era. Live piano music and a slight cigar scent wafting from the patio help to accompany it. The service here is, of course, formal, with distinct roles delineated by distinct uniforms. Servers have their own assistants, and the hierarchy is in your face. Meanwhile, the image of female servers expertly traversing the bar in cocktail dresses and heels seems like an out-of-touch vestige in the post-Harvey Weinstein era. The actual quality of service was inconsistent. Courses and drinks were delivered flawlessly in some cases, with the food magically appearing at exactly the right time. On other occasions, I had awkward interactions. There was the bartender who chose to warn me that a glass of rosé would be expensive but provided no editorial when a more affluentlooking guest ordered the same glass. During another visit, sides were delivered 10 minutes after the mains. And during one memorable experience, a senior-level host scolded a new hostess in front of us for suggesting a poorly positioned table. Although he provided us with a better table, the memory of the hostess holding back tears as she apologized overshadowed the rest of the evening. Like the formal country clubs it resembles, Jeff Ruby’s is not for everyone. It celebrates an era in time, food and service that some have moved beyond. Yes, it’s gaudy, but it cooks a steak and offers a night out that one won’t soon forget. ◆

Hamachi Tataki

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Dining short order

Taco Heaven on the Hilltop El Ranchito does Mexican fare right: simply and affordably. By ERin EdwaRds

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Tacos and more at El Ranchito

Gorditas ($2.75) and sopes tortillas. The super-thin steak, El Ranchito Taqueria ($2.75) are underrated delisalty and tender, is a steal at 1275 brown rd., West side, cacies—how many sope spots $12.90. Other platters include 614-975-9164 have you heard about in the crispy-on-the-outside, town?—but they shouldn’t soft-in-the-middle mojarra be; they’re just not as easy to eat with your frita, or whole fried tilapia ($12.99). hands as a taco. The gordita is essentially Asked what the restaurant does best, its fat cousin, with the ingredients stuffed Miriam doesn’t hesitate to call out its soups, between thicker corn tortillas. Meanwhile, served only on the weekends because of sopes are disks of lightly fried masa (not as kitchen space and the time they take to thin, wide or as crispy as a tostada) that hold cook overnight. El Ranchito’s popular birria refried beans and other toppings. Whereas a ($10), a spicy goat stew (which she calls a taco’s tortillas hold the true star—the interior great hangover cure), entices customers to ingredients—the thicker masa dough, made arrive at 8 a.m. on Saturdays just to score a fresh daily for El Ranchito’s gorditas and bowl. Miriam says it often sells out by midsopes, is a true co-star. afternoon. I can vouch for this, so I’ll be back. Not to be overlooked is the selection of El Ranchito is open 10 a.m.–10 p.m. Tueslarge platters like carne asada, served with day through Friday and 8 a.m.–10 p.m. Satrice, beans, lettuce, tomatoes and warm urday and Sunday. ◆

photo: rob hardin

Located off the well-trodden restaurant track, there’s a cherry-red house on Brown Road near Green Lawn Cemetery that resembles a one-room schoolhouse of old. Except here at El Ranchito Taqueria, you get schooled in affordable Mexican home cooking by patriarch Rogelio Herrera and his family, who hail from the state of Michoacán. Some local taquerias, like Condado, have turned tacos into a trendy, customizable thing with multiple iterations of tortillas, sauces and toppings—washed down with enough tequila to drown myriad agave worms. And that’s fine. The nearly 4-year-old El Ranchito is something different—a no-frills, blue-collar spot where you can find Mexican family recipes for tacos, tortas, carne asada, pozole and more, simply prepared and presented. El Ranchito’s small dining room with jacko’-lantern-orange walls consists of eight booths, two tables and a small counter—nearly all filled on the weekends. The staff is warm, efficient and made up mostly of the Herrera family, says Miriam Herrera, Rogelio’s daughter, who runs the restaurant along with her father and her sister, Alejandra. To begin, skip the soda and order the sweet and cinnamon-y house-made horchata or the refreshing agua de Jamaica (hibiscus tea)—both $1.50–$3. You might also start with the guacamole ($3.50), a fresh and chunky variety served with freshly fried tortilla chips. Homemade salsa sits on all the tables in unassuming squeeze bottles—a green salsa referred to as mild (some will find it quite spicy) and a hot, red version with a tint that cautions: beware. The classic tacos ($2), served on corn tortillas with a protein, cilantro and onions, are indeed straightforward and excellent. Meat choices range from standard pollo (chicken) to flavorful adobada (marinated pork) to tender cabeza (beef head). Miriam says they added “supreme” tacos ($2.25) with cheese, lettuce and sour cream to appeal to American tastes. The same goes for the really large burritos ($6.50). Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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Start your

COMPLIMENTARY SUBSCRIPTION TODAY at columbusceo.com.

After hours with Kate Djupe When Kate Djupe last worked in a restaurant, she was a kitchen assistant at the popular handke’s Cuisine in the brewery District, which closed in 2009. these days she leads the baking program at service bar. the opportunity to work with executive chef Avishar barua and middle West spirits founders Ryan lang and brady Konya (and their team) fulfills her goal of helping good people make big ideas a reality. It’s the very same goal that drove her to open the Commissary in 2014, a commercial kitchen/incubator that has since changed hands and brands. We asked her where she and her family like to eat. —Jill Moorhead Fine Dining: Rockmill tavern. “I get excited about the special meals they host, because any time that chef Andrew smith is given some freedom to play, I want to taste the results.” Chinese: helen’s Asian Kitchen. “helen [Jiao] is back at the helm [after a brief hiatus], and her sichuan cauliflower has never been better.”

photo: courtesy kate djupe

photo: rob hardin

Comfort Food: sassafras bakery. “I love their carrot salad. And their sour cherry pie is my absolute most favorite pie in town. the crust is perfection.”

your neighborhood

gastropub seasona� • che�-driven

Breakfast: “Waffle house is the most satisfying. Prove me wrong.” Dessert: Pistacia Vera. “their cocoa buttermilk loaf is always at the top of the list for me.”

101BeerKitchen.com Dublin • Gahanna • Westerville OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Dining Craft

Double, Double Toil and Truckle Inside the making of Black Radish Creamery’s new cheddar By NiCOlE Rasul PhoTos By Tim JOhNsON

Since being named one of Columbus Monthly’s 2017 Tastemakers, John and Anne Reese, owners of Black Radish Creamery, have been busy not only making award-winning preserves and manning their North Market cheese shop, but also fine-tuning their fledgling cheese-making operation. This summer, the pair released a clothbound cheddar called Charlie’s Legend to the public. The young, 4-month-old version is mild and creamy with hints of butter. With several truckles, or tall cylinder-shaped cheese wheels, still resting in the aging room at their creamery outside of Granville, the duo plans to release a sharper, 9-month-aged variety of the cheddar this holiday season. While honing their skills in the cheese world and managing their shop, the Reeses have been closely evaluating Central Ohio’s artisanal cheese needs. “There really aren’t a lot of makers in Ohio crafting clothbound artisan cheddar,” Anne says. “We know that people love cheddar. It’s an easy, approachable cheese that everyone seems to be familiar with.” In addition to serving the young variety with charcuterie or on a cheese plate, the Reeses note that the milder version is fabulous in grilled cheese, on top of burgers or melted in a sauce to pour over macaroni. The older version, which contains less moisture and is not as pliable, is best savored on its own. “It needs to be the star,” John says about the 9-month-old cheddar. Charlie’s Legend is an homage to John’s grandfather, Charlie Mason, a larger-than-

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Cheese-making Terms to Know 158

Charlie’s Legend cheddar from Black Radish Creamery

life entrepreneur who served as a mentor to John. You can find the cheese at Black Radish’s stall in the North Market, at its farmers market stands in Worthington and Granville or in select Central Ohio stores.

To view a slideshow of the cheese-making process, visit columbusmonthly.com.

Cheesemonger: not to be confused with “cheesemaker,” a cheesemonger is a professional who knows cheese from a to Z. “they are like what a sommelier is to wine,” John reese explains. the american Cheese society offers a Certified Cheese Professional Exam to train these specialized cheese purveyors.

rennet: an enzyme used in cheesemaking that is extracted from the stomachs of young dairyconsuming animals like calves and lamb. the enzyme aids in the digestion process by curdling the milk. Plant-based rennet is also available.

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Crafting an Artisanal Clothbound Cheddar Clothbound, or bandaged, cheddar has deep roots in cheese-making tradition. After it fell by the wayside with the introduction of wax coating, American artisans are rediscovering the use of cloth to protect an aging cheese. the cloth allows greater moisture evaporation during the cheese’s maturation, creating a deep, complex flavor in the final creation.

“With cheese, time is part of the recipe,” John says. Cheddar-making is a scientific and labor-intensive process that involves significant stirring, heating, cutting, stacking and cleaning. to make a successful cheese, ingredients must be added or interacted with at the exact times noted in a recipe. here’s a look at black Radish Creamery’s process for making clothbound cheddar:

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1 black Radish starts with raw grassfed cow’s milk from the creamery’s “partner in farm,” stone Wall Dairy, located near Cambridge, ohio, and adds a customized blend of cheese cultures and rennet. this step ferments the milk and enables curd to form. the liquid byproduct, whey, is continually drained off the curds, as John Reese demonstrates above.

4

In a technique called cheddaring, the curds are pressed together to form a solid, dense mass that gets cut into blocks. these blocks are turned and stacked atop one another, which encourages the product to continually expel whey. Due to the considerable moisture loss during cheddaring, the final creation develops a compact and crumbly texture.

3 the blocks are then broken down by hand, the curds are salted, stirred once again and pressed into cloth-lined truckle molds. the molds are left in a cheese press for 24 hours.

t the Reeses then cover the clothbound truckles

in butter, a process unique to their cheddar— most operations use lard. According to John, this gives their cheddar a hint of butter in each bite. they also add sprigs of fresh thyme to the truckles, which serves as an artist’s stamp on the final product.

u the

truckles are placed in the aging room (as Anne Reese is doing, at right) where they are tenderly cared for with frequent brushing, patting and vacuuming while acquiring their flavor, texture and rind. When the cheese is ready to go to market, the truckles are removed from the aging room, undressed from their cloth and cut for sale.

Raclette: Pronounced “ra-clet” not “race-let,” the term is both the name of a semifirm cow’s-milk cheese as well as the technique of heating and melting the cheese and then scraping it onto a plate for consumption. the term is derived from the French term “racler,” meaning “to scrape.” At their north market shop, John and Anne Reese offer raclette on the lunch menu. the couple is preparing for the production of their own raclette, which will be available for sale in early 2019.

cheddaR: the name of this popular cheese is derived from the somerset County village in southwest England where it’s believed to have originated in the 12th century.

5

Gouda: Americans are notorious for mispronouncing the name of this mild cow’s-milk cheese, one of the most popular in the world. the word is pronounced “ghow-duh” not “goo-duh.” And if you’re in the netherlands, where Gouda originated, it’s actually “how-duh.” black Radish Creamery plans to release its artisanal Gouda to the public in several months.

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Dining Copy & tAstE Beer of The MonTh

Ill Mannered Brewing Ill Manna Slamma Style: Blonde Ale ABV: 4.8% Just because the weather has turned toward fall doesn’t mean beer drinkers should shrug off summery fare. Ill Mannered Brewing’s Ill Manna Slamma blonde ale is light-bodied, pouring clear and golden. The easy-drinking ale, available on draft in the Powell brewery’s new taproom, leans into the sweeter aspects of the malts. A light, citrusy touch from Centennial hops provides balance. It’s the ideal beer for enjoying autumn weather on a patio or while watching your favorite team. —Nicholas Dekker

THE SCOOP:

Out. The renovated market and event space will embrace a “shop local, be local” philosophy, offering local produce and provisions, craft beer and wine, a barista bar serving Crimson Cup coffee and more.

Restaurateur Megan Ada is bringing a new fast-casual ramen and sushi concept to the Short North. Ada, who also owns Asterisk Supper Club and Sunny Street Café Westerville, plans to open Ampersand Asian Supper Club inside the new Brunner Building at 940 N. High St. by the end of 2018. The 50-seat, 2,000-square-foot eatery will feature a full sake bar, sake-based cocktails, Japanese whiskeys and beers.

A local franchise of Rush Bowls, a fast-casual chain out of Boulder, Colorado, is opening its first Central Ohio location in November at 264 W. Lane Ave., across from the Ohio State campus. The eatery offers açai bowls and other meals-in-a-bowl featuring fruits, vegetables, granola, protein and vitamins. Rush Bowls of Columbus, which is owned by Hyde Park Capital co-founder John McDonald, expects to open several new locations in the region in the near future.

openings, Closings and other loCal food news

The Campus-area breakfast spot Hang Over Easy plans to open a second location in Columbus this fall at 51 Parsons Ave. in Olde Towne East. Black Creek Bistro called the Parsons Avenue space home for 10 years until it closed last year. Hisham’s food truck hit the streets in September, serving South African Cape Malay cuisine. Cape Malays are an ethnic group in South Africa with Southeast Asian ancestry. The menu includes chicken, vegetable and beef curries plus hand pies, samosas and koesisters, traditional sticky doughnuts sprinkled with coconut. The Market at Flint Station is holding a grand reopening celebration from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 27. The 1890s-era building, located at 225 Park Road near Westerville, was formerly home to the Flint Carry160

Tostadalicious, a fast-casual Mexican concept, opened last month at 20 S. State St. in Uptown Westerville. Owner Jose Becerra’s menu focuses on tostadas and Mexican dishes on the lighter, more healthful end of the spectrum. Becerra is looking at adding a second location in Polaris. Sammy’s on 5th has replaced the Toledobased burger spot Bar 145 at 955 W. Fifth Ave. in the Fifth by Northwest neighborhood. The French crêperie C’est Si Bon Café, located at 2258 E. Main St. in Bexley, is expected to close on Sept. 30. Little Lebanon Mediterranean has closed its fast-casual eatery on Sancus Boulevard to focus on its catering operation, which is located at 2630 Billingsley Road.

EvEnTS

THE JAMES BEARd FOundATiOn’S CELEBRiTy CHEF TOuR dinnER When: 6:30 p.m. thursday, oct. 18, 2018 What: Gallerie bar & bistro executive chef bill Glover once again hosts this national dinner series when it swings through town this fall. the cocktail hour and multicourse dinner is a chance to experience cooking from some of the region’s best chefs and get a taste of what happens at the famed James beard house in new york City. Where: Gallerie bar & bistro at hilton Downtown Columbus, 401 n. high st., short north Tickets: $135; visit jamesbeard.org/ celebrity-chef-tour Columbus monthly’S BEST RESTAuRAnTS When: 6 p.m. tuesday, oct. 30, 2018 What: Join Columbus Monthly for our inaugural event showcasing the city’s top culinary talent, as featured in our Restaurant Guide. the evening will kick off with a onehour welcome reception with hors d’oeuvres followed by a multicourse seated meal with wine pairings. Where: the Estate at new Albany, 5216 Forest Dr., new Albany Tickets: Visit columbusmonthly. com/bestrestaurants

photo: jodi miller

Chef Jack Moore (Watershed Kitchen & Bar) will cook at JBf’s Celebrity Chef Tour Dinner.

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Dining produCt

Brian Ratliff and his dog, Brewster, on the patio of Endeavor Brewing Co.

Bar Snacks for Spot

Cheers, Big Ears! star

Three local breweries have partnered with Craft Beer Biscuits for a win-win.

photo: jodi miller

photo: jodi miller

By REnEE CasTEEl COOk

An open garage and the smell of brewing beer has long been a signal for Brian Ratliff’s neighbors to head over and taste his latest creations, including treats for their dogs. A longtime home brewer, Ratliff started making dog biscuits about three years ago after reading an article about the health benefits of spent grains, protein- and fiber-packed super grains that are a byproduct of the brewing process. After testing recipes for his own four-legged friend, Brewster, and others in his Worthington neighborhood, he met business partner Robby Ringnalda, a fellow entrepreneur and dog lover. The pair decided to launch Craft Beer Biscuits in January 2018. Around the same time, Ratliff got to know Gavin Meyers, co-founder of North High Brewing, and learned that the brewery had

nearly 8,000 pounds of spent grains each week—so much that North High was paying to have it hauled away. Realizing the opportunity, Ratliff and Ringnalda pitched the idea of co-branding Craft Beer Biscuits to North High, Four String Brewing Co. and Endeavor Brewing Co. Endeavor CEO and owner Scott Talmage calls the partnership symbiotic. “They take our spent grains, which is a waste product for us, and turn them into nutritious treats for dogs. We also happen to love dogs at Endeavor Brewing Co., so the fit is completely natural,” he says. Craft Beer Biscuits craftbeerbiscuits.com

ting this month , pet parents can ta ke advantage of ohio’s new law ting dogs on re permitstauran and bar patios. t

Craft Beer Biscuits come in a clever beer-mug shape with a lineup that includes its best-selling Jabba The Mutt (peanut butter), Unicorgi (apple and cinnamon) and Scarlett & Greyhound (strawberry and apple). With product placement in locations that don’t typically feature beer—from farmers markets to veterinarians’ offices, pet shops to grocery aisles—the breweries are able to get in front of new consumers. “As a local business, we always look to partner with other communityoriented companies in Central Ohio,” says Mark Vitt, co-founder of the retail shop/ grooming center Mutts & Co. “So working with Craft Beer Biscuits made total sense. Plus, their combination of local brewery grains and healthy ingredients is exactly what our customers love.” ® OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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let’s eat our guide to the best restaurants in Columbus

3 Brothers Diner Diners | 3090 Southwest Blvd., Grove City, 614-317-7798. owned by three brothers from oaxaca, mexico, this family-friendly spot combines american, mexican and Cuban diner fare on one menu. you’ll find a variety of omelets, egg scrambles, breakfast burritos, French toast and pancakes, plus entrées like Cuban roasted chicken, Cajun pasta, jambalaya and more. BLD $ 6-1-Pho Vietnamese | 4386 N. High St., Clintonville, 614-706-4903. a fast-casual restaurant where diners can build their own noodle soups, sandwiches and noodle salads—all of which pull flavors from classic Vietnamese cuisine. LD $$ 101 Beer Kitchen Gastropub | 7509 Sawmill Rd., Dublin, 614-210-1010; 397 Stoneridge Ln., Gahanna, 614-934-5501; 817 Polaris Pkwy., Westerville, 614-776-4775. at this expertly executed gastropub (its owners could school others in the art of developing a restaurant), craft brews are paired with made-from-scratch, seasonal dishes. BRLD $$ 1808 American Bistro American | 29 E. Winter St., Delaware, 740-417-4373. a combination of the present and the past using both contemporary and classic elements in décor and cooking. the cocktails, brunch and main entrées are highlights. BRLD $$$ Aab India Indian | 1470 Grandview Ave., Grandview, 614-4862800; 6642 Sawmill Rd., Dublin, 614-791-7900; 2400 E. Main St., Bexley, 614-237-5500. aab india boasts a large menu of authentic northern indian-style curry offerings, plus papadi chaat, chicken tandoori and shrimp bhuna. LD $$ Acre American | 1717 Northwest Blvd., Fifth by Northwest, 614-826-2898; 2700 N. High St., Old North, 614-4479400. Fast food gets a farm-to-table makeover at quickserve acre. dishes like bowls, wraps, salads and tacos are heavy on whole grains, fresh produce and smartly sourced proteins. BBRLD $$ Addis Restaurant Ethiopian | 2750 Cleveland Ave., North Side, 614-2698680. addis restaurant brings ethiopian to a part of town otherwise dominated by somali restaurants. the injera here is about as good as it gets with traditional dishes like tibs, kitfo and doro wot. LD $$ Akai Hana Japanese | 1173 Old Henderson Rd., Northwest Side,

614-451-5411. this entertaining Japanese bento shop boasts some of the city’s best sushi and a wide range of Japanese and Korean entrées. LD $$ Asterisk Supper Club American | 14 N. State St., Westerville, 614-776-4633. owner megan ada offers teatime and suppertime in a bibliophile’s dream atmosphere. Craft cocktails are served at a handsome bar, while the eclectic menu leans on comfort foods like grilled Pb&Js, meatloaf and chicken and amish noodles. BRLD $$ Bangkok Grocery & Restaurant Thai | 3277 Refugee Rd., East Side, 614-231-8787. a family-owned grocery and eatery specializing in authentic thai fare for more than 30 years. go for some of the city’s best pad thai, tom yum soup, nam tok and thai curries. LD $ Barcelona Spanish | 263 E. Whittier St., German Village, 614-4433699. the edge has softened, but longstanding barcelona is still a classic for approachable spanish tapas and other palate-expanding fare with an american influence. the patio is one of the most charming in the city. LD $$$ Belle’s Bread Japanese | 1168 Kenny Centre Mall, Upper Arlington, 614-451-7110. tucked away in the same complex as akai hana, this French-inspired Japanese bakery and café is known for its outstanding pastries, cakes and treats. it also serves tea, coffee and a lunch menu with sandwiches and crêpes. BL $ Black Radish Creamery Soup & Sandwiches | 59 Spruce St., Short North, 614517-9520. this north market cheese shop also offers cheese plates and traditional raclette. BLD $

Danny’s Deli Soup & Sandwiches | 37 W. Broad St., Downtown 614-4697040. the iconic downstairs deli specializes in classic deli sandwiches like the grilled reuben, pastrami and turkey melt. BL $ Dan’s Drive In Diner | 1881 S. High St., South Side, 614-444-7590. a kitschy 1950s south side diner complete with red vinyl booths; open for breakfast and lunch. go for the breakfast skillets, pancakes, meatloaf, mashed potatoes and gravy, hot roast beef sandwich and burgers. BL $ Denmark on High Small Plates | 463 N. High St., Short North, 614-9146700. a european-style cocktail bar focusing on vintage and modern drinks, craft ohio beers and seasonal small plates. on the second floor of the yankee on high building. D $$ Diamonds Ice Cream Mexican | 3870 Main St., Hilliard, 614-971-5490; 5461 Bethel Sawmill Ctr., Northwest Side, 614-718-2980. this ice cream shop serves a dizzying array of mexican desserts, juices and snacks. go for the excellent paletas (popsicles) with flavors that range from the basic to the bizarre. Fruit lovers should try the locas, eye-catching towers of fresh fruit spiked with spicy and sweet toppings. LD $ Due Amici Italian | 67 E. Gay St., Downtown, 614-224-9373. exposed brick walls and modern black and white furniture give this downtown italian eatery an upscale feel. BRLD $$ The Eagle Southern | 790 N. High St., Short North, 614-745-3397. this southern-style restaurant from the Cincinnatibased owners of bakersfield features amish fried chicken, spoonbread, craft beers and a large patio along high street. LD $

BLunch American | 2973 N. High St., Clintonville, 614-641-7501. this bright and friendly eatery covered in murals from Columbus artists offers creative breakfast dishes until mid-afternoon. you’ll find brunch cocktails, a massive breakfast Club sandwich and a variety of pancakes and eggs benedicts. BBRL $

Eddie Merlot’s Steakhouse | 1570 Polaris Pkwy., Polaris, 614-433-7307. this high-end steakhouse from Fort Wayne, indiana, offers a menu of prime aged beef and seafood, plus classics like chateaubriand and steak diane served tableside. as the name implies, wine takes top billing here. D $$$$

Copious American | 520 S. High St., Brewery District, 614-947-1520. this upscale yet casual restaurant offers a seasonal comfort food menu and happy hour. the restaurant is located above its sister live music venue, notes, inside the mcgowan building. BRLD $$$

El Camino Inn Mexican | 238 S. Fourth St., Downtown, 614-220-8877. this retro, ’70s-style taco shop from the owners of the rossi, Club 185 and little Palace is a bar first, restaurant second. stop in for cheap beer or a margarita, and stick around for tasty mexican bar fare, including tacos and tostadas. LD $

Let’s Eat comprises Columbus Monthly editors’ picks and is updated monthly based on available space. if you notice an error, please email eedwards@columbusmonthly.com.

$$$$ $$$ $$ $

average entree $26 and higher average entree $16–$25 average entree $11–$15 average entree under $10

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- Valet available

Kitchen open late outdoor Patio seating

b breakfast br brunch l lunch d

dinner

Critics' Choice Columbus Classic

NEW! restaurant has opened within the last few months.

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El Ranchito Taqueria Mexican | 1275 Brown Rd., West Side, 614-975-9164. An affordable, family-run spot for authentic mexican fare on the hilltop, featuring horchata, tacos, tortas, sopes, burritos and entrée platters like carne asada. the restaurant opens at 8 a.m. on weekends when customers line up for bowls of birria (goat stew) and menudo (beef tripe soup). LD $ Elevator Brewery & Draught Haus Brewpub | 161 N. High St., Downtown, 614-228-0500. In the historic bott brothers building Downtown, this brewpub’s stunning stained glass is contrasted by modern touches like a bar equipped with flat-screen tVs. similarly, on the menu it’s fish and chips and wings alongside vegetable risotto and steaks. LD $$ Figlio Wood Fired Pizza Italian | 1369 Grandview Ave., Fifth by Northwest, 614-4818850; 3712 Riverside Dr., Upper Arlington, 614-459-6575. the vibe is simple and relaxed at both locations of this contemporary neighborhood restaurant with Italian dishes, wood-fired pizzas and a hearty wine list inspired by the travels of owners Peter and laurie Danis. D $$ Final Cut Steak & Seafood Steakhouse | 200 Georgesville Rd., West Side, 614308-4540. A contemporary American steakhouse inside hollywood Casino featuring usDA prime beef, Wagyu beef, Colorado lamb, lobster and an extensive wine list. D $$$$ Flatiron Bar & Diner American | 129 E. Nationwide Blvd., Downtown, 614-4610033. this casual restaurant under the direction of executive chef/general manager steve nicholson is housed in a timeless building that boasts an intricately carved wooden

bar. the menu features barbecue and Cajun classics such as gumbo and fried oysters, plus some global surprises like szechuan chicken wings. LD $$ Flavor 91 Bistro Burgers | 5186 E. Main St., Whitehall, 614-845-8840. this family-owned craft burger joint on the border of Whitehall and Reynoldsburg is dedicated to serving local, organic and fresh ingredients. Go for the flavorful salads, the berbere-rubbed chicken wings, the Flavor burger and the friendly atmosphere. LD $ Flip Side Burgers | 3945 Easton Station, Easton, 614-472-3547. this burger and shake joint with a heavy emphasis on local ingredients (burgers are made with ohio-raised, grass-fed beef) serves great cocktails and boozy milkshakes, plus craft beers. LD $ Gokul Café Indian | 2685 Federated Blvd., Dublin, 614-766-2233. Chef-owner santosh sheregar has a reputation for crafting vibrant southern Indian fare—a cuisine that relies on rice, lentils and aromatic spices. his Gokul Café continues to set the bar high, offering spicy and enticing Indian dishes in a sparse but clean setting. LD $$ Grass Skirt Tiki Room Polynesian | 105 N. Grant Ave., Downtown, 614-4293650. Rum drinks are always flowing at this dark and neon-glowing tiki bar from liz lessner’s Columbus Food league. From the kitchen, it’s hawaiian- and Polynesianstyle food, with King’s hawaiian sweet roll sandwiches, coconut chicken and teriyaki aioli. BRLD $$ The Guild House Contemporary American | 624 N. High St., Short

North, 614-280-9780. Cameron mitchell goes contemporary at the Guild house with a smart collection of small plates, house-made pasta and many dishes crafted with locally sourced ingredients. sleek with a rustic edge, the 140-seat restaurant and bar is connected to the Joseph hotel. BBRLD $$$ Harvest Kitchen & Bar American | 2376 E. Main St., Bexley, 614-824-4081; 2885 N. High St., Clintonville, 614-947-7133. From the owners of harvest Pizzeria, these locations offer the same wood-kissed pies plus salads, sandwiches, burgers and more. LD $$ Harvest Pizzeria Pizza | 45 N. High St., Dublin, 614-726-9919; 495 S. Fourth St., German Village, 614-824-1769. some of the best wood-fired pies in Central ohio are served at this growing group of pizzerias. LD $$ Harvey & Ed’s Delicatessen | 698 N. High St., Short North, 614-6414040. this nostalgic concept from Cameron mitchell Restaurants is inspired by new york delis. located in the former home of Rigsby’s Kitchen, this carryout/ dine-in restaurant gives a contemporary twist to classics like matzo ball soup, cured fish platters with block’s bagels, Reubens and cheese blintzes. A full bar offers cocktails, beer and wine, plus house sodas and egg creams. BRLD $$$ Heirloom Café Café | 1871 N. High St., Campus, 614-292-2233. the fresh and seasonal café located inside the Wexner Center for the Arts always seems to have whatever we’re craving—homemade soup, sandwiches, salads, pastries and coffee drinks. BL $

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Himalayan Grille Nepalese/Tibetan | 1307 Stoneridge Dr., Gahanna, 614-472-0211. A friendly spot serving himalayan fare, like bhatmas sadeko, momos and vegetarian or meat thalis. Also serves familiar Indian fare like dal makhani, tandoori dishes and curries. LD $ Hong Kong House Chinese | 1831 Henderson Rd., Upper Arlington, 614538-9288. Gone are the days of never-ending piles of serve-it-yourself crab legs and egg rolls at hong Kong buffet. the henderson Road eatery has changed its name to hong Kong house and given its menu new focus, switching to a sichuan-heavy menu and table-service format. the result is the most authentic sichuan fare in town. LD $$ Jack & Benny’s American | 12 E. Broad St., Downtown, 614-745-2313; 2563 N. High St., Old North, 614-263-0242. this old north-area breakfast favorite for students and locals alike now has a second location Downtown. Fans clamor here for classic diner fare, breakfast all day, pancakes and sandwiches. BL $ Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams Ice Cream | 59 Spruce St., Short North, 614-2289960; 714 N. High St., Short North, 614-294-5364; 900 Mohawk St., German Village, 614-445-6513; 1281 Grandview Ave., Grandview, 614-488-2680; 2156 E. Main St., Bexley, 614-231-5364; 4247 N. High St., Clintonville, 614-447-0500; 1 W. Bridge St., Dublin, 614792-5364; 8 N. Liberty St., Powell, 614-846-1060; 3998 Gramercy St., Easton, 614-476-5364. Jeni’s creative and seasonal ice cream flavors are renowned across the nation. think salty Caramel ice cream, ice cream sundaes and ice cream sandwiches. LD $ Katalina’s Latin American | 1105 Pennsylvania Ave., Harrison West, 614-294-2233. Expect an eclectic menu of latinleaning items at this tiny café known for its chalkboard walls, scratch-made salads and sandwiches and killer patio in the warmer months. BLD $ Katzinger’s Delicatessen Deli | 475 S. Third St., German Village, 614-2283354. A 30-year veteran in German Village, Katzinger’s is a traditional East Coast-style deli, with 60-plus sandwiches, potato latkes, pickle barrels, specialty foods and more than 100 cheeses. BLD $ The Keep Liquor Bar French | 50 W. Broad St., Mezzanine Level, LeVeque Tower, Downtown, 614-745-0322. With a modern take on the French brasserie, the Keep strives for leVeque tower luxury without being overly fussy. Expect a menu of classic steaks, seafood towers and an old Worldleaning wine list. the adjacent bar is darkly lit with an emphasis on craft cocktails. BLD $$$ Kihachi Japanese Restaurant Japanese | 2667 Federated Blvd., Northwest Side, 614-764-9040. Chef-owner Ryuji “mike” Kimura’s passion for fresh, high-quality ingredients is reflected in his always-changing menu of traditional Japanese fare. D $$$$ Kittie’s Café Coffee & Desserts | 2424 E. Main St., Bexley, 614-9295000. located adjacent to Gramercy books, this surf shop-inspired café is an expansion of Kittie’s German Village sweet shop. the limited menu includes breakfast sandwiches, cinnamon rolls, scones, cupcakes, stumptown coffee, wine and cocktails. BL $

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Little Eater Contemporary American | 4215 N. High St., Clintonville, 614-732-5829; 59 Spruce St., Short North, 614670-4375. beets, lentils, kale and quinoa have a home at Cara mangini’s “produce-inspired” north market stall, which sells healthful seasonal salads by the scoop, crostini, frittatas and quiches. A larger, eat-in location is now open in Clintonville. BLD $ Little Palace Pub Grub | 240 S. Fourth St., Downtown, 614-461-8404. From the creative minds behind the Rossi and Club 185 comes a revamping of this longtime Downtown eatery featuring fried cheese curds, pizza, sandwiches and burgers. BRLD $$ Local Cantina Mexican | 101 Mill St., Gahanna, 614-337-1977; 1423 Grandview Ave., Grandview, 614-488-6146; 3126 N. High St., Clintonville, 614-754-8554; 743 S. High St., Brewery District, 614-564-9775; 3975 Main St., Hilliard, 614-3634931; 667 N. Cleveland Ave., Westerville, 614-394-8720. these kitschy, mexican-themed neighborhood bars with a heavy focus on craft beers also happen to serve good, Americanized mexican fare, like fajitas, quesadillas and tacos, plus self-serve chips and salsa. LD $ Los Guachos Taqueria Mexican | 7370 Sawmill Rd., Dublin, 614-726-9185; 5221 Godown Rd., Northwest Side, 614-538-0211; 1376 Cherry Bottom Rd., Gahanna, 614-471-4717. the brick-and-mortar version of the popular taco truck (461 Commerce sq., West side) offers all the truck favorites—authentic tacos, tortas and gringas—and, of course, the city’s best al pastor. LD $ Lupo Spanish | 2124 Arlington Ave., Upper Arlington, 614-9145455. this new tapas spot from la tavola’s Rick and Krista lopez is a collaboration with fishmonger Ian holmes, who oversees the in-house oyster bar. Chef todd Elder has been tapped to execute a menu of seasonal small plates combining spanish and Italian influences. the full bar focuses on aperitivo-inspired cocktails and a curated list featuring spanish and Portuguese wines. LD $$ The Market Italian Village Mediterranean | 1022 Summit St., Italian Village, 614745-2147. What used to be a shady carryout is now a hip destination. the market offers espresso drinks and baked goods, juxtaposed with fine dining fare. BBRLD $$ Martini Modern Italian Italian | 445 N. High St., Short North, 614-224-8259. Cameron mitchell’s revamped short north staple offers classic Italian cooking in a modern, vibrant setting. D $$$ Max & Erma’s American | 55 Nationwide Blvd., Downtown, 614228-5555. this homegrown chain boasts a neighborhood-tavern vibe mixed with comfort-fare classics like burgers, sandwiches and pasta. LD $ Mazah Mediterranean Eatery Mediterranean | 1453 Grandview Ave., Grandview, 614-488-3633. A modest mom-and-pop eatery with new digs just a few steps down from its original spot in Grandview. With more room to grow, you’ll now find a full bar to complement the authentic middle Eastern-style fare, including kibbe balls, lamb kebabs and mujadara. LD $$ McCarthy’s Wildflower Café American | 3420 Indianola Ave., Clintonville, 614-2622233. Cozy neighborhood restaurant serving made-

from-scratch comfort food, with pot roast, meatloaf, southern fried chicken and sunday brunch. BBRLD $ Melt Bar & Grilled Pub Grub | 840 N. High St., Short North, 614-453-1150; 4206 Worth Ave., Easton, 614-934-6020. the Cleveland-based kitschy bar is all about one thing: grilled cheese. here, you’ll get the expected plain cheese as well as odd variations, like two slices of texas-style toast stuffed with pierogi, sauerkraut and cheese. LD $$ Menya Noodle House Japanese | 331 W. Bridge St., Dublin, 614-210-0222. this family-friendly restaurant features a variety of excellent, traditional Japanese ramens. We recommend the pungent black garlic tonkotsu (pork bone) broth, topped with pork belly. It’s ramen as ramen should be and a bargain considering the quality and quantity. LD $$ Min Ga Korean Restaurant Korean | 800 Bethel Rd., Northwest Side, 614-457-7331. this friendly strip-mall spot serves Korean specialities like kimchi, bibimbap, bulgogi and gopchang.LD $$ Mitchell’s Ocean Club Seafood | 4002 Easton Station, Easton, 614-416-2582. With wood-paneled décor, live piano music and martinis shaken tableside, the ocean Club evokes the Rat Pack era. on the menu, expect high-end seafood like yellowfin tuna, teriyaki salmon and jumbo lump crab cakes. D $$$$ Momo Ghar Nepalese/Tibetan | 59 Spruce St., Short North, 614495-6666; 1265 Morse Rd., North Side, 614-749-2901. Phuntso lama’s modest lunch counters inside north market and saraga International Grocery specialize in momos, the handmade dumplings that she and her crew make by the hundreds, weekly. no trip is complete without the best-seller, jhol momo. LD $ Moretti’s of Arlington Italian | 2124 Tremont Ctr., Upper Arlington, 614-486-2333. this welcoming, casual eatery is the place for zesty ItalianAmerican food with homemade pasta, chicken Parmesan, Veal moretti and the made-for-two Italian Plate. D $$ Moshi Sushi Bar Japanese | 2152 E. Main St., Bexley, 614-732-0641. you’ll find a mix of traditional and modern Japanese entrées and sushi at this bexley spot, with moshi Fish & Chips, shabu shabu, o-h-I-o Roll and moshi King Crab Roll. LD $$ Nida’s Thai on High Thai | 976 N. High St., Short North, 614-299-9199. A quirky, modern short north eatery offering a mix of traditional and trendy thai dishes. LD $$ The North Market Misc. | 59 Spruce St., Short North, 614-463-9664. In the heart of Columbus, the north market features local vendors in a gourmet market atmosphere. Expect world flavors, including barbecue, Vietnamese, mediterranean, ice cream and more. BLD $ Northstar Café American | 951 N. High St., Short North, 614-298-9999; 4241 N. High St., Clintonville, 614-784-2233; 4015 Townsfair Way, Easton, 614-532-5444; 109 S. State St., Westerville, 614-394-8992. northstar’s imaginative menu has a healthful emphasis on organic ingredients served in a casual, order-at-the-counter café setting. At peak times, it’s common to see diners lined up for the beetladen veggie burger, flatbreads, salads, rice-and-veggie bowls and oversized cookies. BBRLD $$

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Old Mohawk Restaurant Pub Grub | 819 Mohawk St., German Village, 614444-7204. this German Village favorite housed in a historic building is rumored to have ties to Prohibition. on the menu is standard American bar fare, including the famed turtle soup. LD $

in a scalding hot stone bowl with crispy rice on the bottom. LD $$

Philco Bar + Diner American | 747 N. High St., Short North, 614-299-9933. the diner gets a modern touch from the owners of the Rossi and little Palace. A sleek gray-and-green atmosphere is paired with a fun menu of hushpuppies, johnnycake sliders, pork shoulder pot roast and, of course, breakfast all day. BLD $$

Rockmill Tavern Gastropub | 503 S. Front St., Brewery District, 614-732-4364. lancaster brewer matthew barbee teams up with chef Andrew smith (formerly of the Rossi, salt & Pine) for barbee’s first restaurant venture. housed in the historic Worly building, the tavern’s jumping-off point is Rockmill brewery’s impressive list of belgian-style beers. tavern fare is in good hands with smith, whose menu includes burrata, a spicy chicken sandwich, daily fish special and Angus rib-eye. BBRLD $$

Red Door BBQ Barbecue | 177 S. Cypress Ave., Franklinton, 614-5577469. Chef Aaron Channels puts tlC into his cooking at this Franklinton carryout. Go for the smoky, dry-rubbed spare ribs, rib tips, scratch mac ’n’ cheese and cinnamony bread pudding. LD $

The Rossi American | 895 N. High St., Short North, 614-299-2810. A perennially packed short north hot spot, diners flock here for inventive bar food (think gourmet pizza, lamb lollipops and grilled Caesar salad) in a new-meets-old atmosphere straight out of manhattan. D $$

Refectory Restaurant & Wine Shop French | 1092 Bethel Rd., Northwest Side, 614451-9774. the most accomplished of Columbus’ French restaurants might put more kitchen effort into a single plate than an ordinary restaurant does into an entire menu. Inside this church-turned-fine-dining spot, expect impeccable service and a world-class wine cellar to pair with your meal. D $$$$

Sassafras Bakery Café & Bakery | 657 High St., Worthington, 614-781-9705. owner A.J. Perry got her start at the olde Worthington summer Farmers market and now serves homecooked desserts (grab a slice of apple pie), pastries, quiche and soup using locally sourced ingredients in her Worthington shop. BL $

Restaurant Silla Korean | 1802 Henderson Rd., Upper Arlington, 614459-5990. you’ll find real-deal Korean cuisine and a menu with semi-explanatory color photos at this casual restaurant. their bibimbap is a textbook example of how the dish should be done—served

Scali Ristorante Italian | 1903 State Route 256, Reynoldsburg, 614-7597764. this strip mall gem opened by Frank and Judy scali in 1993 pulls off sophisticated Italian-American fare with the genuine warmth of a neighborhood institution. the veal Parmesan and classic lasagna give red sauce a good name. D $$$

Schmidt’s Restaurant & Sausage Haus German | 240 E. Kossuth St., German Village, 614444-6808. hoist a stein of beer and treat your stomach to some hearty German food and culture at this longstanding German Village restaurant popular with out-of-towners and locals alike. bring a friend to help you enjoy huge portions of sausage, Weiner schnitzel, bavarian cabbage rolls and cream puffs. LD $$ Schokko Art Café Contemporary American | 480 E. Broad St., Downtown, 614-221-8300. Chef laura Richmond recently took over the kitchen at the Columbus museum of Art’s house café. Expect a menu of soups, salads, sandwiches and desserts to accompany a fantastic setting overlooking the museum’s sculpture garden. LD $$ Service Bar Contemporary American | 1230 Courtland Ave., Short North, 614-947-1231. From middle West spirits comes this well-appointed restaurant run by executive chef Avishar barua. Excellent seasonal cocktails (often featuring the distillery’s oyo spirits) are served at a gorgeous antique bar. barua’s playful menu offers a mix of shareable plates and entrées that express his command of modern techniques and sense of nostalgia. D $$$ Shrimp Hut Seafood | 61 S. Hamilton Rd., Whitehall, 614-866- 6400. It’s no surprise that the batter-dipped shrimp are the musthave at this small Whitehall joint dedicated to fried seafood. Don’t miss the side of fried green tomatoes. LD $$ Starliner Diner Diners | 4121 Main St., Hilliard, 614-529-1198. After 21 years in its Cemetery Road location, starliner moved into a former post office in old hilliard. this funky

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diner serves giant helpings of zesty, latin-leaning comfort food at breakfast, lunch and dinner. BLD $ Stav’s Diner Diners | 2932 E. Broad St., Bexley, 614-725-4330. A friendly, classic American diner with all-day breakfast dishes like pancakes, omelets and bElt sandwiches. Classic lunch items like burgers and club sandwiches share space on the menu with Greek favorites like gyros and house-made baklava. BL $

BeautiFeel Trunk Show Friday, Oct 26 10am - 4pm

Tasi Café Café | 680 N. Pearl St., Short North, 614-222-0788. A place where customers order at the counter and choose a table, tasi Café uses only top-notch ingredients on its madefrom-scratch menu with standouts like huevos rancheros, artisanal sandwiches and lobster mac and cheese. BL $ Tony’s Italian Ristorante Italian | 16 W. Beck St., Brewery District, 614-224-8669. In business since 1982, this white-tablecloth brewery District stalwart offers a blend of traditional and modern Italian-American food, with lasagne, shrimp scampi, veal saltimbocca and tony’s own Fettuccini. LD $$$ The Top Steak House Steakhouse | 2891 E. Main St., Bexley, 614-2318238. For 60 years, this bexley palace of beef has offered award-winning, high-end cuisine (filet mignon, pork and lamb chops and seafood) in a dimly lit, vintage, 1960s-looking haunt. D $$$ Trillium Kitchen & Patio Contemporary American | 2333 N. High St., Old North, 614-369-4888. Chef bradley balch (most recently of the sycamore) and general manager michael Kulikowski opened their globe-traversing restaurant and wine bar last year in the former home of Alana’s Food & Wine. the interior and patio have gotten a major refresh, while the menu continues to showcase balch’s penchant for seafood and seasonal ingredients. D $$$

e-newsletter Your backstage pass to the Arch City

Trism Contemporary American | 1636 N. High St., Campus, 614-369-1450. this fast-casual eatery and bar by A&R Creative Group brings healthful eating to the university District. serving smoothies, smoothie bowls and lunch and dinner entrée bowls. BLD $ Tucci’s Contemporary American | 35 N. High St., Dublin, 614792-3466. A Dublin standby has gotten a welcome shakeup in the form of dining room renovations and a menu revamp. It’s now a straightforward steak-andseafood spot with a huge patio and more than 200 wines in the cellar. BRLD $$$ Uptown Deli & Brew Deli & Brewpub | 41 N. State St., Westerville, 614-8912337. Deli meets brewery at this white-tiled uptown Westerville spot that’s three in one: an old-school deli, a restaurant serving fancy deli classics and the home of temperance Row brewing Co. LD $$

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Valter’s at the Maennerchor German | 976 S. High St., Brewery District, 614-4443531. the Columbus maennerchor singing society (founded in 1848) enlisted the help of Valter Veliu to run this kitchen out of the German heritage house. Expect well-made German fare, such as stout bratwurst, schweinshaxe and an excellent German potato salad. there’s a beer garden to boot. BRLD $$ Veranico Kitchen & Provisions Soups & Sandwiches | 401 N. Front St., Arena District,

614-670-7423. A healthy option for Arena District workers and hockey fans from the owners of market 65. Expect a good selection of salads, grain bowls, panini, flatbreads, soups, juice and more. LD $$ Veritas Contemporary American | 11 W. Gay St., Downtown, 614-745-3864. Chef Josh Dalton’s Veritas recently moved from modest Delaware digs to a grander space in the Citizens building at high and Gay streets. Expect a menu of small plates and a chef’s tasting menu meticulously curated by cooking geeks, plus an exhilarating cocktail list and wine. D $$$ Villa Nova Ristorante Italian | 5545 N. High St., Worthington, 614-8465777. A family-owned Italian eatery that’s a local favorite for its red-sauce Italian cuisine (manicotti, lasagna and ravioli), no-frills pizza and ice-cold beer. LD $$ Watershed Kitchen & Bar Contemporary American | 1145 Chesapeake Ave., Ste. D, Fifth by Northwest, 614-357-1936. Watershed complements its distillery with a handsome and proudly midwestern restaurant and bar. the bar’s seasonal cocktail menu is always entertaining and top-shelf, while executive chef Jack moore’s menu emphasizes quality product and shareable plates. his dishes are probably best explored via the chef’s tasting menu. D $$$ Wolf’s Ridge Brewing Contemporary American | 215 N. Fourth St., Downtown, 614-429-3936. French- and California-cuisine-inspired Wolf’s Ridge is a truly delightful reflection of how we enjoy fine dining today—a happy marriage of high-end cooking and pints of house-crafted beer. BRLD $$$ The Worthington Inn American | 649 High St., Worthington, 614-885-2600. A cozy, old country inn with elegantly restored dining rooms makes an intimate setting to enjoy traditional and modern dishes. take a seat by the bar for the more casual pub menu. BRLD $$$ Wycliff’s Kitchen African | 2492 Home Acre Dr., Northeast Side, 614-7723461. the gregarious and charming Wycliff nduati is usually on hand to guide diners through the menu at Kenyan eatery Wycliff’s Kitchen. Dishes such as the karanga mbuzi (goat stew) make Wycliff’s a worthy destination. be sure to pair dinner with notable sides like pilau (seasoned rice with meat) and kabeji (cabbage). LD $$ Yabo’s Tacos Mexican | 7097 State Route 3, Westerville, 614-212-4090; 3051 Northwest Blvd., Upper Arlington, 614-824-2485; 4046 W. Powell Rd., Powell, 614-336-7639. A sports bar and restaurant with options for full-service or walk-up window ordering specializing in $2 tacos made with cooked-in-house meats. LD $ Yellow Brick Pizza Pizza | 892 Oak St., Olde Towne East, 614-725-5482; 245 King Ave., Victorian Village, 614-429-0750. this pizzeria has the feel of a beloved neighborhood haunt while offering a fresh take on the classic ’za, with specialty pies and appetizers. LD $ Yemeni Restaurant Middle Eastern | 5426 Cleveland Ave., North Side, 614-426-4000. offering a cuisine rarely found in the midwest, this no-frills eatery serves authentic yemeni specialties like fahsa and foul stews, lamb mandi and Adeni milk tea. LD $

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CM_best_e


Columbus Monthly Presents

Best Restaurants October

30

6 p.m.

THE ESTATE AT NEW ALBANY | 5216 FOREST DRIVE | NEW ALBANY, OH 43054

You're invited to a one-night-only dining experience created by the city's most celebrated chefs. This unique culinary collaboration features our 2018 Best Restaurants during a multicourse meal complete with thoughtfully selected wine pairings. Guests also enjoy a welcome reception, hors d'oeuvres and live entertainment. EARLY BIRD TICKETS Available now through Oct. 17

$125

$225 FOR PAIR

FOR TABLE OF EIGHT

($150 after Oct. 17)

($275 after Oct. 17)

($1,080 after Oct. 17)

FOR INDIVIDUAL

$880

Limited Seating Available. Each purchase will receive a one-year subscription to Columbus Monthly (an $18 value).

Visit ColumbusMonthly.com/BestRestaurants for tickets, details and event updates

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cSO concerts for Kids

calendar Events Oct. 2–28 All American Quarter Horse Congress With more than 24,000 entries, this is

the largest single-breed horse show in the world. Free, parking $25. the ohio Expo Center, 717 E. 17th Ave., 888-646-3976, quarterhorsecongress.com

Oct. 3 Evenings with Authors: Eileen McNamara Pulitzer Prize-winning journal-

ist Eileen mcnamara discusses her biography, “Eunice, the Kennedy who Changed the World.” 7:30 p.m. $22–$30. Columbus museum of Art, 480 E. broad st., thurberhouse.org

Oct. 6 Gatsby at the Wagnalls Experience

the Roaring twenties at this 21-and-up festive evening at the Wagnalls memorial library’s fall fundraising event. 6:30 p.m. $75–$130. Wagnalls memorial library, 150 E. Columbus st., lithopolis, 614-837-4765, wagnalls.org

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Short North Gallery Hop on the first saturday of every month, thousands of visitors converge in the short north to celebrate and partake in an evening of sights, sounds, food and shopping. 4 p.m. Free. the short north, along n. high st., between Fifth Ave. and nationwide blvd., 614-299-8050, shortnorth.org Oct. 13 Monster Bash sample delicious concoc-

tions at the adult trick-or-treat before moving on to the party, complete with drinks, dancing and costumes. 7 p.m. Price tbA. German Village meeting haus, 588 s. third st., 614-221-8888, germanvillage.com

OctOber 2018

is this year’s selection for the upper Arlington Author series. $10–$35. upper Arlington high school, 1650 Ridgeview Rd., upper Arlington. 614-486-9621, ualibrary.org

Concerts for Kids: Monster Boogie Don your costumes and bring the whole family to hear boo-tiful music from the ghoulishly-dressed Columbus symphony orchestra. Activities 2 p.m., concert 3 p.m. $9–$13. ohio theatre, 39 E. state st., 614-469-0939, columbussymphony.com

Oct. 14–20 Fashion Week Columbus over

Oct. 19 “Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous” with Nizar Ibrahim this

Oct. 14 Amor Towles the bestselling author of

Oct. 19–28 Boo at the Zoo Enjoy spooky-

the course of one week, enjoy a variety of events—including the largest fashion show in the midwest—showcasing local, emerging fashion designers. throughout the city. 614-285-5264, fashionweekcolumbus.org

“A Gentleman in moscow” and “Rules of Civility”

national Geographic live production presents spinosaurus, the largest predatory dinosaur yet discovered. $32. 3 p.m. Jeanne b. mcCoy Community Center for the Arts, 100 W. Dublin-Granville Rd., new Albany 614-469-0939, capa.com kooky fun for two weekends. Events include an

Photo: Randall l. SchiebeR

cOMPILeD bY RyLAN LEE

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Tell Us About It

to have your event considered for our in-print calendar, email the details to calendar@columbus monthly.com. the deadline for the December issue is oct. 19. to submit an event to our user-generated online calendar, visit columbusmonthly.com, click on the “sections” dropdown tab, click on “Calendar” and then “Add Event.” Questions? Email suzanne Goldsmith at sgoldsmith@columbusmonthly.com. animal show and hay maze. 5–9 p.m. Fri, 10 a.m.–9 p.m. sat, 10 a.m.–8 p.m. sun. Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, 4850 Powell Rd., Powell, 614-645-3400, columbuszoo.org

Oct. 21 Columbus Marathon the Columbus

marathon and half-marathon benefits nationwide Children’s hospital. Each mile is dedicated to a Patient Champion, including 24 children who share their stories. 7:30 a.m. $135–$145 to run, free to watch. throughout Downtown, starting at north bank Park, 4850 Powell Rd., Powell, columbusmarathon.com

Halloween Pet Parade and Fall Festival

Dress up the pup for this pet parade and costume contest—or simply come to look. 12–3 p.m. Free. Easton town Center, Fenlon square, 160 Easton town Center, 614-416-7000, eastontowncenter.com

Oct. 24 Mozart to Matisse this collaboration between the Columbus symphony orchestra and Columbus museum of Art will include a lecture examining tuscan painters of the second half of the 19th century and a chamber music

performance. 2 p.m. $20 ($5 for CmA members). Columbus museum of Art, 480 E. broad st., 614629-0359, columbusmuseum.org

Oct. 23 Evenings with Authors: Becket

becket visits to talk about his recent release, “Anne Rice’s Vampire Chronicles: An Alphabettery.” 7:30 p.m. $22–$30. Columbus museum of Art, 480 E. broad st., thurberhouse.org

Oct. 25 2018 Drexel Gala Come celebrate

the Drexel theatre and the 2018 Drexel hero Award winners linda and Frank Kass. 6 p.m. $250. Convergent media Center, Capital university, 590 College Ave., bexley, 614-719-6614, drexel.net

Oct. 26 Poetry Night Join Cleveland-area

poet and performer John burroughs and poet and retired ohio state university Professor Anna soter for a joint reading. 7 p.m. Free. Gramercy books, 2424 E. main st., bexley, 614-867-5515, gramercybooksbexley.com

Oct. 26–27 HighBall Halloween you are

what you wear at this annual street party. hosted by the short north Alliance, highball will raise funds to improve the short north Arts District. $7–$10. the short north, high st., between nationwide blvd. and E. Goodale st., 614-463-1234, highballcolumbus.org

Oct. 27 Creepside young and old alike can put on costumes and enjoy this family-friendly event. 11 a.m. Free. Creekside Park and Plaza, 177 mill st., Gahanna, 614-827-2500, gahanna.gov/creepside

Oct. 28 Ohio State 4 Miler Join 15,000

runners and walkers for the largest four-mile race

in the united states. A portion of the proceeds go to the urban and shelley meyer Cancer Research Fund. 10 a.m. $55–$60. ohio stadium, 411 Woody hayes Dr., 614-715-8044, ohiostatefourmiler.com

Exhibitions Angela Meleca Gallery To What Red Hell,

through oct. 27. 11–5 p.m. tue–sat. 144 E. state st., 614-340-6997, angelamelecagallery.com

Cloyd Family Animation Center The History of Animation at CCAD, through nov. 2. 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m. mon–Fri. 614-224-9101, ccad.edu/calendar

Columbus Cultural Arts Center  Hypoth-

eses: Art Inspired by the Worlds of Science, sept. 28–nov. 10. 1–4 p.m. and 7–10 p.m. mon, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. and 7–10 p.m. tue–thu, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Fri–sat. 139 W. main st., 614-645-7047, culturalartscenteronline.org

Columbus Museum of Art Titian’s Lady in

White: A Renaissance Mystery, through Dec. 9; Richie Pope: 2018 Columbus Comics Residency Exhibition, through march 10, 2019; Isaac Julien: Looking for Langston, through Jan. 20, 2019; I, Too, Sing America: The Harlem Renaissance at 100 oct. 16–Jan. 20, 2019. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. tue–Wed and Fri–sun, 10 a.m.–9 p.m. thu. 480 E. broad st., 614-221-6801, columbusmuseum.org

COSI Hot Wheels: Race to Win, through Jan. 6,

2019. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. mon–sun. 333 W. broad st., 614-228-2674, cosi.org

BUS IT TO THE BUCKEYES™

cota.com/osufootball

Photo: Randall l. SchiebeR

Ride COTA to and from the game!

Proud Sponsor of Ohio State Athletics

facebook.com/cotabus

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Trademarks of The Ohio State University used with permission.

OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Imagining a Better World: The Artwork of Nelly Toll, through Dec. 23. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. tue–Fri, 1 p.m.–4 p.m. sat–sun. 145 E. main st., lancaster, 740-681-1423, decartsohio.org

Dublin Arts Center Jonathan Quick: The Iron Path, through nov. 2. 10 a.m.– 7 p.m. tue, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Wed–Fri, 11 a.m.–2 p.m. sun. 7125 Riverside Dr., 614-889-7444, dublinarts.org

Franklin Park Conservatory and Botanical Gardens Field, through nov.

11. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. mon–sun. 1777 E. broad st., 614-715-8000, fpconservatory.org

Hammond Harkins Galleries To Dream Avant-Garde, through nov. 11. 10 a.m.– 6 p.m. tue–sat, 1–5 p.m. sun. 641 n. high st., 614-238-3000, hammondharkins.com

Hopkins Hall Gallery Cinema, Expanded,

oct. 15–nov. 28. Check website for times. 130 n. oval mall, 614-292-8861, hhg.osu.edu

McConnell Arts Center Varsity Arts,

through oct. 14.10 a.m.–9 p.m. tue–thu, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Fri–sat, noon–5 p.m. sun. Peggy R. mcConnell Arts Center, 777 Evening st., Worthington, 614-431-0329, mcconnellarts.org

Beeler Gallery Season One: arms ache

avid aeon, oct. 2–march 17, 2019. noon–6 p.m. Wed, noon–8 p.m. thu, noon–6 p.m. Fri–sun. 60 Cleveland Ave., 614-222-3270, beelergallery.org

Ohio Arts Council’s Riffe Gallery

Creating Identity From Place, through oct. 13. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. mon–Wed and Fri, 10 a.m.–8 p.m. thu, 11 a.m.–4 p.m. sat. 77 s. high st., 614-728-2239, oac.ohio.gov

“Golf is like drawing in the air with the ball,” says Rick Borg, a painter who was a member of the 1979 Ohio State University golf team that won the NCAA championship. Varsity Arts, an exhibition of art by former OSU athletes at the McConnell Arts Center in Worthington (including the above work by former free safety Percy King), seeks to find the connections between art and athletics.

Ohio History Center Black Heritage

Through Visual Rhythms Juried Art Show, oct. 13–Jan. 31, 2019. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. mon– Fri, 800 E. 17th Ave., ohiohistory.org/events

Ohio State University’s Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum Koyama

and Friends: Publishing, Patronage and the New Alternative Press, through oct. 21; Artistically MAD: Seven Decades of Satire, through oct. 21. 1–5 p.m. tue–sun. sullivant hall, 1813 n. high st., 614-292-0538, cartoons.osu.edu

Pizzuti Collection Take Up Space,

through Jan. 2019; When Attitudes Become Chairs, through Jan. 2019; For Freedoms, through Jan. 2019. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Wed– sat, noon–5 p.m. sun. 632 n. Park st., 614-280-4004, pizzuticollection.org

Sherrie Gallerie Christian Faur, Yong

Joo Kim, Zemer Paled, through oct 14. 11 a.m.–6 p.m. tue–sat, 1–5 p.m. sun. 694 n. high st., 614-221-8550, sherriegallerie.com

Shot Tower Gallery Ohio Art League

Juried Exhibition, through oct. 12. 8 a.m.– 4 p.m. mon–Fri. 546 Jack Gibbs blvd., 614-299-8225, oal.org

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Urban Arts Space Design Is…, oct.

5–nov. 10. 11 a.m.–6 p.m. tue–Wed, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. thu, 11 a.m.–6 p.m. Fri–sat. 50 W. town st., ste. 130, 614-292-8861, uas.osu.edu

Wexner Center for the Arts Mickalene Thomas: I Can’t See You Without Me, through Dec. 30. 11 a.m.–6 p.m. tue–Wed and sun, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. thu–sat. 1871 n. high st., 614-292-0330, wexarts.org

Festivals Oct. 5 Mac and Cheese Festival

Eat your way through an array of the popular comfort food at this familyfriendly event. Proceeds benefit the adolescent and young adult cancer program at the James Cancer hospital and solove Research Institute. 4 p.m. $10–$25. Easton town Center, 160 Easton town Center, cancer.osu.edu

Oct. 5–7 Italian Festival Celebrate

Columbus and Italian heritage pride with live entertainment, a parade, Italian cuisine and a variety of kids’ events. 4 p.m. Fri, 11 a.m. sat–sun. $5 admission, 12 and under free with paid adult admission. st. John the baptist Catholic Church, 168 E. lincoln st., 614-294-8259, columbusitalianfestival.com

Oct. 14 B.R.E.A.D. Festival this free festival features bread vendors along with hands-on artmaking, traditional music and dance, international cuisine and more to promote tolerance and provide cultural education. Free. Coffman Park, 5200 Emerald Pkwy., Dublin, 614-889-7444, dublinarts.org/bREAD

Oct. 18–21 Nightmares Film Festival  this horror fest features the rarest, scariest, most daring and most unsettling films being created around the country. $10–$99. Gateway Film Center, 1550 n. high st., 614-247-4433, gatewayfilmcenter.org

Oct. 26 Haunted Fest Party the

night away at this halloween electronic dance music experience. this year’s lineup features Porter Robinson, tchami and Alan Walker. 7 p.m. $40. the ohio Expo Center, 717 E. 17th Ave., hauntedfest.com

Films thrOugh NOv. 26 FILM: The 1930s “the Private lives of Elizabeth

and Essex” oct. 1; “swing time” oct. 8; “Fury” oct. 15; “the Roaring twenties” oct. 22; “Dr. Jekyll and mr. hyde” oct. 29. 6:30 p.m. Free. Grandview heights Public library, 1685 W. First Ave., 614-486-2951, ghpl.org

Oct. 2 America’s Greatest Films Series: “Easy Rider” 7 p.m. Free. Drexel theatre, 2254 E. main st., 614-231-9512, drexel.net

Oct. 11 Nightlight 614: “Ghostbusters” 7 p.m. $9–$15. 21-plus. Genoa

Park, 303 W. broad st., nightlight614.com

Oct. 25–29 Unorthodocs “shake-

down” 7 p.m. oct. 25; “handsworth songs” 9 p.m. oct 25; shorts 5 p.m. oct. 26; “bisbee ’17” 7 p.m. oct. 26; “soft Fiction” noon oct. 27; “minding the Gap” 1:30 p.m. oct. 27; “América” 4:15 p.m. oct. 27; “hale County this morning, this Evening” 7 pm. oct. 27; “blue Velvet Revisited” 9 p.m. oct. 27; “Wild Relatives” 1 p.m. oct. 28; “Who Invented the yoyo? Who Invented the moon buggy?” 2:30 p.m. oct. 28; “terror nullius: A Political Revenge Fable in three Acts” 4:30 p.m. oct. 28; “the trial” 4:30 p.m. oct. 29. $6–$8. Wexner Center for the Arts, 1817 n. high st., 614-292-3535, wexarts.org

Music Oct. 2 St. Lucia 7:30 p.m. $29–$31. newport music hall, 1722 n. high st., promowestlive.com

Oct. 3 The Revivalists 7 p.m. $35–$40. Express live, 405 neil Ave., 614-461-5483, promowestlive.com

Charlie Hunter Trio 9 p.m. $20–$25. natalie’s Coal-Fired Pizza and live music, 5601 n. high st., Worthington, 614-4362625, nataliescoalfiredpizza.com Oct. 4 Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats 7 p.m. $35. Express live, 405 neil Ave., 614-461-5483, promowestlive.com

Oct. 6 Iron & Wine 8 p.m. $35–$45.

southern theatre, 21 E. main st., 614-4690939, capa.com

Oct. 7 Celtic Thunder X 7 p.m.

$34–$74. ohio theatre, 39 E. state st., 614-469-0939, capa.com

Oct. 10 Andy Grammer 7 p.m.

$30–$32. newport music hall, 1722 n. high st., 614-461-5483, promowestlive.com

Oct. 11 Mummula 7 p.m. Free. upper Arlington Public library, 2800 tremont Rd., upper Arlington, 614-486-9621, ualibrary.org

Oct. 12 Jake Owen 7:30 p.m. $23–$58. schottenstein Center, 555 borror Dr., 614292-2624, schottensteincenter.com

Shawn Colvin 8 p.m. $32–$42. Davidson theatre, Riffe Center, 77 s. high st., 614460-7214, capa.com Oct. 14 Owl City 6 p.m. $25–$30.

newport music hall, 1722 n. high st., 614-461-5483, promowestlive.com

Oct. 16 Hippo Campus 7 p.m.

$25–$27. newport music hall, 1722 n. high st., promowestlive.com

photo: courtesy percy king

Decorative Arts Center of Ohio

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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Oct. 17 DJ Pauly D 9 p.m. $30.

trism, 1636 n. high st., 614-369-1450, trismcbus.com

Oct. 18 Hubby Jenkins 9 p.m.

$15–$20. natalie’s Coal-Fired Pizza and live music, 5601 n. high st., Worthington, 614-436-2625, nataliescoalfiredpizza.com

Oct. 19 Phil Collins 8 p.m. $53–$278.

nationwide Arena, 200 W. nationwide blvd., 614-246-2000, nationwidearena.com

Oct. 24 Kevin Gates 7 p.m. $35.

Express live, 405 neil Ave., 614-461-5483, promowestlive.com

Performing Arts Oct. 5 Harlem Gospel Choir 8 p.m. $40. lincoln theater, 769 E. long st., 614-469-0939, capa.com

Oct. 8 Black Violin 7:30 p.m. $25–$60. ohio theatre, 39 E. state st., 614-4690939, capa.com

photo: Colin Brennan

Oct. 9 Lucia Micarelli 8 p.m. $24–$40. lincoln theater, 769 E. long st., 614-4690939, capa.com

Oct. 10 “Game of Thrones: Live Concert Experience� 8 p.m. $37–$97.

schottenstein Center, 555 borror Dr., 614292-2624, schottensteincenter.com

Oct. 11–NOv. 3 “The Rocky Horror Show� 8 p.m. thu–Fri, 5 and 9 p.m. sat,

$15–$35. Fisher theatre, 592 E. main st., 614-849-0227, columbusdancetheatre.com

Oct. 12 Naked Classics: Homeland— Bartok, Ives, Vaughan Williams 8 p.m.

Columbus Symphony Orchestra: “Italian Festival� with conductor Daniel Boico and violinist Rachel Barton Pine 8 p.m. $10–$71. southern theatre, 21

5 p.m. sun. $35. short north stage, Green Room, 1187 n. high st., shortnorthstage.org

thu–sun. $25. southern theatre, 21 E. main st., 614-464-0066, promusicacolumbus.org

Oct. 12–13 Leonard Bernstein Centennial Celebration 8 p.m. $10–$71. ohio theatre, 39 E. state st., 614-4690939, columbussymphony.com

Oct. 13 Bassist Edgar Meyer and the Dover String Quartet 4 p.m. $15–$55.

southern theatre, 21 E. main st., 614-4640066, chambermusiccolumbus.org

Oct. 14 ProMusica Opening Night 

7 p.m. $15–$55. southern theatre, 21 E. main st., 614-464-0066, promusicacolumbus.org

Oct. 24–NOv. 4 Disney’s “Aladdin� 

7:30 p.m. mon–Wed, 2 and 7:30 p.m. thu, 8 p.m. Fri, 2 and 8 p.m. sat, 1 and 6:30 p.m. sun. $34–$100. ohio theatre, 39 E. state st., 614-469-0939, capa.com

Oct. 24 New Music on the Short North Stage: “Exceptet� 7 p.m. Free. short north stage, 1187 n. high st., johnstonefund.org

Oct. 26–27 “Dancers Making Dances� 8 p.m. Fri, 3 and 8 p.m. sat.

E. main st., 614-464-0066, capa.com

Oct. 26–NOv. 3 “Lineage: A Collection of Short Ballets� 8 p.m. Fri–sat, 2

p.m. sun, 7:30 p.m. thu. $29–$77. speaker Jo Ann Davidson theatre, Riffe Center, 77 s. high st., 614-229-4860, balletmet.org

OctOber 30 “Whose Live Anyway?�  “Stereotypes� is 7:30 p.m. $41–$71. southern theatre, 21 E. main st., 614-464-0066, capa.com

Sports Columbus Crew mapfre stadium, 1 black & Gold blvd., 614-447-4169, columbus crewsc.com. minnesota united FC, 4:30 p.m. oct. 28

Columbus Blue Jackets nationwide

Arena, 200 W. nationwide blvd., 614246-2000, nhl.com/bluejackets. Carolina hurricanes, 7 p.m. oct. 5; Colorado Avalanche, 7 p.m. oct. 9; Philadelphia Flyers, 7 p.m. oct. 18; Chicago blackhawks, 7 p.m. oct. 20; Arizona Coyotes, 7 p.m. oct. 23; buffalo sabres, 7 p.m. oct. 27; Detroit Red Wings, 7 p.m. oct. 30

the name of Black Violin’s most recent album, and this classicallytrained hip-hop string duo wants audiences to let go of theirs. Violist Wil B. and violinist Kev Marcus, coming to the Ohio Theatre Oct. 8, blend classical, hiphop, rock, R&B and bluegrass music for an improvisational, high-energy sound that defies categories and preconceived notions.

November 14, 2018 Expo: 10–Noon Awards: Noon–1:30

photo: Courtesy perCy king

Meet leading family businesses at our annual Expo. Celebrate outstanding family businesses at our 20th annual Awards luncheon. Info@FamilyBusinessCenter.com

OCTOBER 2018 Columbus monthly

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Wouldn’t you like to be looking at your home? Ask your Realtor to market your home in the Executive Homes section of Columbus Monthly Magazine! East of I-71 call Telana Veil at (614) 469-6106 or e-mail at tveil@dispatch.com West of I-71 call Amy Vidrick at (614) 461-5153 or e-mail at avidrick@dispatch.com

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RE/M PREM CHOI

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CENTRAL DUBLIN NATURAL OASIS! - Backing to the Walter’s Estate, this Kerry Glenn home’s lush outdoor living is matched only by the interior’s quality- vaulted ceilings w/ exposed beams, molding & paneling, granite, & marble flow throughout. Plus a 1st flr Owner’s Suite & LL w/ egress windows! $542,500 www.5049GlenaireDrive.com

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A CLASSIC MUIRFIELD HOME! - Gorgeous hardwoods & brand new Andersen windows flow throughout the open floor plan, from the central kitchen w/ stainless steel + granite to the vaulted great room w/ builtins & brick fireplace. You’ll want to spend all your time in the sunroom w/ backyard views! $425,000 www.6342MemorialDrive.com

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OVER $250K IN RENOVATIONS! - Located on a quiet cul-de-sac in the original area of Muirfield & surrounded by mature trees, this home has all of the updates you’d want. Over-sized gourmet kitchen, screen porch with private green views, lush owner’s suite, + LL bar, 5th bdrm & full bath! $775,000 www.8692BeeswingCourt.com

THE EPITOME OF MOVE-IN READY! - Detailed molding & trim, hardwoods, granite, & tons of bright natural light await you! Enjoy 3 fully finished levels of living- from the great room w/ vaulted ceiling, to the monstrous owner’s suite, to the multi-rec room LL w/ full kitchen + 5th bedroom suite! $640,000 www.4815VistaRidgeDrive.com

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NOT YOUR TYPICAL TARTAN HOME! - The detailed & unique architecture of this home is surrounded by greenery & privacy on this excellent Tartan lot. An open floor plan with hardwood flooring, bright white & SS kitchen, screen porch, & LL with bar + theater await you! $999,000 www.10320MackenzieWay.com

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UNMATCHED OUTDOOR LIVING! - The incredible deck, patio, fire pit, & water views of this home’s exterior are only matched by it’s interior. White & granite kitchen, 2 sty great room, Florida rm, owner’s suite w/ marble bath, & walkout LL with bar, bedroom, full bath, & theater room! $800,000 www.8692TartanFieldsDrive.com

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RE/MAX PREMIER CHOICE

RE/MAX PREMIER CHOICE

Kevin Sullivan (614) 419-2026 kevins@ columbus.rr.com

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REFINED RUSTIC EXECUTIVE HOME - with casual elegance. Reclaimed Post & Beam structure w/cut Limestone, Open Flr Plan, spacious Great Rm w/FP & Wall of Windows, 1st Flr Mstr Ste, Office/Den, Kitchen w/Breakfast Bar & Eating Sp, huge Loft, Walk-Out LL, separate Guest House w/GR, BD & BA above 3-Car detached Gar & workshop and a reconstructed Log Cabin that can be a Barn or Garage. Private retreat on 10.52 Acres! 1651 Daventry Lane $1,700,000

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7491 BLACKS RD. SW PATASKALA - Ideal Dream Property! 5-35 acres of beautiful & private land situated just mins from freeway access. This stunning property is zoned M1, light commercial, allowing for endless business possibilities. Property includes a prefabricated enameled steel Lustron Home which can be used as a residence, office or rental, a 4-leaf clover pond, a stocked lake w/an expansive pier & rolling woods w/a creek running through it.

STUNNING DECORATORS SHOW HOUSE off the beaten path on beautiful Lake Erie. Designed by renowned Interior Designer Sally McDonald & Architect John Behal. A family and entertainer’s dream from the island kitchen and deck overlooking the lake to the elevated 2nd story spacious screened-in porch! Panoramic views of the lake and 5 islands. Breathtaking sunset views. A true retreat for recreation and relaxation! $539,900

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4789 YANTIS DRIVE, NEW ALBANY, OH 43054 - Beautiful Georgian estate overlooking 3rd green of NACC golf course. High-end finishes; quartz counter tops and other updates; refinished hardwood flooring, 11 ft ceilings, & custom cherry woodwork throughout. Stately two story library with marble surround fireplace. Close to popular Market St. $995,000

9/12/18 12:54 PM


Wouldn’t you like to be looking at your home? Ask your Realtor to market your home in the Executive Homes section of Columbus Monthly Magazine! East of I-71 call Telana Veil at (614) 469-6106 or e-mail at tveil@dispatch.com West of I-71 call Amy Vidrick at (614) 461-5153 or e-mail at avidrick@dispatch.com

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS

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5124 RESERVE DR, DUBLIN - Stunning estate on the Muirfield PGA course! Gorgeous custom woodwork throughout. 5BR, 5.5 bath w/1st floor master. 5 car garage. Wooded, ravine lot w/ stream and bridge. Walk-out bsmt w/2nd kitchen, gym, wine cellar, media rm and possible 6th BR. 3 exterior levels to entertain with 7,000 SF. Walk to the tournament! $859,500

PRIVACY & CONVENIENCE IN UPPER ARLINGTON! - Custom built in 2012, this stately 5 BR, 5.5 ba Colonial offers 6,000+ SF inside and resort-style outdoor living space with open air brick porch overlooking inground heated pool & concrete bball court. Open & inviting throughout! Entertainer’s kitchen has all the upgrades you would expect, 1st flr in-law suite/ office with private entrance & so much more - you won’t want to leave! $1,825,000.

KELLER WILLIAMS CONSULTANTS REALTY

APPALACHIA REALTY

Virginia Golan (614) 374-2417 wesellhouses@hotmail.com

Nea Henry (740) 418-4135 neahenry@ gmail.com

6322 COUNTY ROAD 158 - The perfect combination of luxury living & horse farm on a spectacular 18 acres. Close to SR-33 & just minutes to Marysville, Dublin & more. Custom built home w/ top of the line amenities incl. elevator, gourmet kitchen with Italian granite counters & island, & Wolf & SubZero appls. Expansive great room with WBFP, spacious owners’ suite, bath & walk-in closet. Full walk-out LL includes 2 BRs w/baths, guest/summer kitchen, media room & screened porch overlooking 1 acre pond. Walters Buildings 6 stall barn & separate riding arena w/trailer/equipment storage & attached truck garage. 4 fenced pastures, loafing shed & hay field. $877,500

YOUR OWN HUNTING PRESERVE, HORSE FARM, CATTLE RANCH, RECREATIONAL PARADISE! - This exceptional estate is situated on 430+/ gorgeous acres (gated for ultimate privacy). ONE OF A KIND property with 9000 sq. ft. luxury custom home complete with elevator, indoor pool, 3 acre stocked lake, and a lovely horse barn. Beautiful in every detail describes this awesome entertainer’s dream home! Ultimate quality and spacious living area make for luxurious living in the beautiful Hills of Southern Ohio. 2500 Five Points Rd. Jackson, OH. $2,900,000

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

COLDWELL BANKER KING THOMPSON

Lach Experience (614) 324-4002 lachexperience@ kingthompson.com

Lach Experience (614) 324-4002 lachexperience@ kingthompson.com

2691 LEAR ROAD, UA - One of a kind retreat on a wooded quiet private lot. Open and vaulted,this floorplan is bright in every room. Relax in the Great Room w/ stone frplc or enjoy the outdoors with friends on the spacious deck. Chef’s kitchen with every feature leads to the Dining Rm big enough for the largest of tables. Owner’s suite is it’s own private oasis settled in the back of the home with slider access to the deck. $887,500

4807 ABERDEEN AVENUE - Absolutely stunning! This distinctive designed home, in lovely Campden Lakes, is truly 1 of a kind. Attention to detail with beautiful flooring throughout. Great Rm w/ spectacular view of lake/Island & access to wrap-around porch. Stately library, formal DR, light/open gourmet kitchen. Peaceful owner’s suite w/ frplc & private balcony overlooking the lake. Full walkout bsmt w/ built in bar area & exercise rm. $1,067,500

LAKEFRONT LIVING REALTY

STREET SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY

Dick Miller (419) 560-5819 Dick@lakefrontliving.com

David Powers (614) 361-2729 David.Powers@ SothebysRealty.com

7326 ST. RT. 19 UNIT 12 LOT 12 - A stunning Candlewood Lake home that fits everyone’s dream of luxury with commanding southern view of a spacious cove with the enjoyment of sunrises, sunsets and night sky views. The finished walkout lower level, paving stone patio with built-in grills and fire ring, is perfect for entertaining. Professionally landscaped, paved walk ways and concrete drive with additional paved parking area. Candlewood Gated Residential Lake Community. Come, see and enjoy the lifestyle of living on the water. $1,200,000

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PREMIER ESTATE - Located a 20 minute drive north of New Albany, this private retreat contains 200+ acres and breathtaking views! The main residence is a beautiful Georgian style home, overlooking a 10 acre lake, and featuring an indoor pool and wonderful entertaining space. The main residence is neighbored by a 5BR guest home. Privacy and serenity await just minutes from Columbus. $3,200,000

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home?

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classifieds 614.583.5760

Classifieds@ColumbusMonthly.com

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Family Law and Litigation

Suite 101 Waterford Tower • 155 W. Main St. Columbus • (614) 228-1968 www.columbusfamilylawyer.com

HELP WANTED

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NEED HELP WITH..... • Drywall • Metal Studs • Acoustical and textured ceilings • Plaster Repair

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City Quotient

Why Does Our Ohio History Center Look so … Modern? BY JEFF DARBEE

The Ohio History Center is big and impressive, but it looks more contemporary than historical. What can you tell me about its design? The Ohio Historical Society, today the Ohio History Connection, dates back to 1885. It’s a private nonprofit institution, but it has certain mandated state functions—operation of the system of state memorials, for example, and serving as the official state archive. It moved into its first permanent home, Sullivant Hall on the Ohio State University campus, in 1914. The state museum and library were there, while sometime later the archives ended up at the Old Governor’s Mansion on East Broad Street, today the home of The Columbus Foundation. Then in 1965, Ohio voters approved a $290 million bond issue for both a new OHS headquarters and improvements to many of the state’s historical sites. The late W. Byron Ireland was the architect of the new building, off I-71 near the state fairgrounds, and the daring design he proposed was in the not-always-loved modern style known as Brutalism (Ireland 176

had worked on the St. Louis Gateway Arch for Finnish architect Eero Saarinen before founding Ireland Assoc. in Columbus.) Apart from its clearly non-historical design, the history center, which opened in 1970, used innovative techniques of post-tensioned concrete structures, which allowed a cantilevered design in which the library—the upper part of the building sided with brown, Ohio-made, silo tiles—“floats” above an underground base containing the historical exhibits. Things have changed a little—the entrance is at ground level now, not up the east side stairway—but the building remains mostly as built. I heard the Ohio Statehouse renovation in the 1990s cost around $180 million. Wasn’t that an awfully big budget? Well, you have to consider what the project started with. A large team of historical/architectural/design consultants worked on the seven-year renovation, including yours truly, so some of the backstory might be helpful. The main problem was that even after it opened in 1857, the Statehouse was never

under single management. Responsibility shifted among state agencies and departments, so changes and improvements never were done according to an overall plan. By the 1980s it was something of a mess: The original 57 rooms had been cut up into more than 300; there were close to 100 air-conditioning systems; and some emergency exit routes were blocked. The Ohio Senate had keys to part of the building, the House had some, the Department of Public Works had some, and for several rooms there weren’t any keys. In addition, the adjacent 1901 Judiciary Annex (today the Senate’s offices) had long been slated for demolition but simply deteriorated because no demolition funds were approved. Finally, with enough political will and funding appropriated, Schooley Caldwell Assoc. led the team that thoroughly updated heating, cooling, electric power, communications and security systems. At the same time, public spaces were carefully restored to their original character. Most importantly, though, maintenance of the Statehouse, the Senate Building and all of Capitol Square was placed under the authority of the newly created Capitol Square Review and Advisory Board. Jeff Darbee is a preservationist, historian and author in Columbus. Send your questions to cityquotient@ columbusmonthly.com, and the answer might appear in a future column.

ILLUSTRATION: BRETT AFFRUNTI

Sources: www.sah-archipedia. org/buildings/oh-01-049-0091; “Architecture: Columbus” (1976)

Columbus monthly OCTOBER 2018

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DEDICATION CEREMONY & GRAND OPENING SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2018 | 2 PM Please join us for a dedication of the National Veterans Memorial and Museum, to celebrate the opening of this historic institution. The free event will feature distinguished veterans, performances by men and women from all military branches and a keynote address delivered by General Colin Powell (U.S. Army, Retired). Given the expected crowds for the grand opening, tickets are required. RSVP at nationalvmm.org/grandopening.

Americans’ contributions to our country through military service.

civilians with veterans and their experiences.

visitors to serve their community and nation as active, engaged citizens.

schoolchildren about the history and value of service via an exhibition that links directly to educational standards.

OUR MISSION BEGINS THE MINUTE WE OPEN OUR DOORS. 300 W. Broad St., Columbus, OH 43215 | NationalVMM.org

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You instill it. We develop it. He realizes it. At The Wellington School, we know you are your child’s first and most important teacher. We join you in this journey of profound discovery and growth as the world opens up for him. Igniting intellectual curiosity, providing opportunities to succeed and fail, building a strong sense of self. Together we will prepare him to soar.

preschool through grade 12 | www.wellington.org

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Brooks & Tonda Adiansingh

9/12/18 12:56 PM


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