Events

Select event terms to filter by
« Tuesday March 11, 2008 »
Tue
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 11:00 pm

A pop up experience with food, fun, and spectacle in the Flats East Bank.

FOOD
Food vendors Ideally, some of the restaurants that will be part of the Flats East Bank development will set up stands and sell food and drinks. Pig roast and/or oil drum barbecues Grilling meat will add warmth and protein to the evening.

FUN
Ice skating If the weather is cold enough in the days leading up to the event, we will flood part of the Flats East Bank site for skating. If the weather is too warm, the rink area will become a pond for toy boat races. Open snowboarding and competition on rails, boxes, and ramps set up for the night.

Video game competitions Large-scale video games (Rock Band, etc.) projected on a blank building wall at the southern end of the site. (Vertical Sound for audio/projection equipment) Snowsuit fashion show and the crowning of Miss Leap Night.

SPECTACLE
Snow installation The Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative and local artists will create a temporary snow environment as a setting for the event, using ice blocks and snow that will be stockpiled on the site in January and February. The snow installation will be constructed during the last week of February, generating interest and publicity in the days leading up to the event.

Central bonfire and/or a series of trash can fires at the river’s edge to provide light and warmth. Dead Christmas tree forest Old Christmas trees will be stockpiled and used to landscape the site for the event; trees will be harvested throughout the night to fuel the bonfire(s). The Christmas tree forest will be populated by polar bears (actually people in polar bear costumes) who will hand out snacks and deliver trees to the bonfire(s).

SAFMOD Cleveland’s multi-media performance ensemble will create a special fire performance for the event.

LOGISTICS
Safety Fire truck and ambulance on site; off-duty police officers will provide security.


Start: 11:00 am

The Northeast Sustainable Energy Association’s (NESEA) annual conference and trade show for renewable energy and green building professionals.

More information.


Start: 4:30 pm
End: 6:00 pm

An especially poignant lesson on current coal mining—and its impact—in West Virginia and southern Appalachia. The film follows the personal stories of residents as they fight for clean water and a school that is not overshadowed by a coal mining facility and its toxic sludge impoundment pond.


Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

Chris Jordan’s photography is a stunning meditation on American consumerism. He fills the frame with the overflow and detritus of our discarded cars, cell phones, cigarette butts, pop cans as they stack up in our landfills. Jordan’s latest show runs through June 1.


Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm

The Canadian film explores the question, Who doesn’t love trees? This film is compromised of a series of monologues by likely and unlikely tree lovers. What these interlocking stories tell us is that there are multiple sides to the environmentalist issue.

CIFF is offering a discount for GCBL readers – use the code “Green” when purchasing tickets online www.clevelandfilm.org or by phone 866.865.FILM.


Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Sara Hobbs, Associate Director at the Cleveland Restoration Society, looks at sustainability and historic preservation in “The Greenest Building is Already Built,” presented on Tuesday, March 11th at 7:30 p.m. in Oberlin College’s Hallock Auditorium (located in the Lewis Center for Environmental Studies at 122 Elm Street, Oberlin).

In recent years, newly developed “green” technologies have made headlines in response to society’s efforts to reduce human impact on the environment. Discussions of “green” often focus on new construction, while the green potential found in the restoration of existing buildings is overlooked. Hobbs illustrates that the continued use and rehabilitation of existing buildings is the sustainable and responsible use of resources. Hobbs’ presentation covers the negative environmental impact of demolition and discusses possible public policy incentives that could further support and encourage the rehabilitation of older buildings. She will give tips on how homeowners can participate in environmentally friendly practices while preserving the historic integrity of their homes. She’ll also address how historic preservation and green building movements can work together to conserve buildings and promote sustainability.

This free, public program is sponsored by the Oberlin Heritage Center, the Lorain County Preservation Network, and the Cleveland Restoration Society, with local support from the City of Oberlin, the City of Oberlin Historic Preservation Commission, the City of Oberlin Housing Renewal Commission, and Oberlin College’s Office of Sustainability and Environmental Studies Department.