Support modern streets in downtown Providence


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Protected bike lanes in Vancouver, BC.

Providence needs modern bike infrastructure, but private interests stand in its way.

Regency Plaza Apartments and the Providence “Dunk” Convention Center should not get to decide what happens to Providence’s streets. We should.

Sign the petition: Broadway and Sabin St. should get modern design standards to improve conditions for all users.

Regency Plaza would like part of Broadway to be “abandoned” to allow for further development. New apartments in downtown would be great for the city, but with a footprint that is mostly surface parking, there’s no reason for Regency Plaza to take more land from the city’s rights-of-way. It should make better use of what it has.

The Providence Convention Center has blocked any changes to its front street, Sabin St. Sabin is essentially the same street as Broadway, leading up to where the name changes over. Sabin’s geometry is extremely wide, allowing for high speeds punctuated only by traffic jams. Bike infrastructure makes streets safer and helps to reduce city congestion.

We would like Jorge Elorza to act administratively or in concert with City Council to preserve these streets as public rights-of-way, and to modernize their design.

Please sign our petition, and share it far-and-wide (not too far, though, we only need Rhode Islanders.).

Sign the petition: Broadway and Sabin St. should get modern design standards to improve conditions for all users.

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Columbus Theatre Revival: This is How We Rebuild RI

Photo by Katie Cielinski

Saturday night I went to the Revival! show, which reopened the Columbus Theatre on Broadway after years of vacancy, finally allowing the Theatre’s years-old  ‘Opening Soon’ marquee to host a far cheerier message: “Sold Out.”

The Columbus was packed and the sets by Brown Bird and The Low Anthem were, unsurprisingly, excellent. And the building, while not yet a finished product, really is a gem.

But the vibe in the Columbus last night seemed to go beyond the excitement produced by a good show. This is an unscientific measure, but from the people I talked to myself and the conversations I overhead and the general ebullience I observed on the faces of the (approximately 1,000?) concert-goers filling the long-abandoned hall, I could tell there was another emotion shared by many throughout the course of the evening—hope. Hope that this humming, spirit-filled theater might be a tool for, and a symbol of, the  revitalization of the neighborhood and the city at large.

Photo by Katie Cielinski

 

“This building comes alive for an event like this,” said Bryan Principe, City Councilman of Ward 13, who seemed to be having this same thought when I spotted him sitting towards the back of the theater with a big grin on his face. “The whole street comes alive. There’s electricity in the air. It’s absolutely a boon for the neighborhood.”

Spending them dollas. Photo by Katie Cielinski

Principe had a good point. I can’t remember when I’ve seen Broadway like it was last night, lined with parked cars as far as the eye could see, the sidewalk bustling with people and the street filled with energy and excitement.

The social and cultural benefits provided by a place like the Columbus–which will soon be regularly hosting concerts, comedy shows, and other community meetings and events–are plain to see. But it’s important to also keep in mind the economic stimulus such spaces have the potential to offer to our city. The energy and the excitement and the crowd that the Columbus drew to Broadway this weekend resulted in an influx of folks simply wanting to be there, in that neighborhood, in our capital city, eating and drinking and talking and spending their money in the community

What I’m saying isn’t novel, of course. In Providence it is not a new idea that the arts can serve as a potent economic engine for the community, and I’m not just talking about WaterFire–just look at the unbelievable work AS220 has done to bring life and vibrancy and beauty to our downtown. Our city’s and our state’s amazing artistic foundation has been one of the pillars of our economy for some time, and as such, it must be one of the central pillars of our economic revitalization. That’s why Mayor Taveras (who gave remarks at Saturday’s opening), was absolutely right when he said, “This building represents what’s best about the City of Providence.”

And it’s why all of us–policymakers and consumers alike–should be prioritizing support for ventures like the Columbus, which epitomize the lesson that collectively, we can bring something empty and forgotten back, and make it work, and make it beautiful again. It might sound crazy, but for those few hours I was in that space, reveling in the rush of reincarnation, it really did all feel possible. We can revitalize, we can rebuild. Let’s keep it up.

Broadway’s Columbus Theatre to Reopen


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Photo courtesy of Tom Weyman.

For years the marquee on the iconic Columbus Theatre on Broadway has read “Opening Soon” and now finally it’s true. The famed theater that has hosted everything from opera to porn reopens on November 17 with a show headlined by The Low Anthem, a local indie folk band that has made a name of itself on the national stage recently.

They will be joined by  Brown Bird, Roz Raskin and the Rice Cakes, Sugar Honey Iced Tea, Vudu Sister, Alec K Redfearn, “and a mystery guest to be announced later for all the right reasons,” according to an announcement on Low Anthem’s website.

“We invite you to be a part of the rebirth of Columbus Theatre!” says their website. “There will be 2 (or 3) stages. Julian’s double-decker food truck omnibus and Nice Slice pizza will be vending outside, and Revival Brewing will be supplying sweet juices. The kick-off show will be RIDICULOUS and may include charity hair-cuts by band-members.”

Proceeds from the show will go towards the restoration of the theater as well as to Providence charity that provides education and health assistance in Nicaragua. Click here for tickets.

Built in 1926, the Columbus is said to be named for its 1,492 seats. The Low Anthem of the theater’s rich history.

This theatre had seen everything, and embodied a century’s worth of American contradictions (note dubious anti-hero namesake). From the glorious heights of opera to the survivalism of it’s XXX film years, it has hosted everyone from Lightning Bolt to Julie Andrews. It has been the subject of endless first amendment law suits. It has been over the years lobbied, condemned, bent and bargained for like a cherished property of Monopoly America.

Low Anthem has been practicing in the theater as of late, according to their post.

The Columbus Theatre has become a rehearsal and recording home for we of The Low Anthem. It is a dream. We have set up shop in the 1930?s dance and acting school above the Broadway marquee. It is a magical place to work, replete with ghosts of bygone projectionists, world-class, double-proscenium acoustics, pop-corn machines, and enough ju-ju to drown a goo-goo.