December 2009 Archives

2009 Coming to a Close: Here Comes 2010!

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Wow! 2009 has been a pretty great year, overall. I've gotten to work on some fun projects, meet some interesting new people, reconnect with others and basically have a lot of fun.

alabama-coastal-byway-1.jpgSome of the projects I've spent a great deal of time on in the last few years are finally starting to show some real progress: notably the Alabama Scenic Byways Program. The 10 year anniversary of the creation of the program is this spring and we now have 10 scenic byways in our state, including the brand new nationally recognized Coastal Connection, named a National Scenic Byway in October of this year. I'm really proud to have played a small part in seeing that project move forward! (Even got interviewed on the radio about it--not a big fan of hearing my own voice, much to the shock of anyone who has been in a car with me--but it turned out to be less painful than I thought.)

Other projects include the following:

Some fun work on the Lower Cahaba River. We've installed signs in several locations pointing out the many attractions in a four county region (Bibb, Dallas, Hale and Perry Counties). A website  has been developed to highlight the attractions and to bring the many resources together into one location--www.lowercahaba.com.

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black-belt-1.jpgI continued to work on the Alabamafrontporches.com website and some brochures to go along with it. The most exciting part of this in 2009 has been the great Ghost Stories work done by Linda Vice and some filmmakers. (I did a brochure to go along with the videos.)

And, of course, the fun trips friend Ben Burford and I went on down into the Black Belt to take photos, eat the food and see the area from the eyes of a tourist.

The usual assortment of newsletters from my friends with the Alabama Sierra Club, the AIA (American Institute of Architects), Alzheimer's of Central Alabama and more kept me busy for much of the year (I always enjoy working on their annual calendar filled with art from Alzheimer's patients), along with advertising work for American Mining Insurance Company--and their monthly in-house newsletter.

Christmas 2009 in Octagon. Got to see my very photogenic great niece along with my sister and her grandmother Julia.

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Christmas Week: Ready or Not

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This has been a busy year. Perhaps a look back is in order, but not today. Today, I'm putting the finishing touches on another newsletter, this one for my good friends with the Alabama Sierra Club. After more than three years of doing a newsprint, large format newsletter, we've shifted to a web only format. Cheaper, more environmentally friendly (though we did make the extra effort to find recycled newsprint) and much more flexible in terms of schedule. Take a look: http://alabama.sierraclub.org/chapternews/

I'm heading out to meet with another client, the Alabama Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects to talk about their website (considering transitioning it into a wordpress style site). Lots to do, but at least I've gotten our shopping done--oh, wait, I've still got to go to the grocery store.

Lower Cahaba Corridor Project

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Spent all day last Friday riding around and going to a variety of locations in Bibb, Hale and Perry Counties to unveil the signs for the Lower Cahaba Heritage and Recreational Corridor. Good day and a great project: www.lowercahaba.com.

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Alabama Byways On the Radio

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Well, I must admit that, although I love to talk, I'm not sure I've ever been crazy about hearing my voice once recorded. It was with a great deal of reluctance that I went to Montgomery a couple of weeks ago and took part in a radio interview with my friends Joey Brackner of the Alabama State Council on the Arts (the instigator of this whole interview) and Colette Boehm of the Gulf Shores/Orange Beach Visitors Bureau (who I worked with on Alabama's Coastal Connection--the byway that was recently named a National Scenic Byway).

Anyway, here's a link to the interview. The first half is me talking about the Alabama Scenic Byways program, what it is about and a little history. The second half is Colette talking about the Coastal Connection.

http://alabamaartsradio.blogspot.com/2009/11/alabama-arts-radio-podcast-joe-watt-and.html