PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Community Design Assistance Center helps create opportunities in rural Virginia

Design work by center in the College of Architecture, Arts, and Design helps the town of St. Paul, in partnership with St. Paul Tomorrow Inc., leverage $990,000 in grant funding toward economic revitalization.

Community Design Assistance Center helps create opportunities in rural Virginia
2023-06-09
(Press-News.org) The rundown facade of the Thomas Deen building in St. Paul, Virginia, belied the once-impressive department store's better days.

The four-story brick building opened its doors to customers in the early 1920s, but over time, the structure was as forgotten as the discarded tires it housed some 100 years later. As Elizabeth Gilboy, the director of the Community Design Assistance Center, an outreach center in Virginia Tech's College of Architecture, Arts, and Design, and the center's team explored the site in fall 2020, they recognized their unique place at the intersection of the building's history and future.

Since 1988, the center has worked with more than 230 communities on hundreds of projects to assist communities, civic groups, and nonprofit organizations throughout Virginia to improve their natural and built environments through community engagement and interdisciplinary design. In addition, the center provides paid learning experiences for architecture, landscape architecture, and interior design students as they are immersed in the participatory design and planning process. 

"Where there is a vision, there's opportunity," said Gilboy, who has served as the center's director since 2000. "If our team can help the stakeholders think through their ideas and create that vision in a graphic format or rendering, that concept can be used to apply for funding. Sometimes, individual projects build upon each other toward a larger goal, or it might be a cornerstone project, like the St. Paul project, where the town received a grant of $990,000 to move forward."

The Western Front area of St. Paul had a rough-and-tumble reputation in the late 1800s as it grew from an influx of early railroad transients to the center of Southwest Virginia's coal mining industry. The town boasted a population as high as 4,000 in the coal camps, but when the industry declined, the population dwindled in the mid-1900s and the town's future seemed bleak.

Without industrial opportunities, the area's natural beauty and historical resources emerged as central elements of the community's economic revitalization. The Clinch River, the most biodiverse waterway in the Northern Hemisphere, runs through St. Paul and attracts visitors for many outdoor recreation activities. The Clinch River State Park, Virginia's newest state park, and Oxbow Lake offer hiking, biking, birding, and wildlife. The Spearhead Trails extensive off-highway vehicle trail system is less than 20 miles away. 

In 2020, stakeholders from Saint Paul approached the center to create a design to repurpose a historical, multi-story structure near the railroad tracks, the only remaining original building on the Western Front. The building, which was a popular department store owned by merchant Thomas Deen, had fallen into disrepair, underwent significant structural alterations, and became a storage space for a local business. The vision was to redevelop the building as a distillery with a tasting area, outdoor seating, and a demonstration area as well as retail space for locally produced shelf-stable foods, merchandise, and artisan products.

Developing the conceptual designs from the vision, the center's team created ideas and sketches that led to final floor plans and renderings using computer-aided design software. Participants navigated planning, presentations, and feedback sessions through the COVID-19 global pandemic. The project design process concluded in July 2021 and the visual concept documents were included as "evidence of readiness" as part of the grant application submitted by the town of St. Paul and St. Paul Tomorrow Inc. The $990,000 Industrial Redevelopment Fund grant from the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development for the Thomas Deen Distillery project was awarded in December 2022, and the early stages of the redevelopment process are now underway.

The Thomas Deen Distillery is a key project in the St. Paul revitalization and streetscape that includes the Riverside Drive area just a few blocks from downtown. Attractions in the area include the recently renovated Western Front Hotel, farmers market, restaurants, the Sugar Hill Brewing Co., an outdoors outfitter, the historic Lyric Theatre, and access to the Bluebell Island Nature Trail and A.R. Matthews Memorial Park.

 

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Community Design Assistance Center helps create opportunities in rural Virginia

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

WHO recommends Politecnico di Milano guidelines for the design of future hospitals

WHO recommends Politecnico di Milano guidelines for the design of future hospitals
2023-06-09
Milan, 9 June 2023 - The World Health Organisation presented in Baku (Azerbaijan) the new design recommendations for new hospitals to be built in the European Region, the result of a research partnership with the Politecnico di Milano.  The document was prepared by the Design & Health Lab in the Department of Architecture, Construction Engineering and the Built Environment at the Politecnico under the coordination of Professor Stefano Capolongo. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of preparedness for natural and man-made disasters, emergencies and other social crises. The ability to provide continuous ...

3D 'bio-printing' inside hydrogels

2023-06-09
Scientists from the NIHR Great Ormond Street Hospital Biomedical Research Centre (a collaboration between GOSH and UCL), London, and University of Padova, Italy, have shown for the first time how 3D printing can be achieved inside ‘mini-organs’ growing in hydrogels -- controlling their shape, activity, and even forcing tissue to grow into 'moulds.' This can help teams study cells and organs more accurately, create realistic models of organs and disease, and even better understand how cancer spreads through different tissues. A particularly promising area of research at the Zayed Centre for Research ...

Scientists make a surprising discovery about magnetic defects in topological insulators

2023-06-09
Scientists from the Department of Energy’s Ames National Laboratory made an intriguing discovery while conducting experiments to characterize magnetism in a material known as a dilute magnetic topological insulator where magnetic defects are introduced. Despite this material’s ferromagnetism, the team discovered strong antiferromagnetic interactions between some pairs of magnetic defects that play a key role in several families of magnetic topological insulators. Topological insulators (TIs) as their name indicates, ...

Novel ferroelectrics for more efficient microelectronics

2023-06-09
When we communicate with others over wireless networks, information is sent to data centers where it is collected, stored, processed, and distributed. As computational energy usage continues to grow, it is on pace to potentially become the leading source of energy consumption in this century. Memory and logic are physically separated in most modern computers, and therefore the interaction between these two components is very energy intensive in accessing, manipulating, and re-storing data. A team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University and Penn State University is exploring materials that could possibly lead to the ...

Quantum materials: Electron spin measured for the first time

Quantum materials: Electron spin measured for the first time
2023-06-09
An international research team has succeeded for the first time in measuring the electron spin in matter - i.e., the curvature of space in which electrons live and move - within "kagome materials", a new class of quantum materials. The results obtained - published in Nature Physics - could revolutionise the way quantum materials are studied in the future, opening the door to new developments in quantum technologies, with possible applications in a variety of technological fields, from renewable energy to biomedicine, from electronics to quantum computers. Success was ...

Seismic Waves tell lithospheric delamination mechanism in south China

2023-06-09
A research team led by Prof. ZHANG Haijiang from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Prof. HOU Zengqian from Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, revealed the seismically imaged lithospheric delamination and its controls on the Mesozoic Magmatic Province in South China by using a new joint seismic inversion algorithm. The study was published in Nature Communications.  Based on the latest developed seismic joint inversion algorithm, the researchers made use of the seismic body wave travel time, surface wave dispersion ...

Program for underrepresented undergraduate students in STEM receives NIH funding

Program for underrepresented undergraduate students in STEM receives NIH funding
2023-06-09
Alexandra Hanlon, director of the Virginia Tech Center for Biostatistics and Health Data Science, was recently awarded a $1.25 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for a summer program aimed at promoting and diversifying the field of collaborative biostatistics. The Collaborative Undergraduate Biostatistics Experience (CUBE), an eight-week summer program geared toward underrepresented undergraduate students, will receive $250,000 per year over the next five years through the NIH Research Education Program. This R25 award, which is funded in a joint effort ...

USTC enhances fluorescence brightness of single silicon carbide spin color centers

2023-06-09
In a study published online in Nano Letters, the team led by Prof. LI Chuanfeng and Dr. XU Jinshi from the University of Science and Technology of China of the Chinese Academy of Sciences made progress in enhancing the fluorescence of single silicon carbide spin defects. The researchers leveraged surface plasmons to markedly boost the fluorescence brightness of single silicon carbide double vacancy PL6 color centers, leading to an improvement in the efficiency of spin control using the properties of co-planar waveguides. This low-cost method neither calls for complex micro-nano processing ...

Researchers determine quantitative composition of ultrahigh-pressure fluid in deep subduction zones

2023-06-09
In a study published in PNAS, Prof. XIAO Yilin’s group from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) quantitatively determined, for the first time, the chemical composition of supercritical fluids in deep subduction zones, through 3D imaging modelling of ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) multiphase fluid inclusions, and revealed the important role of supercritical fluids in the cycling of carbon and sulfur in subduction zones, which is of great importance ...

USTC reveals reconfiguration process of solar eruptions

2023-06-09
Recently, a research team led by Prof. GOU Yanyu from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) found that the solar outburst structure undergoes a complex reconfiguration evolution during the early outbursts, thus making important advances in the study of solar outburst activity. This study was published in Nature Astronomy.  In classical images, the core structure of a solar eruption is a magnetic rope consisted of spirally wound magnetic lines. When the eruption begins, the magnetic ropes around the core are transformed by magnetic reconnection ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

MD Anderson launches first-ever academic journal: Advances in Cancer Education & Quality Improvement

Penn Medicine at the 2024 ASTRO Annual Meeting

Head and neck, meningioma research highlights of University of Cincinnati ASTRO abstracts

Center for BrainHealth receives $2 million match gift from Adm. William McRaven (ret.), recipient of Courage & Civility Award

Circadian disruption, gut microbiome changes linked to colorectal cancer progression

Grant helps UT develop support tool for extreme weather events

Autonomous vehicles can be imperfect — As long as they’re resilient

Asteroid Ceres is a former ocean world that slowly formed into a giant, murky icy orb

McMaster researchers discover what hinders DNA repair in patients with Huntington’s Disease

Estrogens play a hidden role in cancers, inhibiting a key immune cell

A new birthplace for asteroid Ryugu

How are pronouns processed in the memory-region of our brain?

Researchers synthesize high-energy-density cubic gauche nitrogen at atmospheric pressure

Ancient sunken seafloor reveals earth’s deep secrets

Automatic speech recognition learned to understand people with Parkinson’s disease — by listening to them

Addressing global water security challenges: New study reveals investment opportunities and readiness levels

Commonly used drug could transform treatment of rare muscle disorder

Michael Frumovitz, M.D., posthumously honored with Julie and Ben Rogers Award for Excellence

NIH grant supports research to discover better treatments for heart failure

Clinical cancer research in the US is increasingly dominated by pharmaceutical industry sponsors, study finds

Discovery of 3,775-year-old preserved log supports ‘wood vaulting’ as a climate solution

Preterm births are on the rise, with ongoing racial and economic gaps

Menopausal hormone therapy use among postmenopausal women

Breaking the chain of intergenerational violence

Unraveling the role of macrophages in regulating inflammatory lipids during acute kidney injury

Deep underground flooding beneath arima hot springs: A potential trigger for the 1995 Kobe (Hyogo-Ken Nanbu) earthquake

Sharing biosignals with online gaming partners to enhance a mutual sense of social presence between complete strangers

ABM releases position statement on breastfeeding in emergency situations

Elucidating the mechanism underlying de novo membrane formation during gametogenesis

Sensors and devices guided by artificial intelligence for personalized pain medicine

[Press-News.org] Community Design Assistance Center helps create opportunities in rural Virginia
Design work by center in the College of Architecture, Arts, and Design helps the town of St. Paul, in partnership with St. Paul Tomorrow Inc., leverage $990,000 in grant funding toward economic revitalization.