Saturday, September 7, 2013

Run 52: Northside



The past few times we’ve been to Northside, it has been to eat tacos. My personal favorite is Django, but there is also Tacocracy, and Barrio. 

And Taco Bell.  But I wouldn’t drive all the way to Northside for that.
This morning’s trip to Northside was a bit healthier.  We started our run from the Comet, where we listen to bluegrass on Sunday evenings about once year. I would like to go more often, but my Sunday evenings are typically reserved for an episode of Tia and Tamera, a square of dark chocolate, and a half-glass of red wine.  
 

 

So we ran down Hamilton, past some of the beautiful old buildings.  This  first house always reminds me of a place I saw once in Tucson, Arizona:  
 
 
 
 
Look at the carvings on this old Cincinnati Bell building.  Anyone know what this building is today?

In the business strip on Hamilton we ran past a few of our other favorite Northside destinations, including vegetarian-friendly Melt, the Northside Tavern, and Take the Cake. 
Cincinnati Magazine featured Picnic and Pantry in their story on the best neighborhood shops, but I have yet to visit. 

I love this little sunburst storefront between the carryout and an appliance store:

Next, Donnie took a quick loop around the Jacob Hoffner Park before we turned down Blue Rock to get a close up of the American Can Factory, which is an old factory repurposed into modern and energy-efficient loft apartments.
 
 
 
From there, we hopped onto the peaceful Millcreek GreenwayTrail, which picks runs along the Millcreek and ends at Salway Park, across from Spring Grove Cemetery. 
 
 
 
This trail is amazing—flat and scenic, sunny, just wide enough.  A nod to industry on one side and nature on the other.  It sort of reminded me of the Monon in Indianapolis.  If I lived in Northside this would definitely be on my daily route.  We did our Northside run on Labor Day morning and lots of runners, bikers, and dog walkers were out enjoying their day off.
 


One of my favorite sites on the trail was seeing where Captain Tom parks all of his ice cream trucks.  A few summers ago, I would constantly hear “Do Your Ears Hang Low” tinkling from his trucks.  All.  Day.  Long.  I would hear it from my office window all day at work and then I would come home and hear it all evening.  I eventually wrote him an email asking him to turn it down or find another song.
Starting an email with “Dear Captain Tom” was not one of my finest moments, but it was making me insane.


Leaving the trail, we looped around on Spring Grove Avenue, past the old Liberty Tire building and the Northside sign nearby:
 

Nearby, is the amazing organization Visionaries + Voices, which houses studio and exhibition space for artists with disabilities:
 

Before heading back to the Comet, we made a loop around the residential blocks at Chase, Pitts, and Pullan.  These blocks have some of my favorite qualities in a residential neighborhood: colorful houses on narrow lots close to the street, big ash trees growing between the street and the sidewalk, people walking holding cups of coffee.  Subarus in the driveways.
 
 
 

There is so much to like about Northside.  It is known for being progressive, creative, and diverse; for having active and engaged residents; and for its successful small businesses.  It's known for its Fourth of July parade, its tacos, and its bluegrass music on Sunday nights.  And for being a really great place to run.
 
View the full route with mile markers here:  http://www.usatf.org/routes/view.asp?rID=525319
 
 
-K.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Run 52: North Fairmount


 
Saturday morning started with a storm and then fog.  Later the day would feel, as Donnie aptly put it, “swampy.” 
North Fairmount is sandwiched between East Westwood and South Fairmount.  Our route started near the cool zigzag stairs on Beekman:
 
Nearby are these old church buildings, with interesting windows and roof lines:
 

The second photo makes me think of a rural mountain town.  Parts of North Fairmount do elicit the feeling of being in the mountains—valleys between steep hills and narrow, wooded streets. 
 
 


We found this fairy tale cottage on Seegar Avenue:

As usual, the woods made Donnie start dreaming about buying a plot of land and building a house at the end of a long driveway, Northern Michigan-style.  As I’m typing this post, he is still badgering me about this.  He even has a name picked out: “Don’s Point.” 

At the heart of North Fairmount is St. Leo’s Church, which takes up nearly an entire triangle-shaped block.  The church is known for having an international mission and for playing an important role in refugee resettlement.
 
 


Another neighborhood asset is St. Clair Heights Park on Iroquois Street.  On the morning of our run, the park was packed with peewee football players and their football moms and dads.  

An in depth Enquirer feature on North and South Fairmount describes the housing stock as “having been built on blue collar salaries.”  The 52 Neighborhoods One Voice column mentions the similarities between the housing in North Fairmount and that of Columbia Tusculum:
 
The best part of our visit to North Fairmount was running into a Queen City Bike event at the East End Community Heritage School.  The Community Heritage School is a charter school occupying space in the former North Fairmount Elementary School on Baltimore.  We were excited to meet North Fairmount Community Council’s energetic president, Pamela Adams, who organized the event to promote bike safety and healthy lifestyles.  


We talked to Ms. Adams for awhile and then wrapped up the morning with a few laps around the school:
 
 
View the full route with mile markers here:  http://www.usatf.org/routes/view.asp?rID=524514
 
 
-K.