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Community Spotlight: Valentines Murals in Little Five Points
Each year, Little Five Points in Atlanta, Georgia, invites the community to celebrate Valentine's Day in style with their Valentine's Murals promotion. Community members can pay to have initials, names, or other romantic messages added to a large mural in the district. All funds support the work of the Little Five Points Business Association. We spoke to Reid Koski, Main Street Coordinator for Little Five Points, to learn more.
How did you come up with the idea for the Valentine’s Murals?
Before the pandemic, we used to sell sponsor space on a wall for our Halloween Festival & Parade and had a local artist paint brand logos. However, when we were unable to host that event in 2021, we decided to turn the concept on its head and do something that both supported our individual community members and raised money for our organization. Our district is known for its colorful street art, and we thought that giving people the opportunity to include a loved one among L5P's other art would make a wonderful Valentine's surprise! The unveiling has become a fun, feel-good tradition for our community and this is our fifth year running the heart mural promotion.
Who is the artist? What was the selection process?
This year's Valentine's Mural artist is Gums (@_sw0llen.gum). Gums is a local graffiti artist who, last year, painted one of our patio tables as part of our General Motors Main Street placemaking grant.
How do the Valentine’s Murals help support the Little 5 Points Business Association?
Every dollar we get in we put back into our community. There is never a lack of ways that money helps us support safety, business promotion, and community activities.
What feedback have you received in past years? How does the community feel about the promotion?
The feedback is great! It's really special and fun to see people get surprised by their significant other. We see hugs and kisses and sometimes even a few tears. It really is a wonderful romantic gesture. The wall we use would otherwise be covered in tags, so it's great to contribute to our community's arts culture with something vibrant and meaningful. Local entrepreneurs have also used the mural as a way to promote their own businesses which fits our district's ethos better than other walls with corporate branding or advertisements.
Any advice for Main Streets looking to set up a similar promotion?
Do it! Find an artist you trust, find a theme that fits your community, and a landlord willing to donate a wall. Get a sketch or mock-up from the artist before you commit and make sure they can follow a deadline. During our first year doing this, we had creative conflicts with the original artist and had to find a replacement quickly! Make sure to set up an easy way for people to purchase a heart online and that can keep track of orders in a way the artist can interpret. Take lots of fun photos of the day. We like to have flowers and candy to give out as the Valentines show up for their surprise.
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Main Street America was awarded $5.9 million to support 20 communities in the Main Streets Community of Practice through the Department of Transportation's Thriving Communities Program over the next two years.
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We heard from organizations across the nation about the incredible impact their markets have had on community engagement, entrepreneur and small business support, and keeping their district vibrant.
Mount Airy Downtown, Inc., celebrated the return of their Market Street Arts and Entertainment District (MSA & ED) last weekend, as part of their pandemic recovery efforts.
In remembrance and in honor of Dr. Marin Luther King Jr., over 900 streets in the United States were named after him. Many are located predominantly in African American communities.
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Since 2013, Try This West Virginia has sought to improve health environments in local communities as a collaboration of organizations working together to combat the health challenges facing West Virginians.
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The Downtown Newton Development Association (North Carolina) partnered with the City of Newton on a temporary tactical urbanism project to demonstrate how their permanent streetscape improvements will benefit downtown.
Over 500 people braved the misty rain this past weekend to come and celebrate Painesville and its Made on Main Street community transformation project.
In October 2017, Main Street Ottumwa collaborated with local partners, Main Street Iowa, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Better Block Foundation to stop planning, talking, and wishing, and start doing.
The Metuchen Downtown Alliance created a cool, family-friendly public gathering space in “the worst looking spot in town” with the help of just $2,500 in Edward Jones Placemaking on Main Challenge matching grant funds,
A collaborative effort launched between Laramie Main Street Alliance (LMSA) and vertical farming company, Plenty, looked to blank downtown walls as a canvas for growing food, creating conversation, and activating overlooked spaces.
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Kasey Drummond, Glenrock Main Street Director, explains how they brought the acclaimed graffiti artist ARCY to their Main Street and explores the work he produced in three additional Wyoming communities on his summer tour.
Karen Dye, Newkirk Main Street's program manager, was inspired to “make downtown more fun and festive” with painted water meter covers after learning about the practice at a recent Main Street Now conference.
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In 2016, the North Carolina Main Street & Rural Planning Center partnered with the University of North Carolina at Greensboro’s Department of Interior Architecture (UNCG) to provide design assistance to Main Street communities.
Placemaking is a strategy that Six Corners Association has enthusiastically applied to our community development efforts because of its seamless integration with the Main Street Approach.
In 2015, the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (WEDC) partnered with the University of Wisconsin–Madison to engage Wisconsin Main Street organizations and farmers markets in the Metrics and Indicators for Impact – Farmers Markets (MIFI-FM) toolkit.
The local Main Street organization, Downtown Milford Inc., is trying to address these shifting demographics by creating a more inclusive sense of community.
This is the story of how a National Endowment for the Arts gathering in DC inspired the leaders of a small town in Appalachia to connect with those in Milwaukee to transform a neglected park.
Main Street communities across the country are no stranger to seeking creative strategies to solve their most nagging issues – vacant buildings, marketing downtown, bolstering retail to name a few.
This article is the second in a series on corridors and the important role they play in Main Street revitalization. The previous article focused on the historic origins of corridors, corridor types, and functions that they serve in our communities.
While the Main Street program may not take the lead in corridor enhancements, it can be a vital partner and advocate for improvements in overall community appearance.
A lot of signs are necessary to make a downtown work well, but not every community knows what a good sign system looks like, or how instrumental it can be to the creation of a successful downtown.