Showing posts with label Dunwoody Farmhouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dunwoody Farmhouse. Show all posts

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Wonderful Community Traditions - Light Up Dunwoody & Cocoa n Candles this Sunday evening


Light Up Dunwoody
November 22, 2009

4pm Parade from Dunwoody Farmhouse

4:30 Festival Begins

Entertainment under the Tent, PCMS Jazz Band, Balloon Sculptors, Bounce House, Visits with Santa, Photo Booth & Children’s Activities

Light Up Dunwoody Show Agenda

4:30 DHS Marching Band
4:45 Dunwoody Elementary Chorus
5:00 PCMS Marching Band
5:15 Chesnut Chorus
5:25 Vanderlyn Dancers
5:35 PCMS Majorettes
5:45 Austin Chorus
5:55 Kingsley Chorus
6:05 Pure Elegance Dancers
6:15 Vanderlyn Chorus

6:30 Light the Tree

Followed immediately by Cocoa & Candles at Dunwoody Nature Center 

Dunwoody Village looks so pretty all a-twinkle - and Dunwoody Park is like a fairyland when luminaries line the trails and boardwalk. Volunteers from local high schools and merchants help make it magical! Come to Dunwoody Nature Center for a night hike, a roasted marshmallow, and a cup of cocoa or coffee right after "Light Up Dunwoody." This is our gift to the community - admission is FREE for everyone.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

All are invited to the Dunwoody Police swearing in tonight 6:30 pm at the Farmhouse.

Also, for anyone interested, the Police Department will be rolling out on patrol at midnight from City Hall (41 Perimeter Center East). There will be a brief ceremony starting about 11:30 pm and then the blue lights will roll out.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Safe Routes to School Meeting on Wed to prepare for Thursday.


At tonight's City Council meeting (audio here), I mentioned the Safe Routes to Schools grant and that I was interested in the City putting in a proposal. I stated that I was going to have a quick meeting with a number of interested community representatives as well as several community grant writers on Wednesday Evening at 7 pm at the Dunwoody Farmhouse. I was thinking of having the meeting tomorrow but both of my sons have football games going on with the Atlanta Colts; therefore I have moved it to Wednesday evening.

All are welcome on Wednesday but the goal of the meeting is to review the requirements of the grant and prepare for Thursday mornings meeting with GDOT in order to put the best proposal out for consideration.
Grant Proposal Meeting
Dunwoody Farmhouse
Wednesday 7 pm

The Safe Routes To School (SRTS) program is designed to fund comprehensive programs that include the 5 Es (Education, Encouragement, Enforcement, Evaluation, and Engineering) throughout Georgia to encourage and enable more children to walk and bike to school safely. The funds are intended to start an SRTS program in communities and assist community members in sustaining successful SRTS programs.
Safe Routes to Schools Workshop
Thursday, October 23, 2008,
10:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Georgia DOT,
600 West Peachtree Street N.W., 4th Floor,
Atlanta, GA 30308,
Tel. (404) 631-1990

National Safe Routes to School Task Force Report

Monday, October 20, 2008

What is Dunwoody’s Brand? What does the city represent to you and what should it mean to others?

Does the Dunwoody Farmhouse truly represent our "brand"?

Tomorrow’s City Council work session has a “City Branding” discussion item on the agenda and after a little discussion of the Council an ad-hoc committee may be formed to put together a Brand for the City of Dunwoody. Myself and others initially believed that since the iconic symbol of the Dunwoody Farmhouse already tops most of our street signs and is already a prominent fixture of our city seal, shouldn't that be our “Brand”. Maybe, maybe not?

The problem is what does the farmhouse symbol say about Dunwoody to the people who currently live here? Does it really represent their values and if so explain in words what the farmhouse means so that those ideas can be properly conveyed to a person who doesn’t live here but may want to relocate his family or business here? What does the Dunwoody Farmhouse and the “Dunwoody Brand” mean to the young couple who currently lives in Midtown and is thinking of starting a family? What does it say to Singles, Seniors, businesses, shoppers & investors? Is the farmhouse symbol a positive, a negative or a meaningless abstract item?

My research tells me that the Dunwoody Brand should…
  • provide a positive image which has year-long and long-term economic benefits
  • be complementary to the desired quality of life of local residents
  • be viable, marketable adaptable and achievable
  • be believable, simple and close to reality
  • be appealing and distinctive (there are already too many friendly places out there)
If we look at the officially adopted Vision for the City of Dunwoody, maybe we can get a few more ideas about what Dunwoody is or could be?
The City of Dunwoody will provide quality service to our citizens and support the largest economic engine in the Southeast by planning in a careful and thoughtful manner. The City of Dunwoody will be inventive, transparent and embrace responsible progress which is tempered by our rich history and our desire to maintain a close but vibrant community atmosphere that values family life and entrepreneurial spirit. Dunwoody is a community where activities are centered around the family, our schools, our religious institutions, and our beautiful parks.
Since the farmhouse icon clearly represents responsible progress and the rich history of the City but little else out of our Vision Statement; I am looking forward to hearing more about the "Branding of a City" at the meeting to see what the experts have in mind.

Any suggestions or comments?