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UPDATE | February 16, 2007 4:11 PM

Mural plan heads to city council, again

A plan to paint a mural on the side of the State Wayne Theater in Wayne will go in front of the Wayne City Council Tuesday night.

Members of the Wayne 2020 Committee discussed a revised version of the plan Thursday night and unanimously recommended its approval, according to City Planner Matt Miller.

The revised concept shows two full color center panels along with two full-color flanking panels, according to Peter McInerney, community development director for the City of Wayne.

“It doesn’t look incomplete at all,” Miller said. “It’s just a reduced design.”

It also shows a full upper band of images that refer to the transportation history of Wayne, even though the cost of that is not covered by the original $49,000 contract. The arrtists said that would be added without an additional charge, McInerney said.

“I knew we had the right guys for this,” said a beaming McInerney. “They’re good people.”

“We’re very happy about that,” Miller added.

In a letter to the city, Joshua Winer and David Fichter, the two Massachusetts-based muralists selected for the project, said the upper band was necessary to make the overall composition work.

“Because the budget is fixed, there will be no additional charge for that, even though it does exceed the scope of our previous proposal for $49,000,” they wrote. “We offer this in the interest of having the best design possible with the available resources.”

The funding for the mural project was allocated in the 2005 Downtown Development Authority (DDA) budget and held over in the 2006 DDA budget. It was originally designed to fund two smaller mural projects, one along Michigan Avenue and another on Wayne Road.

During a visit to Wayne last year, however, the muralists proposed the side of the State Wayne Theater for the mural, because it was ‘the best canvas in town.’ The concept they proposed for the side of the theater was larger than the two smaller murals combined, though, and they requested an additional $39,0000 to fund the work.

That request is still formally pending, but McInerney was directed to ask for a scaled back version of the project that fit the original budget because of concerns from the city council that the work would distract from the upcoming road improvement millage campaign.

The location and the concept still have to be approved by the Wayne City Council, too. The city sign ordinance dictates that council approval is necessary before any type of mural can be painted on the side of a building or other outdoor features, Miller said.

“This is just a concept,” he said. “We can work out the details administratively.”

The version discussed tonight leaves four open ‘panels’ on the side of the theater, two on either side of the center work. The upper band of images—which would be painted in shades of one color to resemble carved stone ornaments—would extend along the entire side, though.

“We believe that this mural will function as a ‘stand alone’ design,” the muralists said. “It can also be added to in the future (with the addition to be the missing four panels from our original design) to tell the longer history of Wayne.”

THe City Council meeting starts at 8 p.m. at Wayne City Hall.

http://www.journalgroup.com/Wayne/3196

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Reader comments [2]

Feb 16, 2007 | 10:58 AM
Brenda:

I know this is a minor concern but what happens to this mural if thugs graffiti it like they did the painting on Al’s Market in the past. Who will take care of the costs to restore or fix it?

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Feb 18, 2007 | 7:20 PM
Mark Blackwell:

Just a reply to the comment by “Brenda”; maybe it will go un-repaired JUST like the one at “Al’s Friendly Market”. Kinda ironic, the Mayor of Wayne owns a business in the community yet does NOTHING nor will the city do ANYTHING about the obvious delapitated exterior of his building. Why? I guess that it’s because he’s the MAYOR! If any homeowner EVER let their property get in the state that Haidous’s building is in, you bet your sweet-bippy that we’d surely get a ticket! Just maybe, “Al” did’nt see “Neat-Nick” on the city’s calendar. And what I don’t get is that the City Manager stated that “this mural is just the shot in the arm that the City of Wayne needs”. How is a mural going to bolster the local economy? If that was the case, then I would be painting all over our city, heck, the WHOLE state for that matter.

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