New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (2024)

Jonathan Spiers 23

The Art Deco-style sign would be lighted with a combination of neon tubing and LED lights. (City documents)

A decade-plus effort to provide new signage for the entrance to Carytown has reached the finish line.

City approval is expected this week for a new gateway sign in the 3500 block of Cary Street that would mark the start of the nine-block shopping district for drivers and pedestrians traveling east on the one-way road.

The sign would be suspended above Cary Street via steel wires attached to poles.

The two-sided, Art Deco-style sign with neon tubing and LED lights would be suspended above the road via steel wires attached to two 25-foot steel poles, creating an arch-like entrance that cars would pass under just before Cary’s intersection with Nansemond Street. The green- and white-colored sign with gold accents reads “Carytown” with “Richmond VA” below it and “Est 1938” above.

In the works since 2011, the sign will replace a decades-old wooden sign that had stood beside Cary across from Thompson Street. That sign, which had replaced an older one from the 1990s, fell down last year, providing further motivation for a replacement.

The previous wooden sign fell down last year.

The Carytown Merchants Association has driven the sign effort, which board member and city liaison Kelley Banks said was hampered over the years by challenges with location, design and funding.

Working with city officials, CMA secured the funding via American Rescue Plan funds that the city had received to help businesses affected by the Covid-19 pandemic. The federal funds are covering the roughly $100,000 cost for the sign, Banks said.

“That was a key to the city being able to fund the sign and get us over the finish line,” said Banks, co-owner of Merrymaker Fine Paper.

Kelley Banks

“What has resulted is a product of persistence and volunteer effort, and really good collaboration with the city, on finally realizing the sign in a very permanent and what I think is going to be something that really has impact, not just for Carytown but for Richmond, and an identity of one of the most important parts of Richmond.”

Banks, who joined the CMA board two years ago specifically to assist the sign effort, said the original plan was for another ground sign to replace the older one, based on the thinking that a gateway sign would be too expensive.

The group hired design firm Campfire & Co. to create a branding package, but the ground sign plan hit a roadblock when the preferred location was found to be within right-of-way controlled by the Virginia Department of Transportation, which Banks said doesn’t allow permanent signage on its property.

Further prolonging the effort was the need for consensus among CMA’s members on the design and the cost, which was found to be lower with the wire suspension approach than with a full arch or more structural sign.

Design cues were taken from Cary Court Shopping Center.

Local manufacturer Wellcraft MFG designed the gateway sign, taking design cues from the Art Deco signage of the 1930s-era Carytown Court Shopping Center and the 1928 Byrd Theater. CMA is contracting with Wellcraft for annual refurbishment and repair as needed, and Glen Allen-based Messer Contracting is signed on to build the sign and the concrete footings needed for the poles.

The sign’s location is aligned with a gap between buildings at Carytown Exchange. It would cross Cary between the Torchy’s Tacos storefront and the Kroger parking lot.

The structure is designed to sustain high winds, according to a city planning report, which recommends approval and notes support for the sign from the owner of the Kroger-anchored International Shopping Center and the property manager of Carytown Exchange.

The location as viewed from Carytown Exchange on the north side of the street, facing south.

The Richmond Planning Commission is slated to approve a final review by the city’s Urban Design Committee at its meeting this Tuesday as part of its consent agenda, in which business considered to be routine is voted on as a block.

If approved as expected, Banks said CMA is aiming to have the sign installed in time for this year’s Carytown Watermelon Festival in August.

While the path to this point has been winding and arduous for the CMA’s 75 or so members, Banks said they are pleased with the final result of a gateway entrance to Carytown’s roughly 200 businesses.

“It was kind of serendipitous for (the ground sign) to be rejected, because it, I think, got us something better, and something that I hope could trickle to other special parts of Richmond like Scott’s Addition, Jackson Ward, Shockoe Bottom, the Fan,” Banks said.

“The merchants association was the driving force behind this, and that’s small business owners in Richmond and volunteer time,” she said. “We spent a lot of time talking about this amongst our members, showing it to other businesses in Carytown, getting input, getting feedback. I think to most people it’s going to seem like a surprise, but for a lot of people, we’ve been working on it for a long time.”

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (9)

George MacGuffin

7 hours ago

Excellent idea. You can find these all over out west. A nice added touch.

13

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (10)

Charles Frankenhoff

7 hours ago

It looks like a nice sign, kudos to those who got it done

17

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (11)

Justin Reynolds

6 hours ago

This sign looks great and its design suits Carytown. Nice job, CMA!

13

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (13)

Bruce Milam

4 hours ago

Reply toBruce Milam

I opposed this expenditure at the City level for years and now I see that federal tax dollars paid $100k for it. So, should we use tax dollars to put up signs in every sector of the city, the state . . . The nation?!! A trillion here, a trillion there, so what, huh? No one has any problem finding Carytown. They didn’t need a sign. but If they wanted a sign so badly, why didn’t the merchants and property owners pay for it themselves? Why did they go to the feds (and therefore, you and me)? Somewhere, at someRead more »

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (14)

Gary Levine

3 hours ago

Reply toBruce Milam

Investing in the upkeep and curb appeal is a small cost compared to the millions of tax revenue dollars that Carytown Merchants generates for the city, state, and federal governments.

7

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (15)

Shawn Harper

53 minutes ago

Reply toGary Levine

You are making it sound like an either/or proposition, as Bruce says, Carytown is clearly doing fine — that doesn’t mean that the sign should’ve been made for a struggling retail neighborhood.

At least this isn’t as stupid as Hissonner’s totally unthought out Pedestrian Mall idea….. it would be just like City Halls like Richmonds’ to screw something up that is already working, like they did in Shockoe Bottom to give sweetheart deals to their chosen slow contractors.

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (16)

Bruce D Anderson

3 hours ago

Reply toBruce Milam

… And get off my lawn! 😉

2

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (17)

Shawn Harper

57 minutes ago

Reply toBruce Milam

Wow! Look at you! I DO like the sign, but, yeah, you are singing a song I have sung since the early 1990s when Albany, NY paid 600k in 1990s $ for a bus kiosk (a very nice one that looked “Victorian”) and claimed it cost the taxpayers “nothing” because it was Federal funds. When some people started pointing out what you are (I was actually one of them, in my case interviewed on local TV in a sort of faux- Man on the Street situation) the city then said “Well…. these were USE IT OR LOSE IT transportation funds…”Read more »

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (18)

Bill Sweeney

5 hours ago

Now make it “Pedestrian and public transportation ” ONLY! On weekends

Last edited 5 hours ago by Bill Sweeney

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (19)

Shawn Harper

52 minutes ago

Reply toBill Sweeney

Oh, Brilliant….

-1

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (20)

Adam Smith

4 hours ago

Love this! Good looking design

1

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (21)

Michael Morgan-Dodson

3 hours ago

I love it and I get the CMA worked to get funds via the City to fund its construction but SO glad they will have a regular maintenance agreement managed and paid for by the CMA. God help us if the City was responsible for maintenance; part of the sign went out it would take the city 12-18 months to change a bulb. I strongly suggest they put some good bollards in concrete around it.

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (22)

Shawn Harper

50 minutes ago

Reply toMichael Morgan-Dodson

Yes it’s a nice sign, likely because City Hall had nothing to do with making it and yes, the city would likely treat the sign like it treats the school buildings — something to not fund the maintenance for so they can shame the State eventually into giving it more unearned funds to distribute corruptly and still not maintain the schools.

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (23)

Robert Chakales

3 hours ago

The 1930’s art deco design is perfect! Put it up soon. Now, we need a matching one on the opposite end and make it a pedestrian plaza like Lincoln Road in South Beach.

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (24)

Shawn Harper

49 minutes ago

Reply toRobert Chakales

Because this will FINALLY get foot traffic in Carytown???

Too many people think with ideology.

-1

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (25)

Bruce D Anderson

3 hours ago

Very cool sign. Congrats to the forces behind this!

Reply

New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (26)

Brian Glass

3 hours ago

Bill: If you really want to cause the demise of Carytown eliminating cars on weekends will do it! It’s been tried in many other towns/small cities only to be reversed at a later date.

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (27)

Shawn Harper

47 minutes ago

Reply toBrian Glass

Yes, I think these people have even heard about this and choose to put their fingers in their ears in a “It may not tend to work in PRACTICE, but BOY does it ever work in THEORY!!!” sort of university professor kind of way.

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (28)

Jim Jacobs

2 hours ago

So whatever happened to the sign re-design from several years ago as seen here?

https://www.styleweekly.com/the-old-carytown-sign-is-on-its-way-out/

1

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (29)

Thomas Carter

1 hour ago

When did a sign become “signage?”

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New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (30)

Shawn Harper

46 minutes ago

Reply toThomas Carter

When it started being a magnet for subsidies. There is all sorts of corruptly expensive interpretive signage all over the USA these days, usually with some old grievance real or exaggerated spelled out on them.

Reply

New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (31)

Michael Boyer

7 seconds ago

Thanks a bunch Stoney!

Reply

New gateway sign for Carytown caps yearslong effort - Richmond BizSense (2024)
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