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VOL. 41 | NO. 38 | Friday, September 22, 2017

Public invited to vote on Main Street preservation projects

The Associated Press

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A preservation group is inviting the public to vote on projects to improve Main Streets around the U.S.

Twenty-five cities, including Franklin, from Seattle to Miami are vying for funding to preserve or improve theaters, parks, landmarks and other venues in downtowns, historic neighborhoods and cultural districts.

The Franklkin project would involve renovation of the Dr. McPhail Building, one of the oldest structures in the city. Once it’s renovated, the Heritage Foundation of Franklin and Williamson County will use the building to share Franklin’s history and highlight preservation’s impact on the community.

One proposal would create a park for vintage neon signs in Casa Grande, Arizona. Another would preserve the Formosa Cafe on Route 66 in West Hollywood, California. Several cities seek funding to preserve historic theaters, like the Woodward Theater in Cincinnati and the Yale Theatre in Oklahoma City.

The program, called Partners in Preservation: Main Streets, is supported by American Express, the National Trust for Historic Preservation and Main Street America.

National Geographic is hosting the http://VoteYourMainStreet.org website, where the public may vote once a day for up to five projects through Oct. 31. Winners will be announced Nov. 2. The sites with the most votes will get grants of up to $150,000 each, with as many projects funded as possible from a pool of $1.5 million.

The 25 proposed projects are:

—Dr. McPhail Building, Franklin, Tennessee

—Alabama Theatre marquee, Birmingham, Alabama

—Vintage Neon Sign Park, Casa Grande, Arizona

—Marquee, Market Street Mall, Richmond, California

—Stevens-Hartley Annex, San Diego

—Formosa Cafe, Route 66, West Hollywood, California

—Caboose, Creative District, Steamboat Springs, Colorado

—Manuel Artime Theater, Miami's Little Havana neighborhood

—Bryant Graves House, Sweet Auburn district, Atlanta

—1893 cable car building, Hyde Park, Illinois

—Lyric Theater, West Des Moines, Iowa

—Old McCrory's Store, New Orleans

—Pierce Building and Streetcar Comfort Station, Boston's Dorchester Arts and Culture Innovation District

—The Treehouse, Detroit's northwest Livernois/6 Mile corridors

—Bandstand and park, Ivers Square, Cape Girardeau, Missouri

—E. Romero Hose and Fire Building, Las Vegas, New Mexico

—Restoration Plaza, Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, Brooklyn, New York

—Carolina Theatre, Greensboro, North Carolina

—Woodward Theater marquee, Cincinnati's Over-the-Rhine neighborhood

—Yale Theatre, Oklahoma City

—Trower Building, Parker Hall and other African-American landmarks in Philadelphia's Germantown neighborhood

—Collin County Courthouse exterior, McKinney, Texas

—Historic buildings, Granary District, Salt Lake City

—Fading signs on historic buildings in Seattle's Chinatown

—James Hughes Building, Washington, D.C.

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