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Solar House opens July 10 at Children’s Museum

Posted at 6:44 pm July 5, 2014
By Kay Brookshire Leave a Comment

Living Light House Ribbon-cutting

Chelsea, left, and Craig Myles walk to the Solar House with Carroll Welch, Children’s Museum deputy director, center, after a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new addition at the Children’s Museum. (Submitted photos)

The Living Light Solar House, an ambassador for good design and energy efficiency while at the University of Tennessee, will open to the public on July 10 at the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge.

The Children’s Museum will host an open house from 7-9 p.m. Thursday, inviting visitors to tour the solar-powered house and the museum. Admission will be free that evening, as the museum shows the community its newest exhibit, the house built by University of Tennessee students.

UT donated the solar house to the Children’s Museum, where it arrived May 17. The new exhibit invites children and families to experience sustainability in an energy-efficient house recognized for its architectural design.

“Young people who see the Living Light house talk about wanting a place of their own like that someday,” said Carroll Welch, Children’s Museum deputy director. “The house is very inspiring for children, and it will offer many great learning opportunities.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Entertainment, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: architectural design, Carroll Welch, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, energy efficiency, Kids Go Green! Environmental Center and Gardens, Living Light Solar House, Solar House, solar-powered house, U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon, University of Tennessee, UT

Lake City is now Rocky Top, Tennessee

Posted at 9:52 pm June 26, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Lake City to Rocky Top Vote

The Lake City Council on Thursday agreed to change the town’s name to Rocky Top as part of an effort to attract a multi-million dollar development that could include a water park, interactive theater with children’s museum, and coal miners music theater, among other things.

 

Note: This story was last updated at 1:10 p.m. June 28.

LAKE CITY—Lake City is now Rocky Top, Tennessee.

For most people, Rocky Top has been, until now, the name of a bluegrass song that is wildly popular in East Tennessee and the unofficial anthem of the University of Tennessee Volunteers. Hikers might know it as a sub-peak of Thunderhead Mountain in the Great Smoky Mountains. And shoppers might recognize it as the name of a bookstore, or gas station, or wine trail, or one of many other businesses registered in Tennessee.

But officials and business leaders here have worked for months to make their town to first to use it in a city name.

The idea is to use the name change to spur developments along Interstate 75 that could be worth up to $237 million. Proposed projects include an indoor and outdoor water park, interactive theater with a children’s museum, a coal miners music theater, and laser tag, among other things. Officials have said those developments—which have also included other options such as a hotel, restaurant, and candy company—won’t happen without the name change.

Residents hope the change and subsequent developments will create jobs, add sales tax revenues, and provide a vital economic boost to this depressed town of 1,800 people in northern Anderson County. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Government, Lake City, Lake City, Lake City, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Bill Haslam, Boudleaux Bryant, Brad Coriell, children's museum, Coal Creek, coal miners music theater, economic boost, Felice Bryant, Great Smoky Mountains, House of Bryant, House of Bryant Publications LLC, interactive theater, jobs, Lake City, Lake City Council, Lake City Middle School, lawsuit, Michael L. Lovely, name chagne, Rocky Top, Rocky Top Marketing and Manufacturing Co., Rocky Top Tennessee, Sharon Templin, tax revenues, Tennessee General Assembly, Thomas A. Varlan, Thunderhead Mountain, Tim Isbel, Tim Sharp, trademark infringement, U.S. District Court, water park

Living Light solar-powered home moves to Children’s Museum

Posted at 9:14 am May 20, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Living Light House Trailer

The University of Tennessee donated the Living Light House to the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge, and the 750-square-foot solar-powered home was moved Saturday.

 

The University of Tennessee in Knoxville has donated its Living Light House to the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge, and the 750-square-foot solar-powered home was moved Saturday.

The award-winning home makes more energy than it uses, said James Rose, senior lecturer in UT’s College of Architecture and Design.

Moving the 80,000-pound house was a daylong project. The Children’s Museum is in a residential area in Oak Ridge, so the museum had to move trees, excavate a slope, and create a temporary road to get to the site.

Rose said the one-room home, which has mechanical and laundry areas, will be used at the Children’s Museum for outreach and to showcase the latest energy-efficient technologies.

“This is the perfect place for this building,” said Rose, the architect of record on the project and the leader of the student architecture studio that designed it. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Community, Education, Education, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Slider, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Carroll Welch, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, design, Electrical Power Research Institute, energy efficiency, Environmental Learning Center and Gardens, James Rose, Kids Go Green! Environmental Learning Center, Living Light House, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ollege of Architecture and Design, Solar Decathlon, solar-powered home, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Tennessee, UT

UT solar house donated, moving Saturday to Children’s Museum

Posted at 11:44 am May 16, 2014
By University of Tennessee Leave a Comment

ut-living-light-house

 

KNOXVILLE—The University of Tennessee in Knoxville is donating the Living Light House— its award-winning, solar-powered project—to the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge.

The Living Light House will move to its permanent home on Saturday, May 17. Starting at 7 a.m., the 750-square-foot, zero-energy structure, will be transported from the UT Gardens to the Oak Ridge museum at 461 W. Outer Drive. The move is expected to take several hours.

“The house has served as an ambassador for good design and energy efficiency,” said James Rose, UT architecture lecturer and lead faculty member of the Living Light project. “One of the most satisfying things about giving tours of the house is the response from children. Young people are always fascinated by the house and leave it excited about the future. I cannot think of a better place for the Living Light house to carry on this mission than at the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge.”

The Living Light House, which was built through the efforts of more than 200 UT students, was an entry to the 2011 U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon in Washington, D.C. It has traveled nearly 6,000 miles, been toured by more than 50,000 visitors, and was on exhibit at the 2012 Smithsonian Folklife Festival. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Community, Education, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Carroll Welch, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, Electrical Power Research Institute, Environmental Learning Center and Gardens, James Rose, Kids Go Green! Environmental Learning Center, Living Light, Living Light House, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Rose Ballentine, Solar Decathlon, solar power, Susan Ballentine, U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon, University of Tennessee, UT Office of Research, zero-energy

Lake City’s name change to Rocky Top on hold for now

Posted at 1:29 am May 6, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Tim Isbel at Hearing on Lake City Name Change to Rocky Top

Tim Isbel, president of the Rocky Top Marketing and Manufacturing Co., at a federal court hearing on Monday on Lake City’s proposed name change to Rocky Top.

Note: this story was updated at 2:52 a.m.

KNOXVILLE—Lake City’s proposed name change to Rocky Top is on hold for now as a federal judge considers a request to stop the move.

The name change has been proposed as part of an expensive plan to convert the former coal mining town in northern Anderson County into a tourist destination. But it has been challenged by the publisher of “Rocky Top,” a well-known bluegrass song and unofficial University of Tennessee anthem.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam has signed a bill that allows the name change, but the proposal has not yet gone back to the Lake City Council for final approval. Under the state law, Lake City could become Rocky Top on July 3, said Tim Isbel, an Anderson County Commissioner and president of Rocky Top Tennessee Marketing and Manufacturing Co.

That company has proposed a development that could be worth up to $450 million over six years and include an indoor and outdoor water park, coal miners theater, children’s museum, train rides, restaurant, and candy company on some 300 acres near two exits off Interstate 75. During a hearing in U.S. District Court in Knoxville on Monday, officials said it could bring 200 new jobs to Lake City and generate another $6 million in sales tax per year. But the project hinges on the name change. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Federal, Government, Government, Lake City, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Bill Haslam, bluegrass song, Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, Boudleaux Bryant, candy company, children's museum, coal miners theater, House of Bryant Publications LLC, intellectual property, John Triggs, Lake City, Lake City Council, name change, Nathan D. Rowel, Rocky Top, Rocky Top Tennessee Marketing and Manufacturing Co., Tim Isbel, train rides, U.S. District Court, University of Tennessee, Waddey Patterson, water park

‘Why Art’ exhibit opens Friday at Children’s Museum

Posted at 10:44 pm May 5, 2014
By Kay Brookshire Leave a Comment

Oil Pastel

Jihye Jung is the young artist who created this oil pastel painting of a dragon. (Submitted image)

The Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge will host the opening of the exhibit “Why Art?” from 6-7 p.m. Friday, May 9, showcasing children’s art and highlighting the benefits of art education in a child’s academic life.

Children who are students of private art teacher Anjela McEahern will exhibit drawings and paintings in various media, including graphite pencil, colored pencil, pastel, watercolor and acrylic paint. Her 23 students, who attend preschool through eighth grade, will each have a work of art in the exhibit in Imagination Gallery at the museum at 461 W. Outer Drive.

The exhibit will also include a mural created by Phil Yeh, an artist representing Cartoonists Across America and the World, during the 2010 Street Painting Festival sponsored by the local Oak Ridge Rotary Clubs. Yeh and Leona Kitchings, who contributed to the mural, sketched Oak Ridge landmarks, and many local artists painted the landmarks.

Entertaining with a violin performance will be Michael Lin, a Farragut Middle School student and first violin in the Youth Chamber Orchestra in the Knoxville Symphony Youth Orchestra Association. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Arts, Community, Entertainment, Front Page News, Nonprofits Tagged With: acrylic paint, Anjela McEahern, art, art exhibit, children's art, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, Leona Kitchings, Michael Lin, pastel, Phil yeh, watercolor, Why Art

Twenty dragon boat teams ready to race May 31

Posted at 1:40 pm May 4, 2014
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

Dragon Boat Races

Teams take part in the annual Dragon Boat Festival in Taipei on May 28, 2009. Originally the summer event was a time to ward off bad spirits but now it is a celebration of the life of Qu Yuan, a Chinese poet who opposed the corruption of the imperial court. More than 200 teams from Taiwan and abroad will compete in the three-day race. AFP PHOTO / PATRICK LIN (Photo credit should read PATRICK LIN/ AFP/ Getty Images)

 

Commit to a competitive sport and community support. 

That could be the motto of the inaugural Oak Ridge Dragon Boat Festival, a fundraiser for community nonprofit service organizations that will be launched by the three Rotary clubs of Oak Ridge.

Already at least 20 boat teams are being organized, with more expected to register soon at http://oakridge.racedragonboats.com/.

At least 15 companies and organizations have paid or pledged a total of more than $25,000.

The Oak Ridge Dragon Boat Festival will be held Saturday, May 31, at the Oak Ridge Marina and Pavilion in Melton Lake Park. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Churches, Community, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: Boys and Girls Club, children's museum, dragon boat, dragon boat races, Dynamic Dragon Boat Racing LLC, Free Medical Clinic, Girls Inc., Jim Sumner, Keith Kahl, Leslie England, Melton Lake Park, Oak Ridge Breakfast Rotary Club, Oak Ridge Dragon Boat Festival, Oak Ridge Marina, Oak Ridge Rotary Community Fund, Oak Ridge Sunset Rotary Club, Penny Behling, Rotary Club, Rotary Club of Oak Ridge

STEM standards training for informal educators, tutors, community members

Posted at 12:31 am April 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Schools is partnering with Oak Ridge Associated Universities, the Children’s Museum, and American Museum of Science and Energy to do a STEM standards training for informal educators, tutors, and community members from 6-8 p.m. Monday, April 21, at the Children’s Museum.

“This training will be beneficial to those who are interested in learning more about helping students advance their skills in science, technology, engineering, and math and have been wondering what the Common Core and Science Standards are as well as how they can be applied to informal and after-school education programs,” a press release said. “The training will be led by Oak Ridge Schools’ staff.”

Light refreshments and childcare will be provided. You can register at www.orau.us/informaledworkshop.

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12 Tagged With: American Museum of Science and Energy, children's museum, Common Core, educators, engineering, math, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge Schools, science, Science Standards, STEM, technology, tutors

Children’s Museum hosts Young Child Celebration on April 11

Posted at 11:54 pm April 7, 2014
By Kay Brookshire Leave a Comment

Backwoods Rambling Puppets

Wood and Strings Theatre will bring the rich folklore and toe-tapping tunes of the Appalachian Mountains to life with a puppet performance of “Backwoods Ramblin’” on Friday, April 11, for the Celebration of the Young Child at the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge.

The celebration, from 9 a.m.-1 p.m., will be a tribute to Selma Shapiro, who led the museum for 32 years before her retirement at age 80 in 2004. She expanded the museum from a group of small exhibits established by Girl Scouts into a nationally recognized regional center of learning and play, and continued to volunteer at the museum until her death in 2011.

Wood and Strings Theatre’s marionettes play fiddles, smoke corn cob pipes, dance jigs, and sing mountain tunes as they take the audience to the front porch of storyteller Grandpa Will’s cabin. He spins tall tales based on “Jack Tales,” authentic Appalachian folk tales compiled by Richard Chase. Grandpa Will’s family, friends, and hound dog all join in the lively entertainment. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Entertainment, Front Page News, News, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge Tagged With: Adele Roberts, Carroll Welch, Celebration of the Young Child, Child Abuse Prevention, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, Healthy Start, puppet show, Puppets, selma shapiro, Wood and Strings Theatre, Young Child Celebration

AMSE’s operating contract with for-profit could be replaced by nonprofit

Posted at 9:27 am December 19, 2013
By John Huotari 1 Comment

American Museum of Science and Energy

The American Museum of Science and Energy on South Tulane Avenue in Oak Ridge is pictured above.

The contract with the for-profit company that runs the American Museum of Science and Energy will change from quarterly to monthly starting Jan. 1, and a museum expert could be hired on an interim basis to assess the museum, its place in the community, and a logical new operating structure.

The museum is now funded by the U.S. Department of Energy at a cost of about $1.5 to $1.6 million per year, said David Keim, communications director at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Revenues from the gift shop, admissions, and programs add up to about $300,000 per year.

But officials have long said that the department should not be operating the museum.

“It’s always been a government-funded operation,” Keim said. But, “DOE is not in the museum business.”

In June, a group of museum directors brought to Oak Ridge from around the country recommended that the museum be run by a community-based nonprofit organization—not DOE and not a for-profit company, Keim said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: American Museum of Science and Energy, AMSE, AMSE Foundation, Amy Fitzgerald, atomic bombs, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, David Keim, DOE, EASI, Enterprise Advisory Services Inc., for-profit, Jeff Smith, Manhattan Project, Manhattan Project National Park, Mark Watson, museum, nonprofit, Oak Ridge Municipal Building, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Ray Smith, revenues, Secret City, Secret City Commemorative Walk, U.S. Department of Energy, UT-Battelle, World War II

Children’s Museum Gala celebrates 1970s

Posted at 11:52 am November 12, 2013
By Kay Brookshire Leave a Comment

Jack Funari and John Brown

Jack Funari, also known as “Saxophone Jack,” and John Brown will perform at the Children’s Museum 40th Birthday Gala on Friday, Dec. 6. (Submitted photo)

The Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge will celebrate its origins in the 1970s when guests gather for the 40th Birthday Gala at the museum on Friday, Dec. 6. The theme will be “Rocketing through the 70s!” in honor of the March 11, 1973, birth of the museum and the Rocket Room play area that delights children of all ages.

Guests will hop aboard the “Soul Train,” with the museum decked out as Knoxville’s Southern Terminal, as they enjoy the folk, rock, and pop culture of the 1970s.

Saxophone Jack and Friends will entertain guests with the music from the 1970s, and guests are invited to dress as their favorite characters of that era. Jack Furnari, also known as Saxophone Jack, has been in the Knoxville and East Tennessee music scene for more than 30 years. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Entertainment, Front Page News, Nonprofits Tagged With: 1970s, birthday gala, Caroll Welch, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, gala, Jack Funari, John Brown, Saxophone Jack

Children’s Museum hosts chili cook-off

Posted at 4:21 pm October 14, 2013
By Kay Brookshire Leave a Comment

ES&H at Children's Museum Chili Cook-off

Bill Garibay, president and chief executive officer of ES&H, joins staff members in preparing chili for the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge Chili Cook-off. With him, from left, are Erik Cueto, Bryan Byler, Dave O’Toole, Lynne Musick, and Jim Everett. (Submitted photo)

Chili teams are invited to cook a pot of their best chili, and the public is welcome to sample it, when the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge hosts its first annual Choo Choo Chili Cook-off on Sunday, Oct. 20.

As chili contestants vie for ribbons, the public may sample chili and enjoy hot dogs, cornbread and beverages that will be available during the cook-off, which will take place from 3-6 p.m. For children, pumpkin decorating and scarecrow activities will add to the fun afternoon. Admission for the cook-off and museum is $5.

Chili chefs may enter in one of five categories: vegetarian, meat, spicy, white and surprise ingredient. They will prepare chili off site and bring at least one gallon of chili in a crock pot for the event. Contestants must use non-processed ingredients, except for items such as tomatoes, Worcestershire sauce, and Tabasco sauce. Contestants are asked to provide a team name and decorate a table. Fee for contestants is $25 per team. More than 20 teams are expected at the cook-off. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Entertainment, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, chili cook-off, Choo Choo Chili Cook-off, model railroaders

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

Public Notice: NNSA announces no significant impact of Y-12 Development Organization operations at Horizon Center

AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

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Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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