When the educational program at Dover Street School moved at the end of the last school year to a nearby building it shares with the Tippecanoe program, the 1889-vintage Bay View school building is the site of a planned neighborhood arts center.
According creative director Kellie Krawczyk, The Hive at Dover will be a community collaborative arts center.
“The whole idea for an arts center began when art, music and gym were eliminated from many of our neighborhood schools,” she says in a video tour of the building. “So a group of us volunteers got together and (created) a plan.”
Among the highlights of the plan are:
- Nearly two dozen rooms available for rent to arts non-profits and individuals.
- A main office from which The Hive will be managed. But the former school office will also contain office equipment available to tenants in the building at no cost.
- A Hive Lounge with tables and chairs, a library of art history and how-to art books, coloring books and crayons for kids, free wi-fi and, perhaps, a coffee and tea bar. “It’s meant to be a gathering space and resource center and is free and open to anyone,” says Krawczyk.
- A donation center to collect art and craft supplies for use in the public art studios. The space will also function as a thrift store to sell surplies supplies to help support the project.
- The Gymnatorium – school’s former top-floor gym and auditorium, with a stage and projection screen – will be leased by the hour for public and private events and performances.
- A public art studio where students can come and make one of several prepared art projects for free or a minimal fee. There will also be scheduled kids and adult classes, drop-in hours, room available for rent. Laura Makula-Zimmerman, creative director of The Hive’s public arts studio, notes in the video that, “Teachers and volunteers will be available to answer questions, to guide students and to give support with supplies.”
The public spaces in The Hive will be open to the community at no cost, but, says, Krawczyk, there will be advantages to buying a membership. The specifics of those benefits have not yet been solidified.
The building has not yet been purchased from the district, though a potential model for the sale might be seen in the sale of Garfield School last for for $1 to community members who will turn it into a neighborhood center, says School Board Director Meagan Holman, who represents the district in which Dover is located.
“The superintendent asked me about the disposition of Dover, since now that it is closed, it would have to have significant updates to be available to be used as a school building again,” Holman says.
“I suggested that we look at selling it for community arts and he asked if I could identify a buyer. It was then that I approached Kellie, who has always wanted to run a community art center, and she and her talented, entrepreneurial friends ran with it.”
According to Holman, more than $200,000 in grant requests are pending and revenues from facility rental and income is expected to cover costs.
Makula-Zimmerman says The Hive is “an open space that will help to ignite the creative spirit in everybody.”
The Hive organizers continue to work on plans for the center, Krawczyk says, but there is no firm opening date yet. A public meeting will be held at Beulah Brinton Community Center, 2555 S. Bay St., in Bay View, on Saturday, Dec. 10, at 3 p.m.
“We want to invite everyone to participate with us,” says Krawczyk. “We would love the entire community to come out and be a part of this.”