Muncie Neighborhood Visual Identity Design (ongoing)

snippet of one of the branding images

The City of Muncie has diverse communities with friendly people, exciting pasts, and outstanding cultural amenities that make it a desired place to live, do business, and visit. Starting in Spring 2019, Studio 165+, an immersive design studio in the School of Art, began working with neighborhood committees to develop their visual identity, elevate their image and evoke a sense of pride in residents. The students researched each neighborhood determining unique key aspects, characteristics, challenges, and opportunities. After developing a neighborhood identity, they created designs to captured those characteristics and established style guides to help the neighborhoods illustrate graphic standards and rules to ensure consistency and continuity across applications and platforms. The neighborhoods done so far include Gatewood, Halteman Village, Westbrier, Old West End, Robinwood Estates, Forest Park, McKinley, Southside, Riverside/Normal City, and Whitely.  With input from residents of each neighborhood, they created a variety of materials including logos for each neighborhood to choose from, each one tailored to what makes that area of our community special–from the mid-century architecture of Halteman Village, to the open hands of Whitely.

If Studio 165+ is coming to your neighborhood soon, please fill out this brief questionnaire to help them get started on your new neighborhood identity.

Photo Gallery | You can also check out the great work they’ve done so far!

Awards & Recognition:

Whitely Community Identity Design

  1. American Graphic Design Award (National Award)
  2. American Advertising Federation East Central Indiana, Silver ADDY (Local Award)

Old West End Neighborhood Identity Design

  1. American Advertising Federation East Central Indiana, Gold ADDY (Local Award)
  2. American Advertising Federation East Central Indiana, Judges Choice ADDY (Local Award)
  3. American Advertising Federation East Central Indiana, Best of Show ADDY (Local Award)

Studio 165+

Project Page: https://www.studio165plus.com/bbn
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/studio165plus/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/studio165plus

 


Spring 2019

Faculty Mentor: Shantanu Suman
Department: Art
Community Partner: Building Better Neighborhoods, Muncie Action Plan, Halteman Village, Robinwood Estates, Westbrier Neighborhood, Whitely Community, Old West End
Students: Nikki Abel, Ashley Allegretti, Hanna Boggs, Mariah Drake, Kate Hamilton, Valerie Francis, Emily Lipps, Sylvia Marbach, Samantha Robbins, Cameo Smith, Ashlyn Sterling, Katie Strader, Angel Winchester


Fall 2019

Faculty Mentor: Shantanu Suman
Department: Art
Community Partner: Building Better Neighborhoods, Muncie Action Plan, Forest Park, McKinley Live Learn Neighborhood, Southside Neighborhood
Student Team: Samantha Robbins, Ashlyn Sterling, Dominic Zelli, Erin Mawhorter, Jared Carter, Joel Hall, Katie Strader, Katie Hamilton, Mariah Drake, Ashley Allegretti, Jakob Rosenberger, Mariah Jester, Nikki Abel


Spring 2020

Faculty Mentor: Shantanu Suman
Department: Art
Community Partner: Building Better Neighborhoods, Muncie Action Plan, Riverside/Normal City
Student Team: Samantha Robbins, Ashlyn Sterling, Katie Strader, Valerie Francis, Angel Winchester, Hanna Boggs, Mariah Drake, Cameo Smith, Kate Hamilton, Ashley Allegretti, Sylvia Marbach, Nikki Abel, Dominic Zelli, Erin Mawhorter, Jared Carter, Joel Hall, Jake Gesick, Aubrey Hayden, Xander Crawley, Kimberly Holbrook, James Ong Jakob Rosenberger, and Mariah Jester

Fall 2019 Ball State Immersive Learning Projects

Ball State faculty, students, and community partners worked together this Fall on a number of immersive learning projects in and around Muncie.

Beneficence Records (ongoing)
Faculty Mentor:  Daniel Porter, School of Music
Community Partner:  Indiana Public Radio

Campus Sexual Assault and Rape Culture in the Age of #MeToo 
Faculty Fellow:  Jill Christman, Department of English
Community Partner:  Jana’s Campaign and The Facing Project

Computer Science for Middle Schoolers (CS4MS) (ongoing)
Faculty Mentor:  Dave Largent, Department of Computer Science
Community Partners:  Burris Laboratory School, Muncie Central High School, Northside Middle School

i-Made (Indiana Made) Muncie:  Custom Fabricated Design-through-Production (ongoing)
Faculty Mentor:  Kevin Klinger, Department of Architecture
Community Partners:  Indiana Hardwoods (IHLA), Midwest Metals, Minnetrista, Mobile Market

The Junior Producers Club
Faculty Mentor:  Christoph Thompson, School of Music
Community Partners:  Boys and Girls Club, Buley Community Center

Makerspaces as an Opportunity to Cultivate and Reinforce Cultural Identity in Post-Industrial Cities 
Faculty Fellow:  Laura Romano, Department of English
Community Partner:  Muncie Arts and Culture Council

Muncie Micro-Cinema
Faculty Mentor:  Maura Jasper, School of Art
Community Partner:  Muncie Arts and Culture Council

Muncie Neighborhood Visual Identity Design (ongoing)
Faculty Mentor:  Shantanu Suman, School of Art
Community Partners:  Building Better Neighborhoods, Muncie Action Plan

Preserving the Past and Looking Toward the Future:  Historic Preservation and Digital Storytelling for a Muncie Landmark Church
Faculty Mentor:  Peggy Fisher, Department of Communication Studies
Community Partner:  St. Mary Church

Reconstructed Early Language and Literacy Learning: Addressing school readiness through critically conscious listening centers
Faculty Mentors:  Emily Hoffman, Department of Early Childhood, Youth and Family Studies; Kristin Cipollone, Department of Elementary Education
Community Partner:  Huffer Memorial Children’s Center

Resiliency Plan for Muncie
Faculty Mentor: Michael Burayidi, Department of Urban Planning
Community Partner: City of Muncie

Sitting at the Feet of our Muncie Elders:  Stories of Resistance and Resiliency
Faculty Mentor: Darolyn “Lyn” Jones
Community Partner: Westminster Village, Muncie Delaware County Senior Center, Moth Danner and YART (Yard Sale for Art).

Neighbors Show They Care About McKinley

(Above: Volunteers improve 710 N. Mulberry St. by painting plywood and picking up trash)
Article by Heather Williams

Each neighborhood has its own unique history of development, from farmland, woods, or even marsh to streets filled with two-bedroom bungalows or elaborate Victorian mansions. North, south, east or west, Muncie’s neighborhoods are no different, each unique in character and filled with the hopes and dreams of its residents. Last weekend, a small group of residents gathered together to lift the hopes and dreams of McKinley neighborhood residents through beautification efforts that painted boarded windows and doors and cleaned trash and debris from two abandoned homes located on North Mulberry St.

Volunteers Aimee Robertson-Fant, Kyle Johson, and Augusta Wray work to cover plywood securing the abandoned home at 710 N. Mulberry St.
Volunteers Aimee Robertson-Fant, Kyle Johson, and Augusta Wray work to cover plywood securing the abandoned home at 710 N. Mulberry St.

Responding to the recent cleanup efforts organized by City of Muncie departments, including the Muncie Police Department, Muncie Sanitary District, and Building Commissioner’s office, amongst others, Muncie Delaware Clean and Beautiful put a call out on Thursday morning for volunteers. Partnering with the Muncie Action Plan and Ball State’s Building Better Neighborhoods program, Muncie Delaware Clean and Beautiful set up their trailer on Mulberry Street on Sunday afternoon and directed volunteers in painting boards and cleaning up years of discarded debris.

Derek Tulowitzky, Muncie Delaware Clean and Beautiful Community Cleanups Chairperson, helped organize the event and secure volunteers to help. Tulowitzky noted that, “It’s by no means a solution for the issues that led to this home’s abandonment, but hopefully it shows folks that neighbors care about their neighborhood.”

Muncie Police Department officer Mike Mueller, who helped spearhead the city-wide cleanup of the neighborhood that inspired Sunday’s efforts, understands the importance of this neighborhood as it is directly across from the city’s only high school and on a major thoroughfare for visitors and residents traveling to and from Muncie’s downtown. Mueller believes all parties interested in neighborhood revitalization may be able to work together at similar cleanups in neighborhoods throughout the city, hopefully beginning again in 2018.

Trash and debris was cleaned and windows boarded at 741 N. Mulberry St.
Trash and debris was cleaned and windows boarded at 741 N. Mulberry St.

Muncie Action Plan Neighborhoods Coordinator, Aimee Robertson-Fant, hopes that this is just the first of many efforts to support and encourage community building in the McKinley neighborhood. “McKinley is a vital neighborhood to organize and the momentum to do that is now. Not only are Walnut Commons, Elm Street Brewing Company (which is also transitioning into a family eatery) and other businesses investing in the future of McKinley, there is a community-wide, collaborative plan materializing which will help streamline and more efficiently address abandonment and vacated homes, of which is among the greatest and growing challenges McKinley has faced the past several years, as witnessed by the several abandoned houses on Walnut Street, facing Central. We owe it to the students and families and Muncie Community Schools to help continue efforts for this neighborhood to become healthy again.”

Ball State Immersive Learning students, under the direction of faculty member Lisa Dunaway, worked alongside residents in spring 2017 to develop a combined Minnetrista and McKinley Neighborhood Action Plan. This document may serve as a guide for resident-driven revitalization efforts.

Volunteers braving cold temperatures on Sunday morning to show their love for McKinley include Derek Tulowitzky, Aimee Robertson-Fant, Augusta Wray, Tracy Whelan, Jake Turpin, Kelyn Alexander, Kari Wissel, Aaron Brunsman, and Kyle Johnson (not pictured)
Volunteers braving cold temperatures on Sunday morning to show their love for McKinley include Derek Tulowitzky, Aimee Robertson-Fant, Augusta Wray, Tracy Whelan, Jake Turpin, Kelyn Alexander, Kari Wissel, Aaron Brunsman, and Kyle Johnson (not pictured)

On Nov. 28th at 6pm, come to a community meeting to discuss the future of the McKinley neighborhood. Building Better Neighborhoods and MAP will host the meeting at Muncie Central and encourage the participation of residents and businesses. Attendees will be invited to participate in the 100 Stories and 100 Dreams for Abandoned Properties project. The aim is to collect as many stories about and ideas for blighted properties as possible, as part of a city-wide effort to address blight by creating a new land bank. Urban Planning Professor John H. West will be on hand to talk with and collect stories.

According to Robertson-Fant, “One of best ways to support our one and only high school is take care of the neighborhood surrounding it. Fortunately, there are a lot of people and organizations who want to work together to help see that happen.”

World Changers Looking to Repair Homes in Several Neighborhoods

According to an article posted in the Sunday, May 3rd edition of the Star Press, World Changers will be returning to Muncie this summer to do exterior repairs on a total of approximately 20 properties within the Blaine, McKinley, Gilbert, East Central and Whitely neighborhoods. World Changers’ work may include foundation or porch repair, vinyl siding, door or garage repair, house painting, wheelchair ramp/accessibility items and other miscellaneous repairs. In order to qualify for the program, homes must be home-owner occupied, be located in the target neighborhoods, be current on sewage and tax bills, and have property insurance. Owners must submit an application and provide proof of income. A PDF version of the application is available below. It is also available at the City of Muncie’s Community Development Department office,online, or at the Kennedy and Maring-Hunt libraries. Applications are due by 4 p.m. May 22 at the Community Development Office.

For more information call Community Development at (765)747-4825.

World Changers 2015 – application

McKinley Neighborhood

McKinley header

Neighborhood Association Meetings

The McKinley Neighborhood Association meets on the 4th Thursday of every month, 6:00 pm at Muncie Central High School, 801 N Walnut. All are welcome.

Neighborhood Newsletters

November 2014 Newsletter

On the Web

Neighborhood Action Plan: https://minnetristamckinleyplan.wordpress.com/

Neighborhood Map

McKinley map (pdf)

Find out what others think; rate and review this neighborhood on StreetAdvisor.

Join the private social network for your neighborhood at Nextdoor.