|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Unitarian Church of Sharon 781-784-3652 |
Project AIM: Back to 2008-2009 Project AIM News For more infomation on Project AIM contact the Project AIM committee. February 2008 In addition to the current intensive efforts of the AIM Steering, Nuts and Bolts, Outreach and Stewardship Committees, a small Short Term Planning Task Force has been at work with committees and individuals to gather information about construction timelines and space and program needs during the building process. We began before the holidays with factual information from Joe Rando, and developed a comprehensive questionnaire for committees and individuals to use. It includes questions such as, “How close to each other do parents and children need to be on Sunday morning?” “Where should the church office be located, and how will the new Interim Minister and members of the congregation find one another?” The RE and Worship Committees are already wrestling with detailed questions and considerations, and we’ll be asking for more input from other committee chairs, staff and key volunteers as well as members of the congregation. We hope to complete this information gathering phase this winter. When it’s is complete, we’ll make recommendations to the congregation and board about how we can best continue the work of the congregation during construction. Currently, this short term planning effort has been focused mainly on soliciting information from committee chairs and committees, volunteers who extensively use or care for the building, and professional staff. However, we are very interested in everyone’s questions and ideas and seek your input. Please join us on Sunday, February 27 after the service to hear the latest information and give us your feedback. In the meanwhile, you are also very welcome to contact Jack Armstrong, Joe Rando, Louise Marcoux, or Deb Cayer with your thoughts or questions about this short term planning aspect of the building project. January 2008
What does Access mean to you? By this time next year if everything moves along as planned, access to the Meetinghouse will be infinitely easier.
As a Congregation we choose to exist in fellowship. We choose to uphold our liberal religious values by providing opportunities for spiritual growth, social justice and connection to the wider world. Our mission implies accessibility with a broader meaning: Access to the building. Access to healthy and adequate space. Access to creative programming. And who is this for? Not just for me, not just for you! But for staff and for all people yet to Enter, Rejoice and Come In! The Outreach Committee December 2007
Rejoice in a building that has adequate space for children and adults to learn, play, work, breathe, and grow. Rejoice that class will be not interrupted because it is held in the middle of a public room. Rejoice that a committee meeting doesn’t have to move out of a crowded Meetinghouse. Rejoice that there is adequate space for the professional staff to work comfortably and quietly. Rejoice that visitors feel welcome in bright and spacious quarters. Rejoice that the minister has a private place to meet members of our congregation. Rejoice in a building that supports all that we can do together. Come in to a welcoming community. Come into a building that supports our work. Come into an historic structure that has been preserved for future use. Come into a space that will encourage everyone to worship, learn, give, care, and share. Come in, and be at home.
If you want to help to make it all happen, please contact any of the members of the Stewardship Committee: Tim Monroe (chair), Ellen Schoenfeld-Beeks, Rory McGregor, Philip Conover, David Schoenfeld, Colleen Tuck. November 2007
Stewardship- The fundraisers working with Tamsin Kemos from the UUA to create the vision and process to raise the commitment and funds to make our church a place where all can Enter, Rejoice and Come In! Outreach – The folks with the info, they make sure we all hear about any updates with the building project and that we can all share in the process, creatively. Nuts and Bolts- Not nutty, just focused on the practical issues of getting the building designed and built…kind of like a Buildings and Grounds committee for our future.
So… what are we currently AIMing for? We are working with our architect Lou Alleveto, to create biddable plans, which should be ready soon. We have been meeting with representatives of groups who use our current space, to see what we need our new space to look like to meet our current and future needs. We know it will be a bigger and better organized space than we have now, still filled with the warm and caring community we are and will continue to be. June 2007
Jack Armstrong has joined the Nuts and Bolts sub committee of AIM. Welcome Jack!
These last few months have been an increasingly busy time for the AIM Project and we look forward to continuing the momentum into the summer! Look for more updates in the next Chalice. Please join us, we’d love to have you come along. May 2007 Project AIM Updates
2. Septic Issues revolve around which system the Town will allow us to install. BOT reviewed the plans drawn up by John Glossa. The preliminary work is scheduled for this spring. And, no, the preservation of our antique cesspool is not an option! 3. Surveys are coming! Think Big. Think Mission! Reach! All committees will be asked to review their needs, wishes and ideas for the future. Our new architect will be asking us for details, refinements and projections into the future so he can design space that is useful for how we could use our building.
5. Are you new? We would like to invite anyone who has the eyes of a newcomer to look at our space and our processes with Fresh Eyes and let us know what you see, think, feel. What would make our building and congregation more inviting? (Those of us who are used to the clutter and chaos need not apply!) Time TBD. Assessment Report
Report Discussion March 2007 Going Up! Accessibility and Improvement to the Meetinghouse: Project AIM All of us working on Project AIM have become convinced that we will build. No one knows exactly when. No one knows exactly what. But, with each step we come closer to realizing the dream of a universally accessible meetinghouse and much needed space. Recent AIM progress includes: Submission of a grant to the local CPC (Community Preservation Commission) for funding to offset the cost of the elevator; setting a March date for a visit from the UUA fundraising expert; visiting church sites designed and built by our potential new architect; continued communication with the Historical Preservation Commission and the Disabilities Commission. The latter was overjoyed to hear of our plans since we are the last house of worship in Sharon to address universal access! Our congregation and our staff have also taken the time to review the latest plans, ask questions and suggest changes. Only with our concerted effort will we design a building perfect for us, our children, and future generations. Our next steps will include: Partially beginning the new septic by laying of pipe so the Town can finish the front Streetscapes Project and finalizing our design for submission for estimates. Everyone has been hard at work, including the Jr. Youth Group who took the time to express their thinking about where their class is located. You may be surprised to learn that not ALL the young folk travel into the RE Wing and Vestry for classes after the upstairs moment with the children. Their class travels by foot, in rain or shine, snow or wind, to the Girl Scout House! They and their teachers don’t complain (well, maybe a little!) but with the completion of Project AIM, they will once again, after a very long time, be nestled under the roof of the Unitarian Church of Sharon. About
UCS
| Worship | Religious
Education |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||