Centenarian's
legacy could bolster district
Tuesday, November
14, 2006
Tom Breckenridge
Plain Dealer Reporter
A giant in industrial design wants
to cast his shadow over Cleveland's nascent design district.
Fresh off winning a National Medal
of Arts from President Bush, Viktor Schreckengost, 100, and his
family say they want his legacy to be a building block in the Cleveland
District of Design, a job-generating cluster of consumer product
design studios and showrooms proposed east of downtown.
Schreckengost's nonprofit and retail
ventures want space in the district, says Chip Nowacek, Schreckengost's
stepson and executive director of the Schreckengost Foundation in
Cleveland Heights.
Schreckengost -- sometimes called
the "American da Vinci" adds credibility to the district's
effort to draw design-related talent and business.
Edward "Ned" Hill, vice
president of economic development for Cleveland State University,
and Dan Cuffaro, head of the industrial design department at the
Cleveland Institute of Art, are pushing the design-district concept.
Key to the district's success is
to "preserve and build on the wonderful legacy that Viktor
has given us," Hill said Monday at a CSU gathering to honor
Schreckengost.
He is considered a master of modern,
consumer product design. His accomplishments include crafting the
first mass-produced dinnerware and designing the cab-over-engine
truck, which revolutionized truck transport.
His students at the Cleveland Institute
of Art became top industrial designers, with products ranging from
the Ford Mustang to the Crest Spinbrush.
Last week, Schreckengost was among
11 recipients of the 2006 National Medal of Arts. Bush said Schreckengost's
"fusion of elegance and practicality in industrial design led
to remarkable innovations that have helped improve American life
in countless ways."
Schreckengost's massive archives
could find space in the district, possibly at CSU. His work could
also be put on display for educational research, Nowacek and Hill
said.
Schreckengost wants to "add
fuel to the fire of growth," Nowacek said.
Since announcing the design-district
venture in late October, Hill and Cuffaro have gathered an eager
core of property owners, neighborhood development corporations,
business movers and city development officials.
That includes officials from the
American Society of Materials, known as ASM International, which
recently opened a satellite office at the Idea Center at Playhouse
Square.
The trade association, known for
the distinctive, geodesic dome at its Russell Township headquarters,
counts thousands of materials engineers and scientists among its
members.
ASM recently launched an effort
to educate art and industrial designers in the properties and uses
of various metals. ASM's expertise could be a strong asset to the
design district, which hopes to open consumer product showrooms
just east of Playhouse Square, officials said.
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
tbreckenridge@plaind.com,
216-999-4695
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