| 10/10/2005 |
| Volunteers
transform eyesore into coffee house |
| Tom
Fontaine - Times Staff |
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Dan Heuer helps out at Uncommon Grounds
by waiting on customers and taking care of the plants in the
courtyard. The Times / Kevin Lorenzi |
 | ALIQUIPPA - Hundreds of
volunteers and donors have transformed a former eyesore on
Aliquippa's Franklin Avenue into a vibrant coffeehouse that looks as
if it belongs in a college town or trendy big-city
neighborhood.
After a four-year project to renovate the
two-story building in the 300 block of Franklin Avenue, the
coffeehouse, Uncommon Grounds, opened for business last month.
Many volunteers who took part in the renovation project,
which was kept alive by donations of more than $200,000 in cash and
supplies, had never before hammered a nail much less hung drywall or
worked a power saw.
They ranged from
church leaders and youth-group members to reforming drug addicts and
ex-cons.
"The idea was to get ownership of this place as
broadly based as possible," said John Stanley, an Australian
missionary in the Episcopal-based Church Army USA who began
spearheading the renovation shortly after he and his family moved to
Aliquippa in 2001.
"When you help build something, it becomes
a part of you and you feel a certain responsibility toward it,"
Stanley said.
Uncommon Grounds is intended to be more than
just a place where you can get a cup of joe, a muffin or a panini,
though.
Stanley said 20 people of various backgrounds have
completed the coffeehouse's volunteer-training program, which
teaches how to properly prepare a cappuccino and other menu items as
well as "practical lessons that people can take out into their
community," such as dealing with violence and aggression and drug
and alcohol addiction.
Those who complete the program are
expected to work at least two hours a week at the cafe.
The
building's upstairs is still under renovation but will house an
array of services when it is completed, including space for the ACE
Women's Training Project, which also has a site in the 800 block of
Franklin Avenue.
The program offers basic computer, creative
writing, cooking, assertiveness and parenting courses.
The
upstairs also will have a children's playroom, a kitchen, meeting
space and private rooms for counseling sessions, Stanley
said.
Downstairs, in the front of the coffeehouse, there is a
stage with microphones, a guitar, drums and recording equipment that
anyone can use.
Several musical acts performed on the stage
during last month's Aliquippa Art, Music and Festival of Praise,
which city officials said attracted at least 5,000 people over three
days.
Tom Fontaine can be reached online at
tfontaine@timesonline.com.
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