Raleigh Designer Completes “Moneypalooza” Exhibit for Marbles Kids Museum

Interactive exhibit helps kids learn smart money habits

Vito's Pizzeria exhibit

February 26, 2010 (RALEIGH, NC) — Valentine Design Group, LLC (VDG), a Raleigh-based scenic design company, recently completed a series of exhibits for the new “Moneypalooza Exhibit” at Marbles Kids Museum at 201 East Hargett Street, Raleigh, NC.

“Moneypalooza” is an exhibit that allows children to learn about earning, spending and saving money while having fun doing it.

“Moneypalooza brings to life the importance of establishing healthy money habits through innovative and high-energy activities,” according to the museum’s website.

Aunt Polly's Pet Grooming exhibit

Pam Hartley, vice president of Exhibits and Core Initiatives for Marbles Kids Museum, asked designer Roland Valentine, principal of VDG, to fabricate exhibit casework items for: “Vito’s Pizzeria,” “Aunt Polly’s Pet Grooming,” “The Armored Truck,” and the “Dog Walk.” VDG also provided gallery lighting for the exhibit.

The “Moneypalooza Exhibit” is now open to the public. For more information about the exhibit and about Marbles Kids Museum, go to www.marbleskidsmuseum.org.

For more information on Valentine Design Group LLC, visit www.valentinedesigngroup.com or contact Roland Valentine at roland@valentinedesigngroup.com, or 919-812-4662.

About Valentine Design Group:

Valentine Design Group LLC is a full-service design company offering turnkey production for broadcast, live events, specialty props, signs, kiosks, and more. Since Roland Valentine founded the company in 1989, it has become an integral part of the television production and live event industry across the country.  For more information to to www.valentinedesigngroup.com.

NC Landscape Architect To Address Pittsburgh Symposium

DBell
Dick Bell in Pullen Park, a city park he designed for Raleigh in the 1960s. © f8 Photo Studios

October 26, 2009 (ATLANTIC BEACH, NC) – Master landscape architect Richard C. “Dick” Bell of Atlantic Beach, NC, will address a special symposium on the work and influence of pioneering landscape architect John O. Simonds, to be held in the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, PA, on November 6.

 

Bell, a multi-award-winning practitioner whose own work includes landmark projects throughout North Carolina, apprenticed under John Simonds in the 1950s before Bell establishing his first firm in Raleigh, NC.

 

“Simonds & Simonds Landscape Architects was one of the premier design firms in the nation at that time,” Bell said. “And as the senior man in the office, I was fortunate to get to design some of the projects for John. They were mostly residential designs for architects who practiced the new – at that time — Modern style.”

 

The syposium, entitled “The Hunter and the Philosopher: John O. Simonds,” will focus on Simonds’ work as an author, environmentalist and landscape architect. It will also emphasize Simonds’ influence on the City of Pittsburgh, the field of landscape architecture, and his pioneering environmental planning efforts. Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy, Garden Design magazine, and the American Society of Landscape Architects are sponsors.

 

“I learned so much from John that I carried with me throughout my entire career,” said Bell, whose own career spans 50-plus years. “He was tough and he was a perfectionist. I’m honored to be a part of an event that honors John and his work.”

 

Bell discusses his time at Simonds & Simonds in his upcoming book The Bridge Builders, which traces the genesis of Bell’s life’s work. The book is due out in the spring of 2010.

 

For more information on Richard C. Bell, go to http://www.metronc.com/article/?id=1515.

 

For more information on the Pittsburgh symposium, go to http://www.tclf.org/events/pioneers/pittsburgh/index.html.

 

About Dick Bell

 

Richard C. Bell, a Fellow of both the American Society of Landscape Architects and the American Academy in Rome, was the youngest person ever to receive the Prix de Rome at age 21. Driven by a single, professional mission “to leave a little beauty behind wherever I go,” he earned a national reputation for excellence, and provided Raleigh, NC, with some of its most beloved landmarks, including the N.C. State University “Brickyard,” the serpentine wall at St. Mary’s College, Pullen Park, and the Meredith College lake and amphitheater. He also designed his 11-acre Water Garden complex, one of Raleigh’s first mixed-use developments and an early example of buildings coexisting in harmony with natural resources. Born and raised in Manteo, NC, Bell attended NCSU, where he studied landscape architecture and assisted with the master plan for the university. He and his wife, Mary Jo, lived and worked in Raleigh for 50 years before moving to Atlantic Beach, NC, where he continues his practice today. He was inducted in the Raleigh Hall of Fame in 2008.