Emeryville News

Emeryville City and Political News

Where to Have Brunch in Emeryville this Weekend & Next!

Honor Kitchen & Cocktails offers Brunch on Saturday and Sunday from 10am – 2:30pm. The great thing is that when you sit down, they immediately place a carafe of fresh orange juice on your table along with sparkling wine so that you can create a mimosa exactly to your taste! They are also known for their spicy Bloody Marys, made with one of three peppered house infused vodkas or a savory bacon washed vodka.

You can begin a leisurely brunch with fresh Oysters on the Half Shell accompanied by an apple, cucumber, jalapeno mignonette or launch right into Fried Chicken & Waffles: bacon stuffed waffles, buttermilk-fried chicken and blueberry chipotle syrup. You can also have a couple of starters like a bowl of seasonal fresh Farmers Market fruit and a Giant Bourbon-Pecan Sticky Bun made with pecans, hot bourbon sticky sauce, currants and whipped mascarpone.

Mishka Subaly – Photo/Honor website

Besides great food and cocktails, Honor likes to bring new musicians to Emeryville. On Thurs., Mar. 8, they are hosting best selling author, cult songwriter and storyteller Mishka Shubaly. For more information on how to attend this event please email [email protected]

Honor Kitchen & Cocktails is located at 1411 Powell St. in Emeryville – (510) 653-8667.  Please note they do not accept reservations.

Trader Vic’s offers up Brunch on Sunday March 18 with what they are dubbing a Tiki Fashion Show Brunch from 11am – 3pm, with the fashion show starting at 1pm. Retro Diva is providing the clothing and all items are for sale after the show at 3pm. Exotica Sounds by DJ Otto von Strokeim will keep the Tiki Fashion Show lively. Enjoy the history of Trader Vic’s before you arrive and peruse the Brunch Menu.

Reserve a table now at Trader Vic’s, home of the original Mai Tai: (510) 653-3400. Trader Vic’s is located down on the water at 9 Anchor Drive in Emeryville.

 

Emeryville’s Shortest Triathlon Ever Merges With Emeryville Day on the Bay!

In its second year, Emeryville Day on the Bay, a community celebration of Emeryville’s marina district and its history, expands to include The City of Emeryville’s 10th Annual Shortest Triathlon Ever, Peet’s Coffee, ‘A Taste of  Emeryville Public Market Restaurants’, a Beer & Wine Garden, Fishing Boat Tours and Rides, Ferry Rides, Stand Up Paddle Lessons, Live Music, Emeryville Artists a’ Painting, Jump House, Fishing, Passport & other activities for kids, including Introductions to Safety on Boats.

On Saturday, March 24 from 10am – 2pm, lots of information will be available for you to learn about Emeryville and get involved in your community, including tours of a fire truck and rescue boat. Come meet your neighbors at this friendly fun community event. Even if you live farther away. It is going to be a great day on the  SF Bay! And a fit one also.

This year, Emeryville’s Shortest Triathlon Ever heads to the Bay! The race now starts down in the Emeryville Marina in the San Francisco Bay and ends at the Marinas to celebrate Fish Emeryville’s fishing fleet, Watersports and Life on the Water in Emeryville during the Emeryville Day on the Bay party.

The Shortest Triathlon Ever is so short, anyone can do it!

  • 100 yd. swim in the SF Bay – 4 lengths of a school pool
  • 2.5 mi. bike ride around the marina and up to Berkeley and back
  • 1.5+ mi run that ends at the Emeryville Day on the Bay event

More details coming your way soon. Stay tuned! And Save the date – Sat. March 24 at the Emeryville Marina.

Here’s the Day’s Schedule:

  • Race Registration: 7:30am
  • Race Starting Time: 9am
  • Awards: 10am
  • Emeryville Day on the Bay Party: 10am – 2pm

Sign up for the Shortest Triathlon Ever!

Did you Know?

Did you know Emeryville, that shortest city ever of 1.2 sq mi, has two marinas with 850 boat slips and a fleet of 6 recreational sportfishing boats.

Did you know Fish Emeryville has special shorter day trips set aside for families to go out on the Bay and explore the City, Alcatraz and Angel Island from the water while fishing?

Did you know you can walk, bike and run all along Emeryville’s beautiful shoreline?

Sponsors:

  • City of Emeryville
  • Emery Cove Yacht Harbor
  • Emeryville Marina, a Safe Harbor Marina
  • Emeryville Yacht Club
  • Emeryville on the Bay
  • Emeryville Public Market & Restaurants
  • Fish Emeryville
  • Prop SF

Emeryville & Alameda Marinas Fight Pollution with Ocean Vacuums!

Join Safe Harbor and Seabin Project to Celebrate New Seabins!

  • Emeryville Marina Launch: Fri., Dec. 1, 2pm – 3310 Powell St. in Emeryville
  • Ballena Isle Marina Launch: Sat., Dec. 2, 10am – 1150 Ballena Blvd. in Alameda

Seabin Project co-founders Pete Ceglinski & Andrew Turton

Here’s how it all started. Two life-long surfer friends from Australia, appalled by the plastic and debris pollution in our waters, set out to clean up the ocean. They wanted to create a garbage bin that would collect the floating plastic. This got them started cleaning up the marine environment, one marina at a time. How? With the V5 Seabin, a floating vacuum filter device they invented that works like an ocean vacuum 24/7 continuously collecting floating debris – plastic bottles, paper, oil, fuel, detergent and more. Over the last two years Seabin Project co-founders Pete Ceglinski and Andrew Turton secured partners for a pilot study into the effectiveness of the seabin.

Safe Harbor, the world’s largest marine management company, is one of six partners in the Seabin Project pilot study with their first location in Cabrillo Isle Marina in San Diego, CA. “We had a section of water in our Cabrillo Isle marina which had earned the nickname of ‘scum alley’,” commented Kate Pearson, Safe Harbor’s West Coast Regional VP. “It was the downwind corner of Harbor Island that had no natural flushing…we became

Cabrillo Isle, San Diego

a Global Pilot Partner and installed the first Seabin in the US. The Seabin blew our expectations out of the water! The small, compact and quiet machine hums away in ‘scum alley’ and we have pulled 1000 lbs. of trash this first year out of it. We also sort and document the trash, reporting our findings back to the Seabin team so we can look at source issues and educational programming for schools.”  The pilot, part of Safe Harbor’s commitment to protecting the marine environment, proved successful and now Safe Harbor is bringing the Seabin Project to the San Francisco Bay Area’s Emeryville Marina and Alameda’s Ballena Isle Marina.

“We’re proud to introduce Seabin as an innovative, cutting-edge technology that respects and protects the marine environment,” says Kate. “It’s versatile, small in size, cost-effective and functionally-effective – everything our marinas and boaters have been asking for.” In an  interview on CBS, San Diego,  she said that the most common items they pull out of the seabin every day is cigarette butts, pens and straws.

The Seabin Project has  evolved into a comprehensive research, educational and technology initiative with worldwide reach, including educational tools for students to get on board. The Seabin Project team believes that each child that learns to dispose of litter properly will grow to be one less source person for pollution of our oceans and waterways. Currently, according to Jambeck Research, 8.1M tons of mismanaged waste enters our oceans every year.

Some cool facts:

  • Each device collects about 60 pounds of debris per day – that’s about 1,000 pounds of pollution/yr.
  • It’s a cost-effective and 24/7 alternative to the “trash boats” traditionally used to clean up marinas.
  • Currently attached to the dock, the Seabin Project team is developing new technologies to get it off the dock and into the water.

Here’s how it works:

  • The seabin is installed in a specific problem debris area, attached to a dock.
  • Water is filtered from the surface and passed through a catch bag inside the Seabin, powered by a submersible water pump.
  • Water is then pumped back into the water leaving the litter and debris trapped in the catch bag. Larger pieces of plastic may attach themselves to the bin.
  • Marina operators need to empty the catch bag at least twice a day, as it holds up to two pounds.

The public is welcome at the two fun launch events.

  • Emeryville Marina Launch: Fri., Dec. 1, 2pm – 3310 Powell St. in Emeryville
  • Ballena Isle Marina Launch: Sat., Dec. 2, 10am – 1150 Ballena Blvd. in Alameda

 

 

 

Meet Emeryville’s Artists on Opening Night of the Emeryville Art Exhibition!

WHEN: Friday, October 6, 6-9pm

WHERE: EmeryTech, 1475 66th St in Emeryville

WHAT: Opening Night Gala Reception – 31st Annual Emeryville Art Exhibition

  • Celebrate, view the exhibit and meet the artists who helped make Emeryville a CA Cultural Arts District
  • Live music by The doRiaN Mode: Vintage Jazz & Blues
  • No-host bar – proceeds to benefit Emeryville Youth Art Program
  • Emeryville Art Exhibition is open to artists of all media and includes paintings, sculpture, photographs, ceramics, textiles,

    Linda Lee Boyd – Anasazi Ruins –
    25˝ x 33˝, woodcut, 2014

    and glass works. Now in its 31st year the exhibition continues to uncover emerging talent, along with new work by established artists. This annual arts event represents the unique character of Emeryville, a city that is small in size but grand in the scale and spirit of its creative community.

  • Independent curator and exhibition designer Kathleen Hanna is curator and juror for the 31st Annual Emeryville Art Exhibition. Ms. Hanna brings a deep knowledge of Bay Area arts and fine craft. The other 2017 jurors are Shelley Barry and Danielle Fox, Principals, SLATE Art, Oakland and Elizabeth Shypertt, the co-founder of Velvet Da Vinci Jewelry Gallery, San Francisco.
  • The 2017 Exhibition is on display October 7 – 29, 2017, open daily from 11am to 6pm
  • Admission is free.
  • Directions and emery-go-round stop

Mark Galt, Electric Motor Man #7 18˝x6˝x6˝, brass, bronze, aluminum, stainless steel, electricals, 2017

“ I think the fact that this is the 31st year of this event says that Emeryville has an extraordinary community of artists and community members that support art,” comments Emeryville City Manager Carolyn Lehr.  “One would be hard pressed to find a community of this size that produces and supports this level of quality of work for over three decades. The City is 100% behind this effort and event production.” 

The annual Emeryville Art Exhibition presented by Celebration of the Arts truly brings Emeryville together as a community. According to Economic Development Direcor Chad Smalley, “The Emeryville Art Exhibition is arguably the most significant community event in Emeryville. This event is the embodiment of Emeryville’s competitive advantage, where in the midst of an office building where innovative companies are changing the world, workers and residents will celebrate the creativity of the community. It is a clear demonstration of how Emeryville is a City of Art and Innovation. Innovative companies are born and grow in Emeryville because they are fueled by creativity. The Celebration of the Arts Emeryville Art Exhibition is, essentially, a celebration of the community’s creative abilities.”

Comments from Sharon Wilchar, Exhibition Coordinator: “Emeryville, for its size, has an amazing number of creative thinkers and makers, many publically known and even more working behind the scenes in support of artistic and cultural

Joseph Kosdrosky – P-O-P-C-O-R-N –
7˝ x 5˝, acrylic on wood, 2017

endeavors. As the non-profit partner to the City of Emeryville Rotten City Cultural Arts District, Emeryville Celebration of the Arts has been an anchor in developing an active, engaged arts community over the last three decades. With this new District designation, we all look forward to enhancing and deepening this community, to bringing us closer to the reality of a Cultural Arts Center in our city, to developing more artist live/work spaces, and to broadening our supportive environment for creative businesses.”

About Sharon Wilchar and Celebration of the Arts

Sharon Wilchar is a long-time resident of the 45th Street Artists’ Cooperative, serves as its Community Liaison and is a founding member of the Emeryville Celebration of the Arts. She has coordinated the juried Emeryville Annual Art Exhibition for 29of its 31 years, serves as Chair of the City of Emeryville’s Public Art Advisory Committee and coordinates the Artists’ Cooperative’s successful artist-in-the-schools program now in its 34rd year in the Emery Unified School District.

Space Donation

The annual juried show, featuring works of nearly 100 artists and craftspeople who live or work in Emeryville, is held at a different location each year – generously donated by a local Emeryville business. This year’s space has been donated by EmeryTech and Clarion Partners.

Ronald Davis – Zoe Keating – 20˝x 20˝, digital photograph, 2016

By |2017-10-06T13:58:41-07:00October 5th, 2017|0 Comments

New Sake Bar + Taproom’s Opening Party Tonight, Fri., Sept. 15, in Emeryville!

WHEN: Friday, September 15, 4-9pm

C2H6O (= Ethanol or Alcohol)

WHERE: The Periodic Table, Emeryville Public Market, 5959 Shellmound St.

WHO: Shiba Ramen, which has provided customers the traditional Japanese ramen experience in the Public Market since 2015, is the sister restaurant to The Periodic Table.  Both owned by husband & wife scientists Jake Freed & Hiroko Nakamura

WHAT: Grand Opening & You Are Invited!

  • Japanese drinking scene with Taproom and Sake Bar (craft beer, sake, whiskey, shochu and other drinks from Japan)
  • All night Happy Hour from 4-9pm
  • Special Japanese menu – Small Bites (you can order from Shiba Ramen’s menu also!)
  • Oysters!

The owners are excited to finally have their long anticipated bar open in the Public Market.  “We have a curated selection of Sakes and some of those vendors are coming to the opening,” says Hiroko. “I really don’t know what to expect!” Don’t miss out and welcome this unique Public Market bar.

 

By |2017-09-15T09:47:58-07:00September 15th, 2017|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments
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