Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Doors Open event brings hundreds to King Drive

Citywide open house aims to bring businesses new patrons

- Sarah Hauer

William Bachle said he often stands outside his home goods shop on King Drive to draw in customers.

Saturday, as the shop took part in the citywide open house Doors Open Milwaukee 2018, more than 400 people came to Nostalgia Home Decor, Bachle said.

Nostalgia Home Decor and a dozen businesses, churches and organizati­ons along King Drive welcomed visitors Saturday and Sunday as a Doors Open spotlight neighborho­od. In all, more than 170 sites across the city participat­ed in the two-day open house.

Bachle said he hopes the people drawn into the

neighborho­od during Doors Open return.

“We love the neighborho­od, and it’s been doing good things lately,” he said. “It’s a shame to see all these great businesses, but nobody is willing to come in — for some reason people don’t want to make the trip over.”

Nostalgia Home Decor opened in May selling vintage furniture and home accessorie­s. Bachle owns the shop with his girlfriend, Georgette Muilenburg. Bachle said people who visited Saturday remarked how much they liked the neighborho­od.

“All it took was them coming down and seeing what’s here,” he said.

James Flippin, a barber at Gee’s Clippers, said King Drive and Bronzevill­e needed a reintroduc­tion to Milwaukee like what was happening through Doors Open.

“It’s giving us a light because this was a rundown neighborho­od for a long time,” Flippin said. The basketball­themed barbershop Gee’s Clippers moved from another location on King Drive to a former bank last year. The barbershop opened in 1992.

“There were not that many businesses over here. You bring Pete’s Market in and the developmen­t is happening and the people of the city are seeing it.”

King Drive and the Bronzevill­e neighborho­od are experienci­ng a resurgence with new developmen­t. Pete’s Fruit Market opened a year ago in a building that had been vacant for five years. America’s Black Holocaust Museum is reopening in the neighborho­od. Other stops in the spotlight neighborho­od included 5 Points Art Gallery & Studios, Glorious Malone’s Fine Sausages and Pilcrow Coffee.

Bader Philanthro­pies purchased a long-vacant building on the north end of King Drive, renovated it and moved in this summer.

Part of the organizati­on’s objective for moving its headquarte­rs into the Harambee neighborho­od was to bring visitors who don’t normally go to that part of the city. Frank Cumberbatc­h, vice president of engagement for Bader Philanthro­pies, said one goal of the developmen­t is for people view the neighborho­od as a critical part of the city.

With the developmen­t, Cumberbatc­h said, he wants to see the integrity of the neighborho­od remain.

“We don’t want a community where those who used to live here are driven out because that would not be success,” Cumberbatc­h said. “Success is all of us living together, and that is difficult but it’s important. We are going to do all that we can to see if we can achieve that.”

 ?? SARAH HAUER / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? William Bachle and Georgette Muilenburg own Nostalgia Home Decor on North King Drive. They welcomed the annual Doors Open Milwaukee event.
SARAH HAUER / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL William Bachle and Georgette Muilenburg own Nostalgia Home Decor on North King Drive. They welcomed the annual Doors Open Milwaukee event.
 ?? MICHAEL SEARS / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Visitors enjoy the view Sunday from the 32nd floor of the new Northweste­rn Mutual Tower and Commons during Doors Open Milwaukee 2018.
MICHAEL SEARS / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Visitors enjoy the view Sunday from the 32nd floor of the new Northweste­rn Mutual Tower and Commons during Doors Open Milwaukee 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States