THOUSAND OAKS : Giant Banner Sought for Civic Arts Plaza
- Share via
To help passing motorists who mistake a state-of-the-art auditorium for a towering office building, the Thousand Oaks City Council will consider hanging a giant banner on the half-built Civic Arts Plaza.
Councilmen Alex Fiore and Frank Schillo are recommending that a banner 60 feet long and 6 feet high be hung atop the southern wall of the auditorium’s fly tower, bearing the message: “Civic Arts Plaza--For Information, Call 496-8688.”
The banner’s size would dwarf the standard signs permitted under the Thousand Oaks municipal code. The city’s design guidelines restrict all businesses to 20-foot banners except the Auto Mall, which is allowed a 30-foot advertisement for special events.
But in a memo to the council, Fiore and Schillo argued that a regulation-size banner would not be appropriate on the massive tower, which rises 10 stories high. “A 20-foot banner on the face of a 125-foot stage tower would look more like a Band-Aid than a banner,” they wrote.
And Helene Ross, publicity chairwoman for the grand-opening committee, wrote a letter supporting the banner on the grounds that the city has “invested years of energy into this project, and funds, and a simple means of identification seems to be much needed.”
Price quotes for the banner range from $482 to $1,461. The council will vote on the issue at Tuesday’s meeting.
Also Tuesday, the council will vote on the official logo for the Civic Arts Plaza’s two-month grand opening ceremony starting next fall, which coincides with the city’s 30th birthday.
After reviewing 55 designs submitted in a logo competition, a citizens committee has recommended two winners. One, featuring two dancers cavorting under an oak tree, would be used for posters and large-sized reproductions. The other, a fluid drawing of a single dancer, would be used on stationery and other items requiring small-scale reproductions.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.