The
shape
of things
to come...canopy reduces cooling costs
by 10-15% and, rising three feet above the roof, reducing
maintenance, Architect Steve Morrill told Interiors
& Sources magazine about the Broken Arrow
facility.
The publication's May 1995 issue, in an article by
writer Diane Wintroub Calmenson, describes the interior
design this way: "
An open ceiling system provides plenty of vertical
space for hanging the bank's advertising banners. The
ceiling's exposed deck, duct work and track lighting
further the retail image of the bank.
"The lighting is reflected off the ceiling's
glossy paint finish and the highly polished floor tile
for a bright atmosphere. Two bands of white neon that
mimic the neon around the canopy, plus wall sconces,
enhance both the retail image and the brightly lit
atmosphere."
Community Bank & Trust now has 10 locations and
$165 million in assets. Joplin, its largest market, has
excellent quality of life and virtually no unemployment,
Lee says. Among its pluses are still-vigorous older
industries that have been around for two or three
generations, plus a variety of new ones which have filled
up one industrial park and created demand for another
one.
The city has two fine hospital complexes, he adds, and
considerable rehab work is under way downtown. Due to
Joplin's crossroads location, a number of trucking
companies call the city home, too.
So the Joplin branch has a lot going for it, even
without the striking design. "But if it is as
successful as we think it is going to be, we will
consider building other branches this way," says
Stipp.
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The canopy over the Community Bank
& Trust building serves several purposes: a
locoation for distinctive signage, helping to
cool the interior and shading the front entrance
and the drive-in area. The neon over the drive-in
notes that the bank is "employee owned and
operated." |
Others
see bright future
for community bankinglot of
community bankers like Ray Stipp and Bill Lee are
optimistic about the future of their profession.
Recently the CPA and consulting firm McGLadrey
& Pullen, LLP, based in St. Paul, Minn., used
its monthly Banknotes to ask readers for
their opinions about the future of community
banking.
These were some of the responses printed in
the July issue of the publication:
"As a career community banker, what
particularly struck me was the 10-year old
reference to community banking's 'one key
advantage .... the service-oriented, intimate
relationship they maintain with their
depositors.' As consolidation continues to thin
the ranks of the banking industry, it is my
observation that this advantage is more clear cut
than ever."
"As larger banks swallow up smaller banks
the level of service and relationships will
suffer and these communities will begin forming
new banks to fill that need."
"Service, local control, community
reinvestment these are all issues of importance
that I see at work each day .... and I know they
are issues of concern to MY customers. And they
are all reasons that community banks must
survive."
"Fortunately for all concerned, banking
is a diverse business and our customers' needs
are too varied to be served by a
one-size-fits-all, mass-produced approach to
service."
"The challenge then, for community banks,
is to embrace technological improvements in
product delivery capabilities, train our people,
and still maintain the hometown touch. Those
community banks that can achieve these objectives
have, in my opinion, a bright and profitable
future."
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