Posts Tagged ‘20100721’

We Are Many: Chris Jordan Captures Our Blessed Unrest

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

YES! Magazine

Photographer Chris Jordan is most famous for his efforts to portray the enormous and usually incomprehensible scale of human impact on the Earth. His shots of albatross choked by plastic on Midway Island create a personal connection to a global problem; his Running the Numbers series brings statistics about material consumption to life.

Jordan recently released a new work that tries to convey a fact that’s just as mind-boggling, but much more heartening: the number of people working to build a more just and sustainable world. E Pluribus Unum is 24 feet square, composed of aluminum panels laser etched with the names of “one million organizations around the world that are devoted to peace, environmental stewardship, social justice, and the preservation of diverse and indigenous culture. The actual number of such organizations is unknown, but estimates range between one and two million, and growing.”

Full story

How an Injured Dolphin Can Heal an Economy

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Florida Trend Magazine

A major 3D motion picture based on Clearwater Marine Aquarium’s most famous resident will begin filming in Pinellas County in September and is expected to continue through the end of the year. A Dolphin’s Tale will be produced by Alcon Entertainment and distributed by Warner Bros., which collaborated on the Academy Award winning The Blind Side. “Financially, we have some compensation,” Aquarium CEO David Yates said. “But the biggest way (that) we and the area benefit is that tourists will come into the area. We expect our attendance to double and potentially triple in the first year. The good news is: (tourists) stay in our hotels, eat in our restaurants, fill up at our gas stations. It cycles throughout the economy, so the economic impact will be very strong.”

Full story

High speed rail briefing in Tampa gives update on project

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Creative Loafing Tampa

Some key politicians attended a Florida high speed rail update today in Tampa, in which an overview was given of the progress of the Tampa to Orlando rail project.

“The weight is great on our shoulders to do it right,” said Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio. She explained the use of the multi-modal high speed rail station that is expected to be built in downtown Tampa. The third floor of the station would be dedicated to high speed rail, the second for light rail and the first for buses and local trolleys. She explained that the purpose of having all forms of transport at one station is to provide better access to the surrounding areas that high speed rail cannot access. “We think it’s the best system for downtown,” the Tampa Mayor said.

Full story

Architecture Is for the Birds

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

UTNE Reader

If you’re an urban dweller and have never heard a migrating bird bounce off a glass door or seen a feathered friend crash into a skyscraper, you’re in the minority. A conservative estimate is that a billion birds a year meet their demise after failing to dodge a human-made obstacle.

City officials in Toronto, where the annual death toll is between 1 million and 10 million, are in the process of building a new breed of bird-friendly structures, reports the Ontario-based environmental magazine ON Nature (Spring 2010). As of January, the city was the first in North America to require a majority of new buildings to incorporate window treatments, awnings, shades, and other elements to reduce reflection—no small feat given eco-architecture’s propensity for flight-risky glass.

Full story

Sustainable Living Through New Bradenton Community, Garden

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

83 Degrees

Sustainable living is celebrated at Neal Communities through its newest offering, Central Park at Lakewood Ranch, as well as a progressive project underway across the street.

Neal collaborated with Bruce Williams Homes on the 800-home Central Park project. The six neighborhoods are named for historic and popular urban parks across the country: Miami’s Brickell Park, New York’s Gramercy and Claremont parks, Jackson County Missouri’s Longview Lake, Atlanta’s Piedmont Park and St. Louis’ Forest Park. Homes are Green Built and celebrate rather than overpower the natural surroundings. According to Neal, price points are in what the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index considers the most affordable in 18 years. Homes in the Central Park community start at $126,990.

Full story

Time waits for no city

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

By: Adam Fritz, Urban Charette

I recently came across an article written in 200,1in the Jacksonville Business Journal about how Tampa missed out on the 2012 Olympics. Why was it in the Jacksonville paper?  Well, some of the Olympic soccer games would have been played in Jacksonville’s Alltel stadium.   But let’s discuss the bigger issue.

While the article is somewhat dated, the connectivity problems that contributed to the region’s failed Olympic bid remain prevalent. The Tampa Bay area still exists as a disparate region of individual communities lacking the infrastructure to connect in ways that would justify each community’s proximity to one another.

I have always admired the vision of the organizer for the Tampa 2012 Olympic bid, Mr. Ed Turanchik, and what he believed the event would have done for the bay area.  Imagine a whole region pulling together for a common goal of hosting the Olympic Games. Imagine how the planning would bolster our built environment by creating places where people actually want to linger, how it would physically connect us with valuable transit infrastructure to channel growth for years to come, and how it would show the world we are a serious business contender for them to bring economic exchanges.  The region’s marvelous weather may attract visitors but it will take the opportunity for a superior quality of life to keep them here.  Winning the Olympic bid would have given the region a common goal to work toward. Imagine what a better situation our area would be in, as we would have the necessary infrastructure finishing, the amenities coming online, and an invaluable amount of  continuous advertisement for our city on national television for a year and a half.

What has consistently held the TampaBay back? What is the one thing we receive poor marks for every time we are judged in the world’s eye?  Our lack of connectivity!  The city’s physical disconnection has led to deep rooted social separation.  We have great pockets of interaction with interesting organizations and tribes working in their own silos of influence  but we lacking an overarching goal that can unify us and behind which this region can rally. It seems to take the Bucs winning a Super Bowl (don’t laugh it happened) or the Rays going to the World Series (that also happened) for the unity of our region to bridge the bay. Outside of such sports events, what is our region’s identity?

Fortunately, we have an opportunity to make a positive decision and invest in our future.  We lost ten years “discussing” our limitations and making a case for us to wallow in mediocrity. Our limitations are well documented and now remain as paper barriers.  Excuses have amplified our fears and limited our true potential as a region. Let us have the foresight and courage to push through these frail barriers and realize our true potential — the potential that only a serious investment into designed connectivity will bring us.

Tags attach stories to charity shop’s donated goods

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

springwise.com

Launched at this year’s Future Everything digital arts festival in Manchester, RememberMe is a collaborative project between TOTeM (Tales of Things and Electronic Memory) and Oxfam which infused personal history into donated items by enabling people to attach stories to them using RFID tags.

People donating items at an Oxfam store in Manchester were asked to tell a story about the object into a microphone, including when and where they acquired it and any personal stories associated with it. The audio clips were linked to an RFID tag and QR code and items tagged with a story were added to the shop’s stock as part of the in-store exhibition. Visitors to the shop used their own smart phone or a bespoke RFID reader to listen to the stories through speakers in the shop, and were invited to purchase the story-tagged objects.

Full story

Art in the Slums of Brazil

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

UTNE Reader

For the past four years, Dutch artists Jeroen Koolhaas and Dre Urhahn have been splashing paint on Rio de Janeiro’s favelas, transforming the hillside slums into clustered monuments of urban art.

The neighborhoods aren’t just changing aesthetically. “About one-third of Rio de Janeiro’s population lives in favelas,” reports mental_floss. “To prevent kids from getting caught up in the drug trade, the Favela Painting project pays Brazil’s youth to create murals for their communities. As a result, armies of teenage artists are giving their neighborhoods new faces—ones covered in bright, cheerful colors. The hope is that within the next few years, the entire landscape of favelas will become a massive work of art, drawing attention to the needs of the poor and filling the community with pride.”

Full story