Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta EUA. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta EUA. Mostrar todas as mensagens

14/03/2014

«Cities Mobilize to Help Those Threatened by Gentrification»

PHILADELPHIA — Cities that have worked for years to attract young professionals who might have once moved to the suburbs are now experimenting with ways to protect a group long deemed expendable — working- and lower-middle class homeowners threatened by gentrification.
The initiatives, planned or underway in Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, Pittsburgh and other cities, are centered on reducing or freezing property taxes for such homeowners in an effort to promote neighborhood stability, preserve character and provide a dividend of sorts to those who have stayed through years of high crime, population loss and declining property values, officials say.
Newcomers, whose vitality is critical to cities, are hardly being turned away. But officials say a balance is needed, given the attention and government funding being spent to draw young professionals — from tax breaks for luxury condominium buildings to new bike lanes, dog parks and athletic fields.
“We feel the people who toughed it out should be rewarded,” said Darrell L. Clarke, president of the Philadelphia City Council, which last year approved legislation to limit property tax increases for longtime residents. “And we feel it is incumbent upon us to protect them.”

Artigo completo aqui: http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/03/04/us/cities-helping-residents-resist-the-new-gentry.html?from=global.home

Foto: Colina do Castelo, um dos bairros ameaçados de gentrification, tal como a Colina de Santana e o Príncipe Real, com a monocultura dos projectos de habitação de luxo, hotéis de charme, short term rentals, etc... O que estará a CML a fazer para responder a estes novos problemas? Nada até que o problema seja tão grave que terão de reagir - Lisboa, quase sempre a reagir e quase nunca a prevenir, antecipar...

03/09/2013

BETTER BLOCK: um exemplo de cidadania dos EUA

Recebemos de um cidadão lisboeta, activo na reabilitação concreta da cidade, este email/sugestão:
 
Caríssimos,
 
Junto envio um video que achei inspirador sobre a forma de intervir na cidade penso que o Fórum Cidadania LX podia ter intervenções deste género, envolvendo as comunidades locais, eu estou disponível para ajudar.
FVC
 
Opposite to the 'top down' concept of urban design is BETTER BLOCK, founded in Dallas' Oak Cliff by Jason Roberts and Andrew Howard. The Better Block project is a demonstration tool that temporarily…
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntwqVDzdqAU

A revista MONOCLE publicou um texto do fundador do Better Block na edição de Agosto (pág. 109).
 
FOTO: Largo do Convento da Encarnação, um dos muitos locais de Lisboa onde faz falta uma grande mudança do paradigma de ocupação do espaço público! Apesar de a CML receber frequentes denúncias e alertas para o estacionamento abusivo naquele largo histórico (IIP), nada ainda fez para repor a lei - talvez esteja na altura dos cidadãos fazerem eles próprios alguma coisa já que a lógica do «top down» obviamente não funciona neste caso... Ideias? Voluntários?

05/09/2011

Urban Farms: NY, Osaka, Londres, Chicago

Londres, Chicago, Osaka e Nova Iorque:


E Lisboa? Qual a produção agricola da nossa cidade?

Foto: Borough Market, Londres

30/07/2011

ZURIQUE: Tram operators can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt.

Across Europe, Irking Drivers Is Urban Policy


Pedestrians and trams are given priority treatment in Zurich. Tram operators can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt.


ZURICH — While American cities are synchronizing green lights to improve traffic flow and offering apps to help drivers find parking, many European cities are doing the opposite: creating environments openly hostile to cars. The methods vary, but the mission is clear — to make car use expensive and just plain miserable enough to tilt drivers toward more environmentally friendly modes of transportation.

Cities including Vienna to Munich and Copenhagen have closed vast swaths of streets to car traffic. Barcelona and Paris have had car lanes eroded by popular bike-sharing programs. Drivers in London and Stockholm pay hefty congestion charges just for entering the heart of the city. And over the past two years, dozens of German cities have joined a national network of “environmental zones” where only cars with low carbon dioxide emissions may enter.
Likeminded cities welcome new shopping malls and apartment buildings but severely restrict the allowable number of parking spaces. On-street parking is vanishing. In recent years, even former car capitals like Munich have evolved into “walkers’ paradises,” said Lee Schipper, a senior research engineer at Stanford University who specializes in sustainable transportation.
“In the United States, there has been much more of a tendency to adapt cities to accommodate driving,” said Peder Jensen, head of the Energy and Transport Group at the European Environment Agency. “Here there has been more movement to make cities more livable for people, to get cities relatively free of cars.”

To that end, the municipal Traffic Planning Department here in Zurich has been working overtime in recent years to torment drivers. Closely spaced red lights have been added on roads into town, causing delays and angst for commuters. Pedestrian underpasses that once allowed traffic to flow freely across major intersections have been removed. Operators in the city’s ever expanding tram system can turn traffic lights in their favor as they approach, forcing cars to halt.

Around Löwenplatz, one of Zurich’s busiest squares, cars are now banned on many blocks. Where permitted, their speed is limited to a snail’s pace so that crosswalks and crossing signs can be removed entirely, giving people on foot the right to cross anywhere they like at any time.
As he stood watching a few cars inch through a mass of bicycles and pedestrians, the city’s chief traffic planner, Andy Fellmann, smiled. “Driving is a stop-and-go experience,” he said. “That’s what we like! Our goal is to reconquer public space for pedestrians, not to make it easy for drivers.”

While some American cities — notably San Francisco, which has “pedestrianized” parts of Market Street — have made similar efforts, they are still the exception in the United States, where it has been difficult to get people to imagine a life where cars are not entrenched, Dr. Schipper said.

Europe’s cities generally have stronger incentives to act. Built for the most part before the advent of cars, their narrow roads are poor at handling heavy traffic. Public transportation is generally better in Europe than in the United States, and gas often costs over $8 a gallon, contributing to driving costs that are two to three times greater per mile than in the United States, Dr. Schipper said.

What is more, European Union countries probably cannot meet a commitment under the Kyoto Protocol to reduce their carbon dioxide emissions unless they curb driving. The United States never ratified that pact.

Globally, emissions from transportation continue a relentless rise, with half of them coming from personal cars. Yet an important impulse behind Europe’s traffic reforms will be familiar to mayors in Los Angeles and Vienna alike: to make cities more inviting, with cleaner air and less traffic.

Michael Kodransky, global research manager at the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy in New York, which works with cities to reduce transport emissions, said that Europe was previously “on the same trajectory as the United States, with more people wanting to own more cars.” But in the past decade, there had been “a conscious shift in thinking, and firm policy,” he said. And it is having an effect.

After two decades of car ownership, Hans Von Matt, 52, who works in the insurance industry, sold his vehicle and now gets around Zurich by tram or bicycle, using a car-sharing service for trips out of the city. Carless households have increased from 40 to 45 percent in the last decade, and car owners use their vehicles less, city statistics show.

“There were big fights over whether to close this road or not — but now it is closed, and people got used to it,” he said, alighting from his bicycle on Limmatquai, a riverside pedestrian zone lined with cafes that used to be two lanes of gridlock. Each major road closing has to be approved in a referendum.

Today 91 percent of the delegates to the Swiss Parliament take the tram to work.

Still, there is grumbling. “There are all these zones where you can only drive 20 or 30 kilometers per hour [about 12 to 18 miles an hour], which is rather stressful,” Thomas Rickli, a consultant, said as he parked his Jaguar in a lot at the edge of town. “It’s useless.”

Urban planners generally agree that a rise in car commuting is not desirable for cities anywhere.
Mr. Fellmann calculated that a person using a car took up 115 cubic meters (roughly 4,000 cubic feet) of urban space in Zurich while a pedestrian took three. “So it’s not really fair to everyone else if you take the car,” he said.

European cities also realized they could not meet increasingly strict World Health Organization guidelines for fine-particulate air pollution if cars continued to reign. Many American cities are likewise in “nonattainment” of their Clean Air Act requirements, but that fact “is just accepted here,” said Mr. Kodransky of the New York-based transportation institute.

It often takes extreme measures to get people out of their cars, and providing good public transportation is a crucial first step. One novel strategy in Europe is intentionally making it harder and more costly to park. “Parking is everywhere in the United States, but it’s disappearing from the urban space in Europe,” said Mr. Kodransky, whose recent report “Europe’s Parking U-Turn” surveys the shift.

Sihl City, a new Zurich mall, is three times the size of Brooklyn’s Atlantic Mall but has only half the number of parking spaces, and as a result, 70 percent of visitors get there by public transport, Mr. Kodransky said.

In Copenhagen, Mr. Jensen, at the European Environment Agency, said that his office building had more than 150 spaces for bicycles and only one for a car, to accommodate a disabled person.
While many building codes in Europe cap the number of parking spaces in new buildings to discourage car ownership, American codes conversely tend to stipulate a minimum number. New apartment complexes built along the light rail line in Denver devote their bottom eight floors to parking, making it “too easy” to get in the car rather than take advantage of rail transit, Mr. Kodransky said.

While Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has generated controversy in New York by “pedestrianizing” a few areas like Times Square, many European cities have already closed vast areas to car traffic. Store owners in Zurich had worried that the closings would mean a drop in business, but that fear has proved unfounded, Mr. Fellmann said, because pedestrian traffic increased 30 to 40 percent where cars were banned.

With politicians and most citizens still largely behind them, Zurich’s planners continue their traffic-taming quest, shortening the green-light periods and lengthening the red with the goal that pedestrians wait no more than 20 seconds to cross.

We would never synchronize green lights for cars with our philosophy,” said Pio Marzolini, a city official. “When I’m in other cities, I feel like I’m always waiting to cross a street. I can’t get used to the idea that I am worth less than a car.”

in THE NEW YORK TIMES 26 June 2011



FOTO: Eléctricos "presos" na Rua dos Fanqueiros devido ao excesso (e excessos!) de estacionamento à superfície que ainda existe na Baixa, Lisboa. É todo um paradigma de mobilidade, de estilos de vida, que tem de ser profundamente altetado em Portugal.

10/02/2010

Exposição: WMF PRESERVING MODERN ARCHITECTURE

WORLD MONUMENTS FUND EXHIBITION ON PRESERVING MODERN ARCHITECTURE

Cities and towns across America routinely demolish their modern architecture, without giving the buildings a chance to be preserved and adaptively restored.

Why this happens, and what we can do to save 50 years of modernist architecture, is addressed in Modernism at Risk: Modern Solutions for Saving Modern Landmarks, a traveling exhibition organized by the World Monuments Fund (WMF) and sponsored by Knoll, Inc. Opening on February 17 at the Center for Architecture, 536 LaGuardia Place, the exhibition will be on view there through May 1, 2010.

A project of WMF's Modernism at Risk program (http://www.wmf.org/advocacy/modernism), the exhibition features large-scale photographs by noted photographer Andrew Moore and interpretative panels on five case studies that explore the role designers and other advocacy groups play in preserving modern landmarks.

"For decades the World Monuments Fund has worked to save heritage sites around the globe, from early settlements to 20th-century architecture," said Bonnie Burnham, WMF President. "While modern buildings face the same physical threats as ancient structures, they are too often overlooked as insignificant, not important enough to preserve. We launched our Modernism at Risk initiative to advocate for these often ignored buildings and to address their special needs. And, through this traveling exhibition, we hope to draw many more advocates to our cause. We are especially pleased that it is now here in New York, at the Center for Architecture, where we hope hundreds of people will see the show and add their voices to ours on the importance of preserving our modern heritage." (...)

"Architecture isn't just about building new buildings," said AIANY President Anthony Schirripa, FAIA, "It's also about celebrating our architectural history. Preserving modernist landmarks should be a goal not only for the design community, but for all communities that want to celebrate the diversity and richness of modern architecture in their midst. I hope this exhibition will begin a dialogue amongst New Yorkers about how, and why, modernism matters, and that it inspires us to each contribute in our own way to the World Monuments Fund's valuable mission of saving these extraordinary buildings."

The Center for Architecture

The Center for Architecture is a destination for all interested in the built environment. It is home to the American Institute of Architects New York Chapter and the Center for Architecture Foundation, vibrant nonprofit organizations that provide resources to both the public and building industry professionals. Through exhibitions, programs, and special events, the Center aims to improve the quality and sustainability of the built environment, foster exchange between the design, construction, and real estate communities, and encourage collaborations across the city and globe. The Center also celebrates New York's vibrant architecture, explores its urban fabric, shares community resources, and provides opportunities for scholarship. As the city's leading cultural institution focusing on architecture, the Center drives positive change through the power of design.

Foto: Museu Guggenheim, restaurado em 2009 por ocasião dos 50 anos

09/02/2010

Marca preferida de Michele Obama promove turismo lisboeta nos EUA

Além de fotografar o catálogo em Lisboa, o site da J Crew tem um roteiro sobre a capital.

O catálogo da edição Primavera-Verão da marca de roupa norte-americana J Crew, começou por ser fotografado nas ruas de Lisboa. Agora, palavras como "Olá", "Bica" e "Obrigada" enchem as montras da loja na Madison Avenue, em Nova Iorque, com convites para entrar sob o ‘slogan' "Olá de Portugal".

A marca - uma das preferidas da primeira-dama Michelle Obama - escolheu a capital portuguesa para fotografar a nova colecção mas não se limitou a isso. No plano de comunicação estava ainda prevista a criação de um roteiro sobre o que há a não perder na capital, onde procurar e o que dizer numa primeira viagem a Portugal.

Apesar de a marca não ter contactado antecipadamente a Associação que gere o Turismo de Lisboa (ATL), as informações veiculadas não podiam agradar mais à entidade. "Lisboa tem tido muito boa imprensa nos EUA. Temos tido alguns trabalhos muito significativos ultimamente sobre a capital, o que tem contribuído fortemente para a promoção deste destino enquanto local privilegiado e ‘fashionable'", justificou Paula Oliveira, directora de promoção da ATL. No site da marca (jcrew.com), convidam-se os visitantes a abrir o "Passaporte para Lisboa". Nele vão encontrar quatro separadores com tudo o que precisa de saber: o que esperar da capital, os locais obrigatórios a visitar, recebem ainda uma lição de língua e uma selecção dos melhores lugares.

"A Brasileira", "A Vida Portuguesa", o "Restaurante Lautasco", a "Antiga Confeitaria de Belém" e o "Castelo de S.Jorge" são ‘spots' a não perder. "Bica", "Obrigada", "Fado", "Azulejos", "Sardinhas Assadas" e "Praia" são algumas das palavras a sublinhar no dicionário. Cinco dias bastaram para o ‘cast' da marca se render aos encantos e recantos lisboetas. "A ajuda destas marcas é fundamental, particularmente em mercados tão alargados como os EUA, onde não é fácil comunicar sem valores de investimento muito significativos. Estes trabalhos são um enorme contributo para a divulgação e notoriedade de Lisboa", explicou.

Para Paula Oliveira, trabalhos como este ou o que surgiu recentemente no "The New York Times" contribuem para a promoção marca "Lisboa" tanto ou mais do que uma mega campanha publicitária. No artigo, Lisboa era vista como uma cidade "gourmand", com ‘chefs' e restaurantes de qualidade. "O cenário é cinematográfico, com o cheiro a manter-se o mesmo", assina Alexander Lobrano, com o "pão cozido, peixe frito, carne assada e sopa" a marcar compasso olfactivo à medida que se passeia na capital. "Aqui há Peixe", "Tavares", "Já à Mesa", "100 Maneiras", "Alma" ou "Manifesto" constam do cardápio obrigatório numa ementa em Lisboa.
In Diário Económico
Promoção grátis e da mais eficaz! para quem quiser ver o site

20/06/2009

THE CARBON COUNTER: Times Square billboard counts Carbon build up

National debt used to be the big number we all lived in fear of. Now it's greenhouse gases.

Climate change is likely to have all sorts of nasty consequences over the next century—among them, according to a brand-new report from the U.S. Global Change Research program, an increase in torrential downpours in the American northeast.

So it was uncomfortably fitting that a major climate-consciousness-raising event took place in just such a downpour. As reporters and dignitaries huddled under leaky tents just outside New York's Madison Square Garden on Thursday, Deutche Bank switched on its mammoth Carbon Counter billboard. The counter, towering 70 feet above busy Seventh Avenue and dramatically visible to hundreds of thousands of commuters who take the train to and from Penn Station, displays a real-time count of heat-trapping greenhouse gases we're pumping into the atmosphere—about 2 billion metric tons every month, added to the 3.6 trillion tons already floating around up there.

How do they know it's 2 billion tons? Actually, they know it isn't. Although carbon dioxide is by far the most significant human-generated greenhouse gas, it isn't the only one. Methane, generated by ruminating cows and rice paddies is another; nitrous oxide, created in making fertilizer, is another; so are halocarbons, used as refrigerants. If you really want to know about how much heat we're trapping, you have to take these into account too—and that's what Deutche Bank and its scientific advisers from MIT wanted to do.

It's complicated, though. For one thing, each of these gases traps heat at a different rate (OK, they really trap infrared radiation, but it ends up amounting to the same thing). Methane, for example, is a much more efficient energy-trapper than CO2; it's just that we emit a lot less of it. Each of these gases, moreover, degrades in the atmosphere at a different speed. That means you can't just add them up. "It's like you give someone a hundred dollars," says MIT atmospheric scientist Ron Prinn, "but it's a mix of Australian and Canadian and U.S. dollars. "You have to make some conversions before you know what it's worth." For the Carbon Counter, those conversions run into many pages of equations, at the end of which you get a number representing the "CO2 equivalent" of 20 different gases. Add them up, and you're at 2 billion tons monthly.

That's a big number, certainly, but what exactly does it mean? Most popular accounts of climate change don't talk about tons; they talk about parts-per-million—the number of CO2 or other molecules you'd find in a million molecules of atmosphere. CO2 was at about 280ppm back in 1700; it's now at 386 and rising. For perspective, climate scientists believe that if CO2 rises to 450ppm or so, the global average temperature could rise as much as 2 degrees Celsius, with serious consequences (and heavy rainstorms are hardly the worst).

But if you factor in the other greenhouse gases, we're already at 450, or pretty close to it. That being the case, you'd think we'd already be seeing dramatically rising seas and severe weather changes. There are two reasons why we aren't. First, it takes a while for heat to build up once the gases are up there. Second, and more important, the Carbon Counter doesn't take aerosols into account. These are tiny particles of soot, sulfur dioxide and other pollutants spewed into the air along with greenhouse gases. "The problem with these," says Bill Chameides, dean of Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment, "is that some aerosols tend to cool the planet, some tend to warm it, and some interact with clouds in ways we don't understand."

That's the good news. The bad news is that aerosols cause their own problems— lung disease and acid rain, just to name a couple. Presumably, we'll be trying to limit those emissions in the future, which will leave the greenhouse gases to do their thing without interference.

By leaving some factors out, the Carbon Counter is by definition somewhat inaccurate. But since most of us don't know what 3.6 trillion tons of carbon or carbon-equivalent or whatever actually means, it hardly matters. It's a big number, and it's getting bigger, fast. Deutche Bank and the MIT folks hope that seeing these huge numbers scroll by on a giant billboard will make people more aware of what we're doing to the planet, just as billboards with the U.S. national debt try to raise awareness about another scary number.

Given how much people pay attention to the debt, though, let's hope this one is more effective.

In NEWSWEEK, 19 de Junho de 2009


Nota: Vamos sugerir ao Presidente da CML, e ao Vereador do Ambiente, que instalem semelhante painel em frente, por exemplo, da sede do ACP. Ou, em alteranativa, em vez da tela de publicidade mal disfarçada da Renova no ROSSIO.

24/05/2009

CITY ON AN UP 'CYCLE': 143% jump in pedalers


The spokes are really flying around the Big Apple. Scores of new bike lanes and a sour economy have led to a surge in people pedaling to work, data released yesterday show.

The number of bicycle commuters surged by 18,000 from 2007 to 2008, according to numbers from the city and advocacy groups. An estimated 185,000 people pedaled to the office in 2008, compared to 76,000 in 2000 -- a 143 percent increase, according to the figures provided by Transportation Alternatives.

The reason, officials and cyclists say, is the hundreds of miles of new bike lanes and the recently tanking financial picture.

"I save at least $60 a month on subway fares, $100 on parking and $100 on gas," said West Village resident Michael Pavlakos. "My bike costs me $50 a year in repairs. So I ride it even more because of the economy."

Over the past three years, the city Department of Transportation laid down about 620 miles of lanes, some separated from busy roads with paint and pylons.

Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan said it's those lanes -- not the streets -- that will handle the 1 million more people projected to move into the city in the near future. "We can't compensate for more people by double-decking the road network," she told The Post. "We're looking to create a [bike-lane grid] for cyclists to go from Point A to Point B without getting off."

She also praised proposed legislation in the City Council that would make more building owners accept riders storing bikes in their offices. "That would ensure the bike is going to be there when they need it," Sadik-Khan said, noting that riders are worried about bike theft.

Recently, the MTA approved 10 percent fare hikes and the state Legislature agreed to increase the price of driver's-license renewals and car registrations. "People are bring priced out of driving and priced out of transit," said Wiley Norvell, spokesman for Transportation Alternatives. "Any time that happens, you usually see a boost in people biking to work every day."

But bike theft is still a problem, cyclists said, and some want more bike racks around the city. "The city still has a lot to do with parking," said East Village resident Paul Heck, who bikes to work every day. Sadik-Khan said there are more than 6,000 racks in the city now, with more on the way.

TA's biking numbers, which go back to 1980, are based on DOT counts of cyclists who ride into Midtown and lower Manhattan every day and are projected for the entire city. in New York Post, 15 Maio 2009

Foto: Nova Iorque ja tem mais de 1000 km de bike-lanes, implementadas nas faixas de rodagem e nunca em passeios. Nota: os sublinhados sao nossos.