Archive for August, 2008
Posted on August 27th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 14 comments
My urbanist geek friend Don Vehige got all excited about some pedestrian behavior he observed downtown at 1st and University and snapped the photos below. Apparently people lose their ability to read during sunny Saturday afternoons, because the construction area at the front of the new Four Seasons hotel has the biggest and most explicit […]
Posted on August 27th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 23 comments
Leave it up to a starchitect like Rem Koolhaas to create engaging, lively, useful public spaces like the pivotol corner of 4th Avenue and Spring Street. Someone tell me how this promotes an active street face? I don’t know whether to blame the City of Seattle for being so ga-ga over the Dutchman and allowing this […]
Posted on August 25th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 3 comments
Posted on August 20th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 4 comments
The scoldiest urban scold that ever scolded, Lewis Mumford, had a bone to pick with Marshall “the medium is the message” McLuhan back in 1970:
But it remained for McLuhan to picture as technology’s ultimate gift a more absolute mode of control: one that will achieve total illiteracy, with no permanent record except that officially […]
Posted on August 19th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 20 comments
is Two Union Square — at least that’s the word on the street. Designed by NBBJ, completed in 1989; 56 floors, 740 feet tall (third tallest in Seattle), with ~1,100,000 square feet of rentable space.
But there’s a pretty low bar for modern skyscrapers in Seattle, and to me, ranking them is sort of like ranking […]
Posted on August 17th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 11 comments
If you’re looking for indicators of the chances we can turn our self-destructing culture around before the entire planet is devoured, witness the howls of “nanny state” in response to Seattle’s 20-cent bag tax. Might I suggest that this reaction is not the most promising indicator?
In the context of the ecological limits of the planet, […]
Posted on August 16th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 2 comments
Posted on August 14th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 15 comments
Cost, you say? Accessibility? Lack of imagination? Oh Europe and your ancient progressive ways…
Posted on August 13th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 4 comments
HAC on 8/4/08
HAC on 8/7/08
NYT on 8/8/08
Posted on August 13th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 5 comments
It only took the PI four days to catch up with the news, first reported on the Seattle Condo Blog, that Moda (shown above) is converting from condos to apartments. How far can the pendulum swing in this direction? From the PI:
“The market and the financing conditions for condominiums have really taken a drastic turn,” […]
Posted on August 12th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 17 comments
[ Source: Oregon Department of Environmental Quality and EPA ]
Via Sightline, the 2005 U.S. greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions chart above illustrates an alternative way cut the pie, emphasizing the importance of goods and materials, and suggesting we ought to look at ways to use less stuff. But to intelligently assign priorities, […]
Posted on August 12th, 2008 in Uncategorized with no comments
Apparently my friend WB (who named this blog) has some “ideas” he wants to express. So I beseech you, esteemed readership, please pay attention to the “posted by” credit at the top of the posts.
Posted on August 12th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 28 comments
I walk to work everyday and have, for a long time, been perplexed by why so many people don’t know how to use sidewalks. The generally accepted method is much akin to how cars and bikes use roadways. Your path of travel should always be to your right (Anyone wager on how many folks are […]
Posted on August 12th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 17 comments
Posted on August 11th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 25 comments
So writes Roger Valdez in a balanced little riff on affordable housing in the DJC.
“First, we know growth is good. Accommodating people in the city is more sustainable than sprawl, but sometimes neighborhoods resist growth. That resistance works to limit supply by making permits more expensive and time-consuming. Welcoming growth can help increase supply, which […]
Posted on August 11th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 1 comment
Posted on August 11th, 2008 in Uncategorized with no comments
Posted on August 10th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 8 comments
This is the 1958 Logan Building at the corner of 5th and Union, and I like it. It was built with a complete air-conditioning system, which was an ultra-modern feature at the time. And no, your eyes do not deceive you: it has windows that open. Perhaps in 1958 people still […]
Posted on August 10th, 2008 in Uncategorized with no comments
The unaccounted for:
AVA (8th and Pine): 36 stories, 200+ condo units, 190-room hotel.
7th at Westlake: 31 stories, 16 floors office, 184 condo units.
8th and Stewart: 400-foot tower, 300+ condo units.
8th and Westlake: 225+ condo units.
That adds up to over 900 housing units in projects that have been put on hold or canceled. […]
Posted on August 9th, 2008 in Uncategorized with no comments
Noisetank’s greatest moment came back in 2005 when, during an NPR Fresh Air interview, Terry Gross asked Paul Anka about “one last thing in the annals of Paul Anka lore, and this is a website that you probably really hate…” (starts at 20:55): The Guys Get Shirts had become an internet […]
Posted on August 7th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 17 comments
The answer seems rather obvious to me.
Posted on August 7th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 56 comments
So then why do so many people get their panties in such a bunch about them?
But before going there… talk about Instant Karma: Yesterday I had the closest call I’ve ever had on my bike downtown. A Metro bus blew by me within inches, and when I confronted the driver about it at the next […]
Posted on August 4th, 2008 in Uncategorized with 33 comments
(warning: echo-chamber post forthcoming)
Erica Barnett nailed it: “Cyclists are angry for a reason.” As I wrote back when hugeasscity was still an innocent babe, I appreciate the frustration that feeds the Critical Mass gestalt. And this is an appreciation that you cannot gain until you’ve spent a lot of time […]
Posted on August 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized with 6 comments
hipster fixie ‘the bumblebee’ you want this! - $800 (Capitol Hill)
Reply to: sale-781268604@craigslist.org
Date: 2008-08-03, 9:24AM PDT
Come one come all! Hipster kids behold: the Bumblebee. Ok so I never got around to painting it like a real bumblebee but you could.
This is your perfect ticket of acceptance into your local fixed gear scene.
Ever wanted to […]
Posted on August 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized with no comments
[ The coolest house in Medfield — and children are still allowed to live in it. ]
Medfield made the Boston Globe in a story headlined with “Welcome to Medfield, especially if you don’t have children.” Medfield, like many other similar small towns in Massachusetts, has been encouraging “over 55″ developments because it costs […]
Posted on August 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized with 4 comments
Nothing has more universal appeal than the most technologically advanced killing devices ever created. Except maybe donuts.
The scene at Mt. Baker beach, where every age, race, religion, political affiliation, and socioeconomic class joins as one to bask in the glory of the paramount failure of the human race. I brought my kids. […]
Posted on August 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized with 18 comments
[ Apropos of nothing, a scene from the Umoja Parade at 23rd and Cherry in the Central District ]
Is there anything interesting happening out there? Density this, sustainability that, bla bla bla. Can any of you readers out point us to something fresh and inspiring?
Summer laziness has set in, and I’m going […]