So I don't blog here very often, as I found I had a hard time keeping a train of thought long enough to write a whole article. I found Tumblr was much more my speed, as I could write short, spastic articles, and consume other's similar content.
I may resume my blogging here at some point, so if you really want to read my rambles I recommend subscribing to the RSS feed over on the right side of the page and forget about my blog until something shows up (Disclaimier; it may be some time before something shows up.)
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Farmers Markets!
There are many reasons to celebrate the return of spring, longer days, warmer weather, but one of the reasons I celebrate is the return of fresh produce from local farms heralded by the restart of local farmers markets.
Don't get me wrong, I love a Chilean peach as much as anyone, and you don't have much of a choice if you want a peach in the middle of February. But no amount of industrial farming and careful handling techniques can rival produce purchased and eaten on the same day it was picked.
Because I found the farmers markets around Cedar Rapids to be a bit confusing (seriously, the downtown farmers market has three different location depending on what day it is on, and don't even get me started about how stupid it is to move the Saturday market around,) I had to create a Google calendar.
Take a look at the calendar, and if you think it might be useful, add it to the list of calendars you can view by clicking the little icon in the lower right-hand corner.
Note: I have never tried to share a calendar with an HTML address, so I don't know how it will work. Please give me feedback, the first farmers market is the Hiawatha market which starts at 11 am on April 4th.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
More on parking in Cedar Rapids
When I went to the recent "Parking in Action" round table discussion, put on by the Cedar Rapids Downtown District, I went in thinking the parking system in Cedar Rapids was a bloated system with too many decrepit parking garages serving a an audience who was unwilling to walk a block to save their lives.
What I saw and heard over the next hour and a half made me believe the parking system is part of a poorly organized system, yet it is positioned to be a strong catalyst for downtown development. And most of the people in Cedar Rapids are still unwilling to walk a block to save their lives.
In a tone very similar to the recent transit open houses, much of the message was about what we can do with an underfunded system in the meantime, and what it could turn into if done correctly.
Prior to the formal presentation, the question was posed to each table to list the top three concerns with the parking system as it stands today. The answers from approximately 20 tables were pretty uniform; price, location and ease of use. A few unique responses were security concerns with the parkades, the appearance/maintainable of the parkades, and the lack of access control leading to permit holders not having spaces on night and weekends.
The presentation by Dennis Burns, vice president of parking consultant Carl Walker Inc. (video of the presentation), contained images from cities where parking ramps are designed to reflect the values of the communities they were built in, subterranean lots to allow parks to be build at street level, open and inviting parking garages and multi-use buildings incorporating commercial spaces at street level and parking and residential above.
Burns talked about many ideas which could be incorporated into Cedar Rapids' current parking system to encourage people to use it as it exists today. These ideas included new and simplified signage and maps to make it easier for visitors to know where to park and where to go, a policy of "first hour free" to encourage use of the off street parking system and remove the requirement for parking validation.
Other slides focused on new technology which could be used to combine multiple parking meters into a single point of use which would accept credit and debit cards. Burns stated that in other cities where the only change was the addition of a system which accepted credit and debit cards resulted in an increase of revenue 15-20% solely due to the increased ease of use.
The general theme carried throughout the presentation was the organization necessary to have a strong parking system. In many cities the parking system uses the profits generated from the on-street parking to subsidize the structured parking as well as to reinvest into improving the surrounding streetscapes. These improved areas result in more people visiting the downtown therefore increasing the revenues for the parking system.
While the parking system in Cedar Rapids is not organized to be able to do this (at least not currently) we have one distinct advantage, the city of Cedar Rapids owns ~78% of all the parking in the downtown area (which is huge compared to other cities).
One thing I thought was made clear during this presentation, if Ron Corbet really wants to revitalize the downtown area of Cedar Rapids, eliminating all parking fees for ten years isn't really an option, this would simply result in the parkades to fall further into disrepair and won't allow the city to advance our parking system for another ten years.
Friday, January 8, 2010
Parking in Cedar Rapids
I'm new to Cedar Rapids, so I will admit there are issues I don't understand the full complexity.
One of these issues is the apparent parking problem in downtown Cedar Rapids. I say there is a parking problem because there are currently two ongoing issues which need to deal with the parking problem.
The first issue is where to build the new library. Not only is no one raising the idea of just reusing the existing location (after adding some flood gates to the existing earth berms,) but it appears the two best locations have been ruled out due, in part, to a lack of parking.
The second issue is Doug Neumann, president of the Downtown District stating that downtown needs a new parking ramp. This statement is at odds with the consultant hired to manage the parking system in Cedar Rapids, who said that there is no need for a new parking garage.
As the consultant said, there are 918 unoccupied parking spaces in the parkades during peak occupancy. 918! That is literally a parking lot the size of several football fields. But we need more parking ramps.
Neumann says "If we don’t want to significantly hinder this community’s efforts at job creation and economic development, we do, indeed, need a new parking ramp in the vicinity of the new federal courthouse," this statement doesn't address the fact that the area bounded by 8th Ave E, 2nd St SE, 12 Ave E and the river, is one giant parking lot.
As Chuck Wieneke suggested, maybe these people should walk more and lose weight.
My final word, take a quick look at the parking map, provided by the Cedar Rapids parking system. It doesn't even show all of lot 44 (or any of the private lots around downtown), but it does a pretty good job illustrating how much parking is available in the off-street system around downtown.
Drive less, walk more, lose some weight.
One of these issues is the apparent parking problem in downtown Cedar Rapids. I say there is a parking problem because there are currently two ongoing issues which need to deal with the parking problem.
The first issue is where to build the new library. Not only is no one raising the idea of just reusing the existing location (after adding some flood gates to the existing earth berms,) but it appears the two best locations have been ruled out due, in part, to a lack of parking.
"The losers were the TrueNorth and Banjo Equipment blocks, both between Fourth and Fifth Avenues SE, to the south and east of Greene Square Park. Library board members said both sites were plagued by uncertainties, especially parking and flood insurance."I have to scratch my head over the uncertainty of parking, because if the TrueNorth site was selected, it would be right next to a 9 story parking structure, which is ~half empty during it's peak time (full disclosure, I park in this garage, I never have to drive above the fifth level to find a spot). In addition, it would be diagonal from another parking garage.
The second issue is Doug Neumann, president of the Downtown District stating that downtown needs a new parking ramp. This statement is at odds with the consultant hired to manage the parking system in Cedar Rapids, who said that there is no need for a new parking garage.
As the consultant said, there are 918 unoccupied parking spaces in the parkades during peak occupancy. 918! That is literally a parking lot the size of several football fields. But we need more parking ramps.
Neumann says "If we don’t want to significantly hinder this community’s efforts at job creation and economic development, we do, indeed, need a new parking ramp in the vicinity of the new federal courthouse," this statement doesn't address the fact that the area bounded by 8th Ave E, 2nd St SE, 12 Ave E and the river, is one giant parking lot.
As Chuck Wieneke suggested, maybe these people should walk more and lose weight.
My final word, take a quick look at the parking map, provided by the Cedar Rapids parking system. It doesn't even show all of lot 44 (or any of the private lots around downtown), but it does a pretty good job illustrating how much parking is available in the off-street system around downtown.
Drive less, walk more, lose some weight.
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Come flix with me!
I recently realized that while I very good at sharing my contact information for facebook, twitter, tumblr, this blog, etc, etc... I have utterly missed out on utilizing the social features of Netflix. I don't know how useful they are, but from other forms of social media, I know I can't figure it out if I don't give them a try, I also know I enjoy discussing movies with my friends and acquaintances, and often put more weight on a good review from someone I know than a renown movie critic.
So if you want to try this out with me, click this link, and become my friend on Netflix!
Edit: If you do add me as a friend, I would appreciate it if you were to send me a quick note or a comment here so I have some idea who my new Netflix friends are.
So if you want to try this out with me, click this link, and become my friend on Netflix!
Edit: If you do add me as a friend, I would appreciate it if you were to send me a quick note or a comment here so I have some idea who my new Netflix friends are.
Monday, November 9, 2009
Pale Blue Dot
Today is the 75th anniversary of Carl Sagan's birth.Carl would probably be the first to tell you, he wasn't all that important, and I would mostly agree. He was a human who lived all of his life on the surface of the small blue speck in the brown band on the right hand side of this image.
Of this photo, Sagan said
The same brilliant words are also available in a video. I recommend that you read the words, watch the video and try to remember them always, especially the last part, "To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we've ever known."
I think that the world is a better place for anyone who remembers and cherishes these words.
Of this photo, Sagan said
"Look again at that dot. That's here. That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every "superstar," every "supreme leader," every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there – on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.
The Earth is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena. Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors so that, in glory and triumph, they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot. Think of the endless cruelties visited by the inhabitants of one corner of this pixel on the scarcely distinguishable inhabitants of some other corner, how frequent their misunderstandings, how eager they are to kill one another, how fervent their hatreds.
Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the Universe, are challenged by this point of pale light. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.
The Earth is the only world known so far to harbor life. There is nowhere else, at least in the near future, to which our species could migrate. Visit, yes. Settle, not yet. Like it or not, for the moment the Earth is where we make our stand.
It has been said that astronomy is a humbling and character-building experience. There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world. To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we've ever known."
The same brilliant words are also available in a video. I recommend that you read the words, watch the video and try to remember them always, especially the last part, "To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we've ever known."
I think that the world is a better place for anyone who remembers and cherishes these words.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Sidewalks?
I was very excited to read this article in the Gazette about the upcoming project to widen Collins Road. Although I am not so excited about the road widening part as I am about the fact that there are finally going to be sidewalks along the the portion of First Avenue east of 40th street.
Not only do I think that all roads (other than interstates and rural roads) should have sidewalks, but especially this area of First Avenue. The area in question is mainly commercial zoning and I have always thought it was ludicrous that I had to put my life in fairly significant danger to go from one shopping complex to the one across the road from it. In addition, 1st Ave is one of the few ways to get from Cedar Rapids to Marion (for two neighboring cities, they don't have many connections).
One thing the article doesn't say, and I am trying to figure out, does the improvements to Collins Road include sidewalks? I hope one of my three regular readers knows.
Not only do I think that all roads (other than interstates and rural roads) should have sidewalks, but especially this area of First Avenue. The area in question is mainly commercial zoning and I have always thought it was ludicrous that I had to put my life in fairly significant danger to go from one shopping complex to the one across the road from it. In addition, 1st Ave is one of the few ways to get from Cedar Rapids to Marion (for two neighboring cities, they don't have many connections).
One thing the article doesn't say, and I am trying to figure out, does the improvements to Collins Road include sidewalks? I hope one of my three regular readers knows.
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