#Industrial Flooring in Woodward
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Transform Your Space with Top-Quality Flooring Services in Moore, Oklahoma
Are you looking to enhance the look and functionality of your residential or industrial space in Moore, Oklahoma? Look no further than ATF Oklahoma, your trusted partner for all your flooring needs. Whether you're seeking Residential Flooring Solutions or industrial-grade flooring installations, we've got you covered with our expert services.
Residential Flooring Services:
Our team at ATF Oklahoma understands the importance of having durable, aesthetically pleasing flooring in your home. From cozy carpets to elegant hardwood floors, we offer a wide range of residential flooring options to suit your style and budget. Whether you're renovating your living room, bedroom, or kitchen, our experienced Flooring Contractors will work closely with you to bring your vision to life.
Industrial Flooring Services:
In the industrial sector, having high-quality flooring is crucial for maintaining a safe and efficient working environment. That's where ATF Oklahoma comes in. We specialize in providing top-notch industrial flooring solutions that are built to withstand heavy foot traffic, equipment, and machinery. Whether you need flooring for a warehouse, factory, or manufacturing facility, our team has the expertise to deliver exceptional results.
Flooring Contractor Expertise:
With years of experience in the industry, our flooring contractors are skilled in handling a variety of flooring materials and installation techniques. From hardwood and laminate to vinyl and ceramic tiles, we have the knowledge and expertise to handle any project with precision and care. Our attention to detail ensures that your flooring is installed correctly the first time, saving you time and money in the long run.
Commercial Flooring Solutions:
In addition to residential and industrial flooring services, ATF Oklahoma also offers commercial flooring solutions for businesses in Woodward and surrounding areas. Whether you're a retail store, restaurant, or office space, we can provide durable, attractive flooring options that meet your specific needs and requirements.
Industrial Flooring for Kitchen:
When it comes to industrial kitchens, hygiene and safety are top priorities. That's why ATF Oklahoma offers specialized industrial flooring solutions designed specifically for kitchen environments. Our durable and easy-to-clean flooring options provide the perfect combination of functionality and aesthetics, ensuring that your kitchen remains a clean and safe working environment.
Service Areas:
While we are based in Moore, Oklahoma, ATF Oklahoma proudly serves customers in Altus, Anadarko, Ardmore, Bartlesville, Bethany, Bixby, Blackwell, Blanchard, Broken Arrow, and beyond. No matter where you're located, we're committed to providing exceptional flooring services that exceed your expectations.
At ATF Oklahoma, we believe that quality flooring can transform any space, whether it's a residential home or a commercial facility. Contact us today to learn more about our services and schedule a consultation with one of our experienced flooring contractors. Let us help you create the perfect flooring solution for your needs.
#Flooring Contractors in Woodward#Commercial Flooring in Woodward#Industrial Flooring in Woodward#Industrial Flooring for Kitchen in Woodward
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I made it for myself cuz i didn't find a spreadsheet but idk, maybe mfs want a list too.
BLUE for Connor
ORANGE for Markus
GREEN for Kara
PURPLE for multiple "main" characters
-> AUG 15TH, 2038
08:29 PM || THE HOSTAGE - CONNOR
-> NOV 5TH, 2038
09:38 AM || SHADES OF COLOR - MARKUS
09:58 AM || THE PAINTER - MARKUS
03:24 PM || THE OPENING - KARA
04:53 PM || A NEW HOME - KARA
09:14 PM || STORMY NIGHT - KARA
09:42 PM || BROKEN - MARKUS
10:58 PM || FUGITIVES - KARA
11:21 PM || PARTNERS - CONNOR
-> NOV 6TH, 2038
12:41 AM || THE INTERROGATION - CONNOR
03:34 AM || FROM THE DEAD - MARKUS
09:56 AM || WAITING FOR HANK⌠- CONNOR
10:25 AM || ON THE RUN - KARA
03:02 PM || THE NEST - CONNOR
04:30 PM || JERICHO - MARKUS
05:13 PM || TIME TO DECIDE - MARKUS
07:45 PM || ZLATKO - KARA
07:51 PM || RUSSIAN ROULETTE - CONNOR
08:01 PM || SPARE PARTS - MARKUS
08:17 PM || THE EDEN CLUB - CONNOR
-> NOV 7TH, 2038
01:02 AM || THE PIRATE'S COVE - KARA
01:19 AM || THE BRIDGE - CONNOR
09:24 AM || THE STRATFORD TOWER (pt. 1) - MARKUS
-> NOV 8TH, 2038
01:30 PM || THE STRATFORD TOWER (pt. 2) - MARKUS
04:06 PM || PUBLIC ENEMY - CONNOR
05:10 PM || MIDNIGHT TRAIN - KARA
-> NOV 9TH, 2038
01:51 AM || CAPITOL PARK - MARKUS
11:17 AM || MEET KAMSKI - CONNOR
12:04 PM || FREEDOM MARCH - MARKUS
04:13 PM || LAST CHANCE, CONNOR
09:34 PM || CROSSROADS - MARKUS, KARA, CONNOR
-> NOV 10TH, 2038
04:17 PM || NIGHT OF THE SOUL: PAY RESPECTS - MARKUS
07:31 PM || NIGHT OF THE SOUL: WELCOME HOME - MARKUS
09:24 PM || WARREN'S PRESS CONFERENCE
AA:AA PM || NIGHT OF THE SOUL: SACRED GROUND - MARKUS, NORTH, CONNOR
AA:AA PM || NIGHT OF THE SOUL: AMONG THE PEOPLE - MARKUS, NORTH
AA:XX PM || NIGHT OF THE SOUL: HANK'S HOUSE - CONNOR
-> NOV 11TH, 2038
10:48 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CYBERLIFE TOWER - CONNOR
10:51 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: WEST SIDE INDUSTRIAL - KARA
10:56 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: DEMONSTRATION ON WOODWARD AVENUE - MARKUS
10:56 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: REVOLUTION ON WOODWARD AVENUE - MARKUS
11:01 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CYBERLIFE TOWER FLOOR -49 - CONNOR
11:01 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: ROOFTOP AT HART PLAZA - CONNOR
11:01 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: REVOLUTION LAUNCHES ATTACK - MARKUS
11:02 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: BUS TERMINAL - KARA
11:02 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: RECALL CENTER NO. 5 - KARA
11:06 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: IN THE LINE - KARA
11:07 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CONNOR VS CONNOR
11:07 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: FINAL ASSAULT - MARKUS
11:08 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: BARRICADE - MARKUS
11:08 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: RECYCLING MACHINE - KARA
11:15 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: LATE FOR BUS - KARA
11:16 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: ATTACK ON THE BARRICADE - MARKUS
11:26 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: THE ANDROIDS SURRENDER - MARKUS
11:26 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: DETROIT RIVER - KARA
11:30 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CANADIAN BORDER - KARA
11:36 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: IN CANADA (BORDER CHECKPOINT) - KARA
11:57 PM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: IN CANADA (RIVER) - KARA
-> NOV 12TH, 2038
12:01 AM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: THE SPEECH - MARKUS, CONNOR
12:01 AM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CONNOR CONFIRMS IF MARKUS IS DEAD
07:37 AM || BATTLE FOR DETROIT: SOLID WASTE LANDFILL - KARA
EE:EE AM || CONNOR AND HANK MEET AGAIN
EE:EE AM || RK900
EE:YY AM || MARKUS REJECTED
EE:HH ?? || KARA REJECTED ALICE
EE:HH ?? || KARA REMAINED RESET (FROM ZLATKO)
I got a small request đđžđđž if anybody can plz make a video for me with side by side chapters (Markus Demonstration+Connor with the army section) using a timer to see if there's a way of gettin' a aprox. event start time, for example:
Start BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CYBERLIFE TOWER, (wasting around 12 minutes til BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CYBERLIFE TOWER FLOOR -49) count 8 min and start BATTLE FOR DETROIT: DEMONSTRATION ON WOODWARD AVENUE (another 12 minutes til BATTLE FOR DETROIT: BARRICADE - MARKUS) then start BATTLE FOR DETROIT: CONNOR VS CONNOR after around 11 minutes. I mean, the itself game ain't time sensitive here, doesn't work in a realistic way but i guess y'all got what i'm trynna say.
#i would do shit myself if i had an editor and the game.#if there's something missing let me know#dbh#detroit become human#markus rk200#connor rk800#kara ax400#dbh kara#dbh connor#dbh markus#dbh observation list
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Fic Rec List #3
YES I said Iâd make this like a week ago and Iâm very sorry it took me so long to make this since The Devil Go With All hit 30,000 hits and 2,000 kudos on AO3 (yay!) but I had surgery on my broken leg (boo!) so give me a break. Itâs here now!
Cursed to Follow, Blessed to Lead by @anarchycoxâ In this world, Geralt never met Jaskier until well after he was responsible for Ciri. Without the humanizing influence of the human, he is not the man he could be. On the path Geralt enters a Gwent tournament and finds himself with the prize of a cursed bard, whom he quite literally cannot get away from. He is determined to break the curse and rid himself of the annoyance, and continue on his loner and stoic ways. Jaskier and fate of course have very different plans.
Written for one of the big bangs, AC does an amazing job with this fic! Itâs humorous but also bittersweet and has really great banter between the boys! I loved loved loved reading it and I havenât been reading a lot of longer fics lately so it was awesome getting to read this without ADHD brain yelling âtoo long!â
a demon can get into real trouble, doing the right thing by stockholm_syndrom Dear Chaos, Today I encouraged the elves of Dol Blathana to start a revolution against the humans! Carefully and strategically planting the seeds of chaos, as you know I like to do. Love,Julian. - The demon Jaskier fic where he is a literal agent of chaos assigned to tempt Geralt away from Destinyâs Path. Inspired by good omens.
Ahh! This fic is soooo good! I love how oblivious Jaskier is of his own feelings and emotions the entire time and Geraltâs just been patiently With the Program all along. The dynamic is astounding and Jaskierâs just so funny in this! Definitely gives off incredible Crowley vibes 10/10
in this life (and the next) by themarvelousmaize The overly talkative theatre actor with the brilliant blue eyes and the quicksilver grin canât seem to stop coming into Geraltâs bar. Now, if only Geralt can figure out why Jaskier looks so familiar. In which Geralt and Jaskier keep meeting and falling in love over multiple lifetimes.
This fic gives me so many emotions omfg. the resurrection of geralt over and over again as jaskier lives on and tries again and again to help Geralt just see his love? poetic cinema
boogie nights by spqr âThis isnât nothing.â His eyebrows draw together. âJaskier. What happened?â Jaskier fists his hands in his own hair and contemplates pulling it out. âI got shot.â âShot,â Geralt echoes, in a tone Jaskierâs never heard before. âOnly a bit,â Jaskier hedges. âI took some vicodin, itâs perfectly fine. I can hardly feel it.â
Agh this fic is so good! I love the twist on the whole porn star story and how it shows the nitty gritty of the adult film industry (so heed the tags). lots of jaskier whump but has a wonderfully happy ending! Fic is rated Explicit
long on the road by @limerental Geralt is a long-haul trucker who has recently broken it off (again) with his ex-wife. Jaskier is a free spirit musician hitchhiking across the country while grappling with a sudden reminder of his mortality. Geralt really, really regrets picking him up at the last rest area. Until, he doesnât.
You know, Iâd seen this fic several times before I actually read it. I skipped over it each time for reasons I canât remember anymore because if you havenât noticed I love this fic. I donât cry easily, and so for a fic to actually bring me to tears is a feat! Very incredibly sad with a bittersweet ending and MCD, read this at your own discretion and have a box of tissues handy. Fic is rated Explicit
And it Echoes When I Breathe by @queen-squish "He sighs, turning back around, freezing in his spot as he hears a distant⌠well, something. Heâs not sure what it is, yet, but he keeps quiet, listening for any other sound. There it is, again, and this time he recognizes it as a piano, in the distance, somewhere in this abandoned old building â the sound of the single note echoing through the large halls and many rooms. Again, a note, then a chord, and he cocks his head as whoever is playing starts the song in earnest. "Ghosts aren't real. That much Geralt knows. That's why, when he explores the halls of the abandoned Woodward Sanatorium in the hopes of renovating the building, he knows it's not haunted. The toy car in one of the rooms only moves on its own because of the uneven floor. The wheelchair in another room doesn't change positions, he's just remembering things wrong. The shadows he sees out of the corner of his eye are just that- shadows, tricks of the light, his imagination. Yet, even he can't explain the piano music that drifts through the halls of the abandoned building.
This fic!!! Oh my god this fic!!! I love it!!! It makes me feel so many emotions and Iâm so sad yet so happy and it really hits the sweet spot for me. I donât want to give too much away but heed the tags for this fic, itâs not dddne but it has some heavy stuff in it. But! A happy ending too!Â
Until the next time I make a fic rec list, check out my bookmarks on AO3! Or find some more recs in the first two and a half lists Iâve made here, here, and here!
#fic rec list#fic rec#long post#lots of emotional ones today lads#fanfiction#the witcher#geralt of rivia#jaskier#geraskier#the witcher netflix
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I removed some books today.
I think of myself as a minimalist, but that doesnât happen to be true. I have acquired more books than I will ever read. They still sit, stacked and unreachable, in piles by the walls, two dozen books tall and sometimes two books deep.
I donât think I know where they all came from. I think more came from online than from any physical store. I bought them from Abebooks, the sales search platform that Amazon owns now. Abebooks tell you the names of the sellers, but they seem unconnected to any real place.
From Better World Books. From Thrift Books and Bookbarn. From Silver Arch Books, Motor City Books, Free State Books, Sierra Nevada Books, Yankee Clipper Books, and the Atlanta Book Company. From Green Earth Books and Housing Works Books. From Goldstone Books and Powellâs Books and Kennys Bookshop and Art Galleries. From Satellite Books and the Orchard Bookshop. From Blue Cloud Books and Hippo Books and Wonder Book.
Theyâre from all over, from places youâve never been, places youâll never be. Theyâre names on a box. But then there are the books from more intimate places, intimately connected
From libraryâs old bookstore, which sold paperbacks for fifty cents, hardcovers for a dollar. From the basement of the old independent bookstore down on Front Street, where they sold remaindered and overstocked books marked down with red-orange tape. From the thrift store across the street, which charged too much.
From the Chapters at the mall in your hometown, or the Chapters and Indigo in the places youâve been to, from the shelves of marked-down items where you looked for bargains, for the books you knew you should read, and all the books you never would. Places where you could drink sweet cream and coffee and pretend to read.
From the Borders in Syracuse, where you idled while the family went to the fair, where they always said they were going to build the largest mall in America, but never did. There was another Borders in South Florida, where they were stripping fixtures from the walls because the books had not sold, and so the Borders had to be. They still have bookstores. Iâm not sure what they sell now. Postcards, I think.
The books still in my room had postcards from people I will never know, dedications to people I will never see, business cards from people who have moved on to other work. But their spines are unbroken, their pages unmarked. I guess I wanted them that way. I bought them like that.
I sometimes worried they would break through the floor. I would wake up to the collapse of everything I have ever owned as I plummeted a few short feet to my death. I guess it would probably take longer than that. I would have to wait for them to crush me. That mass of books would fall on me, blotting out the light. Crushed beneath nearly everything I have ever owned.
Thatâs what happened to the clerk Toshiko Sasaki in John Hersheyâs Hiroshima, who was seated at her desk on August 6, 1945, in front of a couple of bookcases from the factor library:
Everything fell, and Miss Sasaki lost consciousness. The ceiling dropped suddenly and the wooden floor above collapsed in splinters and the people up there came down and the roof above them gave way; but principally and first of all, the bookcases right behind her swooped forward and the contents threw her down, with her left leg horribly twisted and breaking underneath her. There, in the tin factory, in the first moment of the atomic age, a human being was crushed by books.
Miss Sasaki made out alright, although not so well as to not ask the question âIf your God is so good and kind, how can he let people suffer like this?â But then, I have more books than she did.
I removed some books today. I still have more I want to remove. I just donât have the boxes for them. I took the boxes I did have in the back of my car to a mass-market thrift store, where they will end up on the shelves by the leather jackets.Â
Perhaps they will end on some other shelf, like a postcard from somewhere unknown, in someone elseâs memory. But I donât think they will. I donât think theyâll sell. There arenât enough people here who spend money pretending to read.
I donât know what will happen to them. I suppose they will pulp them. Or perhaps they will end in a landfill, crushed beneath their own weight, suffocating beneath the earth we have made for them until life reclaims them.
I wrote out a partial list of the books I threw out. I donât know what it says about me. Thereâs a double significance here: These are books I bought, for some amount of money, but these are also books I am throwing away, because I asked the question the woman told me to ask, which was whether they sparked joy, and I answered no.
Those books in the photo are the books that have not yet been thrown away. Here, below the fold, are the books that have:
Judith Fitzgeraldâs Sarah McLachlan: Building a Mystery
Mordecai Richlerâs Oh Canada! Oh Quebec!
Jonathan Coeâs The Rotterâs Club
Misha Glennyâs McMafia
Joinville and Villehardouinâs Chronicles of the Crusades
Michael Ignatieffâs The Lesser Evil
Russell Daltonâs Citizen Politics in Western Democracies: Public Opinion and Political Parties in the United States, Great Britain, West Germany, and France
Richard Finnâs Winners in Peace: MacArthur, Yoshida, and Postwar Japan
Ramachandra Guhaâs India After Gandhi
Fox Butterfieldâs China: Alive in the Bitter Sea
Anthony Sampsonâs The Changing Anatomy of Britain
Masanori Hashimotoâs The Japanese Labor Market in a Comparative Perspective with the United States
Donald Keeneâs Dawn to the West: Japanese Literature of the Modern Era: Poetry, Drama, Criticism
Andrei Shleiferâs Without a Map: Political Tactics and Economic Reform in Russia
Peter Newmanâs The Secret Mulroney Tapes
Nicholas Negroponteâs Being Digital
Lesley Downerâs The Brothers: The Hidden World of Japanâs Richest Family
Harold Vogelâs Entertainment Industry Economics
Stephen Goldsmith and William D. Eggersâs Governing by Network: The New Shape of the Public Sector
Donald Harman Akenson, Saint Saul: A Skeleton Key to the Historical Jesus
Philip Zieglerâs King Edward VIII
David Wesselâs In FED We Trust
Robert Dallekâs Flawed Giant: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1961--1973
David Halberstamâs The Reckoning
David Bellâs The First Total War: Napoleonâs Europe and the Birth of Warfare as We Know It
Kevin Phillipsâs The Cousinsâ Wars
Yirmiyahu Yovel, Spinoza and Other Heretics: The Adventures of Immanence
Michael Orenâs Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of the Modern Middle East
Lawrence McDonaldâs A Colossal Failure of Common Sense: The Inside Story of the Collapse of Lehman Brothers
Richard Posnerâs The Crisis of Capitalist Democracy
William Chester Jordanâs Europe in the High Middle Ages
William Cohanâs House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street
Bryan Burrough and John Helyarâs Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco
Linda Learâs Beatrix Potter: A Life in Nature
Jane Mayerâs The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals
Allan Brandtâs The Cigarette Century: The Rise, Fall, and Deadly Persistence of the Product That Defined America
Garry Willsâs Head and Heart: American Christianities
Sarah Bradfordâs Elizabeth: A Biography of Britainâs Queen
Andrew Gordonâs The Evolution of Labor Relations in Japan: Heavy Industry, 1853--1955
John Ardaghâs France in the New Century: Portrait of a Changing Society
Bob Woodwardâs The Agenda: Inside the Clinton White House
John Julius Norwichâs Byzantium: The Early Centuries
Taylor Branchâs Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963--65
Michael Lewisâs Liarâs Poker
Tim Blanningâs The Pursuit of Glory: Europe, 1648--1815
Robert Faglesâs translation of Virgilâs The Aeneid
Karl Popperâs The Poverty of Historicism
P. D. Smithâs Doomsday Men: The Real Dr. Strangelove and the Dream of the Superweapon
Richard Rhodesâs Arsenals of Folly: The Making of the Nuclear Arms Race
Margaret Thatcherâs Downing Street Years
Alistair Horneâs Harold Macmillan, 1957--1986
Taylor Branchâs The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President
Ian Kershawâs Hitler, 1936--1945: Nemesis
David Grossmanâs To the End of the Land
Sean Wilentzâs The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln
Philipp Blomâs The Vertigo Years: Europe, 1900--1914
Jacob M. Schlesingerâs Shadow Shoguns: The Rise and Fall of Japanâs Postwar Political Machine
Peter Jenkinsâs Mrs. Thatcherâs Revolution: The Ending of the Socialist Era
Martin Lawrenceâs Iron Man: The Defiant Reign of Jean ChrĂŠtien
Marin Lawrenceâs ChrĂŠtien: The Will to Win
Alastair Campbellâs The Blair Years
Tony Blairâs A Journey
David Kennedyâs Donât Shoot: One Man, a Street Fellowship, and the End of Violence in Inner-City America
Joshua Ferrisâs Then We Came to the End
Kate McCaffertyâs Testimony of an Irish Slave Girl
Martin Wolfâs Why Globalization Works
Charles Fishmanâs The Wal-Mart Effect: How the Worldâs Most Powerful Company Really Works -- and How Itâs Transforming the American Economy
William Easterlyâs The White Man's Burden: Why the West's Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good
Karel van Wolferenâs The Enigma of Japanese Power: People and Politics in a Stateless Nation
Jeffrey Sachsâs The End of Poverty: How We Can Make It Happen in Our Lifetime
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Global Aircraft Pump Market is estimated to reach USD 5.8 Billion in 2024 at a CAGR of 6.6%,
Aircraft Pump Market: Summary
The Global Aircraft Pump Market is estimated to reach USD 5.8 Billion in 2024 at a CAGR of 6.6%, Predicts Forencis Research (FSR). Rising demand for ejector pumps and increasing demand for aircraft piston pump expected to drive the market during next five years. However, high maintenance cost act as a restraining factor for this market during the forecast period. Highly adoption of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and growing demand for fluid power technology is identified as an opportunity for this market.
Aircraft pumps is a type of fuel system which is used to transfer fuel to engine before the engine operates. All types of aircraft service provider use fuel pump system to generate initial power from engines. The pump is divided into fixed and variable displacement pumps. Light weight pumps are used in aircrafts to enhance fuel efficiency.
Some key players of the market Honeywell International Inc., PARKER HANNIFIN CORP, Eaton Corporation PLC, CRANE AEROSPACE & ELECTRONICS, Triumph Group., Woodward, Inc., Crissair, Inc., AeroControlex. and Woodward, Inc. among others.
Request The Report Sample PDF of Global Aircraft Pump Market @ https://www.forencisresearch.com/aircraft-pump-market-sample-pdf/
Aircraft Pump Market Segmentation
This market research report offers a comprehensive analysis of key market trends in the global aircraft pumps market. It includes detailed discussion on historical market trends, current market dynamics, consumer landscape, growth opportunities and challenges backed by factful feedbacks.
¡        On the basis of type, the aircraft pump market is segmented into hydraulic pump, fuel pump, lube and scavenge pumps, coolant pumps, vacuum pumps, and water booster pump.Â
¡        By technology, the aircraft pump market is segmented electrical driven power pumps, engine driven power pumps, air driven power pumps, and ram air turbine (RAT).Â
¡        By pressure range, the aircraft pump market is segmented into below 1500psi, 1500psi to 2000psi, 2000psi to 5000psi, and above 5000psi.Â
¡        By application type, the aircraft pump market is segmented into commercial aircraft, business aircraft and military aircraft.Â
¡        By end user, the aircraft pump market is segmented into original equipment manufacturer and aftermarket.
Aircraft Pump Market report segmentation
For the scope of report, In-depth segmentation is offered by Forencis Research
Aircraft Pump Market, by Type
¡        Hydraulic Pump
¡        Fuel Pump
¡        Centrifugal Boost Pumps
¡        Ejector Pumps
¡        Pulsating Electric Pumps
¡        Lube and Scavenge Pumps
¡        Coolant Pumps
¡        Vacuum Pumps
¡        Water Booster Pump
Request Report Methodology On Competition On Global Aircraft Pump Market @ https://www.forencisresearch.com/aircraft-pump-market-request-methodology/
Aircraft Pump Market, by Technology
¡        Electrical Driven Power Pumps
¡        Engine Driven Power Pumps
¡        Air Driven Power Pumps
¡        Ram Air Turbine (RAT)
Aircraft Pump Market, by Pressure Range
¡        Below 1500psi
¡        1500psi to 2000psi
¡        2000psi to 5000psi
¡        Above 5000psi
Aircraft Pump Market, By Application
¡        Commercial Aircraft
¡        Business Aircraft
¡        Military Aircraft
¡        Transport Planes
¡        Fighter Planes
¡        Maritime Patrol Planes
¡        Multirole Airplanes
Aircraft Pump Market, By End User
¡        Original Equipment Manufacturer
¡        Aftermarket
Consult With an Analyst of Global Aircraft Pump Market for More Information @ https://www.forencisresearch.com/aircraft-pump-market-consult-with-an-analyst/
Flooring Market, by Region
Asia-Pacific
¡        China
¡        India
¡        Japan
¡        South Korea
¡        Australia
¡        Rest of Asia-Pacific
North America
¡        US
¡        Canada
¡        Mexico
Europe
¡        Germany
¡        France
¡        Italy
¡        UK
¡        The Netherlands
¡        Rest of Europe
Middle East and Africa
¡        Saudi Arabia
¡        UAE
¡        Rest of Middle East & Africa
South America
¡        Brazil
¡        Argentina
¡        Rest of South America
Purchase Global Aircraft Pump Market Premium Industry Research Report with Analysis @Â https://www.forencisresearch.com/aircraft-pump-market-purchase-now/
About Forencis Research
Forencis Research is a B2B market research, intelligence and advisory firm engaging in market research and consulting services across leading industries, globally. Our robust and meticulous research team provides high growth and niche syndicated reports, customized reports and consulting reports to the diverse global fortune clientele and intellectual institutions. Forencis Research database is a constantly evolving pool of reports and white paper studies which helps companies to foster accelerated revenue growth in global and regional markets. Forencis Research delivers market research and consulting reports on high growth markets to help companies dominate their competition and set themselves apart by attaining increased revenue growth. To enable exclusive insights around the target market, Forencis Research employs robust research Methodology & Design which includes data acquisition, data synthesis and data correlation, through Primary and Secondary Research. Through the obtained data, Top-down and bottom-up methods are exercised to attain and verify data sanity within the entire market. This market data is yet again correlated with Forencis Researchâs internal database before presenting it in any of our final publications. These methods of data correlation and amalgamation benefit us to put forward accurate market estimates enabling our clients to transform their business, markets and most importantly their âREVENUESâ.
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Homerton High Street Hackney Regeneration
Homerton High Street Hackney Building, Regeneration Development, CZWG Architects London Architecture Photos
Homerton High Street Hackney, London
3 December 2021
Design: CZWG Architects
Location: Homerton High Street, Hackney, north east London, England, UK
CZWG gets go ahead for new industrial workspace and housing co-location on Homerton High Street
Corner of Sedgwick & Homerton:
Visualisations by CZWG Architects
Homerton High Street Hackney Building News
The London Borough of Hackney has resolved to grant planning permission (1 December) for a new mixed-use regeneration development on a dilapidated urban site adjacent to Homerton overground train station.
Designed by CZWG for developer Nudo Properties, the scheme comprises buildings ranging in height from 3 to 17 storeys and will provide 244 new homes, as well as replacing under-utilised and out of date industrial space of poor quality with over 4,400m2 of modern, high quality office, light industrial, artist studio, cafĂŠ/ restaurant and retail uses around a new generous and publicly accessible courtyard.
Adam West, CZWG Director said, âRather than simply mitigating the potential conflicts arising from the co-location of residential and industrial uses in this dense urban location, the design brings together these diverse communities.â
The small industrial/workshop units include affordable workspace and are designed in line with the Mayor of Londonâs Industrial Intensification Primer. Units have high ceilings and floor loadings and are accessible by light good vehicles via a shared service yard suitable for HGV use.. Centred around a sunlit courtyard space at ground level, the development will provide a pedestrian friendly public realm for the new residents and occupants, existing residents and passers-by alike.
The industrial spaces provide vibrant active frontages to the perimeter streets. The development will also deliver significant improvements to the public realm surrounding the site, enhancing the route to the train station.
Planners at Hackney Council recommended the scheme for approval, saying: âThe comprehensive development of the urban block is beneficial in design terms as it allows for a considered composition of scale, form and massing across the entirety of the application site.â
âIt is considered that [âŚ] the tower forms a balanced composition with other tall buildings grouped around the station. The tower element has a coherent role in the wider context, as well as being of a high quality design. The wider public realm is also improved as a consequence of the proposal.â
The development uses a range of passive design and demand reduction energy efficiency measures including fabric insulation, high quality glazing, improved air tightness, efficient lighting and Mechanical Ventilation Heat Recovery for residential units, predicted to achieve a 43% reduction in CO2 emissions. A site wide system is proposed comprising Air Source Heat Pumps and Water Source Heat Pumps and photovoltaic panels will be provided toward meeting electricity demand. The development is also projected to achieve a BREEAM Excellent rating.
Homerton High Street, Hackney, London â Building Information
Team credits:
Architect: CZWG Limited Planning Consultant: DP9 Heritage Consultant: Montagu Evans Rights to Light Consultant: Point 2 Viability Consultant: Turner Morum Landscape Architects: The Environment Partnership Multi-disciplinary Consultant: Stantec Fire Consultant: Hydrock Engagement: Iceni
Visualisations: CZWG Architects
CZWG
Homerton High Street Hackney Building,images / information received 230921
Location: Hackney, north east London, south east England, UK
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Wallis Road Building at Hackney Wick Design: Stockwool, Architects image courtesy of Hectic Electric / Stockwool Wallis Road Building at Hackney Wick
Frampton Park Baptist Church Design: Matthew Lloyd Architects LLP photos : Benedict Luxmoore, Patricia Woodward Frampton Park Baptist Church Building in Hackney
Kings Crescent Estate Phases 1 and 2 Architects: Karakusevic Carson Architects and Henley Halebrown photo Š Peter Landers Kings Crescent Estate Phases 1 and 2
The Old Smoke House, Tower Hamlets, East London Architects: HWO Architects photography : Craig Auckland The Old Smoke House
Hackney Wick Olympic Regeneration Design: David Kohn Architects photograph : Will Pryce Hackney Wick Olympic Regeneration
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Now that Iâve lived in the Detroit area for some time, Iâve decided to actually play Deus Ex to see how they did downtown future Detroit. Itâs good to know that future Detroit still has the cylindrical nightmare of navigation and floor layout known as the Renaissance Center on the left and Ally Center on the right. Looking across the river, it seems that future Windsor got some cool new skyscrapers too.Â
This is actually pretty close to how far apart these buildings are IRL. If this was real, the Sarif Industries headquarters would be right on Woodward somewhere around where Campus Martius park and the Quicken Loans building is right now.Â
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When you add it up, the total amount of synthetic microfibres going into the wider environment as we wash our clothes is an astonishing number.
US scientists estimate it to be 5.6 million tonnes since we first started wearing those polyester and nylon garments in a big way in the 1950s.
Just over half this mass - 2.9 million tonnes - has likely ended up in our rivers and seas.
That's the equivalent of seven billion fleece jackets, the researchers say.
But while we fret about water pollution, and rightly so, increasingly this synthetic "fluff" issue is one that affects the land.
The University of California, Santa Barbara, team which did the calculations found that emission to the terrestrial environment has now overtaken that to water bodies - some 176,500 tonnes a year versus 167,000 tonnes.
High plastic concentration found on ocean floor
Microplastics are 'littering' riverbeds
The reason? Wastewater treatment works have become very good at catching the fibres lost from washing machines. What's happening is those captured fibres, along with biosolid sludge, are then being applied to cropland or simply buried in landfills.
"I hear people say that the synthetic microfibre problem from apparel washing will take care of itself as wastewater treatment works become more widespread around the world and more efficient. But really what we're doing is just moving the problem from one environmental compartment to another," Roland Geyer, from UCSB's Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, told BBC News.
The industrial ecologist, working with a range of other experts, has previously totted up the total amount of virgin plastics ever produced (8.3 billion tonnes); and the annual flow of plastics into the oceans (roughly eight million tonnes a year).
These types of calculations are fiendishly complicated, involve models and necessarily resort to quite a few assumptions to plug real-world data gaps.
They can't be absolute in their descriptions of the issues, but at the very least they provide some ball-park figures on which to base serious conversations around mitigation.
About 14% of all plastic is used to make synthetic fibres, principally for clothing. When those garments are washed, they will shed tiny strands that are much thinner than a human hair.
For its just-published report in the journal PLoS One, the UCSB team tried to work out how much synthetic clothing had been produced in the past 65 years or so; how it's been used; and how it's been cleaned.
Consider the complexity in such an assessment. Consider, for example, how many people around the world have access to washing machines and how many still wash by hand; and how many of those washing machines are front-loaders and how many are top-loaders.
Different methods (and detergents) will shed different amounts of fibres. We also know the rotating paddles in top-loaders apply a lot of mechanical pressure to garments and are therefore regarded as big shedders of microfibres.
And think for a moment how many of the garments in an individual's wardrobe are actually routinely worn (and therefore cleaned), and how many stay on the shelf and rarely get an outing? That favourite old fleece almost certainly sees much more action than the office jacket and tie. It's thought a quarter or more of a person's clothing store probably isn't being worn at all or only very, very infrequently.
When the UCSB team ran its flow analysis on all these variables, the number that emerged for the total mass of synthetic microfibres emitted from apparel washing between 1950 and 2016 was 5.6 million tonnes.
Half of this amount, however, was released in just the last decade. This is in part a consequence of course of our ballooning collections of clothes.
In 1990, say the researchers, the global average stock of garments per capita was 8kg. By 2016 it was 26kg per head.
As stated above, increasingly the shed fibres are ending up in land settings, and improving the availability of modern wastewater treatment infrastructure is only going to accentuate this trend.
"Large-scale removal of microfibres from the environment is unlikely to be technically feasible or economically viable, so the focus needs to be on emission prevention," Bren School colleague and PLoS One article lead author Jenna Gavigan said.
"Since wastewater treatment plants don't necessarily reduce emissions to the environment, our focus needs to be on reducing emissions before they enter the wastewater stream."
This means a suite of solutions, commented Jamie Woodward, from the Department of Geography at The University of Manchester and whose group was the first to show that UK rivers could be very heavily contaminated with microplastics.
These solutions include reducing use, engineering more efficient filters on washing machines, and developing better wastewater treatment.
"Microfibres pose a particular challenge because these escape from wastewater treatment plants in their trillions - even with advanced treatment," he explained.
"We know that microplastics have been in the environment for decades, but we still don't know what an environmentally acceptable level of microplastic contamination might look like - in any environment. This underscores the importance of research aimed at better understanding the ecological impact of microfibres in both terrestrial and aquatic environments. Microplastic pollution is a fact of modern life - it is here to stay and we are only beginning to appreciate the consequences."
And the Prof added: "Natural fibres such as wool and cotton have been present in our rivers and seas in significant concentrations since the Industrial Revolution. The durability of synthetic fibres means they will be in the natural environment for a very long time and can be recycled from sludge treated soils into rivers and, ultimately, the ocean."
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OUR FAVOURITE THINGS TO DO IN TORONTO IN SUMMER (& SPRING)
Things to do in Toronto in Summer & Spring
Often overlooked by itâs loftier (literally) neighbours on the west of Canada, Ontario doesnât get as much a look into visitors to Canadaâs itineraries as say Banff, Lake Louise, or Vancouver. Canadaâs largest city does have plenty of reasons to visit though.
Nestled in amongst the great lakes, Toronto gets pretty cold in winter and its residents tend to hibernate (as residents of Toronto over the last year we can vouch for this!) but as soon as the mercury turns red and temperatures start to rise to more respectable levels, the city starts to come to life. Patio terraces open, parks turn pink and then green, and boat trips to the island beckon in time for summer.
Unless youâre a snow bunny, we recommend spring and summer as the best time to visit Toronto, with plenty of things to do in the city and beyond. Given that weâve only been here a year (!) we asked some fellow local bloggers to chip in with some of their favourites, too!
Favourite Things to do in Toronto in Spring
See the Toronto Cherry Blossoms
Spring in Toronto is a wonderful time to be here. Canadians endure long, harsh winters so when spring comes the streets come alive and the city has a sense of renewal.
One of the best parts about spring in Toronto is seeing the cherry blossoms hit peak bloom in High Park, filling the city with beautiful colors and joy. This years peak bloom is predicted to be from May 2nd-May 8th, meaning 70% of the blossoms will be open at this time. The cherry blossoms only stay open for roughly four to ten days, depending on the weather.
Each year the cherry blossoms draw tens of thousands of people to High Park, so prepare for big crowds. The city has banned vehicles from parking in High Park this year during cherry blossom season due to the popularity. Instead, consider biking to the park or taking the subway. There are also 14 other parks around the city where you can find Sakura trees, including Trinity Bellwoods, Toronto Island, and Woodbine park.
2019 was a special year for the cherry blossoms, as it marks their 60th anniversary in the city from when Former Japanese ambassador Toru-Hagiwara donated 2,000 trees on behalf as the citizens of Tokyo as a gesture of appreciation following World War II. Â Itâs always a joy to see the cherry blossoms bloom each spring in Toronto. I canât wait to go see them and commemorate this special anniversary!
Contributed by Lora of Explore with Lora
Wander Kensington Market on a Pedestrian Sunday
As of May, car-free Sundays are back in at Kensington Market: located off Spadina Avenue and home to the best ethical and sustainable buys in Toronto. From 26th May 2019 until October, the last Sunday of every month will be car free so you can happily wander and enjoy street food, peruse local vendors and soak up the entertainment in a more relaxed mode.
Watch One of Torontoâs Marathons
If you are an avid runner then you would be delighted to know that one of the best things to do in Toronto for runners is to join a marathon (or half marathon or a 5K) race in Toronto and see and explore the city that way.
There are 2 marathon events in Toronto, one in May and one in October. Both marathons are in the nice shoulder season allowing runners to benefit from the comfortable weather. Both marathons in Toronto cover a number of different neighborhoods and some of the most beautiful parts of Toronto allowing you to see the city while running.
The May Marathon in Toronto also has a 10K option whereas the October Marathon doesnât. If you are interested in seeing the downtown area of Toronto along the water on a flat course then the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon in October is perfect. During this course you will see Yorkville, City Hall and most of downtown Toronto. The Toronto Goodlife Marathon race in October is perfect for those who want to start from uptown and run south to downtown Toronto while benefiting from the downhill slope. During this course you get to see the castle in Toronto, Casa Loma, as well as the Distillery District.
Regardless of which marathon you choose in Toronto you will be able to see the best parts of Toronto in a non-traditional touristy way.
Submitted by Serena of Serenas Lenses
Browse one of Torontoâs Many Farmersâ Markets
With the arrival of Spring, by May farmers markets in Toronto are in full swing and are a great way to stock up on Canadian grown produce. Some of our favourites are:
Leslieville Farmers Market â Sundays â Located at Queen East and Woodward Ave, just before Coxwell
St Lawrence Farmers Market â Saturdays â Head to the tent like pavilion at the back of St Lawrence Market on Saturdays for great value produce from local farmers
Sorauren Farmers Market â Mondays (3pm-7pm) â Located in Sorauren Avenue Park in the West End Parkdale area of Toronto
Head up the CN Tower for a View of Toronto in Spring
As green creeps over the city, head to the skies (well almost) to enjoy the crisp views.
The favorite thing I did in Toronto was go up the CN Tower. Â There are several highlights, starting with the elevators. Â They are on the outside of the tower and have glass walls and some have glass floors as well. Â They whiz up to the observation deck in less than a minute (thatâs 15 miles/ 22 km per hour) â a great start to the experience.
Itâs all about the views, and the tower, one of the tallest in the world, is 1,815 feet/ 553 meters tall. Â There are two main observation decks, including an outside deck. Â The lower of the two decks has a glass floor. Â This was actually the first glass floor in an observation deck (they have one in Willis Tower in Chicago too). Â Itâs quite safe, but it is nonetheless kind of terrifying to first step out on glass with an unobstructed view all the way down to the ground far, far, far below (1,122 feet/ 342 meters to be precise). Â The upper observation deck now also has a glass floor, so you can look from that down through the lower glass floor as well.
You can actually go even higher. Â For an additional fee (worth it, in my opinion), take another elevator up a further 33 floors to the Sky Pod. You will now be 1,465 feet/ 447 m above the ground. Â On a clear day, you can see Niagara Falls. Â It wasnât that clear when I visited, but the view over Toronto and Lake Ontario was still spectacular.
If all that is not enough, you can also do the EdgeWalk, where you spend half an hour attached to a harness outside on a narrow ledge, hanging over the edge 116 floors above ground. Â Not for those with a fear of heights!
Prices start at $38 for the regular observation decks, and go up to $53 including the Sky Pod. Â The EdgeWalk is an additional $195. Â Not cheap, but sure to satisfy your inner adrenaline junkie.
Contributed by James of Travel Collecting.
Things to do in Toronto in Summer
In summer itâs almost as if Toronto becomes a different city: The cityscape is transformed from grey to vibrant green; the shorts come out, smiles appear everywhere on the faces of Torontonians, and the city comes alive with live music, outdoor theatre, and many a trip to the Toronto Islands.
Here are some of our favourite ways to enjoy the city when the sun is out.
Enjoy the Toronto Beaches
There are quite a few beaches on Toronto, on the shores of Lake Ontario, but thereâs a whole area of Toronto called âthe Beachesâ, located to the east of Leslieville. It holds a soft spot in our hearts as this was the first place we stayed in Toronto. If you want to stay longer in this area, donât miss the wonderful Airbnb we stayed in.
Note that the water in Lake Ontario is not recommended for swimming â either here or on the islands due to the amount of contamination that goes into the water from industry. đ
If you are in Toronto and looking to get away from the hustle and bustle of downtown, then head to The Beaches! Located in Torontoâs east end, this peaceful and social neighbourhood is a great place along Lake Ontario to get some fresh spring air, relax in the summer sun, or watch the leaves turn in the fall!
Besides the lakefront areas (as the name suggests), The Beaches are actually quite residential with loads of great boutique shops, cafes, and restaurants along lively Queen Street. You might stop in for a coffee at Budâs Coffee Bar or have a drink and a bite to eat at one of the many patios that line the street.
Naturally, The Beaches are home to some of Torontoâs best beaches. Woodbine Beach is one of the largest and is a hugely popular hang out spot in the summer season. You might even feel like renting a paddle board for a morning or evening paddle along the rocky shores of Ashbridgeâs Bay.
If you really want to stretch your legs, the wooden boardwalk stretches for kilometres â passing through wooded areas and along the beachfront. There are courts for beach sports, smaller green spaces, and even dog parks â all along the beachfront. Donât forget to photograph Leuty Lifeguard Station â itâs a been a Toronto icon on Kew Beach since 1920!
Contributed by Eric from Ontario Away
Visit the Toronto Botanical Gardens
Toronto can feel like a bit of a concrete jungle at times, but there are plenty of spots which we find ourselves regularly retreating to to reconnect with nature and just enjoy time outdoors in one of Torontoâs green spaces â which come into their own in summer. We have our own shortlist of favourite green spaces in the city, the Toronto Botanical Gardens being one of them!
Located in East York, the Toronto Botanical Gardens are a delight to just wander around, or attend one of their special exhibitions, events or tours. There are Blossom Parties, Earth Day celebrations and much more â you can find a listing of events on their website.
Visit the Toronto Islands
One of our favourite things to do in Summer is a visit to the Toronto Islands, and weâre not alone. Canadian blogger Carol from Wandering Carol shared some of her tips with us:
The Toronto Islands are a great way to escape the concrete grind, and itâs a fun and fast ferry ride over from the harbour front. You can catch the ferry at the Jack Layton Ferry Terminal at Bay Street and Queenâs Quay, and the 13-minute ride takes you to a collection of interlinked islands. The ferries go to three different points: Centre Island, Hanlonâs Point to the east or Wardâs Island to the west. All the islands are interconnected and itâs about five km (three miles) from end to end.
One of the best ways to explore Torontoâs green oasis is by bicycle, and you can rent them on the island â Centre Island is the nearest stop for bike rentals â or you can take your own over on the ferry. Centre Island is also the stop for the family-friendly Centreville Amusement Park, where youâll find popular childrenâs activities such as a merry-go-round, a small Ferris wheel and swan pedal boats.
Other things to do on the island include picnicking, kayaking or strolling the boardwalk along Lake Ontario. You can take a mini train around the island, grab a meal at one of the island restaurants or hit the beaches. Manitou Beach is the largest stretch of sand, while at Hanlonâs Point youâll find Torontoâs only clothing-optional beach.
Weâd add that for best views of the Toronto skyline fronting the lake, take the ferry back around sunset!
Shakespeare in the Park
Continuing our theme of enjoying the great outdoors in Toronto, the cityâs most famous park â High Park â offers plenty of things to do; including Shakespeare Theatre Performances in their outdoor auditorium in Summer. Performances run from July 4th to September 1st this year. Tickets sell out so youâll have to be quick with these ones.
You can find the performances and buy tickets on the Canadian Stage website.
Visit Riverdale Farm
If you have kids in tow, a visit to Riverdale Farm is the perfect family-friendly outing. Located in Cabbagetown (one of our favourite neighbourhoods for its characterful houses and interesting history) in the Riverdale East park, the Riverdale Farm offers free admission and is a working farm â kids can see the animals being fed, learn about how a farm works, and get to know the different animals.
Visit Lakeshore and the Tunnels Underneath Humber College
Head out of downtown Toronto towards Etobicoke, a modern sub-urban hub on the banks of the Lake for a different perspective of Toronto. The Colonel Samuel Smith Park is a great place to wander on a summerâs day, with views back towards the city, and we took a special tour of Humber College which took us into the tunnels of what used to be Lakeshore Psychiatric Hospital.
The Lakeshore Psychiatric Hospital was built in 1888 as the Mimico Asylum, and served as a home for many of Torontoâs deemed mentally ill until its closure in 1989. The tour takes you through the tunnels and into out of bounds areas of todayâs Humber College and is a sobering trip through the history of the (lack of) care for those deemed to be mentally ill in the past. Thereâs a beautiful art exhibition, too.
Monthly tunnel tours are run, free of charge, and there are a number of other events organised by Humber for visitors, too â great for those interested in doing something completely different in Toronto! More information here.
Celebrate Canada Day!
Every year on July 1st, most of Canada gets their patriotism on and their red and white out, to celebrate the birthday and independence of their country. Typical celebration of Canada Day includes picnics, plenty of barbecues, long weekends away in cottage country, and fireworks a plenty.
In Toronto itself there are big celebrations at the Harbourfront Centre, fireworks from the Ashbridgeâs Bay Park in the Beaches, and there are also Canada Day cruises in the Toronto harbour area. Happy celebrating!
The post âOUR FAVOURITE THINGS TO DO IN TORONTO IN SUMMER (& SPRING)â was seen first on Soul Travel Blog
Toronto Naturopathic Doctor - Dr. Amauri Caversan
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Get top-notch surface preparation and industrial flooring services in Midwest City, Enid, Stillwater, Norman, Oklahoma. We specialize in epoxy kitchen floor solutions for both residential and commercial properties. Contact us today. http://atfoklahoma.com
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Why Asheville, North Carolina Is the New Must-Visit Music City â Rolling Stone
Dave Grohl had never been to Asheville, and when a wicked snowstorm hit the same December weekend that he played Warren Haynesâ annual Christmas Jam in the North Carolina town, the Foo Fighters leader wondered if heâd ever leave. Socked in by feet of snow, Grohl couldnât fly out. But instead of holing up in his hotel, he decided to put together an impromptu show at a venue he kept hearing people rave about.
âEveryone was talking about this place the Orange Peel,â he told Rolling Stone late last winter. âI just imagined it was going to be some corner pub with a six-inch stage with one monitor and half a PA, and then someone said it holds a thousand people. I didnât know if anyone was going to come, but I didnât want to sit around my hotel room doing nothing.â
After playing a surprise set of Led Zeppelin, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Nirvana covers for an intently listening, tightly packed crowd of music lovers, Grohl learned what so many other music fans have been discovering: Asheville is becoming one of the countryâs most vital music hubs.
âThereâs always been an underground scene of music, with a lot of great musicians, but only in the past 15 or 20 years has it risen to the level that it is now,â says Haynes, the former Allman Brothers Band guitarist and unofficial mayor of the town nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains on the Tennessee-North Carolina border. Haynes was raised there and watched its music community thrive over the years. âThere is a whole kind of bohemian subculture thing going on that is really impressive and organic.â
Dave Grohl, Town Mountain, Midland, Elle King and others have performed at the Orange Peel.
Aside from Ashevilleâs already well-known brewery and outdoor industries â beer and hiking are ways of life here â itâs music that ties the community together. The town is rife with venues, from Grohlâs club of choice the Orange Peel to the Grey Eagle, the Mothlight, Asheville Music Hall and the pub Jack of the Wood, where polka bands play alongside folksingers. At the 5 Walnut wine bar, crowds spill over onto the sidewalk to hear jazz combo the John Henrys. In the taprooms of beer meccas like Highland Brewery and Twin Leaf Brewery, singer-songwriters soundtrack drinking sessions. Buskers dot street corners and drum circles pop up weekly in downtownâs Pritchard Park.
Rock, world, hip-hop and electronic are readily discoverable, but itâs Americana and bluegrass that reign as the predominant sound. Many artists in those genres have made Asheville their homebase, furthering the cityâs growing reputation as an Americana hotbed. The Steep Canyon Rangers, Town Mountain, River Whyless, Jon Stickley Trio, Rising Appalachia and Marcus King Band all reside or have once lived in the area. For the guitar phenom King, the town launched his career.
âAsheville is a coming-of-age story to me. The first concert I ever snuck into was Widespread Panic at the Civic Center, and I snuck under the gate and paid the security guard off and he let me onto the floor. When I was 15, I was almost thrown in jail, âcause I snuck into the Orange Peel to try and give Warren Haynes a demo,â says King, who more legitimately hooked up with Haynes through mutual friends years later and found a mentor. âAsheville has always been a place where I cut my teeth.â
Now a Nashville resident, King maintains strong ties with his former community. For the past two years, heâs returned to host his Marcus King Band Family Reunion at Pisgah Brewery in nearby Black Mountain, North Carolina. The 2018 installment attracted a jam-heavy crowd, who vibed to sets by outlaw songwriter Nikki Lane, Nashville soul band DeRobert & the Half-Truths and bluegrass phenom Billy Strings. Kingâs night-ending performance included a cameo by Strings, who tore through an electric âOrange Blossom Special,â a symbolic nod to both the bluegrass history of the region and its Americana present.
âThere is something about Asheville that is hip. Itâs always been this place where hippies and people who are thinking about the planet, and are into bluegrass music, tend to move,â Strings says of the townâs reputation for stoking the creative muse. âYou wake up in Asheville, have a cup of tea, grab your instrument and smoke a joint and play some tunes. Itâs a beautiful place to be.â
But natural beauty isnât all that has been attracting players. Asheville is also home to the church-turned-studio Echo Mountain Recording, where artists as diverse as the War on Drugs, White Denim, Zac Brown Band, Blackberry Smoke, Turnpike Troubadours and Dierks Bentley have all cut albums, along with locals Steep Canyon Rangers and fellow North Carolinians the Avett Brothers. Echo Mountainâs pristine acoustics have made it a destination studio, with bands booking time to record in a room specifically constructed to amplify and carry the human voice. Standing in the main room, with its stained glass windows and vestibules stocked with a Guitar Centerâs worth of gear, itâs hard not to feel inspired.
The War on Drugs, Blackberry Smoke and Dierks Bentley are among the artists who have cut albums at Echo Mountain Recording. (Photo: Stewart OâShields)
âItâs palpable. You can feel it in the air,â says Jesse Langlais of Town Mountain, the IBMA Award-winning newgrass band. Heâs speaking of the studio, but expands his thought to include Asheville in general. âWhat sets it apart from a city like Nashville is itâs a little more down-home, more close-knit. I think the reason why is that the industry, by and large, is left out of the equation.â
A little less than five hours to the west, Nashville and its star-making system is readily accessible for ambitious bands eager to raise their commercial profile. But Langlais, who moved to Asheville from Maine in 2001, says that Ashevilleâs secret appeal is its isolation from Music Row â as well as a certain sense of ambivalence when it comes to âmaking it.â
âPeople arenât necessarily there because theyâre trying to push their musical agenda. Theyâre there because they want to be part of the scene,â he says. âItâs pure music fans who are there solely for the music, not the industry.â
That mindset helps explain the more niche festivals that are springing up around Asheville. Haynesâ Christmas Jam charity benefit, which marked its 30th year in 2018 with Grohl, Eric Church and Jim James, may be the most famous, but others have also become part of the local fabric. The Asheville Electro-Music Festival celebrates EDM and electronic music (the Moog synthesizer factory is in Asheville); the Mountain Dance and Folk Festival highlights the old-time sounds of Appalachia; and Aprilâs Connect Beyond Festival seeks to spark societal change through the written word and musical performance. Grammy winner Fantastic Negrito headlines this year.
Haynes says the increasingly diverse lineup of his Christmas Jams reflect the townâs growth and its reputation as a must-visit music city, one that he compares to Austin.
âItâs symbolic of what has happened with Asheville as a community,â he says. âWhen I was growing up, we didnât have many venue options and now there are more and more. I see that happening in different ways all over the country, especially in little towns in the South, but Asheville has something special going.â
Town Mountainâs Langlais agrees. Heâs seen an influx of fresh talent in the last few years.
âThere is a whole new crop of bluegrass musicians moving here. I donât know a lot of these kids, but itâs a fairly large population of people. Itâs similar to the path that the Town Mountain fellas found ourselves on 18 years ago, moving here because of the rich bluegrass and old-time music scene,â he says, singling out a certain musical âspontaneityâ of Asheville.
âIt permeates the food culture and the beer culture and the art culture. This town is full of great musicians.â
(Additional reporting by Garret K. Woodward)
The Moog synthesizer factory in Asheville, North Carolina. (Photo: Moog Music)
This content was originally published here.
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Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast 2018-2023
KD Market Insights added a title on âAutomotive Fuel Injection System Market â 2018-2023â to its collection of industry research reports that offers extensive and highly detailed current and future market trends in the global and regional/market. The report includes market size, Y-O-Y growth analysis and structure of the overall industry based on a unique combination of industry research, fieldwork, market sizing analysis, and our in-house expertise.
The market research report demonstrates market dynamics which includes growth drivers, restraining factors and opportunities and trends spearheading current nature and future status of this market. Our general approach is to target several individuals with specific questions that we believed would satisfy our research objective. Further, to speed up the data collection process, we employed an online survey, delivered via email. The research team analyzed the results to identify potential opportunities and risks for the market.
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In addition, the report offers recent industry activities and value chain analysis for the Automotive Fuel Injection System Market. Moreover, Porterâs Five Forces analysis demonstrates the five forces which include buyers bargaining power, suppliers bargaining power, the threat of new entrants, the threat of substitutes, and degree of competition in Automotive Fuel Injection System Market. Along with figures and tables, a market attractiveness and BPS analysis has been provided for every segment in the report.
Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Size & Forecast
Global Automotive Fuel Injection System market witnessed a market value of USD XX Million in 2017 and is estimated to reach USD XX million in 2023, registering a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of XX% between 2017 and 2023. The report analyses the market by geographies i.e. North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America & Middle East & Africa. Further, the geographies are fragmented into the country and regional groupings:
- North America (U.S. & Canada)
- Europe (Germany, United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, Russia and Rest of Europe)
- Asia Pacific (China, India, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, Australia, New Zealand and Rest of Asia Pacific)
- Latin America (Brazil, Mexico, Argentina and Rest of Latin America)
- Middle East & Africa (GCC, North Africa, South Africa and Rest of Middle East & Africa)
Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Segmentation
The research offers a comprehensive analysis of global Automotive Fuel Injection System market with respect to following sub-markets:
Based on Vehicle Type:
- Compact
- Midsize
- Luxury
- SUV
- LCV
- HCV
Based on Technology:
- Gasoline Port Injection
- Gasoline Direct Injection
- Diesel Direct Injection
Based on Fuel Type:
- Gasoline
- Diesel
Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market: Competitive Landscape
The report also highlights the competitive landscape of the global Automotive Fuel Injection System market, market share and positioning of all the major players in the industry. The competitive landscape analysis provides detailed strategic analysis of the companyâs business and performance such as company overview, financial information, revenue breakup by segment and by geography, SWOT Analysis, key facts, business strategy, key product offerings, marketing and distribution strategies, new product development, recent news (acquisition, expansion, technology development, research & development and other market activities).
The report includes profiles of leading companies in the global Automotive Fuel Injection System market. Some of the key players profiled include:
- Robert Bosch GmbH
- Denso Corporation
- Delphi Technologies PLC
- Continental AG
- Hitachi Automotive Systems Ltd
- Federal-Mogul Corporation
- Edelbrock LLC
- Woodward, Inc
- Kinsler Fuel Injection
- Other Major & Niche Key Players
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Table of Contents@
Research Methodology
Market Definition and List of Abbreviations
1. Executive Summary
2. Growth Drivers & Issues in Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market
3. Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Trends
4. Opportunities in Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market
5. Recent Industry Activities, 2017
6. Porter's Five Forces Analysis
7. Market Value Chain and Supply Chain Analysis
8. Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
9. Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Segmentation Analysis, By Vehicle Type
9.1. Introduction
9.2. Market Attractiveness, By Vehicle Type
9.3. BPS Analysis, By Vehicle Type
9.4. Compact Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
9.5. Midsize Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
9.6. Luxury Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
9.7. SUV Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
9.8. LCV Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
9.9. HCV Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
10. Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Segmentation Analysis, By Technology
10.1. Introduction
10.2. Market Attractiveness, By Technology
10.3. BPS Analysis, By Technology
10.4. Gasoline Port Injection Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
10.5. Gasoline Direct Injection Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
10.6. Diesel Direct Injection Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
11. Global Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Segmentation Analysis, By Fuel Type
11.1. Introduction
11.2. Market Attractiveness, By Fuel Type
11.3. BPS Analysis, By Fuel Type
11.4. Gasoline Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
11.5. Diesel Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12. Geographical Analysis
12.1. Introduction
12.2. North America Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.2.1. By Vehicle Type
12.2.2. By Technology
12.2.3. By Fuel Type
12.2.4. By Country
12.2.4.1. Market Attractiveness, By End-user
12.2.4.2. BPS Analysis, By End-User
12.2.4.3. U.S. Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.2.4.4. Canada Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3. Europe Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3.1. By Vehicle Type
12.3.2. By Technology
12.3.3. By Fuel Type
12.3.4. By Country
12.3.4.1. Market Attractiveness, By Country
12.3.4.2. BPS Analysis, By Country
12.3.4.3. Germany Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3.4.4. United Kingdom Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3.4.5. France Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3.4.6. Italy Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3.4.7. Spain Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3.4.8. Russia Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.3.4.9. Rest of Europe Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4. Asia Pacific Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.1. By Vehicle Type
12.4.2. By Technology
12.4.3. By Fuel Type
12.4.4. By Country
12.4.4.1. Market Attractiveness, By Country
12.4.4.2. BPS Analysis, By Country
12.4.4.3. China Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.4. India Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.5. Japan Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.6. South Korea Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.7. Indonesia Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.8. Taiwan Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.9. Australia Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.10. New Zealand Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
12.4.4.11. Rest of Asia Pacific Market Size (USD Million), Forecast & Y-o-Y Growth Analysis, 2017-2023
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#Automotive Fuel Injection System Market#Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Size#Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Share#Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Trends#Automotive Fuel Injection System Market Research
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Wind Turbine Converter Market - Segmented by Type, Growth, Trends, and Forecast (2019 - 2023)
14 February 2019: Wind Turbine Converter Market was million US$ in 2018 and is expected to million US$ by the end of 2023, growing at a CAGR of between 2019 and 2023.This report studies the Wind Turbine Converter market size (value and volume) by players, regions, product types and end industries, history data 2014-2018 and forecast data 2019-2023; This report also studies the global Wind Turbine Converter market competition landscape, market drivers and trends, opportunities and challenges, risks and entry barriers, sales channels, distributors and Porter's Five Forces Analysis.
The Global Wind Turbine Converter Market is anticipated to grow at a staggering CAGR of 4.7% in the forthcoming period. A power liquid-cooled converter is one of the essential components in the design of wind turbine that encompasses permanent magnetic synchronous generator (PMSG). This technology is broadly used at present for wind turbines. Technically, a power converter attaches with permanent magnet synchronous generator to enable effective grid connected power generation.
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 The driving factors responsible for the growth of wind turbine converter market include decline in production cost for wind turbine products, rise in automation, and optimization of wind power system. In addition, a wind turbine converter reduces power loss and enhances utilization of wind energy. Government subsidies and regional support act as a driver to market development. However, significant costs of installation, expensive spare parts, and dearth of periodic maintenance are likely to curb the market developments in the near future.
Geographical segmentation for wind turbine converter market includes North America, South America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East and Africa. Asia-Pacific regions are expected to account for a significant market share during the forecast period. Factors such as consumersâ awareness and adoption of clean and renewable sources of energy are the other drivers. Rise in the number of offshore wind turbine installation contributes to the market development. Technological advances in the wind energy market and increased production are likely to act as a catalyst for the market growth.
North American and European regions are likely to witness a substantial market share in the global scenario due to government support and subsidy. Rise in expenditure for production of electricity is a great concern in the U.S. and there arises a need for viable alternatives. Wind turbine converters could be an optimized solution, responsible for massive production of electricity. Consumersâ awareness regarding environmental degradation is another market driver for wind turbine converter in the western part of the globe. The key players in the wind turbine converter market include AMSC, ABB, Woodward, Ingeteam, Emerson, Siemens, Switch, Vacon, Schneider and GE Power.
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 Wind Turbine Converter Market by Geographical Regions:-
⢠North America
⢠Europe
⢠Asia Pacific
⢠Middle East and Africa
⢠South America
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6 Salon Old Woodward, Birmingham MI
6 Salon Old Woodward, Birmingham Interior, Michigan Building, American Commercial Architecture Images
6 Salon Old Woodward in Birmingham MI
Apr 15, 2021
6 Salon Old Woodward
Design: M1DTW Architects
Location: Birmingham, Michigan, USA
6 Salon (Old Woodward) is a 21-station hair salon that focuses on the interaction between stylist and client. It relies on a range of materials whose surface qualities interact with light.
The site, a ground level, retail storefront in a mixed-use building built in the 1960s, is the second location for the client, whose original 18-station salon shares a similar spatial configuration. This project involved relocating and expanding a nearby 12-station salon, doubling the capacity and making use of a number of existing elements, including a make-up counter and reception desk.
The existing corner entry was reworked with a new floor to ceiling glass storefront that extends parallel to the existing facade to create an interstitial vestibule and retail space that moves patrons around the central salon space and to a reception area set at the rear of the space. A desk refaced with an array of geometric tiles cut from an industrial grade plywood faced a matte black dimpled top layer transforms as patrons approach the warm end grain appears while a mural of original photographs commissioned for the client showcases the hands of a hairstylists at work.
Three rows of seven stylist stations compose the primary salon space. Each station is comprised of three components: a floor anchored chair, a stainless steel storage pod with tool tray, and a ceiling suspended stainless steel chassis and mirror. The station, custom fabricated from laser-cut stainless steel, helps reduce the station to its most fundamental component: the reflected mirror surface. A bronze mesh screen provides a visual contrast and helps delineate the various zones.
An adjacent wet area is demarcated by a dark ceramic tile covered a thick wall element with a series of subtracted storage pockets. Seated dryers are further enclosed by a sandblasted dark bronze glass. Private treatment rooms are positioned behind wall element. This organization deftly navigates three existing interior structural columns, while reducing an otherwise vast interior space into a series of linked, intimate zones.
Awards âInteriors Awardâ AIA Michigan Design and Honor Awards, 2015 âRetail Interior Designâ 1st place, Detroit Home Design Awards, 2015 â2014 Salon of the Yearâ Salon Today Magazine
6 Salon Old Woodward in Birmingham, Michigan â Building Information
Architecture: M1DTW Architects
Project size: 4000 ft2 Completion date: 2013
Images: Jeffrey Kilmer
6 Salon Old Woodward, Birmingham MI images / information received 150421
Location: Birmingham, Michigan, USA
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Beacon Park Lumen Restaurant, Grand River Avenue Design: Touloukian Touloukian Inc. photo courtesy of The Chicago Athenaeum Beacon Park Lumen Restaurant
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Gearing Up For Legaltech 2019
Today marks two weeks to kickoff of Legaltech 2019Â held January 29-31st in New York City, and if you are in heading into the Big Apple, there are some events you wonât want to miss. Last year marked the first year that the conference was much more diverse in the range of technology for the legal industry and not just a glorified ediscovery event. This year, with the incredible number of new technologies that have entered the space, should be even better. It feels like the law â usually 10 years behind â is catching up, and I love it.
As per the new format, Legaltech is part of Legalweek where five events are going on simultaneously â Legal Marketing, Legal CIO, Business of Law Forum, Legal Diversity and Talent Management and Legaltech â ALL at the Hilton in Midtown. Itâs nuts, but itâs also one of the best networking opportunities and the chance to see and meet with so many new technologies and connect in person.
I am a firm believer in getting to know the people behind a product, and Legaltech gives you the opportunity to do just that. While the exhibit hall was quite a bit smaller last year than previous years, the exhibitor list this year includes 26 different categories of providers to visit. Many set meetings off the floor with interested folks, so reach out to the ones you are interested in and see what you can set up in advance. Youâll have a one on one session that lets you dive deeper than you can do in an exhibit hall.
Events get started as early as Monday night and this year is no exception. Zapproved is hosting its annual Corporate eDiscovery Hero Awards on Monday night. As Craig Ball wrote this week on his blog, it should be entertaining when he interviews the iconic Bob Woodward â the best selling author and journalist who wrote Fear. Craig promises theyâll talk Trump.
Being honored with the Lifetime Achievement award this year is my friend John Facciola and I couldnât be happier for him. Judge Facciola set a precedent (pun intended) for authoring thoughtful and detailed analysis in ediscovery decisions when ediscovery was in its infancy through some of the most complex issues before retiring from the bench. And perhaps more importantly, he is one of the best people you could meet. You need to register, and seating is limited. Tickets are $75 and the event is being held at the Edison Ballroom.
The show kicks off Tuesday morning with a keynote Iâm looking forward to featuring Alberto Gonzales and Loretta Lynch, both former Attorneys General. The topic is fairly obscurely named âLeadership in the Profession of Law and How It is Changingâ, and I canât wait to hear their comments on the current state of play with their old job.
If youâre hungry before the keynote and willing to get up early, ACEDS is hosting a new #HealthyAlternative Walk/Run/Breakfast Event which is hosted by Berkeley Research Group and ACEDS on Tuesday morning at 6:30am with the theme âStart Where You Are.â The event is part of a year-long initiative that Alex Jacobs of BRG reached out to ACEDS to partner on as an alternative to happy hours. Walkers will meet in the lobby of the Hilton at 6:30am and be lead by Mary Mack, George Socha, David Greetham and Kaylee Walstad for a walk to the breakfast buffet at Ruthâs Chris. Runners will be lead by Alex Jacobs and Ben Hittle. The event is sponsored by Catalyst and Ricoh. No need to register, just show up.
If cocktails are your thing, ACEDS is also hosting their annual Drinks with Doug and Mary Tuesday at 4pm in which they partner with my good friends at Cloud Nine. Iâll be there together with great colleagues like Judges Peck and Francis, Chris Dale, Craig Ball, and the amazing Maura Grossman. I love these events because itâs an opportunity to meet so many new people and be in touch after the show. Is my theme of personal connection starting to resonate with you? Good. You do need to register for this one, and space is limited, so sign up soon.
On Wednesday afternoon at 1:30, Iâll be joining some industry greats for a lively discussion (there will be buzzers) captioned âThe State of the e-Discovery Union: a Roundtable on the Industry and the Profession.â Hosted by the great game show host David Horrigan of Relativity, Iâm honored to be included among the star-studded list of panelists including Bob Ambrogi of Law Sites, Zach Warren, Editor-in-Chief of Legal Technology News, Mary Mack, Executive Director of ACEDS, Ari Kaplan of Ari Kaplan Advisors, Ryan OâLeary, Senior Research Analyst at IDC and Sean Pike, Program Vice-President, Security Products, also at IDC. We are gearing up for some fun and a very lively discussion, so please join us.
Legaltech is what you make of it and some advanced planning will help you make the most of your experience. There are many social events in the evenings and I encourage you to visit as many as possible. Go by yourself â youâll find a friendly face and make some new connections. Our ediscovery field is challenging and itâs good to have compatriots who know and feel your pain.
Keep an eye out for new announcements coming from providers gearing up to and at the show â Bob Ambrogi always seems to have the scoop on his Law Sites blog before the rest of the world and he posts daily. This year should be a very interesting one and Iâll be doing a follow up after the show.
If you have other events going on that I can update this column with, please drop me a line and let me know.
See you in NYC!
Kelly Twigger gave up the golden handcuffs of her Biglaw partnership to start ESI Attorneys, an eDiscovery and information law Firm, in 2009. She is passionate about teaching lawyers and legal professionals how to think about and use ESI to win, and does so regularly for her clients. The Wisconsin State Bar named Kelly a Legal Innovator in 2014 for her development of eDiscovery Assistantâ an online research and eDiscovery playbook for lawyers and legal professionals. When sheâs not thinking, writing or talking about ESI, Kelly is wandering in the mountains of Colorado, or watching Kentucky basketball. You can reach her by email at [email protected] or on Twitter: @kellytwigger.
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As Public Art Goes Up, So Do Nearby Home Prices
ferrantraite/iStock
There was a time when a prime piece of Chicagoâs downtown was an industrial wasteland. Railroad tracks cut off the downtown city core, known as the Loop, from Lake Michigan, creating a large-scale eyesore. But all that changed when the city partnered with developers, architects, and artists to envision what the city website calls âa new kind of town square.â
When Millennium Park opened in 2004, anchored by open-air galleries and interactive public art, it created a ripple effect in nearby development. Soon, condo buildings stretched into the sky, and property values skyrocketed in the Loop. The âMillennium Park factorâ has been credited with fueling the areaâs real estate growth by about 10,000 new units over the following decade, to the tune of $1.4 billion just in residential development, according to an economic impact study by URS and Goodwin Williams Group.
Crown Fountain in Millennium Park, by Jaume Plensa
Millennium Park Foundation
âThe art and the architecture of the park is absolutely at the core of the success of Millennium Park,â says Scott Stewart, executive director of the Millennium Park Foundation. He touted the success of Cloud Gate, a 110-ton, mirrored sculpture by Anish Kapoor better known as âthe Bean,â a selfie magnet for tourists and residents alike.
âPeople really want to be near these great, iconic places or things that make a city recognizable,â Stewart says.
The Cloud Gate sculpture, (aka The Bean) in Millennium Park
EddieHernandezPhotography/iStock
Around the country, public art has become a hot commodity that is being used to spark revitalization in blighted neighborhoods and turn vacant land into places where people want to live, work, and play. Builders are increasingly incorporating art both into these emerging neighborhoods and into their own developments, as they compete to bring in both discerning buyers and tenants willing to pay top dollar.
âDevelopers are beginning to see that if they want to attract tenants, they have to offer them more than just four walls,â says Barbara Goldstein, a public art planner and consultant based in San Jose, CA.  She points to a new mixed-use development revamping downtown Orlando, FL, that she worked on, called Creative Village. The development includes schools, housing, offices and creative studios, parks, and shopping, and weaves art throughout its public spaces.
âWeâre going to see more and more of this kind of thing,â she predicts.
Consider a flock of chrome birds suspended over a Detroit sidewalk, a 14-foot-long outdoor video wall in downtown St. Louis or 202 restored vintage street lamps that line a plaza outside the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The Urban Light exhibit, as the L.A. standing lamps are called, has become a popular place for children to play and for grownups to take photos, encouraging lingering. Itâs all part of what Goldstein calls the ânew urbanism.â
âA lot of these spaces where youâve created something spectacular out of something less than desirable ⌠those are attractiveâ communities now, says Millennium Parkâs Stewart. âThey naturally draw people to them.â
Steve and Dorota Coyâs âFlightâ art installation over the new esplanade on Woodward Avenue in Detroit
Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
Public art can help to revitalize neighborhoods
Beyond boosting property values, community art can help revitalize neighborhoods, says Juanita Hardy, senior visiting fellow at the Urban Land Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based land and real estate research and education group.
She points to the formerly sleepy suburban Brookland neighborhood in northeast Washington, D.C. Itâs now home to the Monroe Street Market, a five-block, mixed-use development that opened in 2014 and includes a community center and three residential buildings. Two of the buildings have 27 affordable artistâs studios on the ground floorâprime real estate normally reserved as retail space. The artistâs studios are equipped with glass doors, part of an art walk, bringing the community into the experience and attracting tourists to the area, says Hardy.
Although thereâs no hard data on what impact the studios have had on the development, Hardy says the buildings have reported faster lease-up rates and higher retention rates.
When the development opened, the median home list price in its ZIP code was $474,000, according to realtor.comÂŽ data. By 2017, the median price had risen to $598,400âa 26.2% increase in just three years.
One of the most prominent examples of public art recently is the High Line in New York City, a 1-mile-long park that reclaimed an abandoned elevated railroad track and became one of Manhattanâs top lures for tourists and locals alike. The park has incorporated art since its first section opened in June 2009, and has its own curator. The park attracted 1.3 million people in its first year. It was completed in 2014; in 2015, it saw 7.6 million visitorsâ and real estate prices and development in the vicinity have soared.
Art along the High Line in New York City.
Neale Clark/Getty Images
âItâs the broader context of using art and culture to connect the community and provide places that attract people and provide economic opportunities,â Hardy says of these kinds of developments.
In Indianapolis, the Cultural Trail, an 8-mile pedestrian and bicycle path built in 2013 that connects downtown neighborhoods and features public art, is responsible for boosting property values in the surrounding area by $1 billion, a study by Indiana Universityâs Public Policy Institute found. The trail was created as a  place where artists could display their work, with about $4 million set aside for that purpose during the design and construction phases.
It attracts suburbanites who flock downtown to cycle the trail and take in the art along the wayâincluding 46 large murals that mark the time the city hosted Super Bowl XLVI, says real estate broker Ryan Mullin, of FS Houses. When the trail was built, it tied together all the âcoolest and hippestâ neighborhoods, he adds, and real estate prices climbed.
âYou used to be able to buy a house for $35,000 to $40,000,â he says of the area. Now, a vacant lot sells for that much and starter homes are selling for $220,000, he says.
Art makes new buildings more attractive to prospective residents
Many builders also make a point of following artists to the next trendy neighborhoodsâand incorporating their work into the high-end condo and rental buildings that are going up to make them more appealing to buyers and renters.
â[Art] is a huge consideration,â says David Brause, president of Brause Realty, a New York City-based developer that has both residential and commercial developments in five states along the East Coast. âI love walking through a building that has art in it.â
When Brause developed a vacant lot in Long Island City, a New York neighborhood known for its graffiti art, he tried to preserve what he described as a âbreathtakingâ image of a rooster that had been painted with graffiti on a 15-foot retaining wall in the back of the lot. He was not successful, so his company took a photo of the piece, blew it up and put it in the lobby of the 38-story rental tower they built, named The Forge.
A photograph of the rooster mural was incorporated into the lobby of The Forge residential building.
Photo provided by Brause Realty
The neighborhood is known for its graffiti art , since it had been home to the former 5Pointz, a former factory covered in curated aerosol art that become an international destination. It was demolished in 2014 to make way for two luxury high-rises that are under construction at the site. There are still plenty of art galleries and museums in the neighborhood.
âI follow the artistsâtheyâre always the pioneers,â Brause says of choosing neighborhoods to build in. âIf you have a neighborhood thatâs just a bunch of bankers and lawyers, youâre not going to find the vibrancy of artists, musicians, and chefs.â
When public art pushes out the artists
However, the downside of art-driven urban revitalization is the gentrification that drives up home values to the point where creative types can no longer afford to live there. In Brauseâs building in Long Island City, studios start at $2,444 a month and one-bedrooms start at $3,240 a month.
And itâs not just new developmentsâthe prices of existing rentals and homes also go up. About 20 years ago, the Fountain Square neighborhood next to the Indianapolis trail had cheap housing that was popular with edgier artists. But as the neighborhoodâs real-estate cachet grew, those artists were priced out, says Mullin.
For more than 12 years, the neighborhood also hosted Subsurfaceâan arts festival that attracted graffiti artists from across the country. But some of the newer residents werenât fans of the street art, which was one reason why in 2016 organizers put the festival on hold.
The loss of the street art festival âwas sad, because it ended an era,â says Mullin.
The post As Public Art Goes Up, So Do Nearby Home Prices appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.comÂŽ.
from https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/public-art-holds-key-unlocking-real-estate-growth/
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