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DIY Urbanism: Market Creates Sense of Community While Bringing Healthy Food Choices to the Mission

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[Photo Credit: Colleen McHugh] Through an interactive market system of live music, produce booths and youth art projects, the Mission Community Market (MCM) activates an underutilized block at the intersection of 22nd and Bartlett Streets. It also brings diverse walks of life together on one block every Thursday from 4 to 7p.m. Chance encounters with fellow pedestrians carrying sunflowers or succulent produce are the…

Planning Communities for Aging

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[Photo Credit: flickr user Troy Holden] In 2011, America's estimated 78.2 million baby boomers will begin to reach retirement age, officially ushering in the "silver tsunami" - a term used to describe the impending onslaught of retirees into a society that is currently ill-prepared to handle the needs of an aging population. Most boomers currently live in suburbs, having ridden the wave of suburban…

Challenges (and High Hopes) for Electric Vehicles in San Francisco

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Plug-in cars in San Francisco [Photo Credit: flickr user felixkramer] PG&E's clean energy blog, Next 100, recently explored the idea of the rise of electric vehicles in the Bay Area. At the recent Plug-In 2010 conference, PG&E President Chris Johns predicted that the Bay Area will see around 500,000 electric vehicles (EVs) "plugging in" over the next decade. From a sustainability perspective…

Public Art Installations to Guide Passengers of Central Subway

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Reflected Loop [Image via San Francisco Arts Commission] We are visual creatures. As such, we derive our orientation of our relative location according to the landmarks and visual reminders around us. This is especially evident in how we navigate urban areas, by remembering a block near a notable statue or fountain in an otherwise crowded arrangement of buildings. It's a common situation - getting…

Getting High Speed Rail Right-Enough

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The California High Speed Rail Authority met yesterday in San Francisco. The agenda was packed with many interesting things including a new station area development policy. But the real controversy was about the section between San Jose and San Francisco. I joined hundreds of people during public comment to weigh in on this one small segment. Over the past few years, a group…

SFpark Update

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SFpark has released a video demonstrating how the new and improved parking system can help reduce traffic, carbon emissions -- and road rage -- while driving on San Francisco streets. Find out more about the program in this blog post. SFpark Overview from SFpark on Vimeo.

Datablog: The Freedom to Visualize

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With just under a year in operation, San Francisco's "data liberation" website, DataSF, has inspired some compelling visualizations. One person who has actively taken advantage of this website is flickr user Eric Fischer. This past week he introduced an animated graphic that caught my eye. While it may take a few views to deduce, this animation shows a full day, starting and ending at…

Urban Bees on the Rise

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As a budding apiarist, I was devastated to hear about the Hayes Valley Farm incident last week. An unknown person sprayed two beehives with household pesticides - destroying the hives and killing thousands of bees. Hayes Valley, the community farm in San Francisco, used the San Francisco Bee-Cause beehives in to help educate Bay Area residents about beekeeping and urban farming. Dead bees at Hayes…

SFpark: Re-imagining How We Park in SF

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Taking the guess work out of parking. That's what SFMTA's innovative new parking program, SFpark, aims to accomplish. When implemented, the program will dramatically change how drivers locate and pay for parking. A new SFpark "smart meter" [Photo Credit: flickr user SFMTA_sfpark] Here's a quick breakdown of how SFpark works: Sensors located in parking spaces and City-owned garages will track real-time parking…

New Study Highlights Untapped Energy Potential of Existing Commercial Buildings

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[Photo Credit: flickr user Snapsi42] Next 10, an independent, nonpartisan organization that studies the intersection between the economy, the environment, and quality of life in California, has just released a new report on the untapped energy efficiency potential associated with existing commercial buildings. The paper outlines the energy efficiency benefits associated with making improvements to commercial buildings and analyzes the market barriers which…

HSR Report: France

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As California lays the high-speed rail groundwork, SPUR continues its series on international precedents. While France built high-speed rail two decades after Japan and within a different state apparatus, the system had remarkably similar results: growth and concentration. France teaches us that a state investment in high-speed rail (HSR) can have major impacts on places that are isolated and suffering from lagging economic performance…

Bringing Geary Back

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Geary Boulevard runs almost the entire width of San Francisco, from Market to the ocean. The name of the street hides a lot of history — John White Geary was the first mayor of San Francisco post-statehood, and he would go on to govern Kansas during its "Bloody Kansas" period in the buildup to the Civil War. But that's a matter for another post though…

Datablog: Finding the World's Dimensions

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The power of data to destroy preconceived notions seems to drive Hans Rosling, co-founder of Gapminder. My first experience with the website was in the spring of 2009 when H1N1 hysteria reached its apex. When a friend sent over the link, I thought I was looking at a simple scatter plot. I had neglected to notice the play button at the bottom of the…

TechnoCRAFT: A DIY Approach to Technology, Art and Everything in Between

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5.5 Designers' wallpaper maze [Photo Credit: Switched on Set] You don't have to know what a fabber (digital fabricator) or modder (person who modifies) is to enjoy TechnoCRAFT, the latest show at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Like the word itself, the exhibit offers projects that blur any distinction there may still be between technology and art, designer and user…

Made in the Dogpatch

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The Dogpatch may already be on everyone's radar as a neighborhood on the rise (see last year's New York Times "Surfacing" feature), but touring the area's artisan manufacturers lends a much more tangible element to all the hype. This former shipbuilding center has attracted a new wave of craftsmen, producing everything from messenger bags to chocolates to modern backyard cabanas. SFMade 's Kate Sofis…

SF Walks: Outer Richmond and Sutro Baths

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Colleen McHugh, native San Franciscan and resident SPUR photographer, will blog about a different walk through San Francisco each week of the summer, reflecting on what it means to live as a pedestrian in this city and some of the ways we can improve upon that experience. There are so many things a walk in San Francisco can be — from a protest to…

This Week in Urban Farming

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Hayes Valley Farm [Photo Credit: flickr user edibleoffice] Urban farming events are plentiful right now in San Francisco. Here's a summary of this week's line-up: SPUR Young Urbanists: Conversations on Urban Farming To what extent can we support a community's food and health needs through urban farming? With Shakirah Simley of Slow Jams, Brooke Budner and Caitlyn Galloway of Little City Gardens, and the…

Communities for Aging: Today's Challenges Helped by Choice

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[Image: The New York Times] Where will I live? How will I get around if I can no longer walk or drive? Will I be able to afford health care? Can I hope for something more than whittling away my golden years in a nursing home? Whether you face these questions around growing old for yourself, or indirectly through the concerns of your parents…

Presidio Habitats Embodies "Art about Place"

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Fritz Haeg's Animal Estates Snag Tower [Photo Credit: Monique Deschaines/FOR-SITE Foundation] How does public art play with the space of an urban area? In San Francisco, public art is important to people, but open space is scarce. Open spaces dedicated to slices of visual quality, such as the POPOS or Pavement to Parks projects, engage the public in a conversation about art without the confinements…