Sunday, December 14, 2008

While apartment shopping...

A couple who are good friends of mine (who happen to be white) spent the weekend shopping for apartments in Brooklyn and Harlem. While looking at a 1-bedroom in Crown Heights:

"This is the last apartment in the building to turn over. All the 'bad' people are gone, and now the building is full of 'good' people like you."

Friday, October 24, 2008

The next crisis for cities

What cities should be doing now:

1. No More Evictions. It's bad for neighborhoods and it's bad for cities. It is better in every case to keep people in their homes, and arrange realistic payments that they can keep up with.

2. Anticipate possible problems in neighborhoods already effected by the foreclosure crisis

Visualize the impact of subprime foreclosures: Look here, for U.S.

What does the crisis look like in New York City?

(Click on images for enlarged photos and map)



Tuesday, October 21, 2008

From Metafilter: "With election season in the US, it's probably hard to get a less than Gung-ho picture of the war in Afghanistan, but this Spiegel Online article paints a dark picture. 'Pessimism about the situation has never been so high.' High level NATO commanders are using phrases like 'Doomed to Fail,' 'We are trapped,' 'repeating the same mistakes as the Soviets', military victory 'neither feasible nor supportable,' 'downward spiral.' For some it is so dark the only beacon of light would be peace talks with the Taliban."

The Heaven Sent Leaf

My friend Katy Lederer is keeping a blog while she gives readings across the country of her new book of poetry, The Heaven Sent Leaf.

Here's what she's writing about:

"Hi there, I am blogging about my cross-country road-trip/book tour on behalf of The Heaven-Sent Leaf, a new book of poems about, er, money. The title is taken from the second part of Goethe’s Faust, in which Mephistopheles has discovered a way to make gold—what alchemists had been seeking to discover for centuries—by printing paper money (“the heaven-sent leaf”). Once Mephistopheles has printed this imaginative money, thereby releasing an impecunious emperor from debt, what we would now term an economic “bubble” ensues; viands, wine, and labor are purchased with nothing so substantial as delusion and credulity. By the end of the story, the proverbial bubble has burst, and the emperor has fallen into ruin. Destinations on the tour include: Austin, Tallahassee, Ithaca, Las Vegas, Sacramento, Oakland, San Francisco, Sonoma, Portland, Missoula, Boise, Denver, Lawrence, Iowa City, Lincoln, Milwaukee, Madison, Appleton, Ann Arbor, Cleveland, Chicago, New York, Providence, Hudson, Buffalo, Northampton, Athens, Atlanta, and Richmond."

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Some music...

The Times They Are A Changing
Cracker Jack Docker

Beat Control

3rd Planet
Bingo
Freedom
Last Night a DJ Saved My Life

and my favorite for classic hip hop: The Bridge.

Some of the videos I saw on a recent re-run of the show, I was able to find on YouTube:

Hanging Out, Large Professor



Which features a sample of that great party record that the folks in Philly always seem to play. It's by "Sister Nancy" apparently:



Supa Star, Group Home



Faking the Funk



Fever for the flavor...
Similac Child, Black Sheep

And, Mushroom Jazz 6 just got released
(Click to enlarge)


I hadn't visited Streets Blog in a while, and as usual, I found interesting info.

I'm hoping that political will in our country can coalesce around an "Invest in America" agenda. Education, Health, Energy, Food, Infrastructure, Economic Growth.

Update:

Robert Reich makes a pretty strong argument for massive spending on infrastructure, here

some cost issues, story here

Grotesquely Mesmerizing

From Danny, on Positive Jam: photo gallery

it's like the ultimate vision of some america gone wrong... the bathroom is just too much to look at though!

Monday, October 13, 2008

Monday, October 6, 2008

I've really been loving this song lately - Paper Planes by Mia

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

What is the purpose of "non-profits"?

From Managing the Nonprofit Organization, Principles and Practices by Peter F. Drucker,

A business has discharged its functions when the customer buys the product, pays for it, and is satisfied with it. Government has discharged its function when its policies are effective. The "non-profit" institution neither supplies goods or services nor controls. Its "product" is neither a pair of shoes, nor an effective regulation. Its product is a changed human being. The non-profit institutions are human-change agents. Their "product" is a cured patient, a child that learns, a young man or woman grown into a self-respecting adult; a changed human life altogether.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

The American Abroad

I've enjoyed reading Ethan's musings: Travel, Relationships, and the New Twenty, including lots of Olympics coverage.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

News

Two news items of interest: latest on programs to encourage green roofs in NYC (NYT), and article on neglected (city-owned?) property in Bedford-Stuyvesant (Daily News) - Mentions new construction and farmers market in the area (my friend Devanie, of the Brooklyn Rescue Mission is coordinating a nearby farmers market once a week).

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Cool map

cool overlay of historical maps over google maps

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Google Mapping

Brooklyn Mugging Map and Discussion

2007 Crime Mapfrom NY Magazine and discussion

And a newspaper article on the trend, from the UK Daily Mail

The Kitchen Sink Post




This is the kitchen sink post. It's the place I put anything that I've found while blogging that I think is really interesting, but hasn't yet worked it's way into a formal post of its own on Changing The Court (or doesn't fit there). So far, some incomplete notes on urban revitalization and preservation and a few of my favorite non-criminal-justice-related blogs and websites.

----

For several years, U.S. cities have promoted themselves as "cool cities" on the premise that young, highly educated "creative class" individuals are the key to revitalization and economic growth. However, a new study by the Center for an Urban Future indicates that first generation immigrants and working class folks who are rising into the middle class are an important engine of economic vitality for cities - entrepenuers and small business man - in places like the Bronx.

This highly discussed article from the Atlantic Monthly suggests that as more of the population returns to urban centers, car culture wanes, and the subprime mortgage collapse proceeds, the McMansions and ex-urban subdivisions of the past decade may be the slums of the new century. Some places are already experiencing social problems - drugs and crime - that are normally associated with urban decay.

Here's an enjoyable, New York-Centric blog on public spaces - things like "placemaking" - what are the charactoristics of safe, vibrant public spaces? Bird to the North

Fascinating blog: Ecology of Absence: The Biocultural Geography of Abandonment, Deindustrialization and transition in St. Loius and the Greater Midwest.

Urban Planet: The BBC's great coverage of emerging urban trends world-wide.

Rebuilding Space in the Urban Place: "This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging." Amazing links sections on a variety of urban issues.





















How much debris and litter is on the average mile of highway in America?














(click to enlarge)


Where does it come from: Manhole ?

Where does it come from: Asphalt?

How do you make your own rain barrel: Spigot assembly, directions ?



Case Studies:
Chicago green alleyways program, Project for public spaces, New York Restoration Project, NYC Greenstreets Program.

I found a fascinating report by the Milano School of Public Policy: A Schoolyard in Brooklyn: Strengthening Families and Communities through the Innovative Use of Public Space. It's a case study of how a community organization can partner with government to transform a public space.



Interesting map showing neighborhoods with high concentrations of low-income people who commute more than 1 hour for work.

Fascinating: The Viele Map (No pop-up blocker)



User-friendly, very informative map of homicides in nyc. (Plots three years worth of data in Google Maps, with date/time, location, demographic information of victim and suspect, and motive, if known in all homicides citywide)


another map - up to the minute incident reports across the five boroughs

Great Blog: Strange Maps

New York City Parks on Wikipedia


What makes a place safe?



More walkers and bikers means greater safety


Safe Haven Program is in decline: On the Upper West Side of Manhattan... According to the Westside Crime Prevention Program the number of members in the Safe Havens network (stores, marked by decals, where children can take shelter if they are being harassed or bothered on the street) has declined from 350 to 250 in the past two years. The bank branches and national chain stores that are replacing mom-and-pop establishments aren't suitable for the program - employee turnover is high and corporate headquarters have refused offers to enroll their franchises. (from this article in the New York Times).


One picture of what a very safe space looks like:

Monday, August 4, 2008

"Comments on Comments"

"There's been a bit of a backlash recently against the angry commenter on newspaper websites. Some are calling for newspapers to stop allowing comments sections all together. But what about democracy on the web? Bob, with the help of "This American Life"'s Ira Glass, ruminates on the dark side of the comments section."

LINK: http://www.onthemedia.org/transcripts/2008/07/25/03