October 28, 2005

BBC - Science & Nature - Sex ID Test - Very cool

BBC - Science & Nature - Sex ID

This is an awesome test. I snubbed my nose at all my critics and came out 50% male-brained. Curiously, I bombed hard on the "see what's changed between two pictures" test, but aced the "rotate 3-D object in your brain to different outcomes" test. I suppose this implies that I have excellent spatial visualization skills, but suck on the detail work. It also probably explains why I'm always losing my keys.

I wish I could sketch in this blog somehow. My work notes are covered in diagrams and doodles all over the place. I remember things best when I draw a little picture to represent it. I imagi2ne that has something to do with the above test and my success with the spatial visualization thing.

October 21, 2005

What sci-fi Character are YOU?

This test says that I am Captain Jean-Luc (why won't they negotiate?) Picard. I'm very dissapointed that I'm not Captain Kirk. I feel like doing it again until it gets it right. Is that wrong?

Which Fantasy/SciFi Character Are  You?

Nice dreamy photo gets some attention


quiet reflections
Originally uploaded by Spatial Mongrel.
The phone rings, and it's an ad agency on the other line. It seems they stumbled on my Nakusp photos from flickr and want to use them in a tourist advertisement for the region. I think that falls into a shady grey area for my cc license, but in this case I've decided to provide them for free with photo credit only, since I like what they do.

EDIT OCt 28th: Updated this post a bit to reflect ad agencies desires to remain anonymous ... for now...

October 20, 2005

What Worse Than A NIMBY? A Successful NIMBY | Planetizen

What Worse Than A NIMBY? A Successful NIMBY | Planetizen: "Nimbyism is gaining quite a following in Toronto -- leaving some detractors to worry that the movement is strangling all growth in the area.

'The message behind all the attention is that NIMBYism is dangerous. It reflects thoughtless, knee-jerk reactions that go against the common good. A NIMBYist group is like a cell that has grown too quickly and become a cancer, threatening the entire organism.

...'It does beg the question as to how a city is supposed to proceed with any agenda, either positive or negative, when communities have the ability to stop what's meant to happen,' says Mark Guslits, chief development officer for Toronto Community Housing and the former manager of the city's affordable housing file.

But what if the opposite is true? Could NIMBYism be good for our city?'"


An interesting article with lessons on how to deal with nimbyism. Raises interesting questions on whether nimbyism might be a form of emergent behaviour ultimately moving the City towards a better and more functional landscape, or whether nimbyism is a serious obstacle towards sustainable and healthy community planning.

October 19, 2005

The most amazing aerial kite photography shot I've ever seen


Bikes and riders
Originally uploaded by KAP Cris.
This photo is the most amazing bit of aerial kite photography I've ever seen. It is of the final gathering at the end of a big bike race , and will blow you away at alarge scale. The detail alone will take you hours to go through. I don't know how I'm going to justify it on my work timesheet, but it was worth it for the joy of it all.

More amazing kite photography can be found at the KAP Flickr Group along with lots of information on how to do Kite Aerial Photography yourself. I think I'll give it a whirl as soon as I find a decent kite, though hoisting my camera 50 meters above pavement on a flimsy string doesn't fill me with joy...

October 18, 2005

Pedestrian Accessibility Study required for downtown Kamloops

Now that we've successfully pushed for and received a City Centre Plan review and a downtown traffic assessment, it's time to ask "What's next?"

My thoughts on the next steps are to build on what we've done so far, and ask ourselves this question - with all the development we're looking at happening in the City Centre Plan, and all the visioning statements we've looked at to make life more livable, how are we actually going to implement this?

We've done the study on how traffic moves in the downtown. Great, and very useful. We know now how we want the downtown to look over the next twenty years. Even better. But how are people going to INTERACT in the downtown core? How will they walk from these new developments, to access the goods and services they need? WHere will they sit, whil eenjoying their new City? What facilities do we need to provide to make sure our pedestrian facilities are up to snuff?

Kamloops needs a pedestrian study as the next step. The purpose of this study would be to look at where people are moving in the downtown. It would provide answers to the following questions:
  • Where are people going, where are they coming from?
  • Who are these people?
  • What are they coming downtown for, and what do they do while they are there?
  • Do they need to sit anywhere? Where? How often, and with what spacing?
  • Do they need park space?
  • What areas are priorities for pedestrian improvements?
  • Where do we most need shade?
  • What routes are most heavily used, and
  • Do we need to prioritize certain crossing points?
Pedestrian-scaled design is about inclusiveness. It's about making sure everyone has an opportunity to enjoy a high-quality lifestyle, whether you're a young child to an elderly senior, whether you're able-bodied or with a disability. The City is for everyone, and downtown is the centre of the action.

A good pedestrian plan will helps us target our resources to making sure we're fitting the urban design to the needs of the people, and that we're ensuring accessibility for all.

October 14, 2005

Reinventing the Alley - Key Elements for Great (and useful!) Alley Design


kamloops alley
Originally uploaded by Spatial Mongrel.
Alleys are wonderful places for social dynamics. The hidden nature of the alley can create ideal conditions for an ad hoc playground among neighbourhood children. Residents hanging laundry out to dry, doing minor house repairs or other activities can meet and chat, watch children play, and get to know one another in a less-formal setting. The alley becomes shared neighbourhood space, a courtyard for the neighbourhood, and is self-maintained by the residents living alongside. An alley achieving this type of attention is visually distinguished by certain characteristics including the condition of the alley maintenance-wise, the permeability of its boundaries, and the high level of visual oversight found within.

It is the rare alley that is able to achieve this type of social role. Many factors must come together for an alley to develop into a community courtyard. Many of these enabling factors have to do with the physical characteristics of the adjoining properties, additionally complicated by the scarcity of rules and regulations governing physical behaviour. The alley that is able to overcome the inherent limitations of its parts and become more than a functional space does so not because of structured rules to make it so. Rather, it emerges from the urban fabric, dependent on a series of small decisions made by residents to bring it into being, and preserved likewise through the ability of residents to maintain the enhanced level of attention. In rare circumstances it is possible to manufacture the conditions that allow an alley to transcend its functional role, but to create a sustainable system requires area residents to buy into the program and take ownership over the alley.

Ownership
The lack of ownership of the alley is by far the greatest threat to its viability as more than functional space, or even to its efficiency at facilitating service delivery. An unsupervised alley collects litter and debris, and provides a potential home for marginal activity. The alley can be an exceedingly good hiding place, full of nooks and crannies, poorly lit, and rarely visited. It is frequently a place for prostitution in urban areas. Drug use is likewise highly common, and some of the worst of human behaviour flourishes there. A visit to an unsupervised inner-city alley can be a wretched and disgusting experience in the daytime. At night, it can be a positively terrifying prospect. It is no surprise that the alley is rarely built in newly planned subdivisions and is frequently eliminated in infill redevelopment situations. On the other hand, a visit to a supervised alley, a "community courtyard," can be an incredibly restful and relaxing experience, and can fill a visitor with a profound sense of satisfaction.

The chance of a resident becoming involved in the care of an alley depends, not surprisingly, on the level of stake they have in the alley. Residents who have rear lot parking or whose children actively play in the alley are far more likely to care about the alley as a resource and work with neighbours to maintain its condition. This returns us to defensible space and the issue of ownership and sense of responsibility over a space, underlining again the importance of ensuring that an alley maintains a reasonably useful and functional role for the residents of a community, aside from its social function as a neutral meeting ground. To reconnect alleys back into the lives of residents, we must consider physical factors that restrict or ease the ability of residents to take ownership. A successful intervention strategy must take into consideration the physical environment of the alley, the properties alongside, and the residents.
The first step is to look at the alley on a block by block basis and develop a definition of what it is, and what the community wishes it to be. Is it a commercial alley, oriented towards service activities? Is it a residential alley, providing green space and community atmosphere to the block? Perhaps it is a functional alley, with vehicle movements and utility maintenance as the primary activity. It may be a purely recreational alley, with activities such as community gardening, walking, conversation and the like occurring within. On a wider context, the alley needs to be looked at as to how it fits into the alley network. Is it part of a linear green corridor, with plenty of dog walkers, pedestrians and bicyclists?

Indicators of Alley Vitality
When looking at the alley to measure how it fits within the block, three elements are important indicators of alley vitality. These are:
  • Does the alley provide access by pedestrians into offices, residences or shops? What type of access has emphasis?
  • Does the alley provide for service delivery, trash and recycling, utilities and maintenance? How prominent are these services?
  • Does the alley function as a connecting walkway to other city streets and alleys? How well is it used?
Other points to consider are future opportunities. Are there parks or gardens nearby that the alley links to? Is the area slated to undergo any kind of redevelopment? Are there opportunities for altering the definition of the alley into something different? An alley is never going to fit cleanly into one mould, but is rather a heterogeneous mix of character from one section to the next, and it relies on the judgement of the planner with input from the local community to determine how best to meet the challenge.

Building Community Support - the Bottom-Up Approach
An alley intervention scheme with a top-down approach will rarely be effective in the long term. If there are no users and no one to assume ownership, if the underlying reasons behind its neglect are not treated, the space will inevitably decline and the initial investment will have been wasted. Many revitalization schemes for alleys, streets, parks and other projects have failed for just this reason. Therefore it becomes imperative to involve stakeholders in the alley right from the start and to determine, based upon local input, the measures that will be taken to enhance the alley and ensure that it remains a cared-for spot.

Community support does not necessarily imply that planners must wait for the community to come to the City for help in repairing an alley. Part of the task of an urban planner is to serve as an advisor to the community and point out possibilities or suggest options that may not have been considered. However, it is also true that in some areas the situation is so severe that residents give up on the alley and consign it to its fate. In that case, the City may need to take the initiative and take the first steps to repair the alley, in order to stimulate interests by local residents in the lane. Again, without community support and an ongoing monitoring program, the investment will be wasted unless followed on by strong local participation and a vigorous monitoring program by City staff.

Assessment and Maintenance
The primary complaint about alleys is that they are dirty. Household debris piles up, neighbourhood dogs rip open garbage bags and strew waste about, and leaves and vegetation collect in the corners. While the City is likely unable to pursue a regular maintenance strategy for the alley in addition to its work with parks, sidewalks and city streets, it is possible to use both proactive and reactive measures to respond to the problem. An example of a partially proactive approach to alley maintenance is to put in place a “needs assessment” site survey program. The survey conducted in this report is an example of such a needs assessment. This data can be collected in a geographic information system and updated either through local surveys or by residents phoning in reports. This can allow for directed maintenance action by sanitation crews for alleys that need extra assistance beyond the capabilities of the neighbourhood. This system is not fully proactive because, though it may identify areas with serious deficiencies, it responds only to the ensuing results of those deficiencies.

A wholly reactive maintenance strategy calls for programs such as the “spring clean-up,” where City crews intervene in alleys with especially severe maintenance problems and conduct a full clean-up. The program can be extended to include regular visits by maintenance crews throughout the year. This can be an effective stop-gap measure in an area with limited economic and social prospects, but is essentially a way to keep an alley in a holding pattern and stop it from getting any worse. This type of action is quite costly and does not address the underlying problem of why the alley is in such poor shape in the first place.

Grant Programs
A different strategy the City can use is to offer assistance to residents by supplying equipment or grants for maintenance, and committing a crew to assist with removing collected material once residents have conducted the initial clean-up. This approach relies on the impetus of residents to participate and be active in the care and upkeep of the alley, while the City provides the heavy lifting capacity to haul away undesired items.

Grant programs such as the “Une Place au Soleil” program in Montreal are effective because of the requirement for full community support from all residents on the alley and the local action that it represents. Grants can be given by the City to residents in support of various community-driven alley projects, including a local clean-up effort, mural painting, flower planting, landscaping, fence repair and so on. Grants can be of any dollar value, from a few hundred dollars to tens of thousands, depending on the initiative of the local community and how much they are willing to invest of their own time in the program. A small grant can help the community buy some cans of paint to touch-up fences and paint over graffiti, while a large grant can pay for more extensive landscaping projects.

Gifts-In-Kind
Gifts in kind represent another powerful tool from the City to promote local activity and care for the alley. Gifts in kind are donations by the city of material or services that have an ascribed dollar value attached to them and are offered in lieu of a cash payment. Services such as providing a maintenance crew with a truck can be used as a gift in kind. Other services are only limited by imagination. The following list offers a few suggestions:
  • plants and flowers;
  • concrete bollards and planters;
  • new or improved street and pedestrian lighting;
  • street paving or paving bricks and stones; and
  • technical advice from a planner and/or landscape architect.
These can be offered as an incentive with the understanding that the primary work and maintenance will be undertaken by residents. The City can agree to provide ongoing maintenance for some features, such as pedestrian and alley lighting. A good alley intervention program combines both grants and gifts in kind as motivational incentives to get residents involved in the state of their alley.

Grants and gifts in kind can be offered as a special program that can be applied for through the city planning department or community services department. Another alternative is to provide funds as a seed program to neighbourhood community associations who will then act to distribute the funds as they see fit. This may be an advantage in cases where a decentralized structure exists that is able to handle such a program.

The primary benefit to these programs is that the City is removed from the alley intervention and takes a role as a supporting partner, not as the initiator. While the City may have approached the community with the idea of providing the resources and the program, it is the residents themselves who must move ahead with the project and do the work. With increasing residential involvement comes the greater likelihood of residents feeling they have a stake in the alley. This increases the possibilities for regular upkeep and enhances neighbourhood surveillance. Observations throughout the course of the author’s research indicate that alleys that have undergone community revitalization work have more proactive residents who are likely to challenge visitors to the alley, report misbehaviour to local authorities, or deal with problems themselves.

Regulating the Alleyscape: Bylaws and Regulations
An alley bylaw can have a great deal of say about the shape and setbacks of the rear area of lots, without being overly restrictive. Bylaws with dimensional ranges and guidelines allow for the creation of consistent urban form while still allowing for individuality to find expression. For example, a bylaw could restrict the amount of paved surface in a rear yard to no more than 20%, leaving it up to the lot owner to determine how best to meet that guideline. Another requirement could be to have a rear fence that is between 1 and 2 meters in height, and no more. The type of material, the shape and pattern, and the colour is left entirely in the purview of the resident. Bylaws that attempt to guide individual expression and detailed visual aesthetic go too far and have no place in the chaotic world of the alley.

Alley Housing
Another regulatory mechanism that can have a major impact on life in an alley is allowing alley-housing. This can be accomplished by legalizing existing secondary suites and allowing new granny suites, or even allowing for the subdivision of lots and the creation of new housing facing directly onto the alley. Allowing habitation of an alley necessitates that the City pay much more attention to issues of maintenance and safety and security, and can require extensive physical interventions to bring the alley up to City standards.

Alleys that are purely residential can be assisted by reviewing obstacles and working to alleviate those conditions. Resurfacing an alley can increase access to garages and carports and provide a hard surface for neighbourhood children to play. If the surface is paved with interesting materials such as cobblestones or brick, this can add extra appeal and charm, particularly if this is coupled with an area-wide pedestrian amenity plan. Adding lights can eliminate shadowed areas and encourage night-time use by residents. Physical interventions done directly by the City are inherently tricky and must involve more community support and interaction to succeed.

Guidelines for Alley Design
Existing alleys must deal with the fact that people live in the area, use the alley on occasion and therefore have an opinion in what happens to it, and more importantly, how it will affect their property. New residential areas do not have that concern. Alleys in a new residential neighbourhood do not need to be developed and planned to the same level as streets, nor do they require extensive public consultation. However, it is strongly recommended that certain key physical features be included to maximize the immediate and long-term benefits to the neighbourhood. The optimum alley has the following minimum physical elements:


  • 6 Meter Right-of-Way: A low-to-medium density neighbourhood should have a right of way of at least six meters in width to allow for adequate open space, visual surveillance and access to rear lots. The width should not be increased greatly beyond six meters unless the alley is expected to handle excessive vehicle traffic to a high-density residential or commercial property.
  • Paved Carriageway: It is recommended that the carriageway be paved to allow for a multiplicity of uses by adjoining residents and to ease maintenance. Side-drainage is encouraged to allow run-off to disperse through permeable edging material in the buffer space, either gravel or paving stones. Speed bumps should be placed at the ends of the carriageway and in the middle, and be well-marked and illuminated. With a six meter right-of-way, the carriageway should be four meters in width and should not extend the full width of the right-of-way.
  • Landscaped Buffer: The buffer refers to the transition space between the carriageway and the lot line. In many alleys the buffer is zero, in others the buffer is approximately one meter in width or greater on either side of the carriageway. Lighting, service utilities and vegetation are the main components of the buffer; parking is less common but can occur. It is recommended that a one meter buffer be retained for the purposes of soft landscaping and drainage, and to act as a transition zone between the public carriageway and the private lot.
  • Pedestrian Illumination: Preferably, illumination should be designed to provide lighting to the entirety of the right-of-way and be reduced in height to conform to pedestrian lighting standards. It is recommended that full cut-off fixtures be used and placed no higher than 4 meters in height to avoid light intrusion and glare, and to allow for adequate horizontal illumination for facial recognition.
  • Utilities & Services in Alley: Services refer to electrical utilities, telephone, cable, and waste disposal. When possible, service utilities should be placed underground, accessed through utility boxes inset into adjoining lots but accessible from the right-of-way. Garbage receptacles should equally be inset within the limits of the adjoining property and be enclosed within a defined area for easy maintenance and access from the right-of-way.
  • Allow Vehicle Parking Access: Parking refers to vehicle storage both in private rear-lot stalls and in garages. Parking justifies the alley in terms of transportation linkages, rear lot access and vehicle storage, particularly in fairly dense residential environments such as found within an infill community. Parking should be included in the design of the alley and space made available for turning radiuses into private rear-lot spaces.
  • Permeable Fencing: Fencing is a method of delineating the limits of a property, separating uses from each other, providing privacy and maintaining a border between private and public space. Fence heights should be kept low, to less than 1.5 meters, and visual permeability should be retained.
  • 8 Meter Alleys for Commercial Activities: Alleys with commercial activity should be widened to handle increased traffic and larger service delivery vehicles, with the increase depending on the degree of activity. Alleys with a moderate level of activity (three or four businesses) should be designed with at least an 8-meter right-of-way.
Each alley has its own character and substance, and will experience a range of uses. Ensuring that the design is permissive of use of all varieties will ensure that the alley remains a successful addition to a neighbourhood.

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Valley of the Hot Springs

Last weekend my girlfriend and I travelled to the Kootenays to enjoy some hot springs and Kootenay hospitality. We had a wonderful time! Our day started early saturday with a drive down the winding Highway 6 fron Vernon to Needles, then across the short cable ferry and up to Nakusp. There, we stayed at the rustic, "seasoned" and full of character Leland Hotel, the oldest functioning hotel in BC. While in desperate need of a makeover, we had nothing but a wonderful experience at this fine place, with a warm, comfortable queen size bed and a view of the Arrow Lakes from our bay window that would charm the most hard-hearted of persons. We paid $60 for our night, and look forward to another wonderful stay in the future! Here's hoping though that they'll get some investment to do more work on the place. It is getting rundown, which is a terrible tragedy, as it is such a beautiful place.

That night, we drove up a winding, 8 kilometre road to the Nakusp Hot Springs, a beautiful pool in a valley setting, nestled in the deep woods. Before jumping in the pool we took the back woods trail acorss an old, rickety bridge over a roaring mountain canyon and climbed up a short trail to view the source. Not astoundingly impressive, but the woods were deep, dark and mysterious, and the hike put us in the mood for a soak. The Nakusp Hot Springs themselves are warm, soothing, and very relaxing. There are two pools - a large warm pool for comfortable relaxation, and a hot pool for draining away your stresses. We spent a long time jumping back and forth between both, enjoying the mineral spring water.

The next day found us travelling further south to New Denver, then across the pass to Kaslo. A more beautiful pass in the fall I have noy yet seen. Yellows, reds, shimmering golds and green treated our eyes as we drove, and still ponds and lakes invited us to stop and admire the rocky crags reflected in their waters. We visited Sandon - an old little historic place up a winding gravel road, famous for an old silver mine. Now, it appears to be not much more than an odd collection of rusting automobiles and the largest collection of vintage Vancouver Trolley Buses I have ever seen. I wouldn't put it high on my list for targetted sites, but to each their own.

Passing Kaslo (a cute and pretty town, perched above Kootenay Lake and with a wonderful view of the Purcell range), we arrived at Ainsworth Hot Springs. This pleasant springs is just off the highway and affords an expansive view of Kootenay Lake and the Purcells while you soak. Of particular interest is the horseshoe cave, whose dim interior you can swim through, if you can stand the heat and humidity, and brave yourself against the dark! A challenge is to paddle to the very far back corvner of the cave, where you can climb onto a hot ledge and stick your toes into a scalding waterfall. Unfortunately, Nakusp Hot Springs had spoiled us, and Ainsworth, while a worthy contender, couldn't quite measure up. So off we went to Nelson!

We stayed at the Dancing Bear Inn, a HI Hostel in the centre of Nelson. Nelson is a funky and very cool town, filled with character and characters, and a collection of architectural features that had me strolling everywehre looking at the lampposts, plaques, sidewalk ornamentation, terrace patios, and other features of note. Laid out in a rectlinear gridf pattern without concern for topography, Nelson's streets are guaranteed to pose a significant obstacle during the winter months! The Dancing Bear Inn, however, was a wonderful stay for us, and extremely comfortable. In fact, I will say it was the finest hostel I have ever been in, wonderfully restored and with friendly, helpful staff.

Our trip back home took us through the Slocan valley, where the highway climbed its way up to the edge of rocky cliffs and sheer embankments, affording us views of the lakes and valleys of the area. We passed through small towns, running linearly to the highway, some clusters of occasional development popping up around a coffee shop for no discernable reason - but we were glad to see them, and to say hello on occasion when the urge struck us.

Past Nakusp, we turned onto the Halfway Road where the highway crossed the Halfway River Delta, and slowly pressed up a long, windy and rock-strewn forest service road. For 11 kilometres we drove, until finally pulling over. We hiked down a long, steep mountainside, following the occasional blaze glimmering blue or orange in the moody light of the forest, until finally we stumbled out onto the Halfway River. There, where the river turned a dog leg and crashed headlong into a sheer cliff, we found several large, simmering pools of crystal clear hot springs which demanded our attention. We quickly leapt in to our delight, and spent several wonderful hours enjoying the beauty of nature and a refreshing soak.

Our final destination before home was Halcyon Hot Springs, about halfway between Nakusp and Revelstoke, on the Galena Bay side of the Arrow Lakes. The newest hot spring resort, it was a little more expensive, but we found a wonderfully enjoyable setup awaiting us when we came out of the change rooms. One large pool simmered with warm, soothing water, while a hot pool curved its way across the deck, inviting healing. A cold plunge pool stood off to the side, inviting a quick polar bear dip. We climbed into the warm pool and allowed a strong current to tug us around a slow course, while floating on handily provided foamies. The view looks west out over Arrow Lake, with the Monashees dominating the horizon. I can't wait to see what happens with Halcyon in the future. A wonderful new addition to the hot springs circuit, this is one resort I am sure I will visit time and time again. Three hours later, we were back home, rested, and looking forward to our next trip to the Kootenays!

October 03, 2005

Fun tongue-in-cheek comment on the miracle of ID from Dahlia Lithwick over at Slate:

But the critics are missing the beauty of this new theory. Because the really great thing about intelligent design is that it takes all the awkward uncertainty out of science. It says, "You know those damn theoretical gaps and conundrums that send microbiology graduate students into dank basement laboratories at 3 a.m.? They don't need to be resolved at all. Go back to bed, sleepy little grad students. God fills those gaps."

Slate Article

And to think I wasted all those years getting a graduate degree. Makes a lot of sense to me. I could use a few more hours of sleep.