Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Friday, February 7, 2025

CASA DO POETA SETABUL PORTUGAL

PERFECT LOCATION, GREAT PRICE POINT, 

LARGE ENOUGH FOR A FAMILY OF 3-4 TO LIVE IN -- NOT JUST VISIT!


Setubal is a gem and Casa do Poeta is in a vibrant location.

You are footsteps from an overlook of the entire waterfront, with a warm, locals bar-restaurants serving local seafood.

There are lots of small, free or low admission museums.

The restaurants are amazing and if you find a locals place, you may get a 5-course fresh seafood meal with wine for under 15 euros including tip.

The architecture is stunning.

This is the real Portugal.

And you are less than an hour's train ride or drive from Lisbon's large airport.

Thursday, February 6, 2025

CASA DO POETA SETABUL PORTUGAL

PERFECT LOCATION, GREAT PRICE POINT, 

LARGE ENOUGH FOR A FAMILY OF 3-4 TO LIVE IN -- NOT JUST VISIT!


I could have stayed a week or a month at this Casa do Poeta.

It is footsteps from a grand arch that leads to the main drag into the fascinating old town.

Just below the hill is the region's main boulevard -- Avenida Luisa Todi -- and all of its parks and amenities.

Casa do Poeta Setabul is a 5-minute walk to the famous choco frito restaurants. Maybe 10 to Praca Bocage, the place for visitors.

It's 15 minutes tops to get to Marcado Livramento -- one of the greatest public markets on earth.

The ferry to Troia is very close, as is the entire old town.

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

CASA DO POETA SETABUL PORTUGAL

PERFECT LOCATION, GREAT PRICE POINT, 

LARGE ENOUGH FOR A FAMILY OF 3-4 TO LIVE IN -- NOT JUST VISIT!


The only demerit in a sea of positives at Casa do Poeta Setabul was the tiny liquid soap dispenser in the bathroom.

Even unique, family-owned properties have figured out it's good hosting to have a large bottle of shampoo/bodywash mounted in the shower and a full bottle of hand soap in the bathroom sink.

On arrival, there was one dispenser, basically out of soap, by the sink.

This may have been an oversight by the cleaning crew -- but it forced me to waste 40 minutes walking to a grocery, waiting in checkout line and walking back...just to have soap and shampoo.

The neighborhood looks a bit dodgy with graffiti. Don't be put off.

The town is transforming and every other building is being renovated.

But I never heard noise from construction during the day or bars and night.

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

CASA DO POETA SETABUL PORTUGAL

PERFECT LOCATION, GREAT PRICE POINT, 

LARGE ENOUGH FOR A FAMILY OF 3-4 TO LIVE IN -- NOT JUST VISIT!


I was so fortunate to book this property.

The owners were fabulous about keeping in touch before I left the US and while I was in Portugal leading up to this visit and during my stay.

They shared many tips on places to see, things to eat, etc.

I'm a history buff and the apartment shares a wall with the birthplace of legendary Setubal and subversive poet and writer Manuel Maria Barbosa du Bocage, which serves as a museum to his works and also as an archive of photographer Americo Ribeiro.

The unit even comes with free parking if you can nab a spot at the next door church square.

Bed was comfy, AC worked well, kitchen facilities were top notch and shower had endless hot water.

Thursday, October 27, 2022

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Monday, October 24, 2022

Sunday, October 23, 2022

CARRIS HOTEL PORTO RIBEIRA

LUXURY IN THE PERFECT LOCATION FOR A FAIR PRICE

I asked for an early check-in, quiet room and small upgrade if available.

In return for barely more than 100 euros in high season, I was upgraded to a suite with 7 balconies.

I also got benefitted from very early check in, for a very tranquil and quiet room (despite a prime location with a fair amount of noise at street level)

The location is perfect -- crawling distance of Porto's Rio Douro riverfront and in the heart of the historic Ribeira district.

https://www.booking.com/hotel/pt/carris-porto-ribeira.html?aid=1664544&label=review_am&sid=ef59c27ba8cd54f9be48a5eb5408d352&all_sr_blocks=28064204_88537171_1_1_0;checkin=2022-09-30;checkout=2022-10-01;dest_id=280642;dest_type=hotel;dist=0;group_adults=1;group_children=0;hapos=1;highlighted_blocks=28064204_88537171_1_1_0;hpos=1;matching_block_id=28064204_88537171_1_1_0;no_rooms=1;req_adults=1;req_children=0;room1=A;sb_price_type=total;sr_order=popularity;sr_pri_blocks=28064204_88537171_1_1_0__18000;srepoch=1664289895;srpvid=055b67b2ea540298;type=total;ucfs=1&#hotelTmpl

Saturday, December 4, 2021

AUTHOR WIL HAYGOOD IS A NATIONAL TREASURE

COLORIZATION, HIS LATEST BOOK, IS A MUST-READ


Wil Haygood is one of America’s finest writers.

With each book, his storytelling grows more confident. His way with words that much more enticing and entertaining.

In addition to being an outstanding newspaper journalist with the Boston Globe and Washington Post, Haygood has produced several biographies of African Americans.

Colorization – One Hundred Years of Black Films in a White World, is not a book solely focused on racism. But racism in the film industry resonates all through the book. 

And spoiler alert: institutional and obscene racism didn’t end during World War II, during the great 1960s Civil Rights Movement, not with the rise of Spike Lee and frustrating – not well into the 21st century. 

Read my full review on Medium at:

https://stevewright-1964.medium.com/author-wil-haygood-is-a-national-treasure-colorization-his-latest-book-is-a-must-read-abefc83de686




Thursday, September 2, 2021

ST. MARK'S PLACE

EAST VILLAGE, NYC


Funky Town seems to fill a wide variety of needs of St. Mark’s Place habitues.

There are convenience store items.

There are tons of cool punk rock, new wave and other rock band T-shirts, stickers and patches.

In the back, they do body piercing.

All around, there are bongs, vaping gear and other things we used to call head shop products.

Also a lot of cheap sunglasses and nice, patient, polite workers there.

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

ST. MARK'S PLACE

EAST VILLAGE, NYC


Search & Destroy is a legendary punk rock clothing and accessories boutique.

Yes, that’s a bunch of dolls stacked in the window to look like dead, well…

And you probably see something vulgar in the image – half the photos on the entry foyer/door are obscene and it doesn’t get any less raw inside.

Famed for high prices and surly workers – plus dozens of signs telling you NOT to snap a picture inside – we’re not sure how this far from wheelchair-accessible, worst customer service in the neighborhood place survives.

But it is highly photogenic and part of the nabe’s punk history.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

ST. MARK'S PLACE

EAST VILLAGE, NYC


Established in 1990, Andromeda Studio 33 bills itself as one of the oldest and original bod mod shops in USA.

We hate tattoos, but love the colorful façade and characters at this walkup space.

Monday, August 30, 2021

ST. MARK'S PLACE

 EAST VILLAGE, NYC


Theatre 80 carries on a generational cultural function, which has helped to create the East Village from the Lower East Side of Manhattan.

When Theatre 80 was first envisioned and built at 80 Saint Marks Place, the neighborhood of the Lower East Side was a blighted area and the term East Village had yet to be coined.

We were among the first of the cultural institutions, which began the Lower East Side Arts Movement resulting in the neighborhood now being referred to as the East Village.

Beginning during Prohibition, 80 Saint Marks Place was a vital destination for performers of all kinds.

Jazz greats such as Thelonious Monk, Harry “Sweets” Edison, John Coltrane and Frank Sinatra performed here before Theatre 80 was established in the former nightclub. 

--from Theatre 80's website. There's also a gangster museum upstairs.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

ST. MARK'S PLACE

EAST VILLAGE, NYC


St. Mark's Place, named after the nearby St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery, is part of Eighth Avenue in Lower Manhattan. It’s named St. Mark’s Place between Third Avenue and Avenue A.

Still the land of misfits, it draws as many tourists and locals and the rents are no longer low.

A cloud of perpetual weed smell hangs in the air and competes with the scent of many Asian restaurants and other cuisine.

Referenced in the Replacement’s ode to the late Alex Chilton -- Checkin' his stash by the trash at St. Mark's place – the few blocks of history and discord also played host to great Broad City episode.

Sunday, June 18, 2017

ARA GÜLER

THE EYE OF ISTANBUL


As a photographer, I don't know when I first discovered the black and white images of Turkish photographer Ara Guler.

His mastery of light haunted me, in a good way, from the first time I looked at his images of Old Istanbul, often in the old Armenian neighborhoods now long lost to development.

My first time in Istanbul, I sought out galleries with his images and came how with a few modern books of his work.

On my very recent trip, I bought so much of his work that I knew it wouldn't fit in the suitcase.

So I went to a shipping agent and spent about 300 Turkish Lira to ship his stuff home.

After that, I vowed to put the buying on hold for my last few days in the city.

Then I went to explore a hotel's wheelchair access, near Taksim Square.

As headed toward Taksim Gezi Park, beyond the square, I noticed a carnival of sorts set up.

As is common for Ramazan in Turkey, most public squares set up large areas for dinners, shows and activities for the sundown breaking of the long day's fast.

A paved area next to Gezi had a carnival of crafts, food and antiques set up.

Try as I might, I was drawn to a row of book sellers.

One had tons of photography books.

Were I a wealthy man, I would have bought out the whole tent and sent it home in trunks.

As I am not, I looked for a special Guler book.

One of trams caught my attention.

It was especially poignant, as the nostalgic tram that goes from Taksim to Tunel along Istiklal Caddesi had been ripped out and taken away since my last visit.

Orhan Pamuk often writes of the Tramway through old Pera.

I settled on the book, haggled...paid way less than the opening price but probably more than I should have.

Worse yet, it is a hard back. Meaning my book bag, already stuffed with a sweater and thousands of dollars worth of high end Nikon lenses, would feel like an army back pack.

But hours later, near sundown, my purchase would pay off.

Istanbul Trams, trough Ara Güler's Eyes, is the translated title of the book of photography

link to great documentary about Guler

Thursday, March 5, 2015

LITTLE HAVANA REVITALIZATION IS A GOOD THING



BUT ANY REZONING MUST PRESERVE CHARACTER AND AUTHENTICITY

Editor's Note: We have known Bill Fuller for more than a decade. He is by far the most responsible developer in Miami. This week, we received an open letter from him, urging Little Havana stakeholders to demand more from the City of Miami before it upzones a portion of the neighborhood. Bill is a visionary who understands preservation, walkability and authenticity. He urges City leaders to slow down and do more to protect the authenticity of Little Havana, so speculators do not build out-of-scale development.  We note that some of our town planning friends support the pending upzoning as is.  Our publishing of Bill Fuller's letter is not a blanket endorsement of everything he is suggesting, but the essence of his ideas is brilliant -- so we are publicizing his careful thoughts here:

Dear fellow stakeholders, 

We are at a critical moment that will forever impact the future of our beloved Little Havana. 
Before we rush into upzoning and historic designation recently initiated by the City of Miami, we should slow down and carefully study all of the impacts on existing and future: residents, buildings, businesses, scale and way of life. 

Any designation of historic preservation or upzoning should come in tandem with a “conservation district” overlay that will prescribe the look and feel of future developments surrounding historic Little Havana.  

As stakeholders who love everything Little Havana is and can be, we must make sure that future developments are consistent with the context and character of the neighborhood.  

An overlay, that will preserve what is good and improve what needs to be enhanced, must include strong guidelines that regulate:

·         The architectural style of new developments 
·         The size, scale, style and character of public spaces
·         Mixed-use development that encourages ground floor retail with residences above
·         Land use in a way that preserves the walkable urban fabric that has served the neighborhood for a century
·         Out of scale uses, such as superblock developments that vacate streets, or supersized retail sites that that destroy the very urban flavor that has made the area so desirable to investors 

Little Havana is a neighborhood known throughout the world.

Locals and visitors alike adore it for arts, culture and authenticity.

Adaptive re-use, properly-scaled infill development and growth that accommodates a healthy range of household incomes are not only welcomed, they should be encouraged by legislation that accommodates them without ruining the neighborhood’s diverse flavor.

While there certainly is room for national retailers, they should not be allowed to destroy Little Havana’s world-renown character by building standard, off the shelf suburban buildings with seas of parking for their drug stores, banks and restaurants.

The City of Miami’s landmark Miami 21 zoning code was passed with the explicit intent of preserving all the wonderful human scale, unique architecture and mainstreet business corridors that make its diverse neighborhoods unique.

Sadly, since Miami 21, the City’s most famous street – Calle Ocho – has been violated by a parade of suburban-style, boring buildings that do nothing to preserve and enhance the beloved historic character of Little Havana. 

Soon, another development by a national company headquartered hundreds of miles from Miami will build a suburban, drive-through monstrosity on Calle Ocho.  This bank, on the corner of SW 12th Avenue and SW 8th street, will have nothing in common with the architectural style and scale that made Calle Ocho the spiritual heart of the city.

These suburban developments destroy the very authenticity that draws artists, entrepreneurs, innovators, startup restaurants and visitors to Little Havana.

A well-crafted overlay must be created within Miami 21 and it must have teeth enough to prevent the remaining good city blocks from being destroyed.  

Several established media sources have reported that a group that operates car dealerships has assembled a lot of land in the part of Little Havana that the City of Miami is fast tracking for an upzoning.

Car dealerships create jobs and commerce. They have their place in greater Miami. No one is saying otherwise.

But can you imagine a huge car dealership -- with its sea of asphalt to display cars and accommodate customers, street trees savagely clear cut to open a view to the giant showroom and architecturally obscene compound of repair bays, body shop and more – taking up several blocks in our newly-minted residential historic district?

This is not a case of wanting to impose Coral Gables-like zoning and beautification standards on the proud working class neighborhoods of Little Havana.

This is simply a matter of drawing the line and demanding that horrifically out of scale superblock developments do not destroy our neighborhood.

City leaders would not dare allow a giant auto dealership, or super warehouse club retailer in any of the dozens of historic and significant neighborhoods that define our diverse Miami.

So why should Little Havana’s people get second- or third-class treatment by imposing a monstrosity that would destroy livability for several blocks in every direction?

But a car dealership or other quality-of-life crushing superblock development will soon be a reality if we do not push the City of Miami to place a use restriction on developments that endanger the vision have for our preserved and re-energized neighborhood.  

We support logical progress. But we must ask our city to slow down, so we stakeholders can determine exactly what the strategy is being considered. We must determine whether it is a holistic approach for the neighborhood, or tweak to benefit only a few deep-pocketed investors.

I have not seen one developer or champion of the upzoning come forward to explain its holistic benefit to our community.

I strongly support historic preservation. But I fear a proposed historic district, without considering the entire neighborhood, is a smoke screen created to placate skeptics while deflecting our attention from the true core issue of a city rushing to upzone a neighborhood coveted by speculators.

As stakeholders that have worked hard to preserve Little Havana’s authenticity, I do not believe we can support a rush to upzone.

I urge you to stand united in our demand for a holistic rezoning plan that preserves the character of the neighborhood we so dearly love.

Sincerely,

Bill Fuller
Miami native, preservationist, investor in adaptive re-use buildings and vigilant activist to preserve the heritage and authenticity of Little Havana

                                                                       Bill Fuller




Wednesday, December 19, 2012

THE ST. REGIS MEXICO CITY – PART 14


SIMPLY THE BEST HOTEL

All we want for Christmas – this year and every year – is a barrier-free room and second-to-none staff at the Mexico City St. Regis.

The St. Regis Mexico City
439 Paseo de la Reforma
Colonia Cuauhtemoc

Phone: (52)(55) 5228 1818


http://www.starwoodhotels.com/stregis/property/overview/index.html?propertyID=1735&language=en_en&PS=GWS_aa_Starwood_StRegis_1735MexicoCity_English_Google_St_regis_Mexico_City_052009