Thursday, January 16, 2025

SUSTAINABILITY SOLUTIONS IN THE SUNSHINE STATE

EVERYBODY WINS WHEN FLORIDA’S 

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT IS PROTECTED


Though Miami Beach’s permanent population is only about 80,000, its total taxable value has soared above $50 billion.

With a land mass of less than eight square miles, it is walkable, densely populated, but only four feet above sea level.

Some of the most valuable residential and commercial real estate in the U.S. is vulnerable to both sunny-day tidal flooding and paralyzing flooding simply when it gets heavy rains.

 

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

SUSTAINABILITY SOLUTIONS IN THE SUNSHINE STATE

EVERYBODY WINS WHEN FLORIDA’S 

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT IS PROTECTED


In Pasco County, Starkey Ranch’s master plan avoids tract housing and strip center retail while using 95% native plants in the 2,500-acre development.

Dix.Hite+Partners designed a community that connects people to nature. Boardwalks and pedestrian bridges float through nature without disrupting the land.

Rather than huge suburban lawns that require intense watering and chemicals to maintain, the community’s greenery is focused on a permanent wilderness preserve donated by the Starkey family.


Tuesday, January 14, 2025

SUSTAINABILITY SOLUTIONS IN THE SUNSHINE STATE

EVERYBODY WINS WHEN FLORIDA’S 

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT IS PROTECTED


In Central Florida, which has plenty of waterways, but an elevation much higher than Florida’s coastal communities, a team of planners, developers, horticulturists, universities and nonprofits is looking at suburban building patterns that conserve land and water, while protecting nature and creating sustainable landscape practices.

 The Outside Collaborative, a proactive nonprofit group in Central Florida, promotes resiliency subdivision by subdivision.

Knowing that the combination of rapid growth, chemical runoff and saltwater infiltration threatens Florida’s sustainable freshwater supply, the collaborative has created a pattern book filled with designs that minimize or eliminate irrigation, fertilizer and pesticides.

 

 

Monday, January 13, 2025

SUSTAINABILITY SOLUTIONS IN THE SUNSHINE STATE

EVERYBODY WINS WHEN FLORIDA’S 

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT IS PROTECTED


Monroe County, which has a Resilience Officer, commissioned a roadway vulnerability assessment for the 311 miles of county-maintained roadways.

They addressed ways to protect property in the face of rising water during king tides and other sea-level-rise events.

The estimated cost to elevate roads and add a stormwater system is upwards of $4 billion.

But the Keys do not have a large tax base.

While leaders lobby for state and federal dollars, they understand the concept Adam Smith shared at one of NAR’s Sustainability Summits.

“We can’t afford not to champion sustainability.

Adaptation can cost billions, but doing nothing comes at a much more staggering cost,” said Smith, a leading climate expert at NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information

Sunday, January 12, 2025

SUSTAINABILITY SOLUTIONS IN THE SUNSHINE STATE

EVERYBODY WINS WHEN FLORIDA’S 

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT IS PROTECTED


In the Florida Keys, water is both a blessing and a curse. 

The narrow land mass—a 120-mile-long string of tropical islands with coastline on each side of it—has created a fun in the sun gold mine where nearly 50% of Monroe County residents work in the tourism industry.

But the 80,000 people who call the Keys home year-round are experiencing sunny-day flooding—roads made impassible by tidal activity—no tropical storm rainfall required.

Sea levels in Monroe County have risen nearly four inches from 2000-2017.

A net additional six to 13 inches has been projected from 2018 to 2040, according to Monroe County government statistics.

Saturday, January 11, 2025

THE CITY OF MIAMI ROUTINELY ALLOWS MILLIONS IN RENOVATIONS

WHILE APPROVING FAULTY WHEELCHAIR ACCESS 

THAT FAILS ALL THE TIME

This is what happens when you segregate the wheelchair accessible entrance from the main entrance in an urban area.

An impenetrable gauntlet of human waste, broken glass and homeless person’s bedding.

When a city allows adaptive reuse of a building, but permits lousy wheelchair access – it is ableism at its worst.

Millions of dollars were spent converting an old post office into a craft brewery in downtown Miami.

The excuse is historic preservation prevents an appropriate ramp at the main entrance.

It’s total BS.

Stairs are NOT historic.

Facades are.

Friday, January 10, 2025

SUSTAINABILITY SOLUTIONS IN THE SUNSHINE STATE

EVERYBODY WINS WHEN FLORIDA’S 

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT IS PROTECTED


Protecting real estate is of the upmost importance, but when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposed gray, 10- to 30-foothigh seawalls as flood barriers, the Miami Downtown Development Authority took another tact.

They commissioned a landscape architecture firm. As an alternative to view-destroying sea walls,

Curtis + Rogers Design Studio proposed nature-based solutions, such as living shorelines, natural breakwaters, nearshore artificial reefs and some raised seawalls.

The approach also would add 39 acres of waterfront, eco-friendly park land for the citizens of Miami.