Monday, July 31, 2017
POIGNANT MESSAGE ON THE BACKSTREETS OF BEYOGLU, ISTANBUL
GOT $ FOR WARS, CAN'T FEED THE POOR
Paused to take a picture of a bakery opening to sell special loaves for Ramazan, when I saw this 60s-looking street art.
Wish I could share the back story, but I don't know it.
Certainly, in times of Trump and other leaders who corrupted elections to deny democracy while edging toward dictatorship, a poignant piece of art.
Ironic that it's on a street, named for a general who fought both for the Ottoman Empire and in the war of Turkish Independence.
Wonder if the artist did that on purpose, or if was just a blank wall big enough to host his political message in the form of eye-catching street art.
Sunday, July 30, 2017
PUBLIC VISIONING WORKSHOP
HOSTED BY COCONUT GROVE BID
PlusUrbia Design proud to lead this visioning workshop.
Stay tuned for an action plan to improve the commercial core and beyond.
Thanks to the BID for its support.
Thanks to partners Perkins+Will and Metric Engineering.
Great turnout -- packed house for half a day!
Wonderful to see so many old friends and to make so many new ones.
Very diverse group at the workshop.
http://plusurbia.com/grovesurvey/
Saturday, July 29, 2017
Hialeah TOD selected for APA Florida Award of Merit
BOUTIQUE STUDIO IN MIAMI WINS 10TH DESIGN AWARD IN TWO YEARS
PlusUrbia Design’s vision for Transit Oriented Development (TOD) in South Florida has been selected for an American Planning Association (APA) of Florida Award of Merit in the Neighborhood Planning category.
The
prestigious statewide honor recognizes the studio’s collaboration with the City
of Hialeah’s Planning Department to create more than 300 acres of compact,
walkable, mixed-use development connected to a pair of commuter rail stations.
The plan,
unanimously approved by the City Council and fully implemented, crafted
guidelines that transition two warehouse districts into vibrant communities.
The 24-hour
communities create civic space, jobs and affordable/attainable housing for
young professionals, empty nesters and families. Developers are already
entitling land within the new guidelines.
“This
couldn’t have been accomplished without the visionary leadership of Hialeah’s
Mayor, Council Members and Planning Department,’’ – Maria Bendfeldt, Project
Director.
“We look
forward to exporting the innovations created for this project to hundreds of
Florida cities that could benefit from TOD regulations and urban design for
main street corridors.”
The TOD is
anchored by Tri-Rail’s Market Station and Transfer Station, which also connects
with Metrorail and Amtrak – enabling commuting to regional employment hubs.
These new districts will increase city tax base while featuring some of the
best rail connectivity in all of South Florida.
The award
will be presented during APA’s statewide conference in September, in Daytona
Beach – where PlusUrbia’s Juan Mullerat and Megan McLaughlin will be key
presenters on healthy urban design and revitalization.
Friday, July 28, 2017
ISTANBUL KADIKOY, NOT KARIKOY
DOs and DO NOTs
DO
Go to
Kadikoy -- the best port to visit on the Asian side.
Walk less
than a kilometer, to the blocks and blocks of open air markets.
Get meze
(tapas) or Lahmacun, a very flat crispy dough with minced meat on it.
You roll it
up with fresh basil and salad….kinda like folding over a slice pizza in
NYC.
While in
Kadikoy, find the nostalgic tram and take it to MODA.
Moda is
upper middle class families – like Park Slope and hipsters – like Williamsburg….expect
everything is 1/4 the cost of NYC.
Shop for
vintage clothes, go to the tea gardens overlooking the point where the
Bosphorus Straits spill into the Sea of Marmara.
DO NOT
Confuse
Karikoy -- the waterfront part of Galata, which has both touristy restaurants
on the water, then some of the best young chef-driven restaurants toward the
former industrial port -- with Kadikoy on the Asian side.
Though both
are top 12 spots to visit via ferry.
Thursday, July 27, 2017
ISTANBUL FERRIES AND FAR-FLUNG THINGS
DOs and DO NOTs
DO
Go to the
Eminonu docks.
Your transportation
smart card works at every ferry station.
Ferries are
still a major source of transportation.
It’s like 50
Staten Island ferries all in use at the same time, honking, ringing bells,
belching smoke - -what cities are about.
The
destination and time of departure is clearly listed.
You really
don’t need English speaking assistance.
DO NOT
Get conned
into going to the modern malls in the suburbs.
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
ISTANBUL CUISINE
DO
Expect a lot
more from Turkish cuisine that pita, doner kebap, hummus and similar Mediterranean/Middle
East fare.
Fish, caught
in the nearby Black Sea and Sea of Marmara, is divine.
Go for Turbot.
It’s not
like Mediterranean Turbot.
It has sharp
disks on its outer skin -- and is served whole.
But it is
superior because the black sea is less salty, so the meat is more succulent.
DO NOT
Go home
without going up to a (city licensed) street vendor selling street food.
Best bets:
Simits -- wider,
flatter sesame seed bagels without cream cheese.
Misir -- corn
on the cob, roasted or boiled.
Kestane -- chestnuts, roasted, best at night when
the cool breezes drift in off the Bosphorus.
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
ISTANBUL HAMAMS
DO
Go to a hamam.
You will do no better than Kılıç Ali Paşa.
For about 50
bucks, you will get a full treatment.
An
ill-advised road widening demolished the women’s bath.
So now it’s
females sun up till 4 p.m., males 4:30 p.m. till an hour before midnight.
It is clean,
comfortable, authentic and designed by Sinan, the greatest Islamic architect of
all time.
It’s next to
a fabulous mosque and footsteps from the Tophane station of the T1 tram line.
Some very
artsy, creative restaurants are between Ali Pasa Hamami and the nearby Bosphorus
-- for that limonata and tost after the pampering Turkish Bath experience.
DO NOT
Go to the
Turkish Bath on Sultanahmet plaza.
It caters
only to tourists.
The cheapest
treatment is about 100 USD and it’s over before you know it.
The
well-located bath is beautiful inside and out, but skip it.
Also avoid
the Galatasaray Hamam.
It is
convenient on the Beyoglu side of town, but is a tourist trap.
Staff will
rush you, then nail you for a 30 USD tip when a Turk is giving them a less than
30 Turkish Lira tip.
Monday, July 24, 2017
ISTANBUL EXPLORATION
DO
Ride the T1 tram across the Galata Bridge to Beyoglu.
Beyoglu is the “new” city across the
Golden Horn.
New as in a tower there is hundreds of
years old.
But it’s older than the Old City.
Get off at the Karikoy stop, use the
underpass and get on the world’s 2nd oldest subway – a one-stop
funicular up the hill.
When you get out, if you walk a tiny
bit back down the hill past the souvenir shops you will be in one of the
youngest hippest areas – Tunel.
If head north after exiting the
funicular, you are on the pedestrian Istiklal Caddesi (Independence Avenue).
It’s about a kilometer long and is the
old Parisian style area of the old upper middle class.
It has chain stores, street vendors,
pastry shops, great architecture, state run cheap book stores and historic
sites all over.
The midpoint of the avenue, where Galatasaray
Lycee sits, is a great place to head off on a side alley and walk the back
streets of Beyoglu.
It ends at Taksim Square.
DO NOT
Stay in Taksim Square.
Though it is well-located for transit
and a public park away from a smattering of chain-flagged hotels, the fringe of
Taksim after dark is getting seedy.
Sunday, July 23, 2017
ISTANBUL DISCOUNTS AND TIPS
DO
Buy a museum card.
It’s good for five days and costs 85
Turkish Lira -- about $25 USD.
Go to two museums and it pays for
itself.
It also lets you cut the line.
The pass includes Topkapi, Ayasofya
and many other top-drawer cultural treasures.
DO NOT
Engage in a conversation with a man
speaking English around the famous museums and Blue Mosque.
He will tell you the mosque is closed
(you cannot visit during the 5 prayer times, but he will fib about it being
closed all day).
He is a carpet tout.
He will offer you tea (far superior to
Turkish coffee).
He will try to sell you a pricey
Turkish carpet – even if you tell him you are allergic to the fabric.
Saturday, July 22, 2017
ISTANBUL SHOPPING
DOs and DO NOTs
DO
Explore the informal markets that pop
up on streets, alleys in car parks and all over.
The Sunday market in Ferikoy is
legendary and can be reached via subway and 1 KM walk.
Ortakoy’s fashion-oriented Thursday
evening market takes you to a famous waterside mosque.
DO NOT
Expect to buy anything but souvenirs
at the Grand Bazaar.
The only exception is silver, which is
sold by weight no matter how much craftsmanship has gone into forging the final
bracelet, necklace, etc.
If you pay more than 50 percent of the
initial offer, you have likely made a fool of yourself and given the shopkeeper
his day’s profit margin.
Friday, July 21, 2017
ISTANBUL IMMERSIVE TRAVEL
DO
Explore the narrow alleys around
Sirkeci.
Sirkeci’s restaurants are half the
price and three times the quality of Sultanahment (the area with Ayasofya, Topkapi,
Blue Mosque, Hippodrome and Basilica Cistern).
Sirkeci has a T1 transit stop.
In two stops, you are at Sultanahmet.
In three, Cemberlitas and its markets.
In four – the Grand Bazaar.
So in a matter of minutes via low cost
tram, you can be at all the historic attractions while sleeping and dining in
more authentic Sirkeci.
DO NOT
Stay somewhere way up in the business
districts of Sisli or Nisantasi.
Unless you are on a business trip and
only will be meeting with multinational companies in those areas, don’t book
your stay in these districts.
Thursday, July 20, 2017
ISTANBUL TOURISTY VS. A REAL NEIGHBORHOOD
DO
Consider staying in Sirkeci vs.
Sultanahmet.
Sirkeci is named for the
still-standing famous Ottoman train station that used to be the final stopping
point of the Orient Express.
The working class area is still tourist-friendly
(people will speak baby English to help you figure things out and backup menus
in English are available).
DO NOT
Stay or eat, unless starving, in
Sultanahmet.
The 3 star hotels tend to have a flaw
in Sultanahmet, be it offering over priced rooms or being too noisy.
Restaurants offer standard Turkish
fare, but it’s not the real thing.
Sultanahmet restaurants cater purely
to the tourist trade.
A pide will be an airport quality
pizza.
A Lokantasi will be a 3rd
rate steam table cafeteria.
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
ISTANBUL TRANSIT
DOs and DO NOTs
Plan on using public transit.
Loading 50 Turkish Lira of a smart
card will give you enough rides to use the subway, tram system, and ferries on
the Bosphorus.
The smart card even covers the 1
Turkish Lira entry fee to a clean public restroom.
All mosques have public water closets.
They are spotless clean.
DO NOT
Pay 40 euros for a car service from
Ataturk Airport to your hotel.
Even if you are splitting it 4 ways,
you are spending about 13 bucks each, plus driver tip, for a trip that will
take twice as long as the train.
The subway is connected to the
airport.
You can load up a smart card – with
English directions – before entering the train.
You make one easy stop to the subway
line that goes into the old city.
It’s about 1 USD for a one way subway
ride.
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
ISTANBUL HOTELS
DO
Stay at a mom and pop hotel.
The old city if flush with 50 room,
family-operated 3 to 3.5 star hotels.
The room will be small but super clean
and efficient.
Most have a terrace with views of
Bosphorus, City, Sultanahmet Square, etc.
Some have very good Turkish breakfast
– olives, peppers, cheeses, French bread, jams and my favorite – simits.
Hotel Niles is a favorite. It’s a
10-minute walk to the Grand Bazar and more important – the Beyazit Square T1
tram.
DO NOT
Stay at a chain hotel.
With the decline in American and
Western Tourism, there are plenty of flagged hotels with $100 USD rooms, which
is tempting.
But you will have a cookie cutter
building, lobby, room, common areas – yuck.
Monday, July 17, 2017
ISTANBUL FLIGHTS
DOs and DO NOTs
Fly Turkish Airlines.
The carrier is consistently voted the
best in Europe.
Coach has decent leg room and a video
screen with hundreds of movies and more – including subtitled Turkish cinema to
get in the spirit of your journey.
DO NOT
Try to save a few hundred bucks
roundtrip by doing a connecting flight.
From the Eastern Standard Time zone, you
already are in the air 11 hours and losing 7 hours of time zone
Why prolong it another 4-6 hours with
a stop, layover and change of planes in Paris, Frankfort, etc.?
Sunday, July 16, 2017
COCONUT GROVE SURVEY
SHARE YOUR VISION
Fill out
this survey to let us know more about your vision for Coconut Grove.
Visit PlusUrbia Design's website to begin the survey.
Attend the visioning workshop starting 9:30 a.m. July 29 at CocoWalk.
Saturday, July 15, 2017
GLAMOUR HOTEL -- 3
SIRKECI, ISTANBUL
A Glamour Hotel single room is small -- about 150 square feet. The bathrooms are extremely small.
A Glamour Hotel single room is small -- about 150 square feet. The bathrooms are extremely small.
But you're not in one of the world's greatest cities to linger in
the room.
You simply want clean, quiet, convenient, well-staffed and
efficient.
Glamour gets at least 4.5 stars of 5 in each of those categories.
A stay during Ramazan was about $60 per night -- taxes and
breakfast included.
The area is amazingly quiet -- and Istanbul is a pretty noisy
city.
The bedding was excellent -- comfortable as a 5-star palace and
3-star prices.
The AC worked fine and there was an empty mini fridge, which came
in handy for storing bottled water, soda and gourmet chocolate.
The best thing is the restaurants are far less expensive than the
more touristy Sultanahmet or Beyoglu areas.
The food is even better and you will be eating among locals in
Hocapasa Mahallesi.
I'd venture to say that locals outnumbered visitors 4 to 1 on the
narrow, pedestrian streets around the Glamour Hotel.
http://www.glamourhotel.com/
http://www.glamourhotel.com/