KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
The Great Synagogue on Maarif Caddesi, which was built in 1906, has been restored and reopened to the public.
KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
The Great Synagogue on Maarif Caddesi, which was built in 1906, has been restored and reopened to the public.
KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
The third capital of the Ottoman Empire, Edirne is near Turkey’s boarders with Greece and Bulgaria.
KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
The Mihran Hanım Konağı on Gazipaşa Caddesi has undergone a careful restoration.
KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
Beyond the timbered houses, Kaleici also boasts some stone civic buildings.
KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
Kaleici Ottoman houses date from the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries.
NATIONAL PET DAY
From the
Kaleici historic district in Edirne, Turkey.
KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
The district dates to the medieval period and is the heart of the old city.
KALEICI DISTRICT EDIRNE, TURKEY
Kaleici in Edirne describes the old streets south of Talat Pasa Caddessi and west of Saraclar Caddessi.
We are his distance adoption guardians
RockNRoll is
our latest distance adoption cat at the Largo Torre Argentina Cat Sanctuary in
the heart of Rome.
He came to
the shelter, which is among ancient and very historic ruins, with his brother
RockABilly.
Sadly, RockABilly
passed away earlier this year.
RockNRoll is
our adopted boy, as we send Euros to help provide for his care including food, shelter
and vet visits.
What we contribute
doesn’t begin to match the needs of the gattara – the ladies (and gentleman)
who care for hundreds of stray cats in the most modest of conditions and with
no help from the government of Rome.
To find out
more about distance adoption, click here
https://www.gattidiroma.net/web/en/distance-cat-adoption-from-rome-largo-argentina-cat-sanctuary/
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
Founded out of a passion for public sector excellence, Best Practice Cities (www.bestpracticecities.com) is a strategic and innovative association of high-integrity, high-performing experts that help local governments reach and sustain operational and organizational success.
It is led by Cathy Swanson-Rivenbark, who served as City Manager for two dynamic full-service South Florida cities.
In addition to designing successful strategic plans and
operational alignments that are still followed today, she led economic
development activities resulting in multimillion-dollar private sector
investments, diversification of the economic base, enhanced quality of life and
increased property values.
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
Swanson-Rivenbark
praised Bober for his leadership and the Commission’s political courage to
allow a professionally-run RFP process that addressed the public’s need for transparency.
"The true test of a public/private redevelopment is not a signed deal or completed construction – it is once it’s fully operational and you can ask the question: `did it capture the dreams, fulfill the goals and meet the expectations of the community?’,” she said.
“For Margaritaville and Hollywood Beach, it’s a
resounding `yes’.”
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
Debra Case
-- owner of Ocean Alley restaurant and bar -- has served as president of the
Hollywood Beach Association, a small business organization, and as a Hollywood
City Commissioner. She said the beach had a lot of slum and blight before the
Margaritaville project.
“Margaritaville opened and all of a sudden, people were here. Mom and pop shops have cleaned up, put in landscaping and tapped into CRA grants to upgrade,” said Case.
“Cathy Swanson-Rivenbark pulled us up by the bootstraps. If she hadn’t gotten
Margaritaville off the ground, we may not have an anchor here in the central
beach.”
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
“The proof
of success is all the redevelopment that occurred on Johnson Street and up and
down the central broadwalk,” Tabatchnick said.
“When this
effort started, no new hotels had been built for over a decade and it was the
2009 financial crisis,” he said. “When Margaritaville opened, people had
confidence in investing capital. One of the key reasons for the RFP was to
encourage other redevelopment and upgrades at the small properties.”
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
Bober said Margaritaville has transformed the beach and created the spinoff development and reinvestment that it promised.
“But for the tenacity -- within the context
of a very difficult economy – of Cathy Swanson-Rivenbark, myself and the
developer, I don’t think this project would have come to fruition.”
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
Lon Tabatchnick, who developed Margaritaville in partnership with Starwood Capital, from concept to opening in 2015, said the project delivered everything promised, including a resort with a coveted Four Diamond rating.
Margaritaville
enhances the beach with free concerts at the historic bandshell at the edge of
the resort and it achieves a goal of linking the ocean to the Intracoastal
Waterway – with a water taxi stop at the resort’s 5 o'Clock Somewhere Bar &
Grill on the intracoastal.
Peter Bober, who served as Mayor of Hollywood during the successful redevelopment process, said Margaritaville revitalized a care-worn but storied property that dates back to the founding years of the city.
The site once was home to Florida’s
largest bathing pavilion, the Hollywood Beach Casino, that featured a shopping
arcade and Olympic-sized swimming pool.
Margaritaville is the greatest thing to happen to Hollywood Beach since the 1920s,” Bober said.
“It’s a textbook example of how a public/private partnership can actually
happen with the public being completely engaged in the process. The finished
product exceeded my wildest expectations.”
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
The Margaritaville development created hundreds of jobs, a revenue stream for the city that will be worth hundreds of millions and an activity generator that has boosted tourism in the historic beach district between the Atlantic Ocean and Intracoastal Waterway.
“In 2009, the City of Hollywood was teetering on bankruptcy. City attempts to develop the parcel that became Margaritaville had failed three times.
The result is a
99-year lease agreement that provides the City's General Fund with a
significant revenue stream, a 1,000-car parking garage for beach visitors, a catalyst
for additional private sector investment and increased foot traffic for
hundreds of small Hollywood Beach businesses,” said Cathy Swanson-Rivenbark.
BEST PRACTICE CITIES' CATHY SWANSON-RIVENBARK LED COMPLEX PROCESS THAT CREATED WINNING PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
A top 10
ranking in Conde Nast Traveler, AAA Four Diamond status and resilience through
the pandemic have proven the Margaritaville Hollywood Beach Resort to be one of
the best public/private redevelopment projects in the nation.
Best
Practice Cities (www.bestpracticecities.com) Founding principal Cathy
Swanson-Rivenbark, while serving as City Manager for Hollywood Florida, steered
the project through uncharted and difficult waters.
Her
leadership created not only the #7 resort among all Florida resorts ranked by
Conde Nast readers, but also an anchor for redevelopment and reinvestment that
has kept hundreds of small businesses on Hollywood Beach alive even in
unmatched challenges during COVID-19.
PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS
By promoting accessibility, communities not only support populations who wish to age in place; they also create more flexible, sustainable housing for all.
This feeds
into the late architect Ron Mace's concept of Universal Design, which is
defined as design usable by all people to the greatest extent possible, without
the need for adaptation or specialization.
"We know that an overwhelming majority of older adults desire to remain in their current homes," Peters says.
"It makes sense to plan on someone
having a mobility disability, whether due to accident, illness, or age."
PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS
"There is at least a 60 percent probability that a newly built single-family home today will have at least one person with a disability living in it in the next 50 years,"
says Brian Peters, community access and policy specialist for
IndependenceFirst, a disability advocacy and resource center in Milwaukee.
Many planners and elected officials think accessible housing is only needed by people with existing disabilities, Peters says,
but according to a 2018 AARP
survey, while 76 percent of Americans over the age of 50 want to age in place
in their current residence, a third of those surveyed say it won't be possible
without major, often expensive modifications, like in the bathroom above.
PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS
Builder groups often oppose visitability mandates, claiming they'll halt construction of new homes.But Smith says the notion is patently false.
She points to Pima
County, Arizona; the village of Bolingbrook, Illinois; and other municipalities
where accessible and visitable homes have held and increased in value, and new
home starts have not been stifled by existing visitability ordinances and requirements
there.
While it is
unclear exactly how many homes have been constructed with visitability
standards across the country, Smith says more than 60,000 were built under the
regulations she championed in these areas and others in the last 30 years.
PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS
Eleanor Smith |
Eleanor Smith, the founder of nonprofit Concrete Change, created the concept of visitability: homes that are not fully accessible, but have one level entrance, a wide threshold, and an accessible bathroom on the ground floor.
The photo above shows these external design features, which make it possible for someone who uses a wheelchair to visit neighboring houses that would otherwise be inaccessible to them.
"I
oppose [visitability] incentives — [they] must be mandated for new construction
of every house in a city or county," says Smith, who uses a wheelchair for
mobility.
PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS
Studio Pacifica |
Accessible units aren't reserved for people with disabilities (PWD), so inventory doesn't meet demand. Local governments need to create databases where accessible units can be listed when they become available, she says.
"It would be ideal if units were listed when available for rent or sale, and if units could be held for a period of time to allow PWD preference," says Braitmayer, who uses a wheelchair for mobility.
Tax or floor area ratio (FAR,
which is typically calculated by dividing the gross floor area of a building by
the total buildable area of the piece of land upon which it is built)
incentives to build accessible single-family housing could be provided, with an
emphasis on properties that have low slope routes to public transit or
walkability to retail centers.
WE RENEW OUR PLEA TO STOP SCOFFLAWS FROM USING ACCESSIBLE PARKING SPACES THAT THEY DO NOT NEED OR DESERVE
Half the vehicles parked in accessible spaces in South Florida don’t belong there.
Young people
“borrow” placards of dead relatives to get a prime space.
Selfish able-bodied
jackasses use placards of legitimately disabled family members (who are not
present to make use of the blue and white placard legal) to avoid paying for
parking.
This denies
access to people with disabilities who need safe, van-width parking.
May karma
deal swiftly with them.
Quoth the
Raven: Nevermore.
PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS
Karen L. Braitmayer, FAIA |
Five percent of multifamily units in Washington State must have fully
accessible bathing features, turning space in the bathroom, knee space at the
bathroom and kitchen sink, work space with knee space and lowered counters, and
all operable controls on appliances within the reach range.
PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS
"DON's mantra is 'Living at home in the community of your choice is a big part of the American Dream.'
The area has a lot of housing in bad condition.
As a nonprofit, we can get them for about 100 bucks from the land bank," says Court Hower, DON's executive vice president of community resources and development.
"We are creating inclusion. We are rehabbing them and making them fully accessible."