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What makes a city smart? September 15, 2014

Filed under: Real Estate,Uncategorized — tracee ribar @ 3:40 pm

Everyone wants to live in a smart place. But the magic mix that draws people in is composed of a lot of different dynamics coming together all at once, according to the National Geographic Channel’s Smart Cities program.

“A city needs a heart and soul—typically the center, where people congregate for work and leisure. Smart cities are well-connected locally and internationally, have a sustainable lifestyle, and are places where people come first,” says Ian MacFarlane, consultant for the program.

National Geographic’s Traveler magazine recently compiled a list of the 50 top attributes that make for a smart city, naming cities that exemplify each factor along the way. Of course, the authors were thinking of travel destinations when they put the list together, but many items on their list matched attributes that make for a top place to live, too. Here are a few that resonated with the U.S. real estate industry:

Support for local artisans. Example: Paducah, Ky. was recently named a UNESCO City of Crafts and Folk Art for its promotion of its fiber arts assets and its attempts to attract creative types to its LowerTown Arts District.
Dreamers who foster innovation. Example: San Francisco is a city that has more than its fair share of tech start-ups and their eager investors.
Urban farming. Example: Manhattan was ahead of the curve when Bell Book & Candle started growing greens in aeroponic rooftop gardens many years ago.
High-tech data streams. Example: Chattanooga, Tenn. got the nickname of “Gig City” for its lightning-fast Internet.
The magazine included 47 other examples from around the world of how cities are demonstrating the types of intelligence that delight travelers and residents alike in the upcoming issue.

Source: “The 2014 Traveler 50: World’s Smartest Cities,” National Geographic’s Traveler magazine (October 2014 issue).

 

Columbus amongst Top 7 Intelligent Communities January 25, 2013

Filed under: Uncategorized — tracee ribar @ 12:53 pm

Honolulu, Hawaii & New York, New York – January 23, 2013 – The Intelligent Community Forum (ICF) today named the 2013 Top7 Intelligent Communities of the Year. The Top7 list includes three from North America, two from Taiwan and two from Europe. “The Top7 communities of 2013 have made innovation – based on information and communications technology –the cornerstone of their economies and fostered economic growth through high-quality employment, while increasing the quality of life of their citizens,” said Lou Zacharilla , ICF co-founder in announcing the list at the Pacific Telecommunications Council’s annual conference (PTC’13) in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.

The Top7 Intelligent Communities of the Year
The following communities, drawn from the Smart21 of 2013, were named to the Top7 Intelligent Communities of 2013 based on analysis of their nominations by a team of independent academic experts:

Columbus OH, USA: With an economically and racially diverse population, the city trails the US average in terms of per capita income, but has America’s highest concentration of Fortune 1000 companies per capita.

The city has led in job creation over the past decade,, adding 15,000 net new jobs while much of the rest of the state has struggled with industrial decline and home foreclosures.

Being the state capital has helped, but the success of Columbus has been forged through collaboration among city government, academic institutions, businesses and nonprofits.

Government has reduced spending in the recession but also raised taxes to fund development. That includes investments in workforce development to meet the needs of advanced manufacturing, logistics and information technology companies.

Business and institutional leaders have created nonprofits that engage in downtown development, education, healthcare and cultural projects.

Columbus has traditionally struggled to commercialize technologies created in its schools and universities, but a public-private venture called TechColumbus is working effectively to leverage the region’s research and technology assets into startup companies.

Ohio State University has re-energized its technology transfer office and holds monthly forms for entrepreneurs, while joining forces with Ohio University to create a venture capital fund.

Manufacturing remains challenged: regional employment in that sector declined 30% from 2001 to 2011. But manufacturing productivity has increased 43% per employee and the region is seeing a dramatic rise in job openings for advanced manufacturing, automation, electronics, robotics and industrial design.

Columbus is also reaching out to neighboring municipalities, including Top7 Dublin, to collaborate on building a broadband ecosystem serving the entire region.

Having added 29,000 new jobs from 2010 to 2012, the Columbus metro region is one of few old industrial regions to reverse a “brain drain” and show net in-migration for the first time in decades.

http://www.columbus.gov

Oulu, Finland: The mobile communications business has been good to Oulu, and the mobile business has become a threat to its future. The “Nokia risk” as Oulu’s leaders called it, materialized in the new century as the company failed to adapt to the rise of the smartphone. Yet Oulu has created 18,000 new high-tech jobs since 2007, thanks to a decades-old culture of public-private collaboration and its many high-quality educational institutions.

Stratford, Ontario, Canada: At the turn of the new century, Stratford had a reputation for being quaint, cultured and out of the way, home to the Stratford Shakespeare Festival and a 90-minute drive from Toronto, the business capital of eastern Canada. Strategic planning, beginning in 1997, has focused on preserving Stratford’s enviable quality of life while leveraging ICT to transform its economy.

Taichung City, Taiwan: When the city and county of Taichung merged in 2010, it created a huge metropolis uniting completely different economies: a major seaport city where 70% of employees work in services, and a rural county where 50% work in industry and agriculture is a significant source of income. The city’s leadership, under Mayor Chih-Chiang (Jason) Hu, was determined to create a whole much greater than the sum of its parts.

Tallinn, Estonia: Estonia saw a major boom from 2004 to 2007, as loan capital poured in from Scandinavian countries. But when the financial crisis came, it hit Estonia and its principal city of Tallinn very hard. Yet beneath the froth, Tallinn has put into place the foundations of ICT-based growth that is generating a strong comeback.

Taoyuan County, Taiwan: Home to the international airport serving Taipei, Taoyuan County is an industrial powerhouse, with more than 24 industrial parks, 44,000 companies and 10,000 factories. The county is also home to 15 colleges and universities, which graduate 25,000 students every year. To upgrade the skills of traditional industrial workers and the unemployed, it offers vocational training as well as a range of digital literacy programs for all ages.

Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Canada’s largest city and financial capital, as well as the political capital of the Province of Ontario, Toronto is one of the world’s more successful places. But it is also challenged to maintain its edge. The city, provincial and Federal governments are addressing these challenges with a development strategy stressing ICT, environmental sustainability and innovation. A key component is Waterfront Toronto, North America’s largest urban renewal project.

 

Home sale prices strengthen in central Ohio March 22, 2012

Filed under: Uncategorized — tracee ribar @ 9:25 am

Inventory down and buyers are looking!

Sale prices for homes sold in central Ohio last month (Feb 2012) showed a healthy increase over the previous year. The average sale price of $151,072 was 7.3 percent higher than in February of 2011, and 5.7 percent higher than the previous month according to the Columbus Board of REALTORS®.

“Buyer activity has been up while seller activity has dipped slightly,” said Jim Coridan, President of the Columbus Board of REALTORS®. “Given the market conditions over the past couple years, sellers have been a bit reluctant to engage. But that could soon change as we head into the stronger spring selling season and the shifting landscape begins to register with well-informed homeowners looking to move.”

Central Ohio housing sales were up in February for the second month in a row. The 1,215 sales showed an 8.0 percent increase over the previous month and a 5.0 percent increase over February of 2011.

In addition, contracts for residential homes and condos jumped 21.7 percent over the previous month and were 57.4 percent higher than the same time last year.

 

reprinted from CBR

 

2012 Home Trends… January 10, 2012

Filed under: Home Innovations,Real Estate,Uncategorized — tracee ribar @ 11:11 am

…That sounds all-knowing doesn’t it? Well, a home is YOUR home so all things are taste specifc, but dare to dream. Here is a delighfuly decadent list of kitchen, bathroom, color and space home design buyer want-to-haves  by writer Elizabeth Weintraub from About.com. Read below for Elizabeth’s suggestions…

Who wouldn’t want all of this? If only we all had an unlimited budget. It is a good idea, though, if you are thinking of selling your home to insert a spot of decadence somewhere in your home, either kitchen or master bath, depending on budget. Paint too goes a long way also to update tired room.

Here are essential items buyers demand in kitchens:

  • Professional 6-burner ranges & convection ovens
  • Whisper-quiet commercial exhaust fans & range hoods, ceiling or island mounted
  • Top-of-the-line built-in stainless steel dishwashers and Sub-Zero Refrigerators
  • Built-in wine coolers
  • Exotic stone, poured cement or granite counters
  • Cabinetry with all the storage bells and whistles, including glass door panels; maple or glazed or ebony colors are popular
  • Kitchen islands with an extra sink
  • Apron-front farm kitchen sinks or hammered-copper sinks, any unique product as long as it costs more than $1,000 Compare Prices
  • Floor-to-ceiling spice racks
  • Towel warmers and warming trays
  • Built-in microwaves with matching cabinetry fronts
  • Recessed lighting combined with hanging-pendant fixtures

Bathrooms

  • Buyers want lots of glass and stone
  • Vessel sinks of all shapes and sizes are mounted into antique dressers or Asian-inspired vanities 
  • Brushed nickel replaces chrome options
  • Double-handle faucets are mounted on the walls and vanities float from the floor
  • Dual rain showerheads  & hand-held sprayers for cleaning showers
  • Power-assisted, low-rise toilets  and bidets
  • Motion light sensors

Colors

Earth-tone, soft colors. Lots of blues, greens, browns — bringing the outdoors inside. Sharp contrasts with brilliant hues of red or orange accent walls.

Specialty Room Trends

  • Open floor plans combining family rooms with kitchen and dining areas
  • Media rooms
  • Playrooms for kids
  • Wine cellars
  • Work-out rooms

Trends in Floors, Walls and Windows

Buyers are moving away from carpeting, even in the bedrooms. If carpeting is used at all, it’s used sparingly. Walls are either plaster, trowel textured or completely smooth. There is a purist movement to retain original windows from pre-WWII homes, refinishing, reglazing and replacing counter-weights or sash cords. Otherwise, the windows are dual pane. Here are popular flooring types:

  • Travertine, 16-inches or larger
  • Bamboo
  • Wood and exotic hardwoods such as Brazilian cherry
  • Cork
 

Creativity in Your Life September 15, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — tracee ribar @ 10:43 am

My vast readership, ahem, knows that I volunteer as a docent at the Columbus Museum of Art. The Museum is undergoing a long-awaited  much anticipated expansion and remodel. Contained within the new and improved Museum is a ground-breaking component–The Center for Creativity. The Center, to me, is truly the "center" of CMA philosophy. It will be a place for the community, teachers, school groups, families, seniors, juniors–everyone to engage in creative interaction with the museum and their own imagination. The CMA mission, if you will, and i do because it is my blog, is to connect and commit the community to the importance of the museum and instill a sense of collective ownership or guardianship. A sense of mutual commitment.  The Center for Creativity is a "creative" way to establish  community outreach and connection and an embraced understanding that without creativity there is no future in art–or anything else.

To launch the Center, the CMA is hosting a 4 day Creativity Summit, the first day of which, Creativity in Your Life, October 14th, is open to the public. Keynote speakers for that session include author Michael Chabon, Wonder Boys, Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, and Liz Lessner, CEO of Betty’s Family of Restaurants. See the bottom of this post for more sign-up info.  "The Creativity Summit will "kick-start" conversations with multiple audiences and partners to introduce CMA as a vitally important resource for teaching and learning initiatives that reinforce twenty-first century skills in our schools and the community." Skills we are falling behind in nationally. I want to sustain creativity in my life-and encourage and facilitate creativity in my children’s lives. This, to me, is an opportunity for personal and professional development.

Without Creativity there is no innovation. No moving forward to capture ideas in business, art, science, which of course includes constant changes in technology in our homes and throughout our daily lives.  All that makes us passionate and engaged in life requires creativity.

What is creativity? As defined in the July 19,2010 Newsweek article, Creativity in America, "to be creative requires divergent thinking, (generating many unique ideas)and then convergent thinking (combining those ideas into the best result)."

For 50 years children GLOBALLY have been given CQ (creativity quotient test) and, much like IQ tests, children have shown a steady point increase due, as the article states, "enriched environments are making kids smarter." American test scores might argue this but…more frightening is that measured CQ tests for American children show that creativity scores are falling. And have been falling since 1990. American ingenuity, what this country was built on, is in the decline. Superpower? Hardly.

This speaks, frighteningly, to future leadership and creative political solutions. "Such solutions emerge from a healthy marketplace of ideas, sustained by a populace constantly contributing original ideas and receptive to the ideas of others." (Newsweek article)

Yikes.

 

To register for Creativity in Your Life on October 14 (8:30-4:00)

Register by October 7 by calling 614-629-5947 or on-line at www.columbusmuseum.org

cost is $45 includes lunch, $30 for students and seniors

Hope to see you there.