Come check out the Los Altos History Museum's Opening Reception for its latest exhibition, "A Place to Call Home" - and celebrate Los Altos' new electric vehicle charging stations at the same time! The kick-off will be an EV Charging Station ribbon-cutting at 4:00pm next to the History Museum. The connection is "The Car of the Future" for "The Home of the Future." They expect to have the mayor, City Council members and perhaps even higher level dignitaries. There will be a 1921 Model T for historical contrast, and several EVs. There may even be a featured Tesla Model S as the first official EV charging station hook up, so don't miss it! For more info, check out the History Museum's exhibits website.
BYOB (Bring Your Own Bag) Los Altos!
Congrats to the City for starting to prepare Los Altans for the upcoming ban on single-use plastic bags - what a great step towards a more sustainable Los Altos! Learn more about the effort here!
Great Video Short on Bike Lanes!
Eight Qualities of Pedestrian-Oriented Design
This is a fantastic article synthesizing the most important qualities that make for successful pedestrian-friendly spaces. They are: imageability, enclosure, human scale, transparency, complexity, coherence, legibility, and linkage. Learn more about what these words mean here.
Cool Mirrored Canopy: The Port Vieux Pavilion
On The Value of Public-Private Partnerships
Public-private partnership is an important option that can be utilized in times of economic uncertainty and in periods of prosperity. There is a nexus between the public sector’s needs and the private sector’s goals. ~Doug Domenech
Downtown Revitalization in Syracuse
5 Urban Technology Trends Impacting City Planning
Here is Streetline's article that outlines 5 cool new ways technology can improve the urban environment: Traffic Management, Smart Utilities, Sidewalk Tiles that Generate Electricity, 3-D Modelling, and Online Civic Involvement. Awesome!
Belgium's Pop-Up Shipping Container Hotel
Check out Belgium's Pop-Up Shipping Container Hotel!
"When you book a night's stay at Belgium's Sleeping Around Hotel, you'll need your GPS to find it." - Bridgette Meinhold
Not Just Green Walls...Flowered Walls!
Check out these green wall ideas - we particularly like the wall-flower concept!
Cool Looping Bridge
The 20 Most Important Restaurants in the US for 2013
Although a Valentine's Day reservation may be a bit too late to make now, you still have the remainder of the year to check out the 20 Most Important Restaurants for 2013. Los Gatos, Napa, and San Francisco are featured on this list by Bon Appetit magazine! Bon appétit!
Ways to Beautify The Streetscape
Just some cool links we like, about hiding utility boxes, and rain-activated street art! Enjoy!
Passerelle Selected as Finalist in Acterra Sustainability Award Competition!
Check it out - Passerelle is on the list of Finalist candidates for the Acterra Award for Sustainability! Here is Acterra's description of its Acterra Award for Sustainability: "Acterra’s highest award recognizes businesses whose programs achieve significant triple bottom line benefits (people, planet, profit) and advance the state of sustainability in a given industry or across industry sectors. Model programs are established and holistic; promoting sustainability throughout the entire value chain and permeating most key business functions."
Want to learn more? Click here to learn more about Acterra, or click here to learn about its Business Environmental Awards program. Wish us luck!
110 First Celebrates Its LEED Platinum Status
Thanks to all who helped us celebrate our office building's long-awaited LEED-Platinum award last Wednesday, January 16th! Mayor Pro Tem Megan Satterlee was on hand to unveil our brand new LEED-Platinum plaque that now lives on the wall of the lobby at 108-110 First Street, where Evolve and Passerelle are both located. We want to especially thank our dedicated design and construction team, including Huntsman Architects, BCCI, ACCO, Sprig Electric, Rumsey, and most importantly project manager Laura Billings of Sage Green Development. Check out the press coverage in the Los Altos Patch! To learn more about the green features of the project, check out our 110 First Street portfolio page.
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Passerelle again nominated for an Acterra Business Environmental Award
Though Passerelle didn't win anything last year, we're at it again, hoping for a 2013 Acterra Award for Sustainability. We've made the just-released list of nominees (which simply means we submitted an application), and the finalists will be announced in February. Cross your fingers, we sure are!
Packard Foundation ULI Tour a Success
I have been volunteering with the Urban Land Institute's Silicon Valley group, helping to coordinate events related to local urban planning real estate development topics. Last month, I helped organize a tour of the Packard Foundation's new headquarters, a LEED-Platinum building in downtown Los Altos with an enviable array of green features. Many thanks to the Packard Foundation folks for generously allowing their office space to be taken over for an hour or so! Check out what the ULI newsletter had to say about the tour.
Bumble, Play!, and Area 151 in San Jose Business Journal!
Check out this November 9 article in the San Jose Business Journal about Mary Heffernan, owner of Bumble, Play! and Area 151: "Kid-oriented businesses break into Los Altos" !
106-110 First Street is a Certified LEED-Platinum Building!
More good news today - Passerelle's office building at 106-110 First Street was just awarded the highest green building rating possible, LEED-Platinum for Commercial Interiors, by the US Green Building Council for its retrofit of the original 1992 structure in 2011. Shared with Evolve, a pilates and fitness studio (106 First), Passerelle's office space at 108 First enjoys many green building features. Photovoltaic and solar thermal roof panels, electric car charging stations, employee bicycle storage and shower facilities, low-VOC paint and products, recycled-content and local materials wherever possible, water-efficient fixtures, and a living wall factored into the building's LEED-Platinum designation. We are so proud! More to come once we install the LEED-Platinum plaque in the building. Go green!
Study Finds Shopping Local Generates Almost Four Times the Economic Benefit
A new study conducted in Salt Lake City, Utah, has found that indies generate almost four times as much economic benefit for the surrounding region as do chains. The study, “Indie Impact Study Series: A National Comparative Survey With the American Booksellers Association: Salt Lake City, Utah,” stressed that a market shift of just 10 percent from chains to independents would keep an additional $362 million in the regional economy every year. The study was conducted by the research firm Civic Economics and was sponsored by Local First Utah. The study is part of the Indie Impact Study Series, a nationwide research project, being conducted by Civic Economics in partnership with the American Booksellers Association.
“Other studies across the country, from Austin to San Francisco to Chicago have been very helpful to all of us in our efforts to further the local movement,” said Betsy Burton, co-chair of Local First Utah, co-owner of the The King’s English Bookshop, and an ABA Board member. “But having the actual figures from our home city is compelling to the public and to local government officials in a whole different way.”
Burton noted that the study’s findings mean that “right here in Salt Lake ... we can say with pride, a dollar spent in a local business means a huge amount to all of us in economic terms.”
She also noted that the study has spurred media interest and has “already raised the profile of local businesses in a significant way. So has the idea that shifting a mere 10 percent of one’s shopping to local can add nearly half a billion dollars to the city’s economy.”
Local First Utah and The King’s English collected surveys from a total of 22 independent businesses, including both retail and restaurant establishments in the community. The businesses provided information on revenue expended in five categories: profits paid out to local owners; wages paid to local workers; procurement of goods services for internal use; procurement of local goods for resale; and charitable giving within the community. Civic Economics then analyzed the data and compared it with four chain retail stores and three national restaurant chains.
The findings were telling. Independent retailers returned an average of 52 percent of their revenue to the local economy, while the chain retailers recirculated only 13.6 percent. Local restaurants returned some 78.6 percent of revenue, while chain restaurants returned 30.6 percent.
Indie retailers spent 27.1 percent locally on labor, 17.4 percent locally on procurement for resale, 3.1 percent on charitable giving, and 4.4 percent on procurement for internal use.
As part of the Indie Impact Study Series, communities with active ABA members were able to engage directly with Civic Economics for a customized local study for a significantly reduced fee. As further incentive, ABA contributed 25 percent of the fee. Communities where a similar data analysis is underway include Bainbridge Island, Washington; Chicago, Illinois; Las Vegas, New Mexico; Louisville, Kentucky; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Pleasanton, California; and Raleigh, North Carolina.
Written by Dave Grogan on Thursday, Sep 6, 2012 for the American Booksellers Association