by TRC_Admin | Apr 30, 2018 | City Signs, Snipe Signs
Video: Fox35 News
“Some residents in Titusville have noticed their garage sale signs missing from street sides.
City representatives said it’s no accident: those signs aren’t supposed to be there. According to city code ‘snipe signs,’ as they’re called, are not allowed on any public property or right of way.
Garage sale signs or other temporary signs can go up on private property with the owner’s permission, but city leaders said if they are placed in the public right of way they can be removed by anyone…”
— Brian Scott, Fox35 News
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by TRC_Admin | Apr 30, 2018 | Complete Streets, Placemaking
Illustration: Elkus Manfredi Architects
“You can find your way to Downtown by looking for our striking skyline of tall, grand buildings, even from miles away over the St. Johns or from the interstate. But once you’re there, on the ground, about all you see are the bottoms of those tall, grand buildings and their parking lots. What people are there hustle from car to office and back to car, coming and going on those efficient one-way streets…
The current campaign to revitalize Downtown includes more grand buildings within a master plan and public-private partnerships and the politics of city subsidies and all that, but this time, the builders also need to think about the essential ingredient: people.
After all, the ‘vital’ in revitalization refers to life, having good energy, liveliness or force of personality. So revitalizing Downtown means repeopling it.
Much of that will be residents, as apartments and condos are sprouting or being planned all around Downtown, toward the goal of a critical mass of 10,000 people.
But it also must include people who come Downtown because it’s fun, interesting or comfortable, just to hang out, maybe lingering after their workday before beginning the trudge back out to the suburbs or the beach…
Everyone focused on revitalization must understand that what we are after is a Downtown that, rather than just being building-defined, is people-fueled.
‘Public places are a stage for our public lives,’ says the Project for Public Spaces, a non-profit that helps cities create and sustain such spaces to build community.
‘They are the parks where celebrations are held, where marathons end, where children learn the skills of a sport, where the seasons are marked and where cultures mix. They are the streets and sidewalks in front of homes and businesses where friends run into each other and where exchanges both social and economic take place.
‘They are the ‘front porches’ of our public institutions — city halls, libraries and post offices — where we interact with each other and with government.
‘When cities and neighborhoods have thriving public spaces, residents have a strong sense of community; conversely, when they are lacking, they may feel less connected to each other.’
Placemaking can be happenstance or a sort of human engineering that can be used for an entire community or for a piece of a city block. ‘It’s a spectrum,’ said Tony Allegretti, executive director of the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville. ‘On one end, just throw a chair out, and on the other end, a multi-faceted experience cluster of retail, outdoor dining, etc. I’m more grassroots: It’s not about infrastructure at all, just something that gets the community together.’
Jake Gordon, CEO of Downtown Vision, offers a more structural definition: ‘To me, placemaking is a multi-faceted approach to the planning, design and management of public spaces. It capitalizes on a local community’s assets, inspiration and potential, with the intention of creating public spaces that promote people’s health, happiness and well-being.’
When 140 Jacksonville leaders went on a fact-finding trip to Toronto in November, they heard Rob Spanier, a partner in an international real estate firm called LiveWorkLearnPlay, talk about creating ‘iconic and thriving’ mixed-use neighborhoods where ‘people love visiting and wish they could live that life,’ college and resort towns, for example.
Spanier’s work, some of it for Tallahassee, focuses on placemaking for entire communities, built around strategizing to attract people and engage community. One approach is to actually compete with malls through innovations like ‘interactive retail,’ pop-up shops and adventure experiences, ‘things to do, not just buy things.’
‘It’s happening everywhere,’ he said, and ‘Jacksonville is perfect.’…”
— Frank Denton,The Florida Times-Union
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by TRC_Admin | Apr 30, 2018 | Billboards, Nature
Photo: Wikipedia
“Okaloosa County officials hope a new public beach safety campaign will help educate visitors about the beach flag warning system, Gulf of Mexico currents and marine life…
On Tuesday, the County Commission unanimously approved spending up to $200,000 in TDD promotional reserve funds for the new beach safety campaign.
The funding includes $119,217.50 that will be paid to St. Petersburg-based Aqua Marketing & Communications for billboard advertising.
Digital and vinyl billboards containing information about the beach flag system, currents and marine life are planned to be installed at various locations…
Adams said the exact locations of the billboards are being negotiated…
In addition, the campaign will feature location-based, digital beach safety alerts that will appear on smartphones once drivers enter a ‘geo-fence,’ which is a virtual boundary around a real-world geographic area…
Such push notifications could include ‘Welcome to Destin-Fort Walton Beach. Red flags are flying,’ Adams said.”
— Tony Judnich,nwfDailyNews.com
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by TRC_Admin | Apr 30, 2018 | Undergrounding
Photo: Sun Sentinel
“Florida Power & Light Co. is planning a pilot program to put utility lines underground in not-yet-identified neighborhoods in the state…
FPL said September’s Hurricane Irma showed that underground main powerlines are more resilient in general, and during storms because they can’t be downed by trees and overgrown vegetation — the prime reason that 90 percent of FPL’s customers experienced an outage.
During Irma, 69 percent of hardened, overhead main powerlines and 82 percent of non-hardened main powerlines experienced outages, while only 19 percent of underground main lines lost power, FPL said in response to Sun Sentinel questions.
FPL said it plans to seek the Florida Public Service Commission’s approval for the pilot in locations somewhere in its 35-county service territory, ‘to determine which powerlines would benefit the most from undergrounding to enhance overall reliability,’ FPL spokesman Bill Orlove said…”
— Marcia Heroux Pounds, Sun Sentinel
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by TRC_Admin | Apr 30, 2018 | Highway Beautification
Photo: Air Force
“A team of Air Force volunteers and soil conservationists has completed a project to beautify five acres at the intersection of State Road 85 and the Spence Parkway in Niceville. The project included transferring 224 cubic yards of top-soil from a pond restoration project on Eglin Air Force Base to the site, adding fertilizer and mulch, planting Florida nativewildflower seeds, and planting 565 longleaf pine seedlings and 57 saw palmettos…
A key component to the project’s approval was finding an entity willing to take over upkeep of the land. The city of Niceville agreed to take on the task…the project area, which, like the rest of the Spence Parkway right of way, is built on Air Force land. A grant from National PublicLands Day, a part of the National Environment Education Foundation, funded $5,808 of the project. An in-kind donation from Eglin AirForce Base of $2,121 covered the remaining cost, bringing the total reported price tag to $7,930.
— Jacob Fuller, Bay Beacon
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