Ann Arbor

Stockwell renovation turns historic U-M dorm coed

The University of Michigan's Stockwell Hall is going to be different in more than one way when its renovation wraps up next fall.U-M plans to turn what has been traditionally a women's dorm into a co-ed facility. The thinking is that demand for all-female housing is dwindling. There are approximately 800 available spaces in all-women residences, but only about half that number of female residents requested such housing.Making the circa-1940 structure a co-ed building on the Hill area of the university's campus will allow for more flexibility in student housing options. There will still be four other female-oriented dorms on U-M's campus, including Betsy Barbour and Helen Newberry residences, Martha Cook Building and Henderson House. "We need to rebalance the availability of women’s housing to the larger preference for coeducational living," says Linda Newman, interim director of U-M's University Housing. "At the same time, we can increase the availability of single rooms desired by returning students – women and men." The university recently began renovating Stockwell as part of its Residential Life Initiatives, which is revitalizing and expanding student-living options on campus. The project will preserve the building's Tudor Revival architecture and interior character, while replacing old mechanical, electrical, plumbing, safety technology and elevator systems.The finished project will feature air-conditioned rooms, WiFi access, lounges, kitchenettes and remodeled community bathrooms. What was once the dining hall area will be turned into a new community spaces for music practice, recreation and informal performances. Residents will eat the newly opened Hill Dining Center.Source: University of MichiganWriter: Jon Zemke

Where The Deals Are Done

Gone are the days of smoke-filled backroom deals over jumbo-sized brandy snifters. Ann Arbor's investors and entrepreneurs tend to do business over a downtown omelette and espresso or microbrew and appetizer. 

Video U-M’s Solar Car Team

Imagine, not paying for gas. Ever. U-M's Solar Car Team brings together engineering, business and design school majors to develop the ultimate sustainable vehicle. How successful have they been? The team has taken home top honors at the North American Solar Challenge for the last five years!

Looking for fairies in Ann Arbor

The little things in Ann Arbor continue to make a big splash around the world. Excerpt: Is there a truth emerging from the urban legend? There are so many fairy doors in Ann Arbor. Are we about to encounter this elusive life form? The first fairy door discovered in Ann Arbor is documented at the Urban Fairies website. Read the rest of the story here.

Ann Arbor part of the urban poultry farming craze

Tree Town becomes Chicken City as it joins Missoula, Montana; South Portland, Maine; and Ft. Collins, Colorado on the list of grass roots urban poultry organizing.Excerpt:"As it turns out, Mackin is hardly an anomaly, in New York or any other urban center. Over the past few years, urban dwellers driven by the local-food movement, in cities from Seattle to Albuquerque, have flocked to the idea of small-scale backyard chicken farming—mostly for eggs, not meat—as a way of taking part in home-grown agriculture. This past year alone, grass-roots organizations in Missoula, Mont.; South Portland, Maine; Ann Arbor, Mich.; and Ft. Collins, Colo., have successfully lobbied to overturn city ordinances outlawing backyard poultry farming, defined in these cities as egg farming, not slaughter. Ann Arbor now allows residents to own up to four chickens (with neighbors' consent), while the other three cities have six-chicken limits, subject to various spacing and nuisance regulations."Read the rest of the article here.

Green building gains momentum in Ann Arbor

The Ann Arbor building landscape is becoming more and more eco-savvy as green building takes root in Tree Town.Excerpt:Green building continues to gain momentum locally, as area professionals organize new initiatives to bring attention to the field and an established construction firm opens an Ann Arbor office focused on environmentally conscious project development and execution.Ryan Stoianowski of Willis Building Co. in Saline is co-chair of the Emerging Green Builders Committee of the Detroit regional chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council. In May, Stoianowski was the only active member, but it has since grown to include chapters at the University of Michigan and the University of Detroit Mercy.He said the goal is networking and education."We want to reach out to teach sustainability to young professionals and college students," Stoianowski said. "We're trying to get mentorship opportunities off the ground."A local network of people interested in green building and development could help stop the "brain drain" of younger people to places like Chicago and San Francisco, Stoianowski said.Read the rest of the story here.

BTB Party Bus runs on churro power… or what they were fried in

Party buses in Ann Arbor are are turning to clean fuels --like used vegetable oils-- to transport revellers.Excerpt:BTB Burrito is already Ann Arbor's go-to spot for bar-goers who crave a late-night snack after last call. Now, BTB wants to give them a ride home, too - on a shuttle bus fueled by the waste oil that their churros were fried in.The BTB Party Bus - a bright-red, 14-seat, former airport shuttle - is powered by a diesel engine modified to run on used vegetable oil. It's indistinguishable from a normal diesel shuttle, except for the 20-gallon tank of grease that sits behind the driver and the tortilla-like aroma that lingers near the tank and emanates from the exhaust pipes. The homegrown mini-chain has been known best for fast, inexpensive Mexican food and a decidedly Ann Arbor attitude, from its funky interior design to its line of Hash Bash-themed merchandise. The turn toward eco-friendly transportation stems from the owners' interest in green innovation.Read the rest of the story here and a story on Ann Arbor's two electric cars here.

Ann Arbor in Top Five Surprisingly Gay Small Towns

Ann Arbor is gay (the traditional definition) about being recognized as a haven for gays raising families.Excerpt:There's one kind of scaling back that won't have you cursing the current economic climate. Opt for something a little smaller next time you pack up the Samsonite, and consider these delightfully diminutive gems, our top five surprisingly gay small towns.Read the rest of the story here and how Ann Arbor was rated one of the best places to raise kids in BusinessWeek here.

TherOx shows how local companies can be forced to move

A cautionary tale about how Ann Arbor is rich in new economy talent, but in need of more resources to develop it here. Excerpt: It's got the backing of Silicon Valley's most prominent venture capital firm, has proven that it can reduce heart muscle death in heart attack patients and has filed to go public. So what does California-based TherOx Inc. have to do with Michigan? The medical device company traces its origins to the state, licenses its key technology from Wayne State University and counts EDF Ventures of Ann Arbor as its first investor. TherOx's 14-year journey from start-up to a company on the verge of obtaining FDA approval for its cardiac system shows promising technology does exist in Michigan. However, the state often has a hard time capitalizing on it because of a lack of significant venture capital. Stories of promising start-up companies that stay in Michigan and eventually hit it big -- like HealthMedia Inc. in Ann Arbor, just acquired by Johnson & Johnson just acquired -- are still too rare. "In some sense, we start the deal here and eventually it gravitates to other places," said David Brophy, director of the University of Michigan's Center for Venture Capital & Private Equity Finance. "We're not exactly flooded with money in this state." TherOx got its start in Michigan in the early 1990s, using technology invented by Dr. James Richard Spears, a cardiologist and until recently a professor of internal medicine at Wayne State's School of Medicine. Read the rest of the story here and a story about how some Ann Arbor firm's believe local venture capital is on the rise here.

Ann Arbor digital marketing firm Ingenex builds search-optimized profiles

Ann Arbor's Ingenex is building up its profile by building profiles for others on sites like LinkedIn.Excerpt:In a nod to the increasing importance of leveraging search engine optimization to improve the visibility of professional social networking profiles, an Ann Arbor digital marketing firm is offering to build profiles for a fee. Ingenex Digital Marketing has created a new service, the Web site SocialHarbor.com, where individuals and companies can create profiles. The company then offers to harvest profile information provided by clients on Social Harbor and created a search engine optimized profile on sites like LinkedIn and AboutUs.org.Ingenex CEO Derek Mehraban said the service offers "an incredible instant search engine optimization boost" for professionals in fields such as accounting and law, where improved Web visibility can mean additional clients."So many people, they know they should be on LinkedIn, but they don't know how to do it," he said.Read the rest of the story here.

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