Sustainability

Meeting focuses on roundabout plans for U.S. 23/Geddes

The devilish details are about to come out of the roundabouts planned for the U.S. 23 / Geddes Road intersection now that the Michigan Department of Transportation will release the details about the project at a public meeting March 25.The plans call for three roundabouts for the freeway exit on Ann Arbor's east side. They will replace traffic lights at the on/off-ramps for the exit and the intersection of Geddes and Earhart Road. Roundabouts, a.k.a. traffic circles, are seen as the most cost-effective way to improve flow and relieve congestion at the intersection without expanding it. The project is also looking at improving the intersection by providing places for pedestrian and bicyclists, while also improving drainage, lighting, utilities and landscaping in the area.Roundabouts have been popping up like dandelions around Ann Arbor in recent years. A pair of them were installed at the Maple Road exit for M-14 to accommodate increased traffic from nearby Skyline High School. Another is at the intersection of Nixon Road and Huron Parkway.Modern roundabouts include a central island to guide the vehicular traffic and splitter islands at each leg of an intersection. One-way traffic moves around the central island where entering traffic must yield to the traffic already in the roundabout.Traffic circles slow and calm traffic, resulting in fewer accidents. They also decrease delays and cut down on the number of idling vehicles, reducing air pollution.They are common throughout Europe and have been appearing more frequently in North America in recent years. More common on the coasts, roundabouts and traffic circles have been popping up in southeast Michigan's suburbs in recent years.The meeting will be held between 7 – 9 p.m. in Concordia University's Student Union Riverside Room, 4090 Geddes Road. For information, contact City Project Manager David Dykman at ddykman@a2gov.org or (734) 794-6410, ext 43685. Source: City of Ann ArborWriter: Jon Zemke

Latest in Sustainability
Ann Arbor orders new solar-powered parking meters

You might not like paying for parking in Ann Arbor but at least it's about to become a more sustainable endeavor. The city’s Downtown Development Authority has order a pilot set of solar-powered parking meters.The DDA ordered 25 solar meters and expects to install them within the next six weeks. They will be placed on Main, Liberty and State streets as the first test phase before replacing all of downtown’s 1,500 parking meters."They’ll be in the most visible places so people get used to using them," says Susan Pollay, executive director of the Ann Arbor Downtown Development Authority.Right now traditional parking meters stand vigil over those spaces. Pollay hopes to eventually swap out the vast majority with the 175 solar-powered meters. One meter station can cover about half a dozen parking spaces. The poles for the traditional meters will remain to help mark the parking spaces for each station.The solar-powered parking meters come equipped with a solar panel that enables them to remain entirely off the grid. These stations can accept coin and credit card payments. They will also allow patrons to plug their meters from any of the stations in the city. The DDA is spending $400,000 to install the sun-powered parking meters. They cost $325,000 to buy and the DDA set aside another $75,000 for installation.Source: Susan Pollay, executive director of the Ann Arbor Downtown Development AuthorityWriter: Jon Zemke

Ann Arbor racks up millions in federal earmarks

When it comes to federal dollars in Washtenaw County there is "Stimulus" cash and "Omnibus" cash. Right now the difference is we know where the Omnibus money is going and Ann Arbor is one of the big winners.Omnibus is short for the Omnibus Appropriations Act, which is the budget bill that Congress passes each year. These are notorious for earmarks, federal dollars set aside by members of Congress for projects back in their districts, which make up a fraction of overall bill (this year's earmarks total approximately 3%). What some talking heads like to decry as pork turns out to be valued funds for getting stuff done outside the beltway. That means $2.5 million in projects that will directly impact Ann Arbor. The big winners include: $950,000 for the Detroit-Ann Arbor commuter rail project $951,500 for a wind generator for Ann Arbor's water treatment plant $381,000 for facilities and equipment upgrades at the University of Michigan Health System $237,500 for the Allen Park GreenwayThe Omnibus bill also includes language directing the Federal Transit Administration (the agency that doles out funds to build mass transit lines) to give "priority consideration" to the Detroit-Ann Arbor commuter rail line. That project is expected to come on line in the fall of 2010.Source: Offices of senators Carl Levin and Debbie StabenowWriter: Jon Zemke

Young Ypsilanti entrepreneur thriving in housing market

Stewart Beal's role in redeveloping Ypsilanti is growing. And so too is his company.Excerpt:While some are saying that we are facing an economic meltdown, others call it an opportunity.Stewart Beal, the 25-year-old Eastern Michigan graduate who owns Beal Properties and Beal Inc., is one of the latter.With the deeds to 20 Ypsilanti buildings in its possession, Beal Properties rents out 120 apartments and saw its sales nearly triple from 2007 to 2008. Beal Inc - a multifaceted company providing services from waste hauling to building maintenance to asbestos abatement - saw its sales almost double $1.4 million in 2007 to $2.5 million in 2008. Read the rest of the story here.

Ann Arbor Energy Office on lookout for new energy ideas

The Ann Arbor Energy Office doesn't have all of the answers. It's staff knows it, and that's why they're looking for your ideas.The energy office has created a list of projects it hopes to put into action with the help of the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant funds. These ideas (about a baker's dozen) range from expanding the getDowntown program to installing more LED streetlights to creating a crash course energy efficiency program for homes.But the energy office wants more. It wants local residents to send in their ideas and suggestions for promoting more sustainable options in Ann Arbor. "Our goal is to be more transparent and let more people participate in the planning process," says Andrew Brix, energy programs manager with the Ann Arbor Energy Office.The ideas will be rated on a combination of CO2 and energy use reduction, along with job creation. All ideas must include enough information so they can be fairly evaluated and be able to be implemented within one year or less.The deadline for submissions has been extended to Friday. For information, send an email to energy@a2gov.org.Source: Andrew Brix, energy programs manager with the Ann Arbor Energy OfficeWriter: Jon Zemke

Governor Granholm tells Ann Arbor audience that alternative energy push is all about jobs

Gov. Jennifer Granholm continues to emphasize how important developing green industries is to Michigan's growth.Excerpt:Gov. Jennifer Granholm wanted to be clear about it.Green is a good, but all the buzz lately in Michigan about battery powered cars and alternative energy is really about one very practical thing."In Michigan, we don't even use the words global warming or climate change," Granholm told an audience at an environmental summit in Ann Arbor on Thursday. "This is all about jobs. I just want to be really pragmatic about it."Read the rest of the story here.

Ann Arbor spends $1.3 million to add 146 acres to Greenbelt

Ann Arbor is throwing a lot more money at expanding its Greenbelt.The City Council just approved spending $1.3 million to acquire the development rights to the Merkel-Heller farms in Webster Township. The city, Federal Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program and Webster Township Land Preservation Fund are all chipping in to make the purchase.The city's Greenbelt Program has been on a bit of a spending spree as of late as developers and locals sell the development rights to land to the Greenbelt in this tight economy. Voters approved the Ann Arbor's Greenbelt Program in 2003. The program collects a 0.5-mill millage for the next 30 years. That money is used purchase the development rights to rural land around the city, preserving and protecting open space, natural habitats and farms. The program has acquired the rights to hundreds of acres or rural land.Source: City of Ann ArborWriter: Jon Zemke

Huron Ophthalmology moves into new green building in Ypsilanti

The doctors at Huron Ophthalmology in Ypsilanti are so committed to environmentally-friendly practices that one of them even rides his bike to work everyday - rain, sleet, snow or shine.So it makes sense that the medical practice is moving into one of the greenest buildings on the St. Joseph Mercy Health System campus. The new 21,200-square-foot building features a bevy of environmentally friendly features, such as a geothermal heating and cooling system, thermal glass, skylights, flooring made of recycling materials, motion-sensor lights and, yes, even a bike garage.More of the practice's physicians are expected to start cycling to the 5477 Clark office later this year when the weather begins to warm up. Huron Ophthalmology currently has four doctors, two optometrists, one physician's assistant and 36 support staff. Another doctor (and potential bicyclist) is expected to join the practice in August.Huron Ophthalmology will be able to treat up to 250 patients each day once it starts going full speed later this year. It will be able to do this while capturing significant savings in utilities overhead."The geothermal system is not only the right thing to do for the environment but it will save us money down the road," says Dr. Gregory Katz, a partner of Huron Ophthalmology.Source: Dr. Gregory Katz, partner of Huron Ophthalmology and Sharon Watson, office administrator for Huron OphthalmologyWriter: Jon Zemke

Ypsilanti-born ShadePlex starts to grow up with investment

The important thing to keep in mind isn't that ShadePlex now calls Toledo its home. It's that the idea for the start-up was born and nurtured in Ypsilanti.Concentrate first reported on ShadePlex a year ago when it was just a start-up started among friends with an idea of putting solar cells on things like tents, struggling to get it off the ground. They're doing that now, however, from the University of Toledo's Energy Incubator.The company made the move because it received a $50,000 product development grant from Toledo-based Rocket Ventures. Start-ups usually go where the venture capital firms that invest in them tell them to go. One of the company's co-founders, Brian Tell, still lives in Ypsilanti. The other co-founders live in Downriver and northern Ohio. The company hopes to hire 20-25 people in the next three years and hit $30 million by 2013. ShadePlex is developing solar cells fabrics that can generate electricity. The idea is that putting them on something like a tent will allow a business or homeowner to generate more electricity somewhere that before only helped create a heat island.Source: Brian Tell, president and co-founder of ShadePlexWriter: Jon Zemke

Construction begins on Ann Arbor City Hall upgrade

After an awful, awful lot of debate, construction has begun on the Ann Arbor City Hall expansion project.The $47 million expansion of the Guy C Larcom City Hall at the corner of East Huron and East Ann streets will add 102,000 square feet of space for the Ann Arbor Police Department and the 15th District Court. An official groundbreaking is set for April, but in the meantime workers are getting started so they can finish the mammoth project within the next 18-24 months. The building is more urban in design than the current Larcom City Hall structure and will aim for gold level LEED certification. The first phase of the project will build the 15th District Court and Police facilities on the west side of City Hall, which is currently a parking lot. The second phase will remodel the basement and first floors of City Hall. The second phase will begin once court and police department move into their new digs.Source: City of Ann ArborWriter: Jon Zemke

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