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Cool Architecture News images

A few nice architecture news images I found:

DoodleBuzz:Typographic News Explorer
architecture news

Image by pushandplay
Doodle Buzz doodlebuzz.com is an online news aggregator with a visual twist. Users are requested to submit their favorite news theme or topic, and to draw a crazy, chaotic, all-over-the-place, messed-up, scribbled line on the white canvas. The line is then used as the framework to layout the headlines, summaries and related topics. The aim is to create an entirely new way of exploring information, one that allows for a kind of "quiet chaos" that gives people the opportunity to explore unthought of paths and connections along their news gathering journey. The data is fetched from DayPI, a recent service by DayLife that allows a new architecture of online news.

www.doodlebuzz.com/

cocoon tower design by tange atlier
architecture news

Image by .ad photo
© .ad photo
World architecture news.comに掲載されました。
World architecture news.com-cocoon Tower

設計、工事、施工中から知っていた場所です。
過去には共同に設計していただきました。別物件で。
コンセプト:繭・・「若者が巣立って行くようにという意味でつけられております」

奇抜というか斬新なデザイン設計は私たち当たり前にしていることであり、施主が一番ネックとなっているのです。施主が希望に答えれば斬新な建築物は建てられます。

これを拝見する限り、フランス建築家Jean nouvel氏のデザイン、Agbar Towerやfoster+partnersのswiss reを思い出す。
My group:Modern architect and interior design

Chicago Daily News Building
architecture news

Image by Musebrarian
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Daily_News

Cool Electrical Engineer News images

Some cool electrical engineer news images:

C.P. Steinmetz (LOC)
electrical engineer news

Image by The Library of Congress
Bain News Service,, publisher.

C.P. Steinmetz

[between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]

1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.

Notes:
Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.
Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).

Format: Glass negatives.

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

General information about the Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain

Persistent URL: hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.16010

Call Number: LC-B2- 3054-5

Wounded Nation (article)
electrical engineer news

Image by mallix
AFTER bathing in the warm, fuzzy glow of the Mandela years, South Africans
today are deeply demoralised people. The lights are going out in homes,
mines, factories and shopping malls as the national power authority, Eskom -
suffering from mismanagement, lack of foresight, a failure to maintain power
stations and a flight of skilled engineers to other countries – implements
rolling power cuts that plunge towns and cities into daily chaos.
Major industrial projects are on hold. The only healthy enterprise now worth
being involved in is the sale of small diesel generators to powerless
households but even this business has run out of supplies and spare parts
from China .
The currency, the rand, has entered freefall. Crime, much of it gratuitously
violent, is rampant, and the national police chief faces trial for
corruption and defeating the ends of justice as a result of his alleged
deals with a local mafia kingpin and dealer in hard drugs.
Newly elected African National Congress (ANC) leader Jacob Zuma, the state
president-in-waiting, narrowly escaped being jailed for raping an
HIV-positive woman last year, and faces trial later this year for soliciting
and accepting bribes in connection with South Africa’s shady
multi-billion-pound arms deal with British, German and French weapons
manufacturers.
One local newspaper columnist suggests that Zuma has done for South Africa
‘s international image what Borat has done for Kazakhstan . ANC leaders in
2008 still speak in the spiritually dead jargon they learned in exile in
pre-1989 Moscow, East Berlin and Sofia while promiscuously embracing
capitalist icons – Mercedes 4x4s, Hugo Boss suits, Bruno Magli shoes and
Louis Vuitton bags which they swing, packed with money passed to them under
countless tables – as they wing their way to their houses in the south of
France.
It all adds up to a hydra-headed crisis of huge proportions – a perfect
storm as the Rainbow Nation slides off the end of the rainbow and descends
in the direction of the massed ranks of failed African states. Eskom has
warned foreign investors with millions to sink into big industrial and
mining projects: we don’t want you here until at least 2013, when new power
stations will be built.
In the first month of this year, the rand fell 12% against the world’s major
currencies and foreign investors sold off more than £600 million worth of
South African stocks, the biggest sell-off for more than seven years.
"There will be further outflows this month, because there won’t be any news
that will convince investors the local growth picture is going to change for
the better," said Rudi van de Merwe, a fund manager at South Africa ‘s
Standard Bank.
Commenting on the massive power cuts, Trevor Gaunt, professor of electrical
engineering at the University of Cape Town , who warned the government eight
years ago of the impending crisis, said: "The damage is huge, and now South
Africa looks just like the rest of Africa . Maybe it will take 20 years to
recover."
The power cuts have hit the country’s platinum, gold, manganese and
high-quality export coal mines particularly hard, with no production on some
days and only 40% to 60% on others.
"The shutdown of the mining industry is an extraordinary, unprecedented
event," said Anton Eberhard, a leading energy expert and professor of
business studies at the University of Cape Town .
"That’s a powerful message, massively damaging to South Africa ‘s reputation
for new investment. Our country was built on the mines."
To examine how the country, widely hailed as Africa’s last best chance,
arrived at this parlous state, the particular troubles engulfing the
Scorpions (the popular name of the National Prosecuting Authority) offers a
useful starting point.
The elite unit, modelled on America ‘s FBI and operating in close
co-operation with Britain ‘s Serious Fraud Office (SFO), is one of the big
successes of post-apartheid South Africa . An independent institution,
separate from the slipshod South African Police Service, the Scorpions enjoy
massive public support.
The unit’s edict is to focus on people "who commit and profit from organised
crime", and it has been hugely successful in carrying out its mandate. It
has pursued and pinned down thousands of high-profile and complex networks
of national and international corporate and public fraudsters.
Drug kingpins, smugglers and racketeers have felt the Scorpions’ sting. A
major gang that smuggle platinum, South Africa ‘s biggest foreign exchange
earner, to a corrupt English smelting plant has been bust as the result of a
huge joint operation between the SFO and the Scorpions. But the Scorpions,
whose top men were trained by Scotland Yard, have been too successful for
their own good.
The ANC government never anticipated the crack crimebusters would take their
constitutional independence seriously and investigate the top ranks of the
former liberation movement itself.
The Scorpions have probed into, and successfully prosecuted, ANC MPs who
falsified their parliamentary expenses. They secured a jail sentence for the
ANC’s chief whip, who took bribes from the German weapons manufacturer that
sold frigates and submarines to the South African Defence Force. They sent
to jail for 15 years a businessman who paid hundreds of bribes to then state
vice-president Jacob Zuma in connection with the arms deal. Zuma was found
by the judge to have a corrupt relationship with the businessman, and now
the Scorpions have charged Zuma himself with fraud, corruption, tax evasion,
racketeering and defeating the ends of justice. His trial will begin in
August.
The Scorpions last month charged Jackie Selebi, the national police chief, a
close friend of state president Thabo Mbeki, with corruption and defeating
the ends of justice. Commissioner Selebi, who infamously called a white
police sergeant a "f***ing chimpanzee" when she failed to recognise him
during an unannounced visit to her Pretoria station, has stepped down
pending his trial.
But now both wings of the venomously divided ANC – ANC-Mbeki and ANC-Zuma -
want the Scorpions crushed, ideally by June this year. The message this will
send to the outside world is that South Africa ‘s rulers want only certain
categories of crime investigated, while leaving government ministers and
other politicians free to stuff their already heavily lined pockets.
No good reason for emasculating the Scorpions has been put forward. "That’s
because there isn’t one," said Peter Bruce, editor of the influential
Business Day, South Africa ‘s equivalent of, and part-owned by, The
Financial Times, in his weekly column.
"The Scorpions are being killed off because they investigate too much
corruption that involves ANC leaders. It is as simple and ugly as that," he
added.
The demise of the Scorpions can only exacerbate South Africa ‘s
out-of-control crime situation, ranked for its scale and violence only
behind Colombia . Everyone has friends and acquaintances who have had guns
held to their heads by gangsters, who also blow up ATM machines and hijack
security trucks, sawing off their roofs to get at the cash.
In the past few days my next-door neighbour, John Matshikiza, a
distinguished actor who trained at the Royal Shakespeare Company and is the
son of the composer of the South African musical King Kong, had been
violently attacked, and friends visiting from Zimbabwe had their car stolen
outside my front window in broad daylight.
My friends flew home to Zimbabwe without their car and the tinned food
supplies they had bought to help withstand their country’s dire political
and food crisis and 27,000% inflation. Matshikiza, a former member of the
Glasgow Citizens Theatre company, was held up by three gunmen as he drove
his car into his garage late at night. He gave them his car keys, wallet,
cellphone and luxury watch and begged them not to harm his partner, who was
inside the house.
As one gunman drove the car away, the other two beat Matshikiza unconscious
with broken bottles, and now his head is so comprehensively stitched that it
looks like a map of the London Underground.
These assaults were personal, but mild compared with much commonplace crime.
Last week, for example, 18-year-old Razelle Botha, who passed all her
A-levels with marks of more than 90% and was about to train as a doctor,
returned home with her father, Professor Willem Botha, founder of the
geophysics department at the University of Pretoria, from buying pizzas for
the family. Inside the house, armed gunmen confronted them. They shot
Professor Botha in the leg and pumped bullets into Razelle.
One severed her spine. Now she is fighting for her life and will never walk
again, and may never become a doctor. The gunmen stole a laptop computer and
a camera.
Feeding the perfect storm are the two centres of ANC power in the country at
the moment. On the one hand, there is the ANC in parliament, led by
President Mbeki, who last Friday gave a state-of-the-nation address and
apologised to the country for the power crisis.
Mbeki made only the briefest of mentions of the national Aids crisis, with
more than six million people HIV-positive. He did not address the Scorpions
crisis. The collapsing public hospital system, under his eccentric health
minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, an alcoholic who recently jumped the
public queue for a liver transplant, received no attention. And the name
Jacob Zuma did not pass his lips.
Last December Mbeki and Zuma stood against each other for the leadership of
the ANC at the party’s five-yearly electoral congress. Mbeki, who cannot
stand again as state president beyond next year’s parliamentary and
presidential elections, hoped to remain the power behind the throne of a new
state president of his choosing.
Zuma, a Zulu populist with some 20 children by various wives and mistresses,
hoped to prove that last year’s rape case, and the trial he faces this year
for corruption and other charges, were part of a plot by Mbeki to use state
institutions to discredit him. Mbeki assumed that the notion of Zuma
assuming next year the mantle worn by Nelson Mandela as South Africa ‘s
first black state president would be so appalling to delegates, a deeply sad
and precipitous decline, that his own re-election as ANC leader was a
shoo-in.
But Mbeki completely miscalculated his own unpopularity – his perceived
arrogance, failure to solve health and crime problems, his failure to
deliver to the poor – and he lost. Now Zuma insists that he is the leader of
the country and ANC MPs in parliament must take its orders from him, while
Mbeki soldiers on until next year as state president, ordering MPs to toe
his line.
Greatly understated, it is a mess. Its scale will be dramatically
illustrated if South Africa ‘s hosting of the 2010 World Cup is withdrawn by
Fifa, the world football body.
Already South African premier league football evening games are being played
after midnight because power for floodlights cannot be guaranteed before
that time. Justice Malala, one of the country’s top newspaper columnists,
has called on Fifa to end the agony quickly.
"I don’t want South Africa to host the football World Cup because there is
no culture of responsibility in this country," he wrote in Johannesburg’s
bestselling Sunday Times.
"The most outrageous behaviour and incompetence is glossed over. No-one is
fired. I have had enough of this nonsense, of keeping quiet and ignoring the
fact that the train is about to run us over.
"It is increasingly clear that our leaders are incapable of making a success
of it. Scrap the thing and give it to Australia, Germany or whoever will
spare us the ignominy of watching things fall apart here – football tourists
being held up and shot, the lights going out, while our politicians tell us
everything is all right."
- CEDWYNN TOWEEL
11:50pm Saturday 9th February 2008

U.S. News Momentum: Business, Education and Engineering Boast Rising Programs
electrical engineer news

Image by University of Maryland Press Releases
Each of the three graduate academic disciplines U.S. News & World Report ranked this week — business, education and engineering — allows the University of Maryland to claim steady progress in its drive to be one of the nation’s top research institutions.

The Robert H. Smith School of Business had five disciplines ranked among the nation’s top 25, with advances across the board: information systems No. 5, No. 6 last year; supply chain/logistics No. 13, No. 15 last year; production/operations No. 23, not ranked in 2010; entrepreneurship No. 20, No. 26 last year. The fifth top 25 is the Part-time MBA at No. 17. The Smith School was No. 45 overall among U.S. schools.

The College of Education jumped two places in the overall ranking, from No. 25 to No. 23. Historically the top producer of Top 25 rankings on campus, education was headed by its perennially ranked No. 1 program, counseling/personnel services. Overall, education had nine disciplines in the top 25, four of which advanced over last year: special education No. 9, No. 11 last year; elementary education No. 13, No. 14 last year; secondary teacher education No. 14, No. 22 last year; and curriculum and instruction No. 15, No. 19 last year. Other education top 25 programs: educational psychology No. 7, No. 6 last year; higher ed administration repeats as No. 10; education policy repeats at No. 13; and administration and supervision repeats as No. 16.

The A. James Clark School of Engineering maintained its ranking at No. 22 among U.S. schools. Nine individual disciplines were ranked: Aerospace/aeronautical/astronautical engineering repeats at No. 9; electrical/electronic/communications engineering repeats at No. 14; computer engineering No. 17, not ranked last year; mechanical engineering repeats as No. 21; biological agriculture engineering No. 26 (not ranked before); civil engineering repeats as No. 27; materials engineering repeats as No. 31; biomedical/bioengineering No. 37; chemical engineering No. 41.

Maryland has a cumulative 73 top 25 U.S. News programs and 32 top ten programs.

Cool Facilities Management News images

Some cool facilities management news images:

Installation Management Command Uncasing Ceremony and Open House
facilities management news

Image by U.S. Army IMCOM
Lt. Gen. Rick Lynch., Commander, Installation Management Command, will host a flag uncasing ceremony for the U.S. Army Installation Management Command Oct. 5, 2010 at 10 a.m. in San Antonio, Texas.

Dr. Joseph W. Westphal, Under Secretary of the United States Army, will be the guest speaker.
The ceremony represents the presence of the installation management community and the assumption of the command’s authority in San Antonio. The installation management community includes the U.S. Army Installation Management Command Headquarters and two major subordinate commands: U.S. Army Environmental Command and the Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command.

IMCOM temporarily occupies leased space in northeastern San Antonio until the new IMCOM Headquarters Building on Fort Sam Houston is completed in October 2011.

Uncasing the flag exemplifies how IMCOM, headquartered in "Military City USA," is transforming to make Army installations the Army’s Home.

U.S. Army Installation Management Command Organizational Day Festivities

Soldiers, Civilian employees and their Families took a break from their normal, busy work schedules to participate in team building activities and celebrate the recent transition of the IMCOM headquarters to San Antonio, Texas.

To learn more about the move to San Antonio, visit here:
www.army.mil/-news/2010/10/06/46153-headquarters-imcom-mo…

About the U.S. Army Installation Management Community:

IMCOM handles the day-to-day operations of U.S. Army installations around the globe – We are the Army’s Home. Army installations are communities that provide many of the same types of services expected from any small city. Fire, police, public works, housing, and child-care are just some of the things IMCOM does in Army communities every day. We endeavor to provide a quality of life for Soldiers, Civilians and Families commensurate with their service. Our professional workforce strives to deliver on the commitments of the Army Family Covenant, honor the sacrifices of military Families, and enable the Army Force Generation cycle.

Our Mission: To provide standardized, effective and efficient services, facilities and infrastructure to Soldiers, Civilians and Families for an Army and Nation engaged in persistent conflict.

Our Vision: Army installations are the Department of Defense standard for infrastructure quality and are the provider of consistent, quality services that are a force multiplier in supported organizations’ mission accomplishment, and materially enhance Soldier, Civilian and Family well-being and readiness.

To learn more about IMCOM, visit us online:

IMCOM Official Web Site – www.imcom.army.mil/hq/

Flickr Photostream – www.flickr.com/photos/imcom

YouTube – www.youtube.com/installationmgt

Twitter – www.twitter.com/armyimcom

Facebook – www.facebook.com/InstallationManagementCommunity

Scribd – www.scribd.com/IMCOMPubs

CNN iReport – www.ireport.com/people/HQIMCOMPA/

DoD Live Blog – usarmyimcom.armylive.dodlive.mil/

British Columbia (NASA, International Space Station, 01/21/11)
facilities management news

Image by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center
Editor’s Note: Hey Flickr friends, I thought all of you would like this one. The text from NASA goes into some great detail about new methods of photography from the Space Station. Happy weekend!

A test photo of British Columbia’s snow-capped west coast mountains is the first official image taken from the International Space Station’s new Window Observational Research Facility, or WORF.

The image was taken to test the functionality of the control computer and camera associated with EarthKAM, an educational outreach project that allows Earth bound middle school students to take pictures of our home planet from the unique perspective of the space station, 220 miles above the Earth’s surface. WORF was delivered to the station on the STS-131 mission of space shuttle Discovery in April 2010.

EarthKAM uses a Nikon D2X digital camera, and was set up in the WORF by Expedition 26 NASA flight engineer Cady Coleman on Jan. 17. EarthKAM ground controllers took the test photo. Expedition 26 also includes Commander Scott Kelly of NASA, European Space Agency astronaut Paolo Nespoli, and Russian cosmonauts Oleg Skripochka, Alexander Kaleri and Dmitry Kontratyev.

The test photo, designated ISS EarthKAM Image Winter 2011 #9362, is of an area of British Columbia, Canada, just north of Vancouver Island. The center point of the photo is 51 degrees, 48 minutes north and 127 degrees, 54 minutes west. Visible in the photo are Calvert and Hecate Islands on the Canadian coast and the southern portion of Hunter Island. Also visible are glaciers of the Ha-iltzuk Icefield near the 8,720-foot-tall — 2,658-meter-tall — Mount Somolenko. Mount Somolenko is a volcanic peak in southwestern British Columbia, that lies in a circular volcanic depression in the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains called the Silverthrone Caldera.

While this isn’t a particularly unique Earth observation image, it is notable that even though it was taken with a wider angle, 50mm lens and covers an area 124 miles/200 kilometers, by 83 miles/134 kilometers, it can be enlarged by more than 400 percent while keeping features in the photo identifiable. This is made possible by the high-quality optics of the Earth-facing window of the Destiny Laboratory, which was launched on Feb. 7, 2001.

The installation of WORF allowed removal of an internal "scratch pane" that has reduced the quality of images taken though the window. WORF also provides a highly stable mounting platform to hold cameras and sensors rock steady at the window, as well as the power, command, data, and cooling connections needed for their operation.

"With the WORF finally in place we can now for the first time make full use of the investment we made in having an optical quality window onboard the station for Earth science and observation," said former astronaut Mario Runco, who was part of the design and development teams for the Destiny window and WORF, and now serves as NASA’s lead for Spacecraft Window Optics and Window/WORF Utilization at NASA’s Johnson Space Center, Houston.

"We are very excited to have a new camera system that appears to be functional and taking incredible images," said Karen Flammer, who manages EarthKAM operations at the University of California, can Diego. "The first student images were taken by Parkview Montessori in the Jackson-Madison County (Tenn.) School System, and Public School 229 – Dyker in Brooklyn, N.Y., part of the New York City Department of Education.

Parkview teacher Vickie LeCroy’s students plan to study landforms, such as islands, mountains and deserts in the image they took of Mexico, and Dyker teacher Camille Fratantoni’s students plan to enrich their studies of earth science and learn more about NASA missions.

In addition to their educational outreach role with EarthKAM, the combination of the window and WORF adds to the station’s capabilities as an Earth science remote sensing platform for high-resolution cameras and multi and hyperspectral imagers. Images from space have many applications, such as in the study of climate and meteorology; oceanography; geology and volcanology; coastal, agricultural, ranch and forestry management; and disaster assessments and management.

The test image is available in multiple sizes and resolutions, visit:
images.earthkam.ucsd.edu/main.php?g2_itemId=33992

Image credit: NASA

View original image/caption:
www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/news/worf.html

More about space station research:
www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/index.html

There’s a Flickr group about Space Station Research. Please feel welcome to join! www.flickr.com/groups/stationscience/

Cool Construction Executive Jobs images

Some cool construction executive jobs images:

20110712-RD-LSC-0225
construction executive jobs

Image by USDAgov
From across the horseshoe shaped town of Pikeville, KY, various buildings, parking lots, temporary walkways, and above ground construction of the Pikeville Medical Center (PMC) expansion project, on Tuesday, July 12, 2011, in Pikeville, KY. After months of infrastructure construction and rain delays, one of Kentucky’s largest American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) projects is under way. The .6 million Community Facilities Loan will finance construction of a new medical office building and parking garage. The new medical office building will house outpatient surgery, endoscopy, surgical support and provide exam, waiting and office space for 23 primary and specialty care physicians. It also will contain a medical research center to support existing research – in conjunction with Pikeville College – on health disparities, genetic research related to the prevalence of cancer and other areas, including drug and treatment trials. The new parking garage with more than 1,000 spaces will be built adjacent to the new medical building, eliminating the need to shuttle patients back and forth from remote parking areas. The new garage will provide closer and easier proximity to medical and hospital services for all patients.
Wayne Rutherford, County Judge-Executive for Pike County, says funding from ARRA is a boon for his county because it will create jobs.

“This is great for Pike County’s economy. We know we have a great hospital, and with this support, it will be even better,” said Rutherford. “The unemployment rate here is above the state average and this will stimulate jobs. There will be construction, which means lots of jobs on the front end – and even more once it is built.”

Pike County is one of Kentucky’s persistent poverty counties and the current medical facility provides health care services for a rural population of more than 68,000. This project will create 1,430 direct and indirect construction jobs, in addition to 97 long-term jobs. It is scheduled to be completed in December 2012.

“This project is a prime example of the ARRA monies being utilized for much-needed health care facility expansion in an economically-depressed region of Eastern Kentucky and Appalachia,” said Tom Fern, State Director for Rural Development in Kentucky. “This hospital has received national recognition for its quality of care, and this money will allow them to expand and build upon their success and continue providing quality health care services to the region.”

PMC was named National Hospital of the Year by the American Alliance of Healthcare Providers in November 2009. The hospital was among 400 elite health care facilities to apply for this prestigious honor. To earn this recognition, PMC competed against more than 400 hospitals, including the Mayo Clinic, the John Hopkins Hospital, Cedar-Sinai Medical Center, the Cleveland Clinic, Duke University Medical Center and Vanderbilt University.

Pikeville City Manager Donovan Blackburn said the medical center is the largest employer in Pikeville and contributes nearly million to the city through the payment of occupational taxes. He went on to say that Pikeville Medical’s success is also the city’s success because as other cities struggle with dwindling revenues, Pikeville has actually seen growth.

“This is a regional medical center that is very important to the city. Pikeville is a legal, financial and education hub for Eastern Kentucky and a gateway to rural communities in Virginia and West Virginia. There are half a million within a 50-mile radius – so it’s not just local people that depend on this facility,” said Blackburn. “From a regional standpoint it adds volume from a jobs standpoint. Everybody in this county knows someone or has family that works for Pikeville Medical Center.
“People in this area used to have to go out of the area for good jobs and quality medical services, but Pikeville Medical has changed that,” added Blackburn. "And it has impact on other parts of the city’s economy – hotels, restaurants and retail. It increases the quality of life tenfold.”

The Recovery Act was designed to spend money gradually over time in order to sustain a true recovery – with peak spending to occur early this year. While the experts agree that ARRA is already responsible for creating or saving approximately two million jobs, about 75 percent of recipients that reported on their Recover Act spending indicated their projects are less than half complete, meaning there is even more job impact from those dollars to come.
USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.

20110712-RD-LSC-0204
construction executive jobs

Image by USDAgov
From across the horseshoe shaped town of Pikeville, KY, various buildings, parking lots, temporary walkways, and above ground construction of the Pikeville Medical Center (PMC) expansion project, on Tuesday, July 12, 2011, in Pikeville, KY. After months of infrastructure construction and rain delays, one of Kentucky’s largest American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) projects is under way. The .6 million Community Facilities Loan will finance construction of a new medical office building and parking garage. The new medical office building will house outpatient surgery, endoscopy, surgical support and provide exam, waiting and office space for 23 primary and specialty care physicians. It also will contain a medical research center to support existing research – in conjunction with Pikeville College – on health disparities, genetic research related to the prevalence of cancer and other areas, including drug and treatment trials. The new parking garage with more than 1,000 spaces will be built adjacent to the new medical building, eliminating the need to shuttle patients back and forth from remote parking areas. The new garage will provide closer and easier proximity to medical and hospital services for all patients.
Wayne Rutherford, County Judge-Executive for Pike County, says funding from ARRA is a boon for his county because it will create jobs.

“This is great for Pike County’s economy. We know we have a great hospital, and with this support, it will be even better,” said Rutherford. “The unemployment rate here is above the state average and this will stimulate jobs. There will be construction, which means lots of jobs on the front end – and even more once it is built.”

Pike County is one of Kentucky’s persistent poverty counties and the current medical facility provides health care services for a rural population of more than 68,000. This project will create 1,430 direct and indirect construction jobs, in addition to 97 long-term jobs. It is scheduled to be completed in December 2012.

“This project is a prime example of the ARRA monies being utilized for much-needed health care facility expansion in an economically-depressed region of Eastern Kentucky and Appalachia,” said Tom Fern, State Director for Rural Development in Kentucky. “This hospital has received national recognition for its quality of care, and this money will allow them to expand and build upon their success and continue providing quality health care services to the region.”

PMC was named National Hospital of the Year by the American Alliance of Healthcare Providers in November 2009. The hospital was among 400 elite health care facilities to apply for this prestigious honor. To earn this recognition, PMC competed against more than 400 hospitals, including the Mayo Clinic, the John Hopkins Hospital, Cedar-Sinai Medical Center, the Cleveland Clinic, Duke University Medical Center and Vanderbilt University.

Pikeville City Manager Donovan Blackburn said the medical center is the largest employer in Pikeville and contributes nearly million to the city through the payment of occupational taxes. He went on to say that Pikeville Medical’s success is also the city’s success because as other cities struggle with dwindling revenues, Pikeville has actually seen growth.

“This is a regional medical center that is very important to the city. Pikeville is a legal, financial and education hub for Eastern Kentucky and a gateway to rural communities in Virginia and West Virginia. There are half a million within a 50-mile radius – so it’s not just local people that depend on this facility,” said Blackburn. “From a regional standpoint it adds volume from a jobs standpoint. Everybody in this county knows someone or has family that works for Pikeville Medical Center.
“People in this area used to have to go out of the area for good jobs and quality medical services, but Pikeville Medical has changed that,” added Blackburn. "And it has impact on other parts of the city’s economy – hotels, restaurants and retail. It increases the quality of life tenfold.”

The Recovery Act was designed to spend money gradually over time in order to sustain a true recovery – with peak spending to occur early this year. While the experts agree that ARRA is already responsible for creating or saving approximately two million jobs, about 75 percent of recipients that reported on their Recover Act spending indicated their projects are less than half complete, meaning there is even more job impact from those dollars to come.
USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.

Cool Facilities Management Jobs images

A few nice facilities management jobs images I found:

Downtown Champaign: Taking Out of Storage
facilities management jobs

Image by grifray
Construction surrounding the deconstruction of municipal lots N and HS (Hill Street). In the late 1960s – early 1970s, the City of Champaign began a multi-million dollar effort to convert the land here to parking lots. Many of the business owners who were located here were removed by condemnation orders of the city, though most settled out of court.
Currently, the city is going through another kind of development, one where the parking lots built during the 60s – 90s are valued as available, and cheap, space for infill construction projects.
As in many cities across the country, many of these projects are attempts to make themselves more attractive to the "creative classes" – those with disposable income and information management jobs.
Lots N and HS have become the site of M2 on Neil, a mixed use facility housing retail, offices and condos. M2 is a million project by the local property development company, One Main. As a construction effort desirable to the city’s redevelopment initiative, the project is receiving not just affordable land, but .5 million in additional financial incentives to complete the building.
One Main is also responsible for the other major urban project in downtown Champaign, just across Neil St. from M2, known as One Main – it’s address.
One Main was also built on a former municipal lot, one that was only operational for 12 years.
The company is undertaking 3 similar projects in another Illinois mid-sized town with a prominent university, Normal that are worth over million.
Parking will still be a feature of the development, only in the form of a privately managed 500 space architectural facility.
The city is developing other plans for its many other lots, which currently represent 1/3 of all parking in downtown, including turning one of the more prominent ones into a landscaped plaza for gatherings and outdoor events. Beautification projects are high on the list of desires.
One Main’s descriptions of their desires and actions towards a new "creative" downtown equates its current state as a vampire to be slain, and the weapon in development:
"To take development back from the edge of the city and drive it deep into the heart of thriving downtown."

Downtown Champaign: Taking Out of Storage
facilities management jobs

Image by grifray
Construction surrounding the deconstruction of municipal lots N and HS (Hill Street). In the late 1960s – early 1970s, the City of Champaign began a multi-million dollar effort to convert the land here to parking lots. Many of the business owners who were located here were removed by condemnation orders of the city, though most settled out of court.
Currently, the city is going through another kind of development, one where the parking lots built during the 60s – 90s are valued as available, and cheap, space for infill construction projects.
As in many cities across the country, many of these projects are attempts to make themselves more attractive to the "creative classes" – those with disposable income and information management jobs.
Lots N and HS have become the site of M2 on Neil, a mixed use facility housing retail, offices and condos. M2 is a million project by the local property development company, One Main. As a construction effort desirable to the city’s redevelopment initiative, the project is receiving not just affordable land, but .5 million in additional financial incentives to complete the building.
One Main is also responsible for the other major urban project in downtown Champaign, just across Neil St. from M2, known as One Main – it’s address.
One Main was also built on a former municipal lot, one that was only operational for 12 years.
The company is undertaking 3 similar projects in another Illinois mid-sized town with a prominent university, Normal that are worth over million.
Parking will still be a feature of the development, only in the form of a privately managed 500 space architectural facility.
The city is developing other plans for its many other lots, which currently represent 1/3 of all parking in downtown, including turning one of the more prominent ones into a landscaped plaza for gatherings and outdoor events. Beautification projects are high on the list of desires.
One Main’s descriptions of their desires and actions towards a new "creative" downtown equates its current state as a vampire to be slain, and the weapon in development:
"To take development back from the edge of the city and drive it deep into the heart of thriving downtown."

Cool Electrical Engineer Jobs images

Some cool electrical engineer jobs images:

Professor A.W.H (Bill) Phillips with Phillip’s Machine c1958-67
electrical engineer jobs

Image by LSE Library
Extracts from ‘The Phillips Machine Project’ by Nicholas Bar, LSE Magazine, June 1988, No75, p.3

A.W. H. ‘Bill’ Phillips is known worldwide as the originator of the Phillips Curve. Less well known is the remarkable man he was personally, and his extraordinary route to academic prominence via what came to be called the Phillips Machine.

Trained as an electrical engineer in his native New Zealand in the 1930s, he caught the travel bug and took up an engineering job in the Australian outback, where he also earned money by running a cinema and hunting crocodiles. He reached London in 1938 via the Trans-Siberian railway and joined the RAF at the outbreak of war. He was captured in Java and spent most of the war in a Japanese POW camp, where he learned Chinese and some Russian from fellow prisoners.

Back in Britain he took the BSc (Econ) 1946-49, special subject sociology. He developed a great interest in economics…and like many of his generation, became very caught up with Keynesian theory. Though fascinated he found the Keynesian model hard going. With Walter Newlyn (an undergraduate contemporary, later Professor of Economics at Leeds University) to help with the economic theory, he fell back on his engineering training. He saw that money stocks could be represented as tanks of water, and monetary flows by water circulating round plastic tubes.

With a grant of £100 (obtained with Newlyn’s help) he spent the summer of 1949 in a garage in Croydon ‘living on air’ as James Meade was later to put it, working on a hydraulic representation of the Keynesian model.

In the machine he constructed, the circular flow of income was represented by water being pumped round a series of clear plastic tubes, with outflows representing savings, taxes and imports, and inflows representing investment, government spending and exports. The model had three tanks representing the stock of money, one for transaction balances and one for foreign-held sterling balances. The whole system determined the level of income, the rate of interest, imports, exports and the exchange to an accuracy (astonishing at the time) of +two per cent. The time path of income and the other variables was traced out by plotter pens making it possible to analyse the quantitative effects of economic policy.

The machine, in the jargon, was a hydraulic representation of an open economy IS-LM model with an explicit underlying dynamic structure. It was this very Heath Robinson prototype which, with the enthusiastic support of James Meade (then Professor of Commerce at the School), Phillips demonstrated to Lionel Robbins’ seminar in November 1949. Those attending gazed in wonder at this large (7ft high x 5ft wide x 3ft deep) ‘thing’ in the middle of the room. Phillips, chain smoking, paced back and forth explaining it in a heavy New Zealand drawl, in the process giving one of the best lectures on Keynes that anyone in the audience had ever heard. Then he switched the machine on. And it worked! According to Lord Robbins’ recollections, “there was income dividing itself into consumption and saving…Keynes and Robertson need never have quarrelled if they had had the Phillips Machine before them”…Phillips was made an Assistant Lecturer in Economics in 1950, Lecturer 1951, Reader 1954, and Tooke Professor of Economic Science and Statistics in 1958 (the year his Phillips Curve paper was published). He took up a Chair at the Australian National University in 1967 and, having suffered a major stroke, retired to Auckland in 1970, where he died five years later aged 60, mourned by many friends for personal as much for professional reasons.’

Reference: IMAGELIBRARY/6

Persistent URL: archives.lse.ac.uk/dserve.exe?dsqServer=lib-4.lse.ac.uk&a…

Tagged!
electrical engineer jobs

Image by laszlo-photo
One more post from this series. You see, I was tagged by dediva. I took my sweet time about it, but here it finally is… 16 things about myself.

1. I was born in 1961. You can do the math.

2. I am an electrical engineer.

3. My original degree was in biomedical engineering, but I left my job at the hosptial to go back to school full-time.

4. I always enjoyed photography, but I bought my first SLR, a Canon EOS Rebel SII for the purpose of shooting underwater. It took me another 5 years to purchase the lenses, housing and strobe needed to take my first underwater pictures in 1997.

5. The first photo I ever took, was of myself. As a toddler, I picked up an old "Brownie" and accidentally tripped the shutter while I was staring into the lens. The photo still exists in a family album somewhere or other.

6. I’ve lived in Cleveland, Ohio, USA my entire life. I was born and raised here, went to college and graduate school here, and have held various engineering positions, all here in Cleveland.

7. I am a pack-rat. I keep all sorts of things I think I might need. I let things get rather cluttered and messy at times, but it eventually gets on my nerves and I purge everything… only to begin hoarding again.

8. I’ve been happily married to the same lovely lady since 1984. You can do the math…

9. As long as I can remember, I’ve been an avid fisherman. I don’t know why, but I feel completely alive when I’m battling a gamefish on the end of my line.

10. I learned to scuba dive as an adult. I could not afford the hobby when I was younger. I almost exclusively dive tropical waters, so it is still an expensive hobby, as it involves air-travel.

11. I’ve always been a good swimmer… not great… just good. I swam varsity in high school and college. Now, I just swim for exercise and the fun of it.

12. Another sport I learned as an adult is skiing. Ohio does not have any mountains, so good skiing implies travel. I consider myself to be an intermediate skier, but I’ll take on some expert slopes too from time to time.

13. I love travel. There are so many places I want to see, in the U.S. and abroad. I use skiing and scuba diving as an excuse, but in truth, I’ll go anywhere at all just to see it whether or not I have a good reason.

14. I am a first-generation Hungarian-American. My parents, both Hungarian, refrained from speaking English in front of me and my sisters because they were sure that we’d pick up heir accents. As a result, Hungarian was my first language. I learned English from television and the neighborhood kids. I never had a Hungarian accent but I can fake one really, really well. Better than Bela Lugosi , well… his accent was real I guess.

15. I try to get ½ hour of strenuous aerobic exercise every weekday. I used to swim a mile every day before work, but now I run 3 miles a day, instead. I don’t think it’s quite the same workout, but it is certainly a lot more convenient.

16. I’ve always been kind-of a nerd. I used to play violin in the high school orchestra, I indulge in math puzzles, and screw around with various technical projects and pursuits. Do you want proof? Check out the photo above.

Me
electrical engineer jobs

Image by primerano
This is me, I work on the web.

Back in 1988, my high school Pascal teacher told us not to go into computer science since all those jobs were heading to India. Yes. I said 1988. This didn’t matter to me because I wanted to be an EE. But as I started looking for co-ops, perspective employers kept noticing that I knew assembler and some higher level languages. I never did land a job as an Electrical Engineer and I eventually finished my MSCS after about 9 years of working as a software engineer.

I’m actually a happy coder and consider myself lucky that the EE job market was so poor when I graduated.

Cool Construction Project Manager Jobs images

A few nice construction project manager jobs images I found:

Aiesh Ragih, KLB Project Manager
construction project manager jobs

Image by WSDOT
KLB Project Director Aiesh Ragih spoke about project delivery and construction related jobs the I-90 Project will bring.

WSDOT kicked off construction of the I-90 Snoqualmie Pass East project to improve safety and reliability of vital cross-state route.

The 5 million, 2005 Transportation Partnership Account-funded project was scheduled to begin in 2010. But a portion of the project was moved ahead a year after engineers developed a plan to build a detour bridge near the Gold Creek area at the Keechelus Lake reservoir to limit construction impacts on the movement of freight and people across Snoqualmie Pass.