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German Model City - Hamburg
A short review, it was started by two brothers as a place to show their hobby began to grow by leaps & bounds. Soon they were joined by other 'Model Railroad Clubs' and other craftsmen. Some were electricians, model makers, carpenters, computer programmers.
Over 400,000 man hours were spent making this dream come true.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/ ACkmg3Y64_s?rel=0
Over 400,000 man hours were spent making this dream come true.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/
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Miniatur Wunderland Hamburg - model building - model ...
Miniatur Wunderland – the world's largest model railway exhibition. A world-famousmodel train and miniature exhibition located in Hamburg, Germany. Miniatur Wunderland - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Miniatur Wunderland in the Speicherstadt district of Hamburg ... (German for miniature wonderland) is a model railway attraction in Hamburg, Germany, ... into seven sections: Harz, the fictitious city of Knuffingen, the Alps and Austria, Hamburg, ...
Singapore has built a huge, eco-friendly Supertree Grove
Singapore has built a huge, eco-friendly "Supertree Grove," made up of unique tree-shaped structures, up to 16 stories high, that collect rain and solar energy, absorb heat and provide shade to visitors and residents. The city is so green-focused that it's committed to zero waste in landfills by the middle of this century, and it was also the first to introduce the congestion charge. Traffic can get so bad that the city introduced a network of real-time cameras, sensors and GPS to track traffic and predict where jams will be, charging drivers more in that area. But don't think that Singapore has forgotten about pedestrians -- the disabled and elderly are given smart RFID (radio-frequency identification) cards which extend crossing times at traffic lights.
What to Do With a Dying Neighborhood
Covington, Georgia, decided not to let a half-completed development sit empty. But the city's solution has been both praised and vilified by observers.
COVINGTON, Ga.—There are hundreds of stories of failed subdivisions left empty by the housing bust, where homeowners are stuck staring into vacant lots of PVC pipes and weeds. There are very few stories where a half-finished development has been saved from ruin.
The rescue of one such development, by the city in which it is located, is being heralded as a potential solution to some of the worst mistakes of the housing crisis. The local newspaper, the Covington News, praised the project, writing that “a community has been brought back from the dead.”
That Covington, a city 35 miles east of Atlanta, did anything at all is unusual, said Ellen Dunham-Jones, an architect and urban-design professor at Georgia Tech who has a chapter on the subdivision, Walker’s Bend, in a forthcoming book, Retrofitting Sprawl.
The rescue of one such development, by the city in which it is located, is being heralded as a potential solution to some of the worst mistakes of the housing crisis. The local newspaper, the Covington News, praised the project, writing that “a community has been brought back from the dead.”
That Covington, a city 35 miles east of Atlanta, did anything at all is unusual, said Ellen Dunham-Jones, an architect and urban-design professor at Georgia Tech who has a chapter on the subdivision, Walker’s Bend, in a forthcoming book, Retrofitting Sprawl.
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Chicago Metro Section of the American Planning Association
Announcements ● Executive Committee ● Event Presentations Announcements
Executive Committee
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Articles From The Urbanophille
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