Boston responds to climate change with elevated parks and flood barriers

Boston has launched a plan to prevent flooding in its most vulnerable waterfront neighbourhoods, becoming the latest US city to respond to the threat of rising sea levels.

Released last week, the coastal Massachusetts city’s climate change plan outlines strategies to protect the neighbourhoods of East Boston and Charlestown from an increased likelihood of flooding.

These areas are at particularly high risk due to low-lying pathways that lead directly down to the edge of Boston harbour. Both are predicted to frequently experience coastal flooding.

Boston’s climate change strategy focuses on two of the city’s most vulnerable coastal neighbourhoods, including Charlestown

The Coastal Resilience Solutions For East Boston and Charlestown report outlines an urban development plan to block floodways into the neighbourhoods as soon as possible.

It comes in the wake of series of drastic and unpredictable weather events in the US, including hurricanes that devastated cities in Florida and Texas, which called for changes in urban planning. San Francisco and the Bay Area recently launched a design competition asking for ways to protect coastal areas from rising sea levels, as well as earthquakes, while New York City and Miami are also taking steps to address flooding.

Coastal Resilience Solutions For East Boston and Charlestown report
Strategies to protect the vulnerable neighbourhood include barricading its waterfront with elevated pathways and parks

“Climate change is here,” said Boston city mayor Martin J Walsh. “It’s happening now. This year, we saw its effect in Texas, Florida, Puerto Rico, and across our country and world.”

“In Boston, we are seeing more frequent flooding on our waterfront, especially in East Boston and Charlestown,” he added. “It’s more important than ever that we work together to make sure our city is ready for the changes ahead.”

Boston intends to implement its flood-defence proposals in future city developments. Plans include raising a section of Charleston’s Main Street – in front of the Schrafft’s Center office complex – by two feet. Proposed redevelopment of the Schrafft’s Center waterfront also calls for elevated parks and pathways that could act as a barricade along the water’s edge, and offer protection to 330 residents.

The other neighbourhood addressed in the report is East Boston, which is also at risk due to low-lying paths that lead straight from the harbour

Another idea to protect Charlestown is to overhaul the waterside Ryan Playground with elevated pathways, plazas and beaches.

Suggestions to protect East Boston include the construction of a deployable flood wall, which could block the entrance to the linear Greenway park in anticipation of flooding, protecting 4,300 residents and over 70 businesses.

Other plans include elevating the low-level Greenway entrance and Piers Park II, creating a raised, public green space.

East Boston and Charlestown were already outlined as the city’s most vulnerable coastal neighbourhoods in the Climate Ready Boston initiative, released last year.

Coastal Resilience Solutions For East Boston and Charlestown report
“Near term” strategies to block these floodways into East Boston’s Greenway park include elevating the green space and building a deployable flood wall

But other areas of the waterside city are also expected to become at risk in coming years, as sea levels are predicted to increase nine inches by 2030, 21 inches by 2050 and 36 inches by 2070. The Coastal Resilience Solutions For East Boston and Charlestown report also outlines a host of future strategies that take these figures into account.

The initiative is among many created to help Boston combat climate change, including Imagine Boston 2030 and Go Boston 2030.

Climate change was one of five topics discussed during Dezeen’s Good Design for a Bad World series of talks during Dutch Design Week last month, along with pollution, politics, terrorism and the refugee crisis.

The post Boston responds to climate change with elevated parks and flood barriers appeared first on Dezeen.

Taking a binge approach to organizing projects

Today National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) starts, 30 days of concentrated writing with the goal of producing a 50,000 word novel. Nearly 20 years old now, the month is a way for writers to set themselves a goal and a deadline, producing 1,667 words a day.

Why does it exist?

  • To provide motivation to writers who may find life getting in the way of writing regularly.
  • To provide a community of support in what is considered a rather solitary process.
  • To shut down the internal editor, the voice that blocks forward motion.
  • To gamify the writing process, giving writers the chance to score wins against the final word count.

I’ve done it a few times, although I only won it once. While in principle I think it’s a great idea, for me it creates too much anxiety and pressure. The binary win/lose option stresses me out and then I can’t actually focus on the writing. Author Chuck Wendig does a great job of taking a slightly tongue-in-cheek look at the pros and cons of working in this way.

For many people, however, it’s the exact motivation they need to finish something. Many popular authors have used the month to kickstart bestseller novels.

Unclutterer is focused on organizing and productivity not writing novels so why discuss it here? Because maybe for you, a binge approach to an organizing project you’ve been putting off may be just the thing you need to get going — and to reach the end.

Let’s break down NaNoWriMo into its component parts and transfer them to a hypothetical organizing project: unclutter and organize the kitchen cupboards.

NaNoWriMo goal: 50,000 words in 30 days
Organizing goal: 18 cupboards and drawers

NaNoWriMo daily goal: 1,667 words
Organizing daily goal: a little more than 1 cupboard or drawer every two days

NaNoWriMo support network: any number of online or local writing support groups and forums (or of course books and workbooks)
Organizing support network: the Unclutterer Forums, friends or family

NaNoWriMo gamification moment: daily concrete opportunity to “win”
Organizing gamification moment: daily concrete opportunity to “win”

NaNoWriMo internal editor silencer moment: with the daily goal and pressure of winning, there’s no time to allow doubt to creep in — it’s a “just do it” moment
Organizing doubt silencer: with a set two-day goal, there’s no opportunity to doubt decision — they simply have to be made

NaNoWriMo positive peer pressure moment: if a daily word count is missed, it can be spread through the rest of the month, or binge-written one day to catch up
Organizing positive peer pressure moment: if a day goes by without organizing a drawer or cupboard, a day with a double “win” can boost your confidence

NaNoWriMo end result: the first draft of a novel, a beginning-to-end piece of fiction
Organizing end result: a streamlined and organized kitchen

This type of organizing, however, is not for everyone. Just as I no longer do NaNoWriMo because it produces too much pressure-related anxiety, the stress of “having to” organize a drawer or cupboard every two days might produce panic or paralysis instead of motivation. It depends entirely on your personality.

If you think you’ll enjoy this challenge, check out Erin Rooney Doland’s book Unclutter Your Life in One Week. It has great tips and provides a guide for uncluttering any room in your home.

Post written by Alex Fayle

Kids Try 100 Years of Cheese

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People Try to Guess Who's a Virgin from a Group of Strangers

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How to Make Clay-Roasted Human Thigh from 'Hannibal'

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Improv Everywhere: Fake Apple Store Prank

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'I, Tonya' Official Red Band Trailer

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Everything Wrong With 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2'

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Making Hairdryer Portability a Breeze

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There is nothing more frustrating than stepping out of the shower in a hotel and attempting to dry your hair with their hairdryer, which has the same effect as having someone blow on your hair for an hour. However, bringing your own hairdryer takes up too much space in your bag. It’s this reason alone that Seongkyeong Son and Sungwoo Park set out to develop something that was not only space saving but challenged the conventional hairdryer grip too. Through this, Pebble was born. Pebble’s design is precisely what you’d expect from its name – smooth curves and a soft design aesthetic, complimenting the shape of the hand. The concept of merging the handle with the device is very interesting – giving the user complete control over the product, enabling them to use it in whichever form they find most comfortable.

Designers: Seongkyeong Son & Sungwoo Park

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