Posts Tagged ‘ottawa’
[CAT] Seven #caturday links: Lil Bub, Pallas cats, Smudge, adoptions, expressions
- This Wired obituary for Lil Bub, arguing that the time for the Internet to be a place fo whimsy is over, does make me sad.
- Norwegian forest cats look amazing! The Dockyards has photos.
- The Pallas cats newly in the Calgary Zoo are, rightfully, becoming big hits. Cottage Life has more.
- Ottawa cat Smudge, already a meme hit, has become a celebrity. CBC Ottawa has more.
- Unsurprisingly, cats bond with their owners in the same sort of way as dogs and even human infants. More here.
- Happily, record numbers of cats are being adopted from shelters, given new homes. Global News reports.
- Some few people are apparently good are deciphering the expressions of cats, 15% of the total in one study sample. VICE reports.
Written by Randy McDonald
December 7, 2019 at 5:00 pm
Posted in Assorted, Photo, Popular Culture, Science
Tagged with alberta, cats, internet, lil bub, links, news, norway, norwegian forest cats, ottawa, pallas cats, photos, psychology, Science
[URBAN NOTE] Seven city links: Ottawa, Longueuil, Montréal, Winnipeg, Saint John, Halifax, Lethbridge
- The Ottawa Citizen suggests a recent audit of OC Transpo should have offered warnings of the Confederation Line problems to come.
- A project office has been set up for the extension of the Yellow Line in Longueuil and elsewhere on the south shore. CTV News reports.
- La Presse looks at the concerns of some artists in Rosemont-La-Petite-Patrie that they might be forced out by gentrification.
- That the Bay Building in downtown Winnipeg has been evaluated as being of little value offers an opening to Heritage Winnipeg. Global News reports.
- The New Brunswick government is forcing suburbs of Saint John to pay for city facilities that they also used. Global News reports.
- Short-term rentals are having a negative effect on real estate markets in Halifax. Global News reports.
- Downtown Lethbridge faces struggles to attract business. Global News reports.
Written by Randy McDonald
November 25, 2019 at 11:45 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Urban Note
Tagged with airbnb, alberta, atlantic canada, borders, canada, cities, confederation line, economics, halifax, lethbridge, longueuil, manitoba, mass transit, montréal, neighbourhoods, new brunswick, nova scotia, oc transpo, ontario, ottawa, québec, real estate, rosemont, saint john, Urban Note, winnipeg, yellow line
The mayor of Ottawa is suggesting freezing Confederation Line fare increases in light of the system’s problems. https://globalnews.ca/news/6146499/ottawa-mayor-transit-fare-freeze-lrt/
- The mayor of Ottawa is suggesting freezing Confederation Line fare increases in light of the system’s problems. Global News reports.
- La Presse looks at the problems faced by the Marché Jean-Talon, here.
- Greater Moncton, arguably the leading metropolis of New Brunswick, wants to double its intake of immigrants. Global News reports.
- Jamie Bradburn looks at Lafayette Park in Detroit, designed by Mies van der Rohe.
- Will Vancouver be connected to Washington State by a high-speed train route? Global News reports.
Written by Randy McDonald
November 12, 2019 at 10:30 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Demographics, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Urban Note
Tagged with atlantic canada, british columbia, canada, cities, confederation line, Demographics, detroit, mass transit, michigan, mies van der rohe, moncton, montréal, new brunswick, ontario, ottawa, parks, québec, rail, seattle, shopping, united states, Urban Note, vancouver, washington state
[URBAN NOTE]Seven city links: Ottawa, Montréal, NYC, Calgary and Edmonton, Vancouver, Sao Paulo …
- Ottawa mayor Jim Watson vows to vix the LRT Confederation Line. Global News reports.
- Home-buyers in Montréal are having to buy outside of the city, in the West Island and even the mainland. The Montreal Gazette reports.
- VICE looks at the legacy of Michael Stewart, a New York City graffiti artist famously killed in the 1980s, here.
- The LRT projects in Calgary and Edmonton are currently facing terrible uncertainty thanks to new legislation. Global News reports.
- New maps show the great damage that could be caused by sea level rise in Metro Vancouver. Global News reports.
- Spacing reports on an amazing graphic novel biography of Sao Paulo.
- Guardian Cities looks at the problematic gentrification of Soweto, here.
Written by Randy McDonald
November 2, 2019 at 11:00 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Demographics, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Urban Note
Tagged with alberta, apartheid, brazil, british columbia, calgary, canada, cities, comics, crime, edmonton, global warming, graffiti, in memoriam, latin america, maps, mass transit, montréal, new york, new york city, ontario, ottawa, politics, public art, québec, são paulo, south africa, south america, soweto, united states, Urban Note, vancouver
[URBAN NOTE] Nine city links
- The new LRT that will unite Brampton and Mississauga looks very cool. blogTO reports.
- The small farming town of Belfountain is apparently facing a major influx of Toronto tourists seeking fall sights. Global News reports.
- Ridership on Kitchener-Waterloo transit generally has increased sharply since the opening of the Ion LRT. CBC reports.
- London, Ontario, is trying to regenerate its downtown. Global News reports.
- CTV Ottawa reports on O-Train Fans, a new fan community devoted to exploring the Confederation Line.
- La Presse looks at how people cross the street in Montréal in a way different from people in Québec City, here.
- A high-density apartment development in Fredericton is unpopular among some neighbours. Global News reports.
- Hillsborough, New Brunswick, is trying to keep its grocery store alive. Global News reports.
- Calgary hosts a new development of compact homes for military veterans. Global News reports.
Written by Randy McDonald
October 30, 2019 at 11:30 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Demographics, Economics, Politics, Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Urban Note
Tagged with alberta, belfountain, brampton, calgary, canada, cities, fredericton, hillsborough, kitchener-waterloo, london canada, mass transit, military, mississauga, montréal, ontario, ottawa, québec, québec city, real estate, shopping, Urban Note
[BLOG] Some Saturday links
- Adam Fish at anthro{dendum} compares different sorts of public bathing around the world, from Native America to Norden to Japan.
- Charlie Stross at Antipope is unimpressed by the person writing the script for our timeline.
- Architectuul reports on an architectural conference in Lisbon.
- Bad Astronomer Phil Plait shares stunning photos of the eruption of the Raikoke volcano in Kamchatka.
- Centauri Dreams looks at what the Voyager spacecraft have returned about the edge of the solar system.
- John Quiggin at Crooked Timber takes issue with the idea of bipartisanship if it means compromising on reality, allegorically.
- The Crux counts the number of people who have died in outer space.
- D-Brief notes that the Andromeda Galaxy has swallowed up multiple dwarf galaxies over the eons.
- Dead Things notes the identification of the first raptor species from Southeast Asia, Siamraptor suwati.
- The Dragon’s Tales notes a paper tracing the origins of interstellar comet 2/Borisov from the general area of Kruger 60.
- Karen Sternheimer at the Everyday Sociology Blog writes about the privilege allowing people access to affordable dental care.
- Gizmodo tells how Alexei Leonov survived the first spacewalk.
- io9 looks at the remarkable new status quo for the X-Men created by Jonathan Hickman.
- Selma Franssen at the Island Review writes about the threats facing the seabirds of the Shetlands.
- JSTOR Daily looks at what led Richard Nixon to make so many breaks from the American consensus on China in the Cold War.
- Language Log notes an undergraduate course at Yale using the Voynich Manuscript as an aid in the study of language.
- Abigail Nussbaum at Lawyers, Guns and Money explains her recent experience of the socialized health care system of Israel for Americans.
- The LRB Blog looks at how badly the Fukuyama prediction of an end to history has aged.
- The Map Room Blog shares a few maps of the new Ottawa LRT route.
- Marginal Revolution notes a paper establishing a link between Chinese industries undermining their counterparts in Mexico and Mexican social ills including crime.
- Sean Marshall reports from Ottawa about what the Confederation Line looks like.
- Adam Shatz at the NYR Daily looks at the power of improvisation in music.
- Roads and Kingdoms looks at South Williamsburg Jewish deli Gottlieb’s.
- Drew Rowsome reviews</a the new Patti Smith book, Year of the Monkey.
- The Russian Demographics Blog shares a paper looking as the factors leading into transnational movements.
- Starts With A Bang’s Ethan Siegel considers the question of the direction(s) in which order in the universe was generated.
- Window on Eurasia shares a report noting the very minor flows of migration from China to Russia.
- Yorkshire Ranter Alex Harrowell looks at the politics in the British riding of Keighley.
- Arnold Zwicky looks at some penguin socks.
Written by Randy McDonald
October 12, 2019 at 8:00 pm
Posted in Assorted, Demographics, Economics, History, Photo, Politics, Popular Culture, Science, Social Sciences
Tagged with 2/borisov, alexei leonov, anthropology, architecture, birds, blogs, book reviews, canada, china, clash of ideologies, comics, confederation line, Demographics, dinosaurs, economics, environment, fashion, finland, first nations, food, former soviet union, geopolitics, health, iceland, in memoriam, islands, israel, japan, judaism, kamchatka peninsula, kruger 60, language, links, maps, mass transit, mexico, migration, new york, new york city, norden, oddities, ontario, ottawa, photos, physics, politics, popular music, russia, scotland, shetlands, siberia, social sciences, sociology, solar system, southeast asia, space science, space travel, thailand, united kingdom, united states, volcanoes, voyager 1, voyager 2, voynich
[PHOTO] Planning for Ottawa and Gatineau
The Guides Ulysse 2019 guide to Ottawa and Gatineau, the two cities of the National Capital Region, seemed a wise purchase tonight. I would be lying if I said that the new Confederation Line LRT was not making me think seriously of a visit north to the metropolis of the Ottawa Valley, but there are so many reasons for me to go north beyond the LRT, too!
[URBAN NOTE] Five city links: Ottawa, Moncton, New York City, Calgary, Richmond
- The Ottawa Citizen reports on the first week of the Confederation Line LRT.
- The New Brunswick city of Moncton now has new affordable housing–20 units–for vulnerable people. Global News reports.
- CityLab looks at one photographer’s perspective of the New York City skyline, changed by the 9/11 attacks.
- An alleyway in Calgary is being transformed by art. Global News reports.
- Birth tourism might become an election issue in the British Columbia city of Richmond. Global News reports.
Written by Randy McDonald
September 21, 2019 at 10:00 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Economics, History, Photo, Politics, Popular Culture, Urban Note
Tagged with alberta, alley, british columbia, calgary, canada, cities, citizenship, laneway, mass transit, migration, moncton, new brunswick, new york, new york city, ontario, ottawa, photography, public art, real estate, richmond, terrorism, united states, Urban Note
[URBAN NOTE] Five city links: Ottawa, Montréal, London, Garges-lès-Gonesse, Venice
- The Ottawa Citizen looks at the problems of the Confederation Line in the evening, here.
- CBC Montreal takes a look at a 1930s tourist brochure from Montréal. The city was represented in interesting ways.
- Wired looks at how skyscraper designs in London are being changed for the benefit of cyclists.
- Guardian Cities reports on “Ma cité va briller”, the viral challenge from the Paris suburb of Garges-lès-Gonesse that inspired competition to clean up cities across the Francophone world.
- Atlas Obscura looks at how the Venetian Republic took great advantage of its expertise in cryptography in the Renaissance.
Written by Randy McDonald
September 17, 2019 at 6:30 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Social Sciences
Tagged with architecture, canada, cities, cryptocyrrency, history, italy, london, mass transit, montréal, ontario, ottawa, paris, québec, technology, tourism, united kingdom, Urban Note, veneto, venice
[URBAN NOTE] Five city links: Ottawa, Montréal, Halifax, Peripignan, Helsinki
- The Confederation LRT line, happily, has opened in Ottawa. Global News reports.
- Dorchester Square in Montréal will feature an open-air gallery for emerging artists. CTV reports.
- How, exactly, will the crane that collapsed in Halifax in Dorian be removed? CBC reports.
- Guardian Cities tells the story of how Gypsies in Perpignan resisted gentrification, here.
- Atlas Obscura reports on the summer custom, in Helsinki, of families cleaning their carpets with salt water on piers.
Written by Randy McDonald
September 15, 2019 at 7:30 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Politics, Popular Culture, Science, Social Sciences, Urban Note
Tagged with atlantic canada, canada, confederation line, disasters, finland, halifax, helsinki, mass transit, montréal, norden, nova scotia. france, oddities, ontario, ottawa, perpignan, public art, québec, Urban Note