Autumn afternoon paddling along the East Canada Creek π
Open Topograhpy – Infrastrucutre for Topographic Data
Open Topograhpy – Infrastrucutre for Topographic Data
9/17/21 by MapScaping
Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/128610411
Episode: https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/juwtpw/OpenTopography.mp3
OpenTopography provides community access to high-resolution, topography data, related tools, and resources … FOR FREE! OpenTopograhy.org Sponsored by Regrid.com Leading provider of land parcels and location context data for your maps, apps, and spatial analysis.
September 22, 2021 – Looking Ahead This Week
The next few days will be quite rainy β but then sunshine returns for the weekend β
Autumn seems to have definitely arrived although today certainly is fairly mild. I am thinking about staying in town this weekend and maybe going up to Thacher Park one last time before the summer nature bus service is done.
This Afternoon. Feels like … September 1st. |
A chance of showers. Partly sunny.
South wind around 9 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
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79 degrees | 67 max dew point | 6:50 sunset |
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Tonight. Muggy ! |
A chance of showers, mainly after 11pm. Mostly cloudy.
Southeast wind around 9 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
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68 degrees | 68 max dew point | 6:43 sunrise |
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Thursday. Feels like … September 1st. |
A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy.
Southeast wind 9 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
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79 degrees | 69 max dew point | 6:50 sunset |
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Thursday Night. Muggy ! |
Showers. Low around 65. Southeast wind around 10 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
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65 degrees | 68 max dew point | 6:45 sunrise |
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Friday. Feels like … September 24th. |
Showers likely, mainly before 10am. Mostly cloudy.
South wind around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New precipitation amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
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71 degrees | 65 max dew point | 6:48 sunset |
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Friday Night. Feels like … September 14th. |
A slight chance of showers before 2am. Partly cloudy.
Chance of precipitation is 20%.
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53 degrees | 6:46 sunrise |
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Saturday. Feels like … September 24th. |
Mostly sunny.
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71 degrees | 57 max dew point | 6:47 sunset |
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Saturday Night. Feels like … September 12th. |
Partly cloudy.
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54 degrees | 6:47 sunrise |
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Sunday. Feels like … September 24th. |
A chance of showers after 2pm. Mostly sunny.
Chance of precipitation is 30%.
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71 degrees | 54 max dew point | 6:45 sunset |
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Sunday Night. Feels like … September 17th. |
A chance of showers before 8pm. Partly cloudy.
Chance of precipitation is 30%.
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52 degrees | 6:48 sunrise |
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Monday. Feels like … September 21st. |
Mostly sunny.
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72 degrees | 53 max dew point | 6:43 sunset |
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Monday Night. Feels like … September 17th. |
Partly cloudy.
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52 degrees | 6:49 sunrise |
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Tuesday. Feels like … September 21st. |
A chance of showers. Mostly sunny.
Chance of precipitation is 30%.
|
72 degrees | 57 max dew point | 6:41 sunset |
The Preservation Battle of Grand Central
The former First Lady was there to illuminate the plight of the Beaux Arts railway station that once dazzled New Yorkers and was, upon its opening in 1913, considered one of the city’s greatest wonders. Intended by developers to dwarf the nearby Penn Station, Grand Central Terminal cost nearly $160,000,000 (more than $4 billion today) to construct and was a front-page story in the local papers for weeks leading up to opening day. As dependence on rail travel diminished in the mid-20th century, Grand Central’s relevance too was questioned, and in 1963, the top of the station became the base for the tower known as the Pan-Am building, named after the airline headquartered there.
In 1975 a plot was hatched to dwarf the Pan-Am building with an even larger structure designed by famed Modern architect Marcel Breuer, but there was a problem: the sting of Penn Station’s demolition in 1964 was still fresh in the minds of many New Yorkers. In the aftermath of that legendary building’s destruction, Grand Central had been designated a New York City Landmark under a new law that gave the city the power to protect buildings it deemed worthy. When plans for the Breuer addition were presented to the Landmarks Preservation Commission, the response from officials was that the tower was essentially an “aesthetic joke.”
While few doubted the significance of Grand Central, the terminal’s owners took issue with the law itself—how, they wondered, could it constitute anything other than an unreasonable violation of their rights as property owners? Preservationists like Onassis, working with groups like the Municipal Art Society, continued to insist that saving Grand Central and buildings like it wasn’t a mere real estate matter, but an issue of public good. On June 26, 1978, the United States Supreme Court agreed with them in Penn Central Transportation Co. vs. New York City, not just in regards to Grand Central but in the spirit of the Landmarks law itself, with Justice William Brennan writing that to rule in favor of the building’s owners would “invalidate not just New You City’s law, but all comparable landmark legislation elsewhere in the nation.”
Overhang
Limbs overhang the lake on this late summer nice morning.
Taken on Monday September 19, 2016