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The 9th Highway and Urban Environment Symposium (9HUES) was held
in Madrid, Spain, from 9-11 June 2008. HUES is run by Chalmers
University of Technology within the Alliance for Global
Sustainability (The AGS). HUES was initiated by Professor Ron
Hamilton at Middlesex Polytechnic (now University) in the early
1980s and had the title "Highway Pollution." The initial aim was to
measure and assess challenges in highway pollution, with a strong
emphasis on urban photochemical smog, ozone formation and particle
release. After the first symposium, the emphasis on air pollution
issues continued through to Munich in 1989 where diesel particulate
issues and the relevance to health through measurements of PM10
emerged. The focus on air quality issues was also strengthened. In
parallel, the symposium started to receive an increasing number of
scientific contributions from the area of urban run off, indeed to
the extent that the title of the symposium was changed to "Highway
and Urban Pollution." Since then the importance of science in
support of policy became increasingly important as a key aspect of
the symposium. 9HUES was held at TRANSyT- Universidad Politecnica
de Madrid, Spain to provide a professional and scientific forum on
global examples of the science required to support pathways to a
positive and sustainable future in the highway and urban
environment."
Explore the Design and Operation of Urban Transport Interchanges
Transport planners throughout the world can implement a range of
policies to influence travelers' behavior, and encourage a move to
public transport to achieve urban sustainability and social
inclusion. At the same time population growth and urban sprawl
exert their own pressures. Quality, accessible and reliable public
transport through intermodal trips provides a solution. More than
20% of current commuting trips in Europe are intermodal, and
typically between 20% and 30% of trip time is spent in intermodal
transfer. Interchange stations are becoming important parts of city
infrastructure where people spend time on social or economic
activities. Includes Contributions from Numerous Experts in the
Field CITY-HUBs: Sustainable and Efficient Urban Transport
Interchanges focuses on urban transport interchanges from more than
20 European researchers demonstrates why transport interchanges are
crucial for a seamless public transport system. It is based on a
broad consultation process to stakeholders of 26 interchanges in 10
different countries, and on tailored surveys to travelers in five
of them. It shows travelers how to reduce the negative aspects of
transfer by improving information provision and by delivering
convenient services and facilities. The book outlines the required
steps from interchange planning to operation, and defines the
functions, the design of the space for transfer, stay and services,
and assesses the needs for different types of interchange. It
introduces the evaluation of urban and economic impacts and the
identification of users' perceptions to improve interchange
efficiency. The most important factors from the user point of view
are safety and security, transfer conditions, information, design,
services and facilities, environmental quality and comfort. These
define the efficiency of the interchange from two different
perspectives: as a transport node and as a place. Packed with
relevant data and offering step-by-step instruction, this book:
Proposes innovative operating strategies for an intermodal services
organization (i.e. innovative business model) Explores pilot and
test case studies for defining interchanges good practice, and
tests them in validation case studies Sets out urban planning
guidelines for urban integration of a transport interchange As an
advanced guide CITY-HUBs: Sustainable and Efficient Urban Transport
Interchanges caters to transport operators, authorities, end-users'
organizations and policy makers who are challenged to implement new
urban interchanges or to upgrade them.
Explore the Design and Operation of Urban Transport Interchanges
Transport planners throughout the world can implement a range of
policies to influence travelers' behavior, and encourage a move to
public transport to achieve urban sustainability and social
inclusion. At the same time population growth and urban sprawl
exert their own pressures. Quality, accessible and reliable public
transport through intermodal trips provides a solution. More than
20% of current commuting trips in Europe are intermodal, and
typically between 20% and 30% of trip time is spent in intermodal
transfer. Interchange stations are becoming important parts of city
infrastructure where people spend time on social or economic
activities. Includes Contributions from Numerous Experts in the
Field CITY-HUBs: Sustainable and Efficient Urban Transport
Interchanges focuses on urban transport interchanges from more than
20 European researchers demonstrates why transport interchanges are
crucial for a seamless public transport system. It is based on a
broad consultation process to stakeholders of 26 interchanges in 10
different countries, and on tailored surveys to travelers in five
of them. It shows travelers how to reduce the negative aspects of
transfer by improving information provision and by delivering
convenient services and facilities. The book outlines the required
steps from interchange planning to operation, and defines the
functions, the design of the space for transfer, stay and services,
and assesses the needs for different types of interchange. It
introduces the evaluation of urban and economic impacts and the
identification of users' perceptions to improve interchange
efficiency. The most important factors from the user point of view
are safety and security, transfer conditions, information, design,
services and facilities, environmental quality and comfort. These
define the efficiency of the interchange from two different
perspectives: as a transport node and as a place. Packed with
relevant data and offering step-by-step instruction, this book:
Proposes innovative operating strategies for an intermodal services
organization (i.e. innovative business model) Explores pilot and
test case studies for defining interchanges good practice, and
tests them in validation case studies Sets out urban planning
guidelines for urban integration of a transport interchange As an
advanced guide CITY-HUBs: Sustainable and Efficient Urban Transport
Interchanges caters to transport operators, authorities, end-users'
organizations and policy makers who are challenged to implement new
urban interchanges or to upgrade them.
The 9th Highway and Urban Environment Symposium (9HUES) was held
in Madrid, Spain, from 9-11 June 2008. HUES is run by Chalmers
University of Technology within the Alliance for Global
Sustainability (The AGS). HUES was initiated by Professor Ron
Hamilton at Middlesex Polytechnic (now University) in the early
1980s and had the title "Highway Pollution." The initial aim was to
measure and assess challenges in highway pollution, with a strong
emphasis on urban photochemical smog, ozone formation and particle
release. After the first symposium, the emphasis on air pollution
issues continued through to Munich in 1989 where diesel particulate
issues and the relevance to health through measurements of PM10
emerged. The focus on air quality issues was also strengthened. In
parallel, the symposium started to receive an increasing number of
scientific contributions from the area of urban run off, indeed to
the extent that the title of the symposium was changed to "Highway
and Urban Pollution." Since then the importance of science in
support of policy became increasingly important as a key aspect of
the symposium. 9HUES was held at TRANSyT- Universidad Politecnica
de Madrid, Spain to provide a professional and scientific forum on
global examples of the science required to support pathways to a
positive and sustainable future in the highway and urban
environment. This volume contains papers grouped by topic on
ustainable mobility and management; air pollution; trace elements
in the environment; urban water contamination, contaminated sites
and treatment; urban climate and climate change. "
Uncompromising, hypnotic and darkly humorous, Other Electricities
charts a new and strange direction in American fiction. “Like
Franklin’s discovery of the electricity we do know, Monson’s
luminous, galvanized book represents a paradigm shift. The
frequencies of the novel have been scrambled and redefined by this
elegant experiment. Other Electricities is a new physics of prose,
a lyric string theory of charged and sparkling sentences. What a
kite! What a key!”—Michael Martone “Monson is tuned in to our
crackling, chaotic, juiced-up times like no other young writer I
know. Other Electricities is necessary reading.”—Robert Olen
Butler Meet “Yr Protagonist”: radio amateur, sometime vandal
and “at times, perhaps the author” of Monson’s
category-defying collection: I know about phones. While our dad was
upstairs broadcasting something to the world, and we were listening
in, or trying to find his frequency and listen to his voice . . .
we would give up and go out in the snow with a phone rigged with
alligator clips so we could listen in on others’ conversations.
There’s something nearly sexual about this, hearing what other
people are saying to their lovers, children, cousins, psychics,
pastors. . . . The cumulative effect of this stunningly original
collection seems to work on the reader in the same way—we follow
glimpses of dispossessed lives in the snow-buried reaches of
Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula, where nearly everyone seems to be
slipping away under the ice to disappear forever. Through an
unsettling, almost crazed gestalt of sketches, short stories,
lists, indices and radio schematics, Monson presents a world where
weather, landscape, radio waves and electricity are characters in
themselves, affecting a community held together by the memories of
those they have lost. Ander Monson is the editor of DIAGRAM and the
New Michigan Press. He teaches at Grand Valley State University and
lives in Michigan. Tupelo Press recently published his poetry
collection, Elegies for Descent and Dreams of Weather.
DIAGRAM.4 is the fourth print installment of the journal DIAGRAM .
These texts are selected from years 7 to 9 of the journal, and are
joined here by a great many found & recovered diagrams.
Contributors: Marcia Aldrich, Steve Barbaro, Douglas Basford,
Lindsay Bell, Samantha Bell, Elisabeth Benjamin, Ash Bowen, Jason
Bredle, Nickole Brown, Stephen Burt, Blake Butler, Edmond Caldwell,
Kate Hill Cantrill, Jimmy Chen, Nolan Chessman, Adam Clay, Juliet
Cook, J. P. Dancing Bear, Lightsey Darst, Kirk Lee Davis, Nicole
Cartwright Denison, Adam Fell, Matthew Gavin Frank, Emily Kendal
Frey, Matthew Glenwood, Brent Goodman, Loren Goodman, Idris
Goodwin, Amelia Gray, Marj Hahne, John Harper, Luis Felipe
Hernandez, trans. Toshiya Kamei, Sean Hill, Eunsong Kim, Gareth
Lee, Matt Leibel, Genine Lentine, Carlo Matos, Kyle McCord, Marc
McKee, Ben Mirov, Trey Moody, Mark Neely, Amy Newman, JoAnna Novak,
Brian Oliu, Kim Parko, Adam Peterson, Cecilia Pinto, Lia Purpura,
Catie Rosemurgy, A. K. Scipioni, Glenn Shaheen, Nate Slawson, B. J.
Soloy, Terese Svoboda, August Tarrier, J. Townsend, Michael Walsh,
Kellie Wells, Cori A. Winrock, Joshua Jennings Wood, and Bill
Yarrow.
DIAGRAM III, the latest baby in the print collection from the
magazine DIAGRAM, brings you our own cabinet of wonders: prose,
poem, and image. Included here are favorite pieces from 2004 and
2005 by the following: Gina Abelkop, Corinn Adams, Nick Admussen,
Forrest Aguirre, Neil Aitken, Stephanie Anderson, Arlene Ang,
Danielle Aquiline, Jennifer Ashton, Craig Beaven, Deborah Bogen,
Jenny Boully, Kristy Bowen, Joseph Bradshaw, Jason Bredle, Pack
Bringley, Marcel Brouwers, S. Burgess, Traci Oberg Connor, Matthew
Cooperman, Nancy Vieira Couto, Kirk Lee Davis, Angie DeCola.
Stephanie DeHaven, DJ Dolack, Melanie Dusseau, Tim Earley, Jeff
Encke, Adam Fell, Ian Finch, Ryan Flaherty, Jason Fraley, Anne
Germanacos, Andrew C. Gottlieb, Miriam Greenberg, Kelle Groom,
Roger W. Hecht, Derek Henderson, Janis Butler Holm, Erika Howsare,
Carrie Jerrell, Melanie Jordan, Ariana-Sophia Kartsonis, Becca
Klaver, David Koehn, Jason Koo, Sean Lovelace, Dawn Cunningham
Luebke, Amanda Magnuson, Courtney Mandryk, Farah Marklevits,
Michael Martone, Clay Matthews, Paul McCormick, Mark McKain, Marc
McKee, Peter Mishler, Carol Novack, Kevin Oberlin, Anne Pepper,
Simon Perchik, Dan Pinkerton, Derek Pollard, Frances Justine Post,
Sima Rabinowitz, Billy Reynolds, Claudia Ryan, F. Daniel Rzicznek,
Shya Scanlon, Morgan Lucas Schuldt, M. B. Seigel, Mike Smith, Jen
Tynes, Matthew Vadnais, Gautam Verma, Caroline Wilkinson, Joshua
Marie Wilkinson, Caleb Wilson, Kevin Wilson, and Terry Wright. Plus
many new schematics. Find us online at thediagram.com Or make this
fine artifact your own only $14.
DIAGRAM.2, the second print anthology from the popular online
magazine of text, art, and schematic, DIAGRAM, includes selections
from its third and fourth years of publication. Includes a wide
array of strange, never-before-seen schematics from the late 18th
and early 19th centuries, chosen for their strangeness and beauty.
Like the first print anthology, (SOME FROM) DIAGRAM: SELECTIONS
FROM THE MAGAZINE AND MORE, this is an often bizarre, sometimes
funny, often profound, and always intense collection. Edited by
Ander Monson, author of OTHER ELECTRICITIES and VACATIONLAND.
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