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Tag: architecture

  • Essex Heritage completes work on lighthouse

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    SALEM — The Essex National Heritage Commission recently completed critical masonry restoration work at the 234-year-old Baker’s Island Light Station with opportunities to tour the site later this month.

    The $30,000 preservation project sought to preserve the structural integrity of the historic lighthouse tower and keepers’ houses for future generations. The work, which took place throughout the summer, included repointing of the lighthouse’s brick masonry interior and restoration of three historic brick chimneys on the keepers’ houses, according to Essex Heritage.


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    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

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  • The Ultimate Garden Shed

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    Byró Architekti’s smallest project to date is its biggest scene stealer. Located in a garden enclave just 20 minutes from Prague’s city center, the shed was built on the foundation of a dilapidated cottage. The owners use the property as a retreat and wanted an outbuilding that serves as a library, gathering space, shelter from the rain, and extra bedroom, while communing with the surrounding greenery.

    To tick all those boxes, architects Jan Holub and Tomáš Hanus devised a pavilion with built-in bookshelves, a sleeping loft, and a façade that pops up to fully connect indoors and out. It’s a practical folly.

    Photography by Alex Shoots Buildings, courtesy of Byró Architekti (@byro–architekti).

    Above: “The building is designed as a wooden structure in a two-by-four construction system,” write the architects. It’s finished with blackened spruce cladding aka shou sugi ban.
    Doors fold back to reveal a polycarbonate window.
    Above: Doors fold back to reveal a polycarbonate window.
    The structure
    Above: The structure’s defining feature is a delightful surprise.

    “We thought about how to connect the building as closely as possible to the surrounding garden, and we ultimately came up with the idea of a folding panel that allows one side of the house to completely open,” write Holub and Hanus.”This way, the interior seamlessly transitions to the outdoors, with the garden penetrating the building, creating a kind of paraphrase of a garden loggia, which was our architectural inspiration.”

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  • Career Certified Extends Its Investment in the Fast-Growing Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) Professionals Market with Acquisition of My Contractors License

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    Through this acquisition, Career Certified adds general contractor and electrical contractor licensing exam preparation solutions to its expanding portfolio of regulated career education products, positioning itself to positively impact a market of millions of AEC professionals. 

    Today, Career Certified acquired My Contractors License, a trusted name in general contractor licensing exam preparation. Through the acquisition, Career Certified expands its portfolio to support learners preparing for state licensing exams and the nationally -recognized National Association of State Contractors Licensing Agencies (NASCLA) exam. 

    By expanding into this market, Career Certified underscores its commitment to supporting professional growth in the AEC sector, reinforcing its position as a go-to resource for compliance-focused education. The My Contractors License acquisition bolsters Career Certified’s existing AEC market leadership in architecture exam preparation. 

    “By aligning directly with local regulations and expectations, My Contractors License sets a high standard for rigor and relevance with their comprehensive state-specific materials, supporting better-prepared contractors who are equipped to meet industry demands from day one,” said Gary Weiss, CEO of Career Certified.  

    “With over 520,000 roles in construction management in 2023, including general contractor positions, and a projected 9% growth through 2033, the construction industry faces a critical talent shortage as retirements rise and skilled candidates remain scarce,” adds Rebecca Turco, EVP of Specialized Trades and Product, Career Certified. “Career Certified’s acquisition of My Contractors License bolsters our ability to bridge this gap, providing accessible, comprehensive training to meet growing infrastructure needs and build a skilled workforce for the future.” 

    “The My Contractors License team is delighted to join Career Certified to increase efficiency, get to market faster with an enhanced curriculum, expand beyond exam prep, and action insights swiftly with a seasoned team centered on preparing our learners for success, no matter where their careers take them,” said Ron Daniell, CEO of My Contractors License. “I remain committed to helping our audience succeed, and with Career Certified supporting us, we’ll be armed to make a significant impact.”  

    About My Contractors License 
    My Contractors License offers a comprehensive learning program delivered through a purpose-built digital platform. With a committed team deeply embedded in the general contracting industries, My Contractors License’s tailored courses enable aspiring contractors to obtain licensing with confidence, supported by a 100% pass guarantee. The company is dedicated to elevating industry standards by increasing the number of skilled, licensed contractors. Learn more at MyContractorsLicense.com
     

    About Career Certified 
    Career Certified makes purpose attainable. From Pre-Licensing, Post-Licensing, Exam Prep, and Continuing Education coursework to tools for the entire lifecycle of a professional’s career, the company pairs an easy-to-use platform and flexible learning options with a deep understanding of students’ needs conducive to guiding them to career freedom. Visit CareerCertified.com to learn more. 

    Source: Career Certified

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  • The first look at the 2025 school year budget focuses on fixing up the buildings

    The first look at the 2025 school year budget focuses on fixing up the buildings

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    DERRY — The Fiscal Advisory Committee presented a preliminary budget of $103.4 million to the School Board Tuesday night.

    “When you’re doing your homework over the next week, the question I have for everyone here is to give these guys some guidance” on a final budget number, said School Board Chair David Clapp. “I know it’s a tough question to ask … but I think it’s prudent for us to do that.”

    In March, residents turned down a proposed budget of $103.5 million, along with warrant articles for $36.8 million in school renovations and $71.2 million for the design, construction and furnishing of a new elementary school building.

    The school year 2025-26 proposed budget saw the biggest changes in three areas: furniture and equipment, which would increase from $58,000 to $288,100; repairs, which went from $1.5 million to $1.8 million; and supplies, which grew from $1.1 million to $1.2 million.

    Repairs needed at almost all of the schools, Simard said.

    “At the end of this presentation you’re going to see the capital projects that we’re looking to go out on a warrant,” Finance Director Jane Simard said. “These are maintenance items that we would like to include in the budget so that’s why I itemized them by school.”

    East Derry, Barka, Grinnell, Hood, South Range, and West Running Brook all need maintenance to their parking lots and new vinyl and carpet flooring, Simard said.

    East Derry also needs a dividing wall replaced; Barka needs culvert repairs; Grinell needs window caulking and sealing and a loading dock replacement; Hood needs its front stairway replaced; South Range needs to replace its oil pump control system; and, West Running Brook needs a roof drain replacement.

    Other projects include replacing the roofs at East Derry, Hood, Grinnell, and South Range, along with projects to replace Barka’s interior and exterior doors. Window replacements are needed at several buildings, and the HVAC system at South Range needs to be upgraded. A warrant article would ask residents to allocate a total of $24.3 million for those repairs.

    There will be four more budget review sessions at 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 4, Nov. 19, Dec. 3, and Dec. 17 at West Running Brook Intermediate School, 1 West Running Brook Lane, before the budget public hearing at 6 p.m. on Jan. 14 at the Derry Municipal Center, 14 Manning St.

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    By Katelyn Sahagian | ksahagian@northofboston.com

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  • Open House Chicago: Top Architecture Sites in 2023 | Choose Chicago

    Open House Chicago: Top Architecture Sites in 2023 | Choose Chicago

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    Have you ever walked by a building and thought “I wonder what that looks like inside?”

    Well, now’s your chance to take a closer look behind closed doors. Open House Chicago — the city’s free annual architecture festival — is back on Saturday, Oct. 19 and Sunday, Oct. 20, 2024.

    During this weekend event, you’ll have the opportunity to explore more than 170 sites across 20 Chicago neighborhoods. Discover historic landmarks, private clubs, and soaring skyscrapers — including 25 brand-new sites.

    Here are just 16 new, unique, and interesting Open House Chicago sites to get you started this year.

    Ramova Theatre in Bridgeport 

    New to Open House this year, the Ramova Theatre in Chicago’s Bridgeport neighborhood has reopened as a live music venue, craft brewery, beer garden, and restaurant. Originally built as a movie theater in 1929, visitors can enjoy house-brewed beers from Other Half Brewing, elevated diner classics at the Ramova Grill, and a vibrant entertainment venue, contributing to the revitalization of Bridgeport neighborhood. 

    Saturday: Closed
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Wheelchair accessible: Yes
    More details

    Pullman Artspace Lofts in Pullman

    The Pullman Artspace Lofts offer affordable live-work housing tailored for artists. Situated in two restored 1880s Pullman factory town buildings and a new structure by Stantec Architecture, the Lofts feature 38 homes, a gallery, classrooms, and community spaces. This project has revitalized the neighborhood by transforming vacant apartment buildings and an empty lot into a vibrant artistic community.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Double Door in Uptown

    The much-anticipated relocation of the beloved Double Door Theater is underway, taking over the historic Wilson Theater. Designed by Henry L. Ottenheimer, visitors can tour the interior of the 1909 structure that was one of Uptown’s first venues showcasing nightly vaudeville acts. The building became a bank in 1919 and endured several transformations, retaining a blend of theater and banking architecture. With plans to transform the now-vacant building into a music venue, this is a unique opportunity to experience its historic interior before renovations begin.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    This site is not wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Walt Disney House in Hermosa

    Exterior of the Walt Disney House in Chicago
    Walt Disney House in Chicago, photo courtesy Frank D’Angelo

    Built by his father in 1891, this two-story wood cottage in the Hermosa neighborhood is the birthplace of Walter Elias Disney. The family welcomed Walt, their third son, on the second floor of the home in 1901. The current owners are working with the city to protect this historic spot and restore it to its original condition. Small groups will be allowed inside for a brief self-guided tour.

    Saturday: 12 p.m. – 4 p.m.
    Sunday: 12 p.m. – 4 p.m.
    This site is not wheelchair accessible.

    Tip: In the neighborhood, Right Bee Cider is a cidery located inside a former Schwinn bicycle factory and an official Open House Chicago site.

    Al-Sadiq Mosque in in Bronzeville

    New to Open House Chicago this year is Al-Sadiq Mosque, one of the first mosques built in the United States and the country’s oldest mosque still operating today. The structure was originally built in the Bronzeville neighborhood in 1922 as a private home. A majority of the space will be accessible for the public to explore during Open House Chicago.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: Closed
    This site is not wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Tip: The Bronzeville neighborhood also has nine other Open House Chicago sites to explore while you’re there.

    Wild Mile in Lincoln Park

    Wild Mile from above
    Dave Burk @SOM

    The Wild Mile in Lincoln Park is the world’s first floating eco-park of its kind, featuring lush gardens of native wetland on floating docks. This innovative park provides vital habitats for wildlife and a serene escape for city dwellers. Since its inception, the Wild Mile has become a popular destination, offering guided tours and inviting exploration of its nearly 700 feet of floating boardwalk.

    Urban Rivers staff will be leading guided tours of the Wild Mile throughout the day. Each tour will last approximately 30 minutes.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Chess Records in South Loop

    Explore the beginnings of Chicago blues at Chess Records, part of Willie Dixon’s Blues Heaven Foundation. This historic recording studio is where legendary artists played and shaped the iconic sounds of rock n’ roll, Chicago style blues, and beyond. Open House Chicago visitors will have the unique opportunity to see the studio space on the second floor, frequented by artists like Muddy Waters, the Rolling Stones, Chuck Berry, and beyond.

    Saturday: Closed
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    The second floor studios are not wheelchair accessible
    More details

    The Driehaus Museum’s Murphy Auditorium in River North

    The Driehaus Museum's Murphy Auditorium
    The Driehaus Museum’s Murphy Auditorium

    Newly reopened and designed by renowned Chicago architects Benjamin Marshall and Charles E. Fox, the Murphy building originally served as a center for surgical research and education. The stunning building features a striking limestone exterior inspired by Paris’s Chapelle Notre-Dame-de-Consolation and showcases bronze doors by Tiffany Studios depicting medical figures. Inside, visitors can enjoy a self-guided experience in the Murphy Auditorium and admire a towering, multicolored stained-glass window. 

    Saturday: 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Chicago Tool Library in West Garfield Park

    Chicago Tool Library
    Chicago Tool Library

    Explore thousands of items at the Chicago Tool Library, housed in a transformed industrial warehouse in West Garfield Park. Members can borrow a wide variety of tools and equipment for household projects, business ventures, and community events. By providing equitable access to resources, the Tool Library fosters creative exchange, community building, and skill development across Chicago.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: Closed
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

    National Puerto Rican Museum in Humboldt Park

    The National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture resides in the historic Humboldt Park stables, a stunning example of Fromman & Jebsen’s architectural design. Despite a devastating fire in 1992, the building has been meticulously restored, featuring original red-pressed brick, timber cornices, storybook turrets, and a red tile roof, alongside modern amenities. Today, this beautifully restored space hosts exhibitions, programs, and cultural activities, serving as a vibrant cultural hub for the community.

    Embark on self-guided tours or join docent-led tours throughout the entire museum. Plus, each day will feature an exciting art project and a lively dance lesson.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Access Living in the Near North Side

    Opened in 2007, the Access Living building is a pioneering example of universal and green design, created with the needs of people with disabilities in mind. The building showcases artworks by disabled artists and serves as a vital hub for disability advocacy, culture, and public events. Visitors from around the world tour Access Living to experience its barrier-free design and participate in various forums and events that elevate disability culture. Learn more about the building and universal design with guided tours from the building architects. 

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: Closed
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Teatro ZinZanni in the Loop

    Teatro ZinZanni Chicago Spiegeltent Zazou. Photo by Alabastro Photography.

    Step back in time at Teatro ZinZanni and explore an antique Belgian Spiegeltent, now home to a unique theater experience that combines cabaret, comedy, and live music. The one-of-a-kind space includes glittering chandeliers, intricate woodwork, ornate stained glass, and fantastic performances that transport audiences to a bygone era of opulence. Enjoy tours and a glimpse of performers in the lounge space and the historic Spiegeltent.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: Closed
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

    Austin Harvest in Austin

    Austin Harvest emerged in summer 2020 as a youth-driven initiative to bring fresh produce to their community, transforming a vacant storefront into a mission-driven market. Entirely student-led, the market manages all operations and reinvests revenue into its sustainability and student stipends, addressing a critical need for the neighborhood. Originally a temporary pop-up, Austin Harvest has now evolved into a permanent fixture, featuring a repurposed shipping container and a welcoming patio where visitors can shop for produce and engage with student entrepreneurs.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: Closed
    Wheelchair accessible: Yes
    More details

    Glessner House in South Loop

    Designed by the legendary American architect Henry Hobson Richardson, this architectural marvel was completed in 1887 and remains a celebrated treasure in Chicago. A radical departure from traditional Victorian architecture, Glessner House inspired great architects like Louis Sullivan, Mies van der Rohe, and Frank Lloyd Wright. Enjoy guided tours of main rooms on first floor and learn how it redefined domestic architecture. 

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    This site is not wheelchair accessible
    More details

    The Roof Crop in West Town

    Built in 1928, this former manufacturing warehouse in West Town has been revitalized to house three dynamic businesses: The Roof Crop, Third Season apothecary and design store, and Flashpoint Innovation, a food and beverage consultancy with a state-of-the-art kitchen. Guided tours are available every 30 minutes exploring first and second floors as well as the green roof and greenhouses showcasing the value of meticulous craftsmanship and creativity.  

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
    Sunday: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
    This site is wheelchair accessible
    More details

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    Illinois Tech Campus in Bronzeville 

    Illinois Tech's S.R. Crown Hall
    Illinois Tech’s S.R. Crown Hall

    For modernist architecture enthusiasts, a visit to Illinois Tech is a must. This year, S.R. Crown Hall and Carr Chapel by modern master Mies van Dder Roe are featured Open House Chicagosites.

    New this year is the Kaplan Institute by John Ronan. The LEED Gold-designated building marks the first academic building to join the campus in 40 years. The star of this building is the remarkable second floor that cantilevers over the ground floor. Thanks to its unique materials and mind-bending engineering, the building has a light, cloud-like appearance.

    Saturday: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
    Sunday: Closed
    Carr Chapel and S.R. Crown Hall arenot wheelchair accessible. Kaplan Institute is wheelchair accessible.
    More details

    Open House Chicago offers a unique opportunity to explore the city’s architectural gems, from historical landmarks to cutting-edge designs. Learn more about Chicago’s unique architectural heritage and history and plan your visit. 

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  • A visit to the McIntire Tea House is a trip back in time

    A visit to the McIntire Tea House is a trip back in time

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    DANVERS — A visit to the McIntire Tea House begins as you step through a gate in the fieldstone wall and follow the manicured pebble path toward the back of the Glen Magna estate house.

    You walk past a semi-circular porch that opens from the house’s main hall, turn right, and follow another path right and into the main gardens which, even in mid-September and despite the dry weather, are still quite beautiful.

    At the end of the garden, you will pass a fountain and enter the pergola — eight fluted concrete pillars imported from a Georgia mansion some time after the Civil War. The pillars are joined on top by heavy cedar beams with the ends cut to an Asian pattern.

    The pergola was blown down three years ago in a storm, said Danvers Historical Society President David McKenna. The only problem putting it back up, he added, was finding cedar beams that big. They managed, however, and now, even the wisteria covering the far end has nearly all grown back.

    Beyond the pergola, on your left, you will get your first real glimpse at the McIntire Tea House. It is a white building, 20 feet square by two-and-a-half stories high, decorated with pilasters, swags and Grecian urns, and topped with rustic wooden statues of a reaper and a milkmaid — and it goes back some 230 years.

    During the War of 1812, Joseph Peabody, the wealthiest Salem shipping merchant of his day, bought the 20-acre Danvers property, according to a brochure from the Danvers Historical Society.

    It was described as “in every respect well-calculated for a gentleman’s seat.” From this initial 20-acre purchase the property grew to over 330 acres and was used as a summer retreat for the next 144 years.

    At approximately the same time, across the river, Elias Haskett Derby, a wealthy Salem businessman, contracted with Samuel McIntire, the renowned Salem architect, to design and build a summer house at his farm on Andover Street in what was then part of Danvers.

    McIntire designed Derby’s summer house and built it on his farm in July 1794. That farm, where Routes 114 and 128 now intersect, encompassed the hilltop on which the summer house was built. It is now the site of the Northshore Mall.

    There it remained until 1901, when it was moved four miles overland from its original site to its present location at Glen Magna Farms.

    According to reports of the time, it was towed by horse teams the entire distance over wooden rails without any damage — except for the loss of one of the two wooden statues (the Milkmaid) which had adorned the roof and disappeared during the move.

    A duplicate was carved in 1924 and placed on what was by now the McIntire Tea house, along with the other statue (The Reaper). The original Reaper fell in a storm in 1981 and it too was reproduced.

    By 1892 Glen Magna Farms belonged to Ellen Peabody Endicott, Joseph Peabody’s grandfather, who in 1893 hired the Boston firm of Little, Browne and Moore to expand the mansion to its present classic colonial revival form.

    Among the many improvements she made before her death in 1926, she brought the Derby Summer House to Glen Magna in 1901.

    Over the years, the family did, indeed, use it as a tea house.

    On hot summer afternoons, they would climb the steep, narrow stairway to the second floor where they would open the eight large, vaulted windows to the cool breezes that always seemed to be blowing.

    Through the rear window, they could enjoy views of the walled rose garden — now badly in need of repair; through the right window they could see the pergola, the main garden and great house; and through the front window, they could stand in marvel of the giant weeping beech tree while servants carried trays of tea up that steep, narrow stairway.

    Nothing the Salem News could find detailed the slow deterioration of Glen Magna Farms but, by the 2000s, it was becoming obvious.

    At about that time, Tom Page, a former Marine who is also a teacher at Salem State University and owner of the historic Page House in downtown Danvers, was elected president of the Danvers Historical Society. He had a deep commitment to the history of Danvers.

    In the words of David McKenna, current Historical Society president, “The Historical Society was in dire straits at the time … it was unattended, nobody went to the meetings … Tom had been a trustee, vice president, then he was elected president and made it a player.”

    McKenna said Page was one of the most fortunate things that happened to the Society at the time.

    “He had a direct line between the Historical Society and the town,” and he was able to continue the life of the Society rather than allowing it to disappear, McKenna said.

    About that time, things began to happen, and the town secured two, $50,000 grants from the Massachusetts Historical Commission.

    The Tea House was in sad condition: It was infested with squirrels, had holes all along the eaves, a lot of water damage, badly worn and missing siding, beams and framework rotted away.

    The first grant was directed at making the building weather-tight: They replaced the roof, repaired the rotted and missing frame and replaced the siding.

    The second $50,000 grant was directed primarily toward restoring the badly weathered rooftop statues of the Reaper and the Milkmaid.

    As the severely damaged originals were in permanent storage and their replacements, also carved wood, were rotted, bug-eaten and simply missing parts and pieces, they had to be replaced.

    Replacing the reaper and milkmaid statues cost most of the second $50,000 grant.

    And since the replacement statues, though hand-carved, were still not not totally accurate reproductions, the Historical Society decided to call in Skylight Studios, Inc., a Woburn firm with a worldwide reputation, which specializes in replacing badly damaged statuary with weather- and insect- and animal-proof polymer replicas that are as close as possible to the originals.

    The new statues were made from molds of the earlier statues, and now stand proudly above the tea house where they are expected to stand undamaged and sparkling white for decades to come.

    The six windows on the third floor were, before the restorations, nearly impossible to open. They operated on a rope, weight and pulley counterbalance system that was frequently used around the turn of the 19th century, and had to be overhauled.

    The rope and weights were no problem, but the pulleys were carved from wood and were no longer available. Window Woman of New England, a firm that specializes in restoring antique windows, took on the job, meticulously carving each of at least 16 pulleys.

    Overall, it cost $100,000 to restore the exterior and the interior of the McIntire Tea House to the condition it is today, but the interior still needs refinishing, and the the Danvers Historical Society is still looking for someone to donate money to do the work.

    At the end of the day, McKenna noted that the members of the Danvers Historical Society are “an extraordinary group of people” who have succeeded in doing a “terribly important job — becoming a member of the community. One of the great metrics of their success is that I can go home with a beer Koozie that says ‘Danvers Historical Society’ on it.”

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    By Buck Anderson | Staff Writer

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  • Prediction: This Tech Stock Could Take Off After the iPhone 16 Launch (Hint: It’s Not Apple)

    Prediction: This Tech Stock Could Take Off After the iPhone 16 Launch (Hint: It’s Not Apple)

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    Apple‘s much-awaited Sept. 9 event is finally in the rearview mirror, and it would be safe to say that there was nothing much to be surprised about. The technology giant revealed a new generation of iPhones that will support generative artificial intelligence (AI).

    The new iPhone 16 lineup will get its first batch of generative AI features next month through a software update. It appears that the company will be gradually introducing AI tools from its Apple Intelligence suite of generative AI features as it looks to make a dent in an emerging smartphone niche that’s expected to take off big-time in the long run.

    Market research firm IDC is forecasting a 364% year-over-year increase in shipments of generative AI smartphones this year to 234 million units. More importantly, the generative AI smartphone market is forecast to grow at an annual rate of 78% through 2028, clocking annual shipments of 912 million units as per IDC.

    So, Apple is moving into the generative AI smartphone market at an opportune time when the demand for these devices is booming. That explains why Wedbush analyst Dan Ives expects Apple’s latest iPhones to kick off a solid upgrade cycle, with shipments expected to increase in the double digits in 2024 compared to last year’s near-4% increase in shipments. The company is expected to ship 240 million iPhones in fiscal 2025 thanks to the growing adoption of AI smartphones.

    Now, it remains to be seen if the AI-enabled iPhones are good enough to give Apple’s top and bottom lines a nice boost. However, there’s one company that could be a bigger beneficiary of Apple’s iPhone 16 launch than the Cupertino-based tech giant itself — Arm Holdings (NASDAQ: ARM). Let’s look at the reasons why.

    iPhone 16 lineup could boost Arm Holdings’ revenue and margins

    Apple points out that its latest smartphones are “built for Apple Intelligence.” To make that happen, the company developed a new smartphone chip — the A18. The iPhone 16 and the iPhone 16 Plus will be powered by the A18 chip, while the Pro and Pro Max versions will have the A18 Pro chip inside them.

    Apple has reportedly designed this chip using Arm Holdings’ Armv9 architecture, according to the Financial Times. Announced in 2021, the Armv9 architecture places emphasis on AI, security, and performance upgrades over the previous generation Armv8 architecture that was launched in 2011. So, it is not surprising to see Apple has reportedly decided to opt for this architecture to develop its latest iPhone processors so that they can support AI functions.

    For comparison, Apple was using the Armv8 architecture until last year when it launched the iPhone 15 models. While the transition to Armv9 could be good news for iPhone users as they will be able to finally use AI features, apart from witnessing a potential jump in performance, it could be even better news for Arm investors.

    That’s because Armv9 “commands a higher royalty per chip than prior architectures,” as pointed out by management in a recent earnings presentation. Arm CEO Rene Haas has said that the royalties from the Armv9 architecture could be double that of its predecessor, the Armv8. A closer look at the management commentary on Arm’s July earnings conference call indeed suggests that Armv9 is driving the needle in a bigger way for the company.

    In the words of Haas:

    Every chip being designed today requires a CPU, and these are being designed with Arm in mind, with our strong tie into all-the-world software … [T]hat has driven significant royalty revenue growth, more value per chip … [In fact, the] v9 [is] up to 25% … [of] royalty revenue of overall.

    That’s up 20% from the previous quarter. More importantly, our smartphone royalty revenue was up 50% year on year. That’s against a single-digit increase in units.

    Clearly, the adoption of Armv9 has led to a much stronger increase in Arm’s revenue against the number of units that the company has been shipping. As a result, the company’s total revenue shot up an impressive 39% year over year in the first quarter of fiscal 2025 to $939 million. More importantly, Arm’s remaining performance obligations also increased 29% from the same quarter last year as the company sold more licenses to customers looking to develop AI chips.

    And now that Apple’s iPhone shipments are expected to jump following the release of its latest lineup, it won’t be surprising to see Arm’s royalty revenue also go up substantially thanks to Armv9. The important thing to note here is that even if Apple doesn’t witness a meaningful increase in shipments on the back of the iPhone 16 launch, Arm Holdings would still remain a winner because of the potentially higher royalties it is set to receive from Cupertino.

    Bigger royalties could translate into terrific earnings growth

    Apple isn’t the only smartphone stakeholder to have switched to the Armv9 architecture. Leading smartphone processor company Qualcomm has already been using this architecture, as has Chinese chip giant MediaTek. So, Arm Holdings is well positioned to make the most of the booming demand for generative AI smartphones, and the growing demand for the Armv9 architecture will allow the company to generate fatter margins because of stronger royalties.

    This probably explains why analysts are forecasting an acceleration in Arm’s bottom-line growth. The company ended fiscal 2024 with $1.27 per share in earnings, which means that its bottom line could jump 23% in the current fiscal year to $1.57 per share as per consensus estimates. The earnings estimate of $2.07 per share for the next fiscal year indicates that Arm’s earnings could increase at a much healthier pace of 32%, which is why investors looking to benefit from Apple’s latest iPhones in particular and AI smartphones in general can consider buying Arm Holdings as its long-term prospects appear to be solid.

    Should you invest $1,000 in Arm Holdings right now?

    Before you buy stock in Arm Holdings, consider this:

    The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Arm Holdings wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

    Consider when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005… if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $729,857!*

    Stock Advisor provides investors with an easy-to-follow blueprint for success, including guidance on building a portfolio, regular updates from analysts, and two new stock picks each month. The Stock Advisor service has more than quadrupled the return of S&P 500 since 2002*.

    See the 10 stocks »

    *Stock Advisor returns as of September 9, 2024

    Harsh Chauhan has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Apple and Qualcomm. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

    Prediction: This Tech Stock Could Take Off After the iPhone 16 Launch (Hint: It’s Not Apple) was originally published by The Motley Fool

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

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    San Francisco’s Fleishhacker Pool was so enormous that lifeguards patrolled using rowboats….

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  • Unlock Simplified, Pro-grade Design Capabilities with Ashampoo 3D CAD Professional 11 | Entrepreneur

    Unlock Simplified, Pro-grade Design Capabilities with Ashampoo 3D CAD Professional 11 | Entrepreneur

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    Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you’ll find interesting and useful. If you purchase them, Entrepreneur may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners.

    For entrepreneurs and design professionals who are looking to elevate their projects, Ashampoo 3D CAD Professional 11 offers a powerful yet user-friendly solution that combines precision, versatility, and an extensive object library—all for just $39.99 (reg. $330).

    Whether you’re a seasoned architect or a DIY enthusiast, this software offers a seamless blend of simplicity and sophistication. Its intuitive interface guides you through every step of the design process, from sketching floor plans to visualizing your space in stunning 3D.

    This Windows-only software is designed to make your workflow more efficient and your designs more precise. It has a host of powerful tools and features that simplify complex tasks. For instance, the program offers dedicated input modes for walls, windows, and doors, allowing you to quickly and accurately define key elements of your project. Additionally, numerical editing tools provide even greater precision, ensuring that every measurement and modification is spot on.

    Ashampoo 3D CAD Professional 11 has auto-save functionality and reminders to save your work manually, so you never have to worry about losing progress. The context menu supports cut, copy, and paste functions, making it easier to manage different elements of your design. With powerful floor plan analysis and correction features, you can quickly identify and address any issues before they become problems.

    It has extensive object catalogs that provide a wide range of 3D objects and more than 250 ready-to-use object groups. From pre-designed garages and kitchen lines to garden houses and saunas, these objects make adding detail and realism to your projects easy. You can also create your own catalog directories and use them directly in the software, customizing your designs to fit your unique vision.

    With more than 20 million users, this software provides all the tools you need to help bring your vision to life.

    Get a lifetime license to Ashampoo 3D CAD Professional 11 now and pay just $39.99 (reg. $330) for a limited time.

    StackSocial prices subject to change.

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    StackCommerce

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  • GMB Announces New Brand Centered on Creating Abundance in Education

    GMB Announces New Brand Centered on Creating Abundance in Education

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    GMB, a planning, architecture, engineering, enrollment marketing, and branding firm serving schools and universities, has announced a new brand to support their evolving organization. GMB has recently expanded its service offerings for clients in education and is focused on equipping and empowering students to build a better future of abundance.

    GMB’s team provides a comprehensive package designed to address the multifaceted needs of educational institutions. With an integrated approach, educators receive a cohesive strategy where each service complements and strengthens the others, leading to enhanced outcomes for schools and students.

    “When you hire GMB, you receive a full range of curated services to support your brand and your buildings,” said David Bolt, GMB President and CEO. “Instead of offering a menu of services to choose from, GMB provides a full-service bundle of interconnected resources which saves schools and universities both time and money.”

    GMB has engaged in several exclusive partnerships to support this holistic evolution. Partnerships with Secure Environment Consultants (SEC) provide clients with built-in safety and security services, and with sustainability and energy experts to integrate with our engineering solutions. GMB also acquired a full-service marketing firm in 2023, providing branding, digital, and enrollment marketing services for higher education institutions across the U.S.

    To illustrate these bold organizational changes, GMB is introducing a new brand and identity that goes beyond traditional architecture and engineering. GMB’s updated logo drops the reference of only offering architecture and engineering services and embraces a new look that speaks to growth and the firm’s evolving nature. A new vibrant color palette evokes a fun and energetic nature that reflects the students we serve.

    “We are excited to expand our impact and reach a broader audience of educators and students of all ages,” added Jeff Hoag, Educational Planner with GMB. “We believe that the more we can share, the more people who have access to resources and knowledge will help all of us increase the abundance, creativity, and inventiveness in the world.”

    GMB employs more than 200 people across the country and has been serving clients for over 56 years. We are a people-centric and empowered team working together to contribute to an equitable, sustainable, and abundant future for all.

    Source: GMB

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  • This Ancient Technology Is Helping Millions Stay Cool

    This Ancient Technology Is Helping Millions Stay Cool

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    Cheap, low-energy evaporative cooling devices are keeping water, food, people, and even whole buildings cool across India.

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    Nadeem Sarwar, Shreya Fotedar

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  • Boring Architecture Is Starving Your Brain

    Boring Architecture Is Starving Your Brain

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    Designer Thomas Heatherwick thinks the construction industry is in a crisis. “We’ve just got so used to buildings that are boring,” says the man behind London’s revived Routemaster bus, Google’s Bay View, and New York’s Little Island. “New buildings, again and again, are too flat, too plain, too straight, too shiny, too monotonous, too anonymous, too serious. What happened?” While those features can often be aesthetically appropriate on their own, Heatherwick notes that it’s the relentless combination of them in the aesthetics of modern buildings and urban spaces that makes them overwhelmingly boring.

    This boredom, he adds, isn’t just a nuisance—it can actually be harmful. “Boring is worse than nothing,” Heatherwick writes in his latest book, Humanize. “Boring is a state of psychological deprivation. Just as the body will suffer when it’s deprived of food, the brain begins to suffer when it’s deprived of sensory information. Boredom is the starvation of the mind.”

    This isn’t just a matter of opinion. Heatherwick cites, for instance, the research of Colin Ellard, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Waterloo who studies the neurological and psychological impact of the built environment. In his experiments, Ellard has shown that people’s moods were considerably affected when surrounded by tall buildings. In one experiment, he collected data from wearable sensors that tracked skin conductance response, a measure of emotional arousal. When people pass by a boring building, Heatherwick says, “their bodies literally go into a fight-or-flight mode. They have nothing for their mind to connect to.”

    The brain, Heatherwick argues, craves complexity and fascination. “There’s a reason why, when you look out into a forest, nature’s complexity and rhythms restores our attention back,” he says. “We need that in buildings. Less is not more.” This is backed by the research of psychologists Rachel and Stephen Kaplan, who in the 1980s developed Attention Restoration Theory, which posited that people’s concentration improves when spending time in natural environments.

    “We haven’t been paying attention to the nutritional value to society of the buildings that are around us,” Heatherwick says. He believes, for example, that architects now prefer to prioritize the internal spaces of a building, while neglecting what the building looks like from the outside. This is a mistake. “Buildings are the backdrop of society’s life,” he says. “A thousand times more people will go past this building than will ever come inside it. The outside of that building will affect them and contribute to how they feel.” Ultimately, to humanize our urban spaces, architects need to think about the people that inhabit them. Heatherwick recalls a debate of elite people in the construction industry a few years ago about whether the opinion of the public mattered. “We debated all night and then they voted that they didn’t. It was unbelievable.”

    Such short-term thinking is leading to what Heatherwick calls “the dirty secret of the construction industry”: its disastrous environmental impact. Just consider, for instance, that in the US, 1 billion square feet of buildings are demolished every year. “That’s half of Washington, DC, destroyed, just to get rebuilt after with the same sort of boring buildings,” he says. In the UK, 50,000 buildings a year are demolished, with the average age of a commercial building being around 40 years. “If I were a commercial building, I would have been killed 14 years ago,” he says. “To build a tower in the city of London, which by global standards isn’t that big, takes the equivalent of 92,000 tons of carbon emissions.” As a result of this, estimates show that the construction industry now emits five times more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere than aviation.

    “We can’t have buildings that are only here for 40 years. We need thousand-year thinking,” he says. “The world of construction teaches you that form follows function, less is more, ornament is a crime. It’s powerful, and when you’re studying, that goes in your brain and brainwashes you.” But Heatherwick reminds us that emotion is a function, and one that should be celebrated in the world of construction.

    This article appears in the July/August 2024 issue of WIRED UK magazine.

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    João Medeiros

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  • Ask Angi: How can I improve my home’s lighting?

    Ask Angi: How can I improve my home’s lighting?

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    It’s easy to overlook the importance of good lighting design. Sure, a few bulbs can give you the light you need to see by, but light is more than just practical illumination. It creates beauty and art in its own…

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    By Paul F. P. Pogue | Ask Angi

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  • Cahill touts financial strength in State of City address

    Cahill touts financial strength in State of City address

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    BEVERLY — Mayor Mike Cahill used his annual State of the City address this week to highlight accomplishments and to reiterate that the city is in a strong financial position.






    Mike Cahill




    In a 30-minute speech at City Hall, Cahill said the city has built up reserves of over $30 million over the last decade — money that can be used to keep the city running smoothly in the event of an economic downturn.

    “Our reserves are meant to get us through a recession when revenues fall precipitously and to do so without wholesale layoffs and drastic deep cuts to critical services,” Cahill said.

    “These reserves are not meant to be used to outspend still strong and growing revenues during good economic times,” he added. “They are meant to help us keep delivering the services people need and rely on right through the worst economic times and through economic recovery from those bad times.”

    In his speech in front of the City Council on Monday night, Cahill ran down the accomplishments of each city department, calling it “a great year in Beverly.”

    Highlights mentioned by Cahill included:

    – The hiring of the first woman as city engineer, Lisa Chandler

    – Progress on upcoming traffic projects like a proposed roundabout at the intersection of Brimbal Avenue and Dunham Road, a traffic signal at the intersection of Corning, Essex and Spring streets, and the Bridge Street reconstruction project

    – Daily visits to the Senior Center are up 63%

    – Over 150,000 people visited the library

    – Two new parks on Simon Street will be completed this summer

    New tennis courts will be built at Centerville and Cove playgrounds

    – A major renovation of Holcroft Park will begin this summer

    – The city’s senior tax workoff program has grown from 50 to over 90 seniors

    – The city will launch its first Beverly Youth Council for young people to learn more about local government and advocate for youth issues

    – The Fire Department has ordered a new pumper truck, which will replace Engine 1 in Central Fire Station when it arrives

    – Five new civilian dispatchers have been hired for the combined civilian, emergency medical services, police and fire dispatch system, with the goal to be “fully civilian” by fall, freeing up uniformed police officers to serve out in the community

    – The city’s veterans department prevented the eviction of three veterans from their houses

    – The city received 73 of the 80 grants it applied for over the last fiscal year, bringing in over $5 million in revenue

    – The mayor’s office launched an iPad translation program for visitors to City Hall whose primary language is not English

    – Four applications have been submitted under the city’s new accessory dwelling unit ordinance

    – The Salem Skipper rideshare program expanded into Beverly starting May 1

    – The city’s community garden has moved from Cole Street to Moraine Farm, and garden plots are still available for this season

    – The city’s electricity aggregation program started on May 1, providing residents and businesses with lower electricity costs while increasing the amount of clean renewable energy

    – Coastal resiliency projects at Lynch Park and Obear Park are in the design and permitting phase

    – Beverly Airport had its most flights since 2003 and is planning to rebuild its main runway

    Cahill closed by thanking the city’s department heads and staff for their work.

    “Thanks in significant part to their contributions, the state of our city remains strong,” he said to the City Council. “With their partnership and with yours, I know the state of our city will improve and become ever stronger well into the future.”

    Staff Writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2535, by email at pleighton@salemnews.com, or on Twitter at @heardinbeverly.

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    By Paul Leighton | Staff Writer

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  • Manchester-by-the Sea Town Meeting backs senior center plan. lauinch service

    Manchester-by-the Sea Town Meeting backs senior center plan. lauinch service

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    MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA — Considering 21 articles on the warrant was no easy task but annual Town Meeting wrapped it up in about three hours.

    Town Moderator Alan Wilson banged the gavel to convene the meeting Wednesday at Manchester Memorial Elementary School precisely at 6:30 p.m. and adjourned it at 9:12 p.m. Midway through, Wilson reported a quorum of 317 voters present.

    The meeting approved financing for a new senior center, the operation of a launch service in Manchester Harbor, and a number of capital projects, including $7,550,000 to make capital improvements to the town’s water and wastewater systems.

    It also approved a fiscal year 2025 budget amounting to $42,336,058, with $16,818,112 for the town operating and enterprise budgets for water and sewer, and debts; $19,060,435 for town’s share of Manchester Essex Regional School District’s operating budget and debt service; $243,385 for the North Shore Agricultural & Technical School; and $2,642,740 for capital items.

    Each of the above articles passed by substantial margins with voters using electronic vote tallying devices.

    Finance Committee Chairperson Sarah Mellish said the budgets received much careful consideration.

    “The Finance Committee feels this budget is prudent and addresses the needs of the town,” she said. “This is a lean budget that meets the town’s needs.”

    Article 6 authorizing the Select Board to raise or borrow $1 million to buy the Masons’ 26,045 square foot parcel at 10 Church St. needed a two-thirds majority and was approved by a sizable margin, prompting a rousing cheer. Many applauding were senior citizens.

    Select Board member Brian Sollosy moved the measure, which was seconded by Select Board member John Round.

    Responding to a question about whether the building is the right place for a town-operated facility, being at the edge of Manchester Harbor, Town Administrator Gregory Federspiel said the elevation of the Masons’ building protects it from storm surge.

    “This building is in pretty good shape,” Federspiel said. An appraisal a few years ago estimated the building’s value to be about $800,000.

    “We do feel the price is appropriate,” he said.

    The town will start running a launch service in Manchester Harbor after Town Meeting voted 309-34 to purchase to two launch boats and fund operating expenses for this fiscal year and next.

    Select Board member Catherine Bilotta said town officials, including Harbormaster Bion Pike, put together a prudent business plan for the launch service.

    “All of these costs are going to be reimbursed by user fees,” she said. “The entire endeavor is to be funded entirely by user fees.”

    Mellish said the effort should eventually be self-sustaining.

    “If you want to use a launch, contact the harbormaster and he’ll gladly take your money,” she said.

    The meeting also approved paying the town’s share of the Manchester Essex Regional School District’s $16,339,528 gross operating and maintenance budget for fiscal 2025, $2,720,907 to cover its long-term debt, and $660,000 for a feasibility study for Essex Elementary School.

    Superintendent Pamela Beaudoin said the Manchester Essex Regional School Committee will eventually narrow its focus to considering possible renovation or new construction for the school, 12 Story St. in Essex.

    “We really lean heavily on community experts,” she said.

    Spending $481,670 of Community Preservation Fund money on restoration of the First Parish Church steeple and resurfacing of the Sweeney Park basketball court, among other things, was approved, but not before a motion was made to eliminate $200,000 to fund the Manchester Affordable Housing Trust. The motion was defeated 178-45.

    Here is a condensed version of the articles on the meeting’s warrant and votes:

    1 – Receive reports of the town’s boards and committees. APPROVED.

    2 – Fix the salaries of the town moderator and members of the Select Board at $0 per year. APPROVED.

    3 – Raise $243,385 as the town’s share of the budget for the Essex North Shore Agricultural and Technical School District. APPROVED.

    4 – Raise sums by taxation to pay town debts and charges — $42,336,058 — for the coming fiscal year, effective July 1. APPROVED.

    5 – Spend the following, all of which were APPROVED:

    — Road resurfacing — $550,000.

    — DPW facility siting, geotechnical analysis — $250,000.

    — Drainage and sidewalk improvements — $250,000.

    — Storm damage repair — $50,000. Not recommended.

    — General building upgrades — $50,000.

    — Backhoe replacement — $150,000.

    — IT and telephone upgrades at Town Hall — $30,000.

    — Planning and zoning studies — $20,000. Not recommended, in operating budget.

    — Library walkway repairs — $6,500.

    — Library building assessment — $43,500.

    — Fire engine replacement fund — $250,000. Not recommended.

    — Ambulance 2 replacement — $470,000.

    — Police tasers — $12,600.

    — Police administration vehicle replacement — $73,000.

    — Cardiac monitors and defibrillators — $54,000.

    — Fire Station repairs and upgrades — $30,000. Not recommended, in operating budget.

    — Dredging/engineering/permitting — $100,000.

    — No wake buoys — $9,500.

    — Plant upgrades/PFAS design — $2 million. $150,000 recommended.

    — Pipe replacement/improvements — $2 million. Not recommended.

    — Meter replacements (for “smart” meters) — $1.5 million. Not recommended.

    — Water truck replacement — $50,000.

    — Plant upgrades/Equipment replacement – $4.1 million. $550,000 recommended.

    6 – Raise or borrow $1 million and authorize the Select Board to use it to acquire, for a senior center and, or community center, all or a portion of the Masons’ 26,045 square foot parcel at 10 Church St. APPROVED.

    7 – Raise or transfer money to operate a town-sponsored launch service in Manchester Harbor including $9,500 for fiscal 2024 operating expenses, $125,000 for the purchase of two launch boats, and $41,000 for fiscal 2025 launch operating expenses. APPROVED.

    8 – Spend $7,550,000 — $4,100,000 on the town’s water system and $3,450,000 on the town’s wastewater system — for capital improvements. APPROVED, 290-33.

    9 – Spend Massachusetts Public Library Construction Program grant funds and re-appropriate $150,000 of the $200,000 previously appropriated for restroom renovations at Manchester-by-the-Sea Public Library. APPROVED, 200-19.

    10 – Create a Special Opioid Settlement Stabilization Fund and dedicate 100% of the opioid litigation settlement funds to the fund. APPROVED.

    11 – Raise or transfer money for the town’s assessment for the gross operating and maintenance budget of the Manchester Essex Regional School District. APPROVED.

    12 – Raise or transfer $660,000 for the town’s apportioned share of the Essex Elementary School feasibility study. APPROVED, 244-44 .

    13 – Raise or transfer $248,348 to fund the town’s share of the cost to refurbish the turf fields in town. APPROVED.

    14 – Hear and act on the report of the Community Preservation Committee on the fiscal 2025 Community Preservation budget and to appropriate $481,670 from the Community Preservation Fund money to meet the administrative and other expenses of the committee for fiscal 2025. APPROVED.

    Included in the $481,670 total amount is:

    – $200,000 for the Manchester Affordable Housing Trust Project funding.

    – $60,000 for restoration of the First Parish Church steeple.

    – $28,500 to resurface the Sweeney Park basketball court.

    – $25,000 for restoration of town cemeteries.

    – $24,400 for portico restoration at Hooper Trask House.

    – $20,000 for Power House Hill parking and access easement.

    15 – Authorize the Select Board to acquire an access and parking easement on property owned by the Manchester Housing Authority at Newport Park for access to Powder House Hill conservation lands.  APPROVED.

    16 – Raise or transfer $100,000 to supplement the fiscal 2024 Legal Expenses Account. APPROVED.

    17 – Raise or transfer $300,000 to be deposited into the town’s “Other Post Employment Benefits Trust Fund.” APPROVED.

    18 – Set fiscal 2025 imitations on expenditures by the town’s recreation programs at $400,000; and the town’s Board of Health Emergency Dispensing Sites and Clinics Programs at $50,000.  APPROVED.

    19 – Amend the Tobacco Products Regulations and Tobacco Use Regulations of the town’s General Bylaws as fines and enforcement are covered by other bylaws and state statutes/regulations.  APPROVED.

    20 – Amend Article X, Section 23 of the General Bylaw on non-accessory signs by adding the language: “The provisions of this section shall not apply to non-accessory signs located on town-owned property, subject to the approval by the Select Board, nor to non-accessory signs on town-owned property used for educational purposes, subject to approval by the Manchester Essex Regional School Committee.”  APPROVED.

    21 – Raise or transfer money to reduce the tax rate. NO ACTION TAKEN.

    Stephen Hagan can be reached at 978-675-2708 or at shagan@northofboston.com.

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    By Stephen Hagan | Staff Writer

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  • Chris Pratt, Katherine Schwarzenegger could’ve given Craig Ellwood teardown ‘some honor,’ architect’s daughter says

    Chris Pratt, Katherine Schwarzenegger could’ve given Craig Ellwood teardown ‘some honor,’ architect’s daughter says

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    Chris Pratt and Katherine Schwarzenegger demolished a famed midcentury home designed by late architect Craig Ellwood to make room for a new, modern mansion.

    That’s not how Erin Ellwood, Craig Ellwood’s daughter, said she would have gone about it.

    “I think it would have been really cool to keep it and do something … add to it in a really interesting, innovative way,” Ellwood told The Times on Monday. “But you know, maybe this just isn’t their style. I mean, it clearly isn’t if they’re building a farmhouse.”

    Ellwood, an Ojai-based interior designer, spoke to The Times about her father’s late ‘40s Brentwood commission, known among locals as the Zimmerman House after original owners Martin and Eva Zimmerman. The property, which she described as a “time capsule” because of its Midcentury Modern aesthetic, was purchased last year and set for demolition seemingly without reason. In recent weeks, several reports revealed that the Marvel star and Schwarzenegger purchased the lot for $12.5 million and that their new mansion — to be designed by Ken Ungar — was the reason for the teardown.

    On X (formerly Twitter), the celebrity couple quickly faced ire from architecture enthusiasts and other critics. “Wow,” wrote one user who shared an Architectural Digest article. “Wow as in, this is really bad.”

    “Chris Pratt bought a BEAUTIFUL 1950s mid century modern house designed by THE Craig Ellwood and demolished it to build a s— McMansion,” one X user wrote on Friday. “My mid century modernist heart is shattered.”

    “Imagine tearing this historic house down to build a ‘modern farmhouse’ McMansion,” a second user wrote on Saturday.

    As more reports about the Ellwood razing surfaced, handfuls of social media users also revived “Worst Chris,” a dig that stemmed from a viral tweet about the Hollywood Chrises (Chris Hemsworth, Pratt, Chris Pine and Chris Evans).

    Representatives for Pratt and Schwarzenegger did not immediately respond to The Times’ request for comment on Monday.

    Like Pratt’s online critics, Erin Ellwood said she only learned about the reason for the demolition earlier this month. But she told The Times that she understands “it comes with the territory.”

    Throughout his decades-long career, Craig Ellwood brought his indoor-outdoor living approach to several properties across Southern California, including his beachfront Hunt House in Malibu. The Zimmerman house, with its floor-to-ceiling glass windows and open floor plans, was designed early in her father’s career and wasn’t the best representation of his work, Ellwood said.

    “It doesn’t break my heart,” she added of the raze.

    Still, the home, sold to “The Man from U.N.C.L.E” creator Sam Rolfe and wife Hilda Rolfe in 1975— stands for a timeless architectural movement. Erin likens her father’s lasting Midcentury designs to “the Chanel of architecture.”

    “There’s certain fashions that will never go away. They’ll always stay strong,” she said.

    The couple’s modern farmhouse aesthetic may not be Erin’s preferred style, but she said she understands why Pratt and Schwarzenegger would want the Zimmerman House plot: proximity to Schwarzenegger’s mother, Maria Shriver. The former first lady of California reportedly lives across the street from the property.

    “I don’t feel bitter. I understand the love of family, I understand wanting to be close to my mother or my mother in-law,” said Ellwood, whose late actor mother Gloria Henry also lived by Shriver. “I understand being a multimillionaire and wanting to build exactly what I want and keep my family close. I get all that. Unfortunately, it involved tearing something down.”

    Razing the Zimmerman House is not just “so brutal,” but wasteful in a variety of ways, Ellwood added. She lamented that the home did not have some kind of ceremonious sendoff — final tours for architecture students, a celebratory cocktail hour, donation of materials for architectural studies — before it was torn down.

    “Is there something more creative that could’ve been done in the process of taking it away that could’ve given it some honor?” Ellwood asks.

    She was speaking to The Times on what would have been her father’s 102nd birthday. She says Craig Ellwood “stood for innovation and a new way of California living.”

    “I think what people are responding to is [the home] is like this time capsule,” she said. “I think that’s what hurts people so much — is that there aren’t that many great ones.”

    With the Zimmerman House now a pile of rubble and Pratt and Schwarzenegger’s new mansion reportedly still in early construction, Ellwood said she hopes the couple considers giving back to the architecture community amid the backlash.

    “They’ve got money,” she said. “It would behoove them to do something kind to the world of architecture.”

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    Alexandra Del Rosario

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  • Green Roofs Are Great. Blue-Green Roofs Are Even Better

    Green Roofs Are Great. Blue-Green Roofs Are Even Better

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    Courtesy of De Dakdokters

    Below that stretches a filter layer, which keeps the soil from getting into the next layer, a lightweight crate system that stores the water. And finally, below that you’ve got additional layers to keep water and plant roots from infiltrating the actual roof. “You have, in fact, a flat rain barrel on top of your roof,” says Kasper Spaan, policy developer for climate adaptation at Waternet, Amsterdam’s public water management organization, which is participating in RESILIO.

    The water levels in the blue-green roof are managed by a smart valve. If the weather forecast says a storm is coming, the system will release stored water from the roof ahead of time. That way, when a downpour comes, the roof refills, meaning there’s less rainwater entering the gutters and sewers in the surrounding area. In other words, the roof becomes a sponge that the operator can wring out as needed. “In the ‘squeezable’ sponge city, you make the whole city malleable,” says Spaan.

    This makes the traditional system of stormwater management more flexible, but also more complicated. So the RESILIO project used software from Autodesk to model the impact of blue-green roofs and the risk of flooding in Amsterdam, also adjusting for climate change.

    “You can take a look at historical flood patterns, and then you can do simulations that will help you understand: If I could take this much capacity out of the drainage network, when the storm comes, I’m going reduce flooding by 10, 15, 20 percent,” says Amy Bunszel, executive vice president of architecture, engineering, and construction design solutions at Autodesk. “So our software allows them to do simulations and play with different trade-offs.”

    Beyond the sponge-city benefits, blue-green roofs can cool the top floor of a building, essentially “sweating” off the stored water. With the right kinds of indigenous plants, they can also boost biodiversity by catering to native pollinating insects. Going a step further, scientists are also experimenting with growing crops on rooftops under solar panels, known as rooftop agrivoltaics. Theoretically, pairing that with blue-green systems might actually improve the efficiency of the solar panels by cooling them with the evaporating water.

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    Matt Simon

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  • Article would move library renovation plans ahead

    Article would move library renovation plans ahead

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    MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA — To residents Gretchen Wood and Lisa Bonneville, the town’s library is a dream.

    But Wood and Bonneville want that dream to be accessible for all who visit Manchester-by-the-Sea Public Library — including those who are disabled. Both are members of the town Americans with Disabilities Advisory Committee.

    Access for all to the library’s offerings is critical, but is a challenge because “the library is very small and it has very tight spaces,” Wood said Thursday. “We have some pretty deep concerns about the library’s accessibility.”

    Wood and Bonneville hope the town shows its support for the library, calling for the approval of a financing measure at annual Town Meeting on Wednesday that would lead to a potential library building project.

    Article 9 asks the town to apply for, accept and expend Massachusetts Public Library Construction Program grant funds and re-appropriate $150,000 of the $200,000 previously appropriated for restroom renovations at the library, 15 Union St.

    Library Director Cynthia Gemmell, who supports passage of Article 9, said she will be at Town Meeting to potentially answer questions about the measure.

    “I would very much like to see the town support the article,” she said. “This is a preliminary step to see if we could have a plan for the potential renovation and expansion of the library. This will allow us to address the space issues, accessibility issues, lack of programming space, lack of meeting space and lack of collection space.”

    Successful passage of Article 9 would enable the town to apply for a matching state grant that will help finance the planning and design of the library project, Wood said.

    “This will not fund it,” she said. “It will merely get us into this round of grant funding. We can’t go forward unless we are accepted. It’s a small ask.”

    Library Trustee Sarah Davis said Article 9 is supported by the Trustees, the Select Board, and the Americans with Disabilities Advisory Committee.

    “It’s a requirement for keeping us in the running for a potential grant from the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners,” she said. “It’s a requirement.”

    The town needs to apply for the grant by May 31, Davis said.

    “We’ve been working on the application for years,” she said.

    Access for everybody

    Wood, who served as town clerk in Manchester for 23 years before stepping down 13 years ago, will volunteer as a timekeeper during Town Meeting deliberations on Wednesday.

    The library, she said, needs attention, adding using the restroom in the building is impossible for some.

    “It’s a very tiny restroom,” Wood said. “That’s a problem.”

    Access to the young adult programs is limited since the programs are held on the library’s upper level – reached only by climbing a narrow full flight of metal stairs.

    “Imagine the feelings of a young person with physical challenges facing this obstacle,” reads the letter by Wood and Bonneville. “Searching for a book in the stacks would be impossible for anyone in a wheelchair. Then, there is the problem of the existing very small restroom tucked into a corner of the reading room, where it is hardly adequate for anyone, but certainly completely inaccessible to anyone in a wheelchair or walker, or a parent with a child in a stroller.”

    The library is a resource in Manchester that needs to be optimized, Wood said.

    “We have a beautiful building that is very valuable to the town,” she said. “It’s time to use it.”

    Ground was broken and construction began on the library in 1886. The building, designed by noted architect Charles P. McKim, was dedicated on Oct. 13, 1887, according to the library’s website.

    “It’s an architectural gem,” Davis said, who added the library’s limited accessibility, limited meeting space and the narrow staircase to the upstairs loft are among the problems faced by patrons and library staff.

    “We want to have more meeting space to support programs, hold meetings and make interactions possible,” she said. “It’s really important to act now.”

    Town Meeting is slated to begin at 6:30 p.m. at Memorial Elementary School at 43 Lincoln St. in Manchester.

    Stephen Hagan may be contacted at 978-675-2708, or shagan@gloucestertimes.com.

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    By Stephen Hagan | Staff Writer

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  • Dubai to build the world’s tallest skyscraper clock dubbed London Gate

    Dubai to build the world’s tallest skyscraper clock dubbed London Gate

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    DUBAI is getting ready to build the world’s tallest residential clock tower in a nod to London’s Big Ben.

    The immense building will stand at a staggering 450 metres high (1,476ft) – almost five times higher than its 96-metre British counterpart.

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    Dubai is set to build the world’s tallest residential clock towerCredit: London Gate
    The project is a partnership with Swiss watchmaker Franck Muller

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    The project is a partnership with Swiss watchmaker Franck MullerCredit: Youtube/ UAE Dubai Properties for Sale
    The tower will feature gorgeous all-marble interiors, such as this living room

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    The tower will feature gorgeous all-marble interiors, such as this living roomCredit: London Gate

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    Aeternitas Tower, dubbed ‘London Gate’, will be the child product of Dubai-based real estate developer London Gate and Swiss luxury watch manufacturer Franck Muller.

    The sky-high tower will have a glistening all-glass facade with the enormous clock at the very top.

    Measuring 40 metres tall by 30 metres wide, the clock will be built in Germany and be visible from miles away.

    Following the Swiss watchmaker’s art-deco style, the clock will featured irregular squashed and stretched numbers.

    Read more on super buildings

    The design will also be infused across the residences inside it.

    “We believe the clock will be seen from six kilometers away because of the sheer height of the building,” said Tom Hill, media relations coordinator at London Gate.

    “We wanted to do something different that hasn’t been done before in Dubai.”

    Developers purchased a plot of land in the heart of Dubai marina, which already has the beginnings of an unfinished 106-storey structure.

    Once complete, the monumental building will be home to 649 units, ranging from one- to three-bedroom apartments, villas and mansion duplexes.

    The ultra-lux residential clock tower will offer residents access to hotel -like services and facilities, but with the privacy and comfort of their own home.

    Saudi unveils plans for 900ft spiky desert skyscrapers on the Red Sea in latest NEOM mega-project ‘built on blood-
    The residence tower will feature a glamorous swimming pool

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    The residence tower will feature a glamorous swimming poolCredit: London Gate
    It will also offer a relaxing spa for residents to unwind after a long day in Dubai

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    It will also offer a relaxing spa for residents to unwind after a long day in DubaiCredit: London Gate
    Developers are aiming for a mix of marble and wood all over the building

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    Developers are aiming for a mix of marble and wood all over the buildingCredit: London Gate
    Once ready, the tower will be home to 649 units

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    Once ready, the tower will be home to 649 unitsCredit: Youtube/ UAE Dubai Properties for Sale

    These include housekeeping, a concierge service, and a 24-hour valet and porter.

    It will also feature shared amenities like health facilities, including a gym, padel court, spa, yoga studio, and swimming pool, to arts and culture spaces such as a cinema, music room, and library.

    Residents should be ready to move into their new homes in 2027, London Gate estimates.

    London Gate launched phase one of its sales last week, with one-bedroom flats beginning at a whopping AED 1.6 million (£343,032).

    The tower’s name means “eternity” in Latin and is inspired by the Franck Muller Aeternitas watch series, one of the brand’s most sophisticated designs with a “eternal calendar,” said Erol Baliyan, managing director at Franck Muller.

    Balyian added that luxury elements such as brushed and polished metals will be juxtaposed against marble surfaces, textured textiles, and vibrant colours.

    Meanwhile, the foyer and reception area include curved walls, archways, and oval furniture to mimic the brand’s characteristic oblong face of its Curvex watch.

    “Attention to detail is paramount, with meticulously crafted joinery and carefully arranged lighting and furniture, ensuring a refined ambiance,” he said.

    The Aeternitas Tower represents a developing trend in Dubai as branded residences—collaborations between designer labels and property developers—are becoming increasingly popular in the Emirate.

    According to Savills Research, the city has 51 completed projects as of October 2023, a figure that is predicted to quadruple by 2030, with names such as fashion firm Karl Lagerfeld, automotive manufacturer Mercedes-Benz, and hoteliers 25Hours all unveiling residential projects in the previous year.

    A luxurious bathroom in one of the homes

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    A luxurious bathroom in one of the homesCredit: Youtube/ UAE Dubai Properties for Sale
    Homes will range from one- to three-bedroom apartments, villas and duplexes

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    Homes will range from one- to three-bedroom apartments, villas and duplexesCredit: London Gate
    Another sophisticated bedroom at the Dubai clock tower

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    Another sophisticated bedroom at the Dubai clock towerCredit: Youtube/ UAE Dubai Properties for Sale

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    Juliana Cruz Lima

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