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The future communities...

Posted on Jul 31st, 2006 by Kenn : Mystic Storyteller Kenn

I recieved this a short while back...I find the potential staggering for green communities within the next decade!

Updated:2006-07-11 17:30:35
The next real estate boom
Dense settlements, not sprawling ranch houses, are the future of housing - and could make for a smart real-estate investment.
By Chris Taylor, Business 2.0 Magazine senior editor

SAN FRANCISCO (Business 2.0 Magazine) -- Picture the scene: it's 2025, and you and your family are living in a beautiful, leafy-green village that seems more 19th century than 21st, even though it has only been in existence for ten years and is just 20 miles from a major American city.

You know all of the 150 or so souls in the village; you see them at the market where you pick up a box of locally-grown produce once a week. You see half of them in the morning as they board the commuter train for school or work in the city; the other half are the network warriors who work from home or, on warm days, use the free Wi-Fi in the village square.

It all seems a world away from the crumbling old 20th-century suburbs people used to live in, if you could call it living. You shudder to think you could still be living there. Oh, and you see that really nice house just down the bicycle lane? That's yours, the fruits of your smart move to plunk down a payment on a piece of the hottest new trend in real estate.

Streetcar stops desired

Sounds like a far-off future? You can already see such a development opening up in Hercules, Calif., 20 miles northeast of San Francisco. And you can bet on seeing many more across the country if changing consumer desires and economic trends dictate the direction of the housing market.

"New Villages," as community planner Robert McIntyre dubs them in the latest issue of The Futurist magazine, are compact, pleasantly urban settlements located well away from city centers. They share some of the charms and amenities of cities, thanks to their density, but have the mostly rural surroundings that originally drew people out to the suburbs, as well as the friendly feel of a small town where you know your neighbors.

The concept of New Villages shares some similarities with the so-called "transit villages" you can already see around the country. Starting in the mid-'90s, when architects and local planners became more interested in more pedestrian-friendly, urban developments, transit villages started to spring up outside cities along revitalized rail lines, from Mission Valley near San Diego, to Ballston and Bethesda outside Washington, D.C.

They were very attractive to young city workers and empty-nest parents. Their defining characteristics: They were eminently walkable, densely constructed without feeling overcrowded, and offered a real community feeling with plenty of common spaces.

The difference between transit villages and New Villages is location: While transit villages mostly reinvented older suburbs that are close to cities, New Villages promise to reinvent the sprawl further out.

The demand for such developments is real, and it's only going to get greater as consumer preferences rapidly shift away from the McMansions preferred by boomers. According to a study by the nonprofit Congress for New Urbanism, while less than 25 percent of middle-aged Americans are interested in living in dense areas, 53 percent of 24-34 year olds would choose to live in transit-rich, walkable neighborhoods, if they had the choice.

Demand for housing within walking distance of transit will more than double by 2025, according to another nonprofit, the Center for Transit-Oriented Development. Even now, properties within a 5- or 10-minute walk to a train stop are selling for 20 to 25 percent more than comparable properties further away - a price premium that's likely to increase as traffic jams worsen.

And as the effects of the Internet continue to kick in, it won't be so necessary to be in the big city - you'll just want access to it every once in a while, for the occasional business meeting or nightclub outing. But as social animals we'll still want to cluster together for face-to-face contact, local food and local culture.

The payoff

All of these consumer trends suggest that New Villages just may be the future. But there are also compelling economic arguments for developers to build and sell such properties, as well as for consumers to buy them.

Rising oil prices notwithstanding, sprawling car-culture cities and vast suburbs simply do not make economic sense in the long run. As much as 50 percent of the land surface area in any given city or subdivision - we're talking prime real estate - is taken up by roadways. For developers, less space given over to roads means more space for housing.

Not only are roads a drain on landlords' potential income, they're a turnoff for residents -- and are only going to become more so as gridlock, road repairs and air pollution increase.

While you might assume that a higher density community would have more traffic, you'd be wrong. When neighborhoods are dense and walkable, studies show, people make fewer car trips. And some may even forgo owning a second car, especially as families realize that living with one less car can save them $6,000 a year on average (and again, that's not counting price rises at the pump).

And then there's simple math. While standard subdivisions have five units per acre, transit villages tend to pack in 20 to 25 per acre - still mostly single-family dwellings or townhomes, but without the vast lawns and backyards of suburbia. And with transit village homes selling for more than similar houses in traditional, sprawling suburbs, developers will make considerably more per acre, while fostering community and being kinder to the environment.

Pocketing a nice real-estate gain while saving the planet? That should help you sleep very well at night in your nice, safe, quiet, neighborly New Village home.

© 2006 Cable News Network LP, LLLP. A Time Warner Company ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
 

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AHHH I'm on fire!

Posted on Aug 16th, 2006 by Kenn : Mystic Storyteller Kenn
Wow,
Experiencing life this past few months has been awesome.  I'm just now completing my online Foundations class for Religious Science and its opened me even more to what existance truly is as an experience.  I've been working on integrating everything of life I experience in order to make sense of it since I was 13 and its finally coming to fruition.  Coming to Zaadz is yet another element of this.  I finally see the next major destination in manifesting my vision into a complete experiencial context that has me saying "YES!" and feeling like energetically '"I'm on FIRE!".  Hehe...its reminds me of the Richard Pryor quote, "When you are on fire people get out of you way!".  I know to the depth of my being I am in the right place at this moment.  The words will eventually come to me over time to give more depth to this.  I have so much to say observing life in all its ways.  I commit to daily bloging to get it all out there. 

My latest culmination is the understanding that how I am spiritually is "Religious Science".  How I am philosophically seems to be "Integral Theory", Ever since I read "The Power of Myth" I felt that it was the same in all aspects of existance not only spiritually it was merely a matter of organizing it into a comprehensible system.  Relationship/Sexually I know myself to be "tantric" and am meditating on the thought/emotion/physical integral experience as a real present thing to create the space for the woman that is to be my beloved companion.  I am thankful for understanding who I am from my family of origin and resolving and evolving with my family members in order to not pass it on to my children. 

A place to express....to let ideas flow....and so it is...

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An interesting day...

Posted on Aug 22nd, 2006 by Kenn : Mystic Storyteller Kenn
Well spent the day going down to Greensboro, NC in order to sell a car but things didn't work out.  Positive note is I shared time with my father who flew his plane up from Southport to help and to fly me back to Roanoke if needed.  So with time to kill I wandered around Greensboro.  I stopped by a Fresh Market I had trained at last year then by the coporate office for the first time.  Its interesting what one see and identifies when one hears "corporate" and what experiences when it is seen.  Each of us find our way from day to day no matter the position within a company/corporation.

I gained a great deal of insight into myself today.  I truly love my father and am glad for the time spent.  I realize I am my father to my son as I am my son to my father.  I can see the continuity in the relationship dynamics, body language and odd quirks we each have.  My son honestly expresses the same needs I keep at times from showing my Father and now my Father is more comfortable to express himself in ways I keep myself from being so as be sure I'm keeping my son on the right track.  I am my son and I am my father one in the same and I love them for who I am in them.

On another note I'm looking into the local school system since they are hiring for teaching positions.  There is one that has caught my interest so I'm going to go through the application process and allow Spirit to manifest as it is appropriate to the Divine Plan.  Its as a Technology Education teacher at a middle school.  All about technology, inventing and scientific process.....in other words....life in its constantly changing and evolving existance in the now.  The spontaneously bubbling and expressing existance that is present as us in us and around us.  

Soul News: 

The Law of Attraction is only that in Time/Space where it evolves and turns within the energy manifested of the physical like a great blue whale that surfaces from the depth of the Oceans.....in actuality within the Big Mind/Spirit outside of Time/Space it IS at the moment of creation and since it IS outside Time/Space it already is and always has been....

faith is a verb and is the act of believing no matter the lack of proof that it exists.  Resonate with the context you wish to be present and exist in and your paradigm will shift....

focusing on objects won't do it...you end up with the Golden Egg and then find you didn't have a context to do anything with it and it goes rotten on you. 

Hence the saying, "Be Careful what you ask for..."

The secret is to be where you want to be in the NOW and kNow and see the unseen and soon it will be there.  Remember it is possible to drive at night anywhere while only seeing 200ft. in front of you :) .

Ah I'm working on the daily log....its getting there...

Visualization for the soul:
...Peach Icecream is such a nice thing on a front porch swing with a gently passing breeze bringing honeysuckle kisses from the vines in the garden....
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