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Try This Couture Coffee Shop the Next Time You’re in Aspen – 5280 | The Denver Magazine

Inside Felix Roasting Co. Photo by Reagan Petrehen, courtesy of Felix Roasting Co.Eat and Drink

Felix Roasting Co.s first outpost beyond New York City offers a highly curated coffee experience, from their hickory smoked smores latte to their branded sugar packets.

Walk into Felix Roasting Co., and youll smell coffeegood coffeemixed with a hint of hickory smoke and sweet, house-made pastries. Youll hear the hum of conversation, the pattering of fingers on keyboards, and the intermittent buzz of the espresso machine. Your eyes wont know where to land as they devour the velour couches, the brazen wallpaper, and the handsome raised panel oak bar. And thats all before youve had the first taste of your latte, matcha, or whipped ricotta and fig toast.

Theres no question: Aspens newest coffee shop offers a veritable feast for the senses.

Situated inside the towns historic Hotel Jerome (though with its own storefront), the custom roastery opened its Aspen outpostthe first location outside of New York Cityin early September. And despite its maximalist experience, it aims to be a source of respite in the midst of a guests busy day.

From ingredients to dcor, Felix is a bean-to-cup operation. The coffee is sourced directly from the farmer, chosen for its seasonality, and roasted by Felixs in-house team. The nut and oat milks are made just for Felix. Even the aestheticright down to the sugar packetswas meticulously crafted. We try to really curate the entire experience from A to Z, says founder and CEO Matthew Moinian.

Among the most elegant examples of this highly detailed process is the signature hickory smoked smores latte, which, at $18, is the most expensive coffee drink on the menu, but it comes with a show (and is sure to boost your number of Instagram followers). A barista makes the decadent caffeine hit to order, mixing steamed, graham-cracker-infused milk, and a shot of espresso. Its served in a dark-chocolate- and graham-cracker-rimmed martini glass and garnished with a hickory stick and marshmallowthe latter, a treat the barista torches while the latte smokes. All of the ingredients (as well as the smoker and serving glass) are personally sourced or made in-house. These are all the things we like to do that are above and beyond the traditional caf experience, Moinian says. Its sort of my ode to coffee.

Moinian remembers how, when he turned 30, my vitality just fell off a cliff. He felt tired throughout the day and had gained some weight. It was coffeea shot of instant java, to be exactthat gave him enough of a caffeine jolt to get to the gym one morningand many mornings after that. Coffee changed my life, he says. It made me feel younger, more energetic. It really made a dramatic shift.

Back then, Moinian was working as a lawyer for his familys business, the Moinian Group, which ranks among the largest privately held real estate investment companies in the world. Moinians own $60 million project, Hotel Hugo, had just been received to high acclaim. But in 2014, his corner office overlooking Central Park began feeling a bit stuffy. I decided that an office wasnt the place for me, and I wanted to be a creative person, he says, likening it to the clich of the successful businessperson who leaves Wall Street to buy a Napa Valley winery. Felix is my version of that.

It took Moinian four years to put together his dream team, including the in-demand interior designer Ken Fulk and a James Beard Awardnominated chef, who created the companys Insta-worthy coffee cocktails. I only wanted the best, Moinian says of Felixs inner circle. When they were ready to do it, thats when we started.

Choosing Aspen as the first location beyond the Big Apple was a personal choice on Moinians part (he proposed to his wife on Aspen Mountains Silver Queen Gondola), but hes also confident the towns clientele will appreciate the Felix experienceand not just those flying in on their private jets. With most of their beverages in the $5 to $10 range, its approachable for locals, too.

Alberto Nieto Williams, the Aspen locations manager, hopes Felix will become the obvious choice for Hotel Jerome guests as well as for employees on their way to work and remote employees vying for office space along with a cappuccino. This corner, from being not too well known, is becoming Felix, he says.

No matter how long a guest stays, whether its five minutes or a couple hours, the goal is to offer a transformative environment at an approachable price point, Moinian says. Whatever youd like to do, were there for youand the price of admission is a latte.

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Try This Couture Coffee Shop the Next Time You're in Aspen - 5280 | The Denver Magazine

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Co-location

In Tampa, original home of The Hub to be razed – Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA The 700 block of N Florida Avenue was once a destination for downtown diners and drinkers.

By day, Southern food was served at Morrisons Cafeteria at 711 N Florida Ave., and, by night, alcoholic beverages were slung at the adjoining The Hub bar at 701 N Florida Ave.

Morrisons shuttered in 1969 and The Hub moved a few blocks away to N Franklin Street in 2002.

The buildings that housed those businesses are now vacant and in disrepair.

By the end of this year, they, along with neighboring 719 N Florida Ave., could be razed to make room for a 28-story, 432-unit apartment complex, according to a building permit filed with the city of Tampa.

The buildings are not historic landmarks.

But, because each is more than a century old, the city of Tampas Architectural Review & Historic Preservation Division had to approve the demolition permits. They did so in August.

After evaluation and visiting the building, it was determined that the deteriorated conditions and extensive modifications to the buildings made their preservation infeasible, division manager Dennis Fernandez said.

A demolition date is pending.

Chicago-based developer X Co. will save and incorporate into their development the nearby 412 E Zack St., which was home of the First Presbyterian Church from 1922 until 2019.

The Tampa Bay Times left two voicemails and sent an email to X Co. asking how it will be incorporated. They did not respond. An image on their website depicts the former church building as a space for gatherings.

This makes five century-old buildings that could be razed in downtown Tampa. The owner of two on N Tampa Street is expected to request a demolition permit to make room for condos.

The earliest business that news archives list at 719 N Florida Ave. is Buells Market in 1908. It later housed a typewriter repair company, a jewelry shop, a corner store and then office space, according to news archives.

The Hillsborough County Property Appraisers website says that 701 N Florida Ave. was erected in 1910.

The Hub opened there in 1949.

The 1950s was a vibrant time for downtown Tampa. It boasted a thriving shopping district and several hotels.

The Hub was right in the middle of the action with a clientele that included a whos who of judges, attorneys, bankers, professional athletes and mafiosos, all dressed in their finest eveningwear.

As downtown shifted from swank to quaint in the 1980s, The Hub transitioned into a beloved dive bar and remains one at its current location. Its old spot has been vacant since the move.

J.C. Vinson, a urologist and World War I veteran, erected his Vinson Building at 711 N Florida Ave. in 1917, according to Chip Weiner, whose book Burgert Brothers: Another Look contrasts old and modern Tampa through photographs. That building is not in his book, but will be featured in the follow-up, he said.

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The first two major tenants that year were The Tampa Furniture Co. and the Starr Piano Co., Weiner said. As with many early-century multipurpose structures, this building had many business tenants and many purposes over its 100-year history, with its most famous being Morrisons Cafeteria.

Morrisons is widely recognized as the most successful Southern cafeteria, historian Gary Mormino once wrote in a column for the Times. Begun in 1920 by J.A. Morrison in Mobile, Ala., the franchise spread across the South, with restaurants in Tampa, St. Petersburg, Clearwater and Sarasota.

Its first Tampa location was 608 N Florida.

In 1949, the cafeteria moved into the Vinson Building, where it fed the masses, in part because the old federal courthouse and post office were nearby, Mormino wrote. But downtown Tampa lost its Morrisons in 1969, while a new cafeteria opened on Dale Mabry Boulevard.

Weiner said that one of the last tenants at 711 N Florida Ave. was Kenneth Jennings, a Londons Savile Row trained Bespoke tailor who made custom suits priced from $1,200 - $2,600. The remnants of his gold leaf sign are still on the window.

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In Tampa, original home of The Hub to be razed - Tampa Bay Times

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Maine’s prime farmland is being lost to solar. Is ‘dual use’ the answer? – PenBayPilot.com

On an overcast afternoon in early July, Michael Dennett drove to a paddock nearmidcoast Maineto check on his sheep. Theyd been there for a couple of days, and it was almost time to move them to another section of pasture.

Dennett, who owns Crescent Run Farm in Jefferson with his wife, Ryan, has been a sheep farmer for years. But this pasture was different from where hed grazed sheep in the past: It was a commercial-scale solar project, and Dennetts sheep were providing the mowing services.

This story was originally published byThe Maine Monitor.

The Maine Monitor is a local journalism product published by The Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, a nonprofit civic news organization based in Augusta.

Ideally we get through a site within 30 days, particularly in the spring when grass is growing really fast, said Dennett. Per his contract with ReVision Energy, Dennett does two grazes annually on several sites not far from the couples home.

Arrangements like Dennetts grazing sheep, or growing blueberries under solar panels are known as dual-use. As Maine farmers lose prime land to solar developers who want it for panels, dual-use has emerged as a way to keep the land in production, yet also use it to generate energy from the sun.

Farmland, with its open fields, southern exposure and well-drained soils, is typically one of the easiest and cheapest places to put a solar project. But that type of land is also limited in Maine.

A lack of regulations around where solar can be sited has resulted in farms being converted to panels at a rapid clip, an analysis by The Maine Monitor found. Developers outcompete farmers for prime land, or offer working farmers attractive sums to take some land out of production.

In an effort to help stem the conversion, a report expected out this week from theGovernors Energy office stakeholder groupencourages farmers considering solar on actively farmed land to prioritize dual-use, to keep as much of that land in production as possible.

Except those systems, solar developers say, are so costly to construct that they arent viable in Maine on any grand scale.

Thats the technology that we cant afford in this state, Matt Kearns, chief development officer of Longroad Energy and member of the Agriculture Solar Stakeholder Group, told members at a meeting in December.

Sheep are able to graze under traditional ground-mounted systems, and the shade the panels provide is great for the animals, said Dennett. But other kinds of dual-use projects, such as those that allow for vegetable farming or cattle grazing, require elevating panels and spacing them farther apart.

That means more materials, like steel and aluminum, and less energy (and thus less revenue) per acre compared to traditional ground-mounted systems, where panels can be placed close together.

Its very expensive, very hard to do, said Kearns. If were encouraging dual-use thats basically just saying the farmer cant develop solar.

Maine, the most heavily forested state in the U.S., has a finite amount of soil suitable for agriculture. About 10 percent of the states nearly 22 million acres are considered soils of statewide importance. Of those soils, 800,000 acres are considered prime, or land that is of major importance in meeting the nations short- and long-range needs for food and fiber, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Only half of the land suitable for farming in Maine is being farmed, and increasing local food production is one of the goals ofMaine Wont Wait, the states climate action plan. State officials have said they want to triple the amount of food consumed in Maine from state food producers to 30% by 2030.

But amid the states solar gold rush, much of that land has stopped growing food or fiber altogether. It now produces solar energy.

The state does not track how much farmland has been lost to solar projects, but arecent analysisby the Maine Audubon Society found that of 180 projects waiting to be reviewed by the Maine Department of Environmental Protection, 163 intersected with soils classified as prime or of statewide importance. That number is potentially much higher, since only projects on more than 20 acres go through full DEP review.

The reality is were losing habitats. And the reality is were losing farmland, said Sarah Haggerty, a conservation biologist with the Maine Audubon, in a presentation to the Agriculture Solar Stakeholder group.

The group, convened by the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry, and the Governors Energy Office, was tasked with seeking ways to protect important agricultural land while helping to reach solar generation goals.

While state and local officials have championed building those solar projects on capped landfills, brownfields and land that is otherwise unusable, thats not where theyre ending up.

We were pretty disappointed to find that 11 of the 180 projects intersect with gravel pits, and just six of them are uncapped landfills, said Haggerty.

Solar is not the only threat to farmland, which is also being developed for housing and sold off as older farmers (the average age of a Maine farmer is 57) retire and there is no one to take their place. But what makes for good farmland southern exposure, well-drained soils also makes an excellent location for solar panels.

And once there are panels on that land, its highly unlikely it will ever be farmland again, at least not for many decades.

I do not think we should expect large amounts of land to return to other uses from solar at the end of the first generation of life, said Fortunat Mueller, a managing partner at ReVision Energy, during a recent stakeholder meeting.

Pressure from solar developers makes it more difficult for the roughly 25 percent of Maine farmers who lease their farmland to compete in the market. It also makes it harder for new farmers, many of whom lease land before theyre able to buy.

Younger farmers are competing with developers who are offering $1,000 an acre on average, when we can maybe offer $200 an acre for row crop quality soil, said Andy Smith, who participated in the committee and runs The Milkhouse, a dairy farm in Monmouth, with his partner, Caitlin Frame.

Farmers who lease hay fields, where they often pay $50 per acre or less for a lease, have been particularly hard hit by solar development, said Smith. Were at a massive disadvantage.

One reason Maine has seen such rampant solar development on farmland is that lawmakers have yet to enact rules around siting solar on those soils, or set regulations that would direct projects away from open space.

The state was flooded with proposals after the Legislature, in 2019, put in place incentives aimed at helping meet its renewable energy goals. With few regulations on where projects can be located, companies have typically looked to the cheapest, easiest options.

Other states and countries have grappled with the issue for years. Massachusetts,faced with rapid loss of farmland and open spaceto solar and housing development, set rules allowing solar development on agricultural land only if panels are raised at least 10 feet above ground and shading from the array covers no more than 50 percent of the field. It also pays companies with such projects more for the energy they produce.

Vermont, responding to a similar issue,enacted rules in 2017that would pay companies more for putting panels on landfills, sandpits and brownfields, although many of those incentives are ending.

Building solar projects on landfills is10% to 15% more expensivethan siting them on undeveloped land. It requires altering construction practices to keep from compromising the landfills protective cap, which can increase labor costs. The presence of the cap also means that posts typically cant be driven into the ground but must be stabilized with ballast or mounted on long concrete footings, an additional expense.

Landfills and brownfields, which often have remnants of industrial infrastructure and environmental hazards,may also require more in-depth reviewthan putting posts and panels in an empty field. Landfill projects must be monitored to ensure they do not compromise the sites integrity in the long term. Size is also an issue; many brownfields and landfills arent large enough for grid scale arrays.

Solar on commercial rooftops is possible, but companies often dont want panels there because they take away from a buildings development possibility, Drew Pierson, head of sustainability at BlueWave Solar, told the stakeholder group.

Thats why developers say financial incentives are essential for companies to build on those kinds of sites or to put up dual-use projects on farmland.

This all feels good. It sounds good. But its not going to get done without additional incentives, said Jeremy Payne, executive director of the Maine Renewable Energy Association, in a December meeting.

Anything that increases costs to ratepayers will be a non-starter politically, the stakeholder group agreed.

Massachusetts, sure. Big, big economy, a lot of ratepayers. Maine has a million and a half ratepayers, said Kearns of Longroad Energy. I dont think we can afford that here.

Solar can also provide an economic cushion for farmers, who often operate on thin and unpredictable margins. Many see it as a way to possibly return the land to farming in the future, even if its taken out of agricultural production in the short term, or as a way to use marginal areas that arent being actively farmed.

Thats the case for Rick Dyer and his family, who run Clemedow Farms in Monmouth. Dyer decided to allow a developer to install ground-mounted panels (Dyer wasnt aware of dual-use at the time) on 45 of the 1,000 acres the family owns in order to help sustain the rest of the farm.

It provides a buffer by which if all else were to end tomorrow, said Dyer, the economic value that comes in will pay the taxes on the entire property for the next 20 to 40 years and maybe beyond.

The panels, he said, provide economic support that will help keep the rest of the land in open space and able to be farmed.

Farming in Maine is difficult at best, Dyer added. For dairy farmers right now, its really trying. The same price of milk is getting paid to the dairy farmer today that was getting paid to my grandfather 60 years ago, and the cost of that tractor went from $15,000 to $150,000.

Once the contract on the Clemedow Farms solar project is up, there are decommissioning plans that could allow the land to be put back into agricultural production.

Dyer hopes that will be the case. Had a housing development been built on that 45 acres, it would be nearly impossible to return that land to agricultural use, he pointed out. Putting up panels on one section will keep that hope alive.

Economics aside, several farmers said they want to see more data that dual-use systems can work in Maine before agreeing to put panels on productive land.

Theres a lot of talk about dual-use and working with farmers and all of this, but at the end of the day not much else is ever going to be able to happen under these arrays other than sheep grazing and bees foraging on clover or something, said Smith, of The Milkhouse. Providing pollinator habitat is often counted as dual-use.

But that to me is kind of greenwashing to call that agriculture, he said. Not that its not important, but were not producing a lot of calories off that land.

Smith and his partner, whose 250-acre farm has a substation in the center, were contacted by more than a dozen companies after the legislation passed in 2019. They have a rooftop array that offsets the farms energy use and were interested in putting up a dual-use system for their sheep and cattle to graze under. A developer told them it didnt make economic sense.

While there are examples of crops successfully growing elsewhere under dual-use conditions, including a24-acre vegetable farmwith 3,200 panels in Colorado, its important to see examples of it working in Maine, said Smith.

Scientists are studying a dual-use array on a 10-acre patch of blueberry field in Rockport to see how many years it takes the berries to begin producing after the array is installed, and also to see how well they do in shade.

Pierson, of BlueWave Solar, told the stakeholder group that globally there are already many examples of this working.

But, he added: Its not all roses (Farmers) are going to need to invest in new equipment, or even business models to figure out how this works. That could mean learning new methods and departing from long-held philosophies on farming.

Certain pieces of equipment cannot fit between the poles, tractors may not be able to maneuver, and farmers have to be careful not to get chemicals on the panels themselves.

There are low-impact methods that may not have been on farmers minds before that are now actually required because you dont want to damage the solar project, said Pierson.

The stakeholder group came up with several recommendations that it hopes will ease pressure on farmers while still allowing Maine to meet its renewable energy goals. A dual-use pilot program of at least 20 megawatts was suggested, along with the creation of a database with information on solar projects.

The report also suggests regulators consider streamlining the permitting process by making dual-use and/or co-location (in which panels are installed on a portion of farmland, as at Monmouths Clemedow Farms) eligible for permit-by-rule, which essentially allows companies to meet certain criteria and be exempt from full site law of development review.

If we really are going to go big on clean energy, we want to be careful about, you know, just adding a ton of new restrictions, said Kearns of Longroad Energy.

The report advocates for allowing farms to keep their agricultural use tax designation even if they put up solar panels, as long as farming remains on the land. Under current rules, farmers typically lose that designation on the portion of the land with panels, which can amount to many thousands of dollars each year.

In public comments, many urged for solar panels to be installed on farmland only as a last resort.

I am an advocate for solar power, but I believe that panels should be on every rooftop and parking lot and brownfield before we cover farmland, wrote David Asmussen, a commercial vegetable farmer.

Anything that slows solar implementation, argue developers and advocates, will hold Maine back from meeting its renewable energy goals. But farmers and others point out that a local food system and a biodiverse landscape are also some of the best ways to fight climate change, even if the benefit is harder to quantify financially.

Its really important that people understand that this is rapidly changing the landscape of Maine, Smith added. Were talking about the development of tens of thousands of acres of land in the state, just to meet our initial (portion) of renewable energy goals.

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Maine's prime farmland is being lost to solar. Is 'dual use' the answer? - PenBayPilot.com

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Darlington Police says these are the worst areas for anti-social behaviour – The Northern Echo

THESEare the main 'hotspots' for anti-social behaviour in Darlington, according to Darlington Police.

Earlier this week, Darlington Police claimed that reports of anti-social behaviour had reduced by 15 per cent over the last year.

Specialist patrols areregularly carried out in relation to anti-social off-road biking in areas such as Yarm Road and Parkside as part of Operation Endurance,Durham Constabularys ongoing crackdown on those who ride bikes and quads illegally.

Inspector Dean Haythornthwaite, from Darlington Neighbourhood Policing Team, said: Everyone has a right to feel safe in their own home, anti-social behaviour is not something that people should have to put up with.

We work extremely hard to tackle anti-social behaviour in hotspots such as Yarm Road and Whinbush Way, which has involved identifying key offenders, sharing that information with partner agencies, and taking the appropriate action against them. This has resulted in reports of anti-social behaviour reducing in these areas.

Councillor Jonathan Dulston, deputy leader of Darlington Borough Council said: The co-location of our Community Safety Team and the excellent partnership we have developed with Durham Police is an important part of our efforts to ensure Darlington is a safe place for all who live, work and visit the borough.

Anti-social behaviour is something that will not be tolerated, and we will continue to work closely with police, local residents and others to make our communities safer and stronger.

Read more:Darlington Police identified this street as a 'hotspot' for anti-social behaviour

Further to this, onJanuary 18,Peter Gibson MP met with the Home Secretary Priti Patelto discuss the progress of the Police, Crime andSentencing Bill, the Nationality andBorders Bill and how these key pieces of landmark legislation deliver on hismanifesto commitments.

Earlier this week, Peter Gibson MP met with Priti Patel to discuss the issue of off-road quad bikes in Darlington

Peter Gibson MP said: It was useful to meet with the Home Secretary to discuss the ongoing blight caused by the continuing issue of illegal off-road quads and bikes in Darlington.

Everyone in Darlington can play their part by sharing information about the location of these bikes and the habits of their riders who cause this blight or indeed their identity.

You can use the 101 service or you can report anonymously through crime stoppers.

I have invited the Home Secretary to visit Darlington to see the challenges faced by residents and the work of Durham Constabulary in ensuring that progress is being made. I look forward to welcoming her very soon.

--

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Darlington Police says these are the worst areas for anti-social behaviour - The Northern Echo

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Big Data Exchange (BDx) Launches 360View With Free Downloads to Enable Infrastructure Management and Tracking Carbon Credit – PRNewswire

360View allows users to to manage their power efficiency and carbon footprints from anywhere in the world.

With sustainability an urgent initiative these days, 360View eliminates the complexity associated with carbon accounting and tracking carbon credits or offsets. The various carbon exchanges and bodies administering carbon credits and Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) currently rely on third-party consultants to validate credit and offset claims. This human factor is cumbersome, expensive, and prone to conflicts of interest. It is also error-ridden, and double counting is a significant problem. As Greenhouse Gas (GHG) producers pledge to reduce their carbon footprint and commit to aggressive net-zero or even carbon-negative goals, 360View provides them a solution to track and measure carbon accurately, 24x7, 365 days a year with zero human intervention. On the back end, 360View can either digitally submit applications to traditional carbon exchanges or become a trusted node in any carbon token blockchain.

"Traditionally, 360View is used by data centers and colocation users to holistically monitor and manage their power-related efficiencies, asset health, and hybrid infrastructure inventory," says Sujit Panda, CTO at BDx. "This new version now also measures CUE (Carbon Usage Effectiveness) to help companies report and receive carbon credits. This revolutionary feature means 360View is no longer a tool just for colocation customers and data centers, but can also be used by residential and commercial buildings, utility companies, and sustainable forestry programs. Being native green, sustainability is embedded in the BDx DNA, and it was a natural decision for us to offer the software globally for free."

With three editions ranging from a free basic version to a full-featured enterprise-level plan the 360View experience allows both colocation and renewables sector users to scale up at any time to access more comprehensive features, including connecting to carbon registries and carbon credit token blockchains.

Key 360View features include:

Existing users like the capability 360View puts at their fingertips.Marcus Cheng, CEO at Acclivis Technologies & Solutions, says, "We are very pleased to have installed the full-featured version on our racks in BDx's SIN1 facility in Singapore. Our managed services team can now monitor our assets and their performance remotely from anywhere, adding another level of real-time insights."

Phil Martin, VP, Network Infrastructure at EXA, comments, "360View is an excellent data center tool that assists with standardization, real-time capacity management and reporting while simplifying the process for our engineers. The ability to provide real-time reporting on power benefits tracking of PUE improvements enables exceptional visibility."

360View is already getting attention amongst renewable energy providers.

"All we have to do is connect to their APIs, and we will have our carbon reload math done for us," says John Cheung, CEO of Taiwan Cube Energy, a renewable energy provider in Taiwan. "It will also allow carbon registries or carbon token blockchains to accurately and transparently validate our carbon credit and offset claims."

For more information on 360View, visit managed360view.com.

*360View uses modules under license from Verdana.

About Big Data Exchange (BDx)BDx is Asia-Pacific's premier data center, colocation and hybrid cloud solutions provider. Led by a globally recognized team, BDx empowers enterprises to scale across the world's most influential markets. With ultra-modern facilities spanning China, Hong Kong and Singapore, BDx goes beyond space and power to deliver next-gen solutions. BDx's commitment to boosting sustainability has resulted in partnering with renewable power suppliers and forging coalitions to develop groundbreaking technologies and digitally transform its facilities. The company is vigorously expanding its presence into emerging regions to meet the growing digital requirements of hyperscalers, multinational, and financial services enterprises.

To learn more about this forward-thinking organization, visit bdxworld.comor follow BDx on LinkedIn, Twitteror YouTube.

Media Contact:Jaymie Scotto & Associates (JSA)[emailprotected]

SOURCE BDx Data Centers

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Big Data Exchange (BDx) Launches 360View With Free Downloads to Enable Infrastructure Management and Tracking Carbon Credit - PRNewswire

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Orange And Engie Join Forces To Convert The GOS, Orange’s Main Data Center In Africa, To Solar Power, Helping To Reduce The Carbon Footprint In Cte…

Orange And Engie Join Forces To Convert The GOS, Orange's Main Data Center In Africa, To Solar Power, Helping To Reduce The Carbon Footprint In Cte d'Ivoire We store cookies on your computer to improve your experience and provide more personalized services, both on this website and on other sites. For more information about the cookies we use, see our Privacy Policy. We won't track your information when you visit our site. We will have to use at least one cookie to ensure that you won't have to make this choice again.AcceptDeclinePrivacy Policy

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Public to have further input on development of Aurora’s Official Plan – Toronto Star

As Aurora looks ahead to 2051 through the development of its new Official Plan, finding the right balance between growth targets and preserving the natural environment will be essential moving forward.

This was one of the key drivers presented to Council last week by consultants tasked with guiding the community through the development of the new Official Plan (OP), one which will act as a blueprint for growth for the next 29 years.

The development of the new OP is now in its fourth of five phases.

The latest phase, which is expected to run through to the third quarter of 2022 will include a further public open house to allow residents to weigh in on the plan, as well as a statutory public meeting to give lawmakers and residents alike a chance to see the final draft before it is sent to the Region for approval.

Regional approval is the fifth and final phase of the draft process and is expected to be complete by the end of this year.

Managing growthinvolves ensuring there is a balance between growth and development with the Town, and having it directed to specific areas, and preserving the natural environment, said consultant Sabrina Colletti in a presentation made to Council at last Tuesdays General Committee meeting. Preservation of natural areas is something we heard (from the public) very clearly again. Developing attainable housing is the recognition that there needs to be a greater variety of housing types within the Town and we heard that again very clearly. In order to build communities, prioritizing active transportation and building the infrastructure needed [and] adapting for sustainability and climate change, we heard very clearly as well as well as the need to preserve cultural heritage.

There was a lot of acknowledgement that throughout phases two and three that there is a greater diversity and the community is becoming more and more diverse, and there is a lot of importance on ensuring there are a variety of voices heard through the decision-making process so it is truly inclusive and that public spaces are designed in a way that is universally accessible to all.

Auroras current OP guides development through 2031. The new, broader update will work to include intensification targets handed down by the Province. Meeting these targets will be a balancing act not only from an environmental standpoint but also in ensuring employment lands continue to generate jobs for the community.

Another driver will be the fostering of complete communities, with opportunities to do so identified in Auroras northeast.

We have a recommendation to introduce a new Community Hub designation. This would emphasize the co-location of community services and facilities, said consultant David Riley. You might think of the existing institutional site, community centre, where we would have policies to encourage additional uses that would benefit the community. We also discussed climate change and recommendations to address climate change mitigation and adaptation. There is policy direction to encourage the Town to develop clean air initiatives, to use green construction standards when evaluating development and, of course, avoiding flood-prone areas through development and protecting the Towns tree canopy.

The draft OP takes a second look at the Towns Promenade Secondary Plan, which encourages commerce and walkability along Auroras Yonge and Wellington corridors, as well as the Provincially-mandated intensification around the GO Station, identified as a Major Transit Station Area (MTSA).

Knowing there is a 45 per cent intensification target, that means 25 per cent of new units between now and 2051 will be within the built-up area and many of those units will be in areas designated to accommodate growth, which is the Promenade, said Mr. Riley. There is really a need to accommodate growth within the Secondary Plan area and were going to see that in a combination of ground-related dwellings, stacked townhouses, mid-rise apartments, generally within existing height permissions. The Secondary Plan doesnt address specifically the MTSA, but it does partially include a lot of the area that is within the MTSA. The boundary of the Secondary Plan needs to be amended to accommodate the entire MTSA. We think there are opportunities for adding additional policies related to built form, setbacks, and permitted uses at grade.

Added Ms. Colletti: Prioritizing the expansion of bus routes and trails within the Town is absolutely a priority, but in order to do that, there needs to be infrastructure to support it, like bike parking. If theres going to be an expansion of trails and bike routes to key destinations, making an investment in improving wayfinding along the trails is something we heard very clearly.

The final draft of the Official Plan is slated to be presented to Council in June.

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Public to have further input on development of Aurora's Official Plan - Toronto Star

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Foodstuff: The ‘gloo that holds it all together – The Aspen Times

I cannot say for certain whether the people of Aspen live in a bubble, given that I am one of such people and Im not sure if anyone would know they were in a bubble from the inside. (See The Truman Show.)

But people in Aspen are definitely eating in bubbles, if the plastic private dining igloos popping up all around town this season are any indication.

Some bubbles came about as a matter of necessity last winter, when indoor dining skeetered between no soup for you and people can have a little table inside, as a treat and restaurants had to get creative to ensure diners could eat outside (er, inside-outside) without freezing their phalanges off.

Even after indoor dining resumed and stayed in play as pandemic restrictions eased, the igloos have stuck around for another season. A few new ones even cropped up, along with a couple of yurts (the igloos private indoor-outdoor dining cousin).

Last year, that was kind of the whole reason why we did the igloos in the first place was to maximize that patio space during COVID and more of the restrictions, and we still have tables now that will show up and they are cautious about COVID, and they want their own family in their own little bubble, said Rachel Koppelman, the chef at Platos Restaurant at Aspen Meadows, where there are three igloos on-site.

But the ethos this year seems to be driven not only by pandemic pressures but also by that Bonus Jonas of the Aspen Idea: mind, body, spirit and experience usually of a private, customizable and high-end variety.

Such is the case for the Diamond Dome on the rooftop courtyard of the conference center The Gant, erected in honor of the 75th anniversary of Aspen Snowmass with a marketing claim to Aspens only rooftop bubble experience.

The first group that booked the dome was sold on the private and small-group setting for a New Years Eve fireworks watch party, said Lou Eppelsheimer, the director of sales and marketing at The Gant; others have come to the dome who might be a little apprehensive to go out in town and eat in a crowded restaurant but are willing to entertain the idea of a smaller, more intimate space.

The Diamond Dome has its own dedicated server and two daily seatings at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. Reservations are required 72 hours in advance the dome fits six to eight people comfortably but might hold 10, Eppelsheimer said. Theres a minimum food and beverage spend of $250 that turns into a cancellation fee if diners bail within 24 hours of their reservation.

Over at Duemani, the experience is as exclusive as it is unique, according to Carlos Solorzano-Smith, who oversees day-to-day operations at Duemani and sister restaurant Aquolina as a managing partner of Aspen Hospitality Group. There are two seatings, one at 5:30 p.m. with a $2,000 minimum spend and one around 8 p.m. with a minimum spend of $3,000.

Solorzano-Smith emphasizes service as well as cultivating a beautiful place and warm, fun atmosphere at the yurt, Solorzano-Smith said. The yurt an hold a maximum of 10 diners and also promises a dedicated server. (Most of these dining experiences around town do come with igloo- or yurt-dedicated waitstaff.)

Most of the yurts and igloos around these parts tend to run in that range a few hundred bucks and a few grand for minimum food and beverage spends: its $400 at both the 5:15 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. seatings for each the three igloos at Platos, which can fit six adults comfortably or eight cozily. ts $2,500 for the 5 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. seatings at The Snow Lodges yurt at the St. Regis, which can hold as many as 12 diners but has a recommended capacity of 10.

There seems to be an appetite for such private luxury experiences too, according to folks like Koppelman, Eppelsheimer and Solorzano-Smith who oversee the restaurants that offer these sorts of things.

But those of us with appetites but perhaps not the same cash-flow to sate them can still take refuge in one of these plastic domes without liquidating our assets.

Bonnies, that pancake haven on Aspen Mountain, has several eight-person igloos that are first-come, first-serve with no booking fee Monday through Thursday; the booking fee is $50 Friday through Sunday. Reservations are only available in person, so you might actually need those skis you were going to post on the Swap to get there.

Kaya Williams is a reporter for The Aspen Times and The Snowmass Sun whos still waiting to see which local restaurant will have the gumption to offer dining in an actual igloo made of snow. Email her at kwilliams@aspentimes.com.

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Foodstuff: The 'gloo that holds it all together - The Aspen Times

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Tips that you should follow to take to make your website run smoothly – AppleMagazine

You should always keep your website running smoothly by following a few simple tips. You should regularly update your websites content, optimize your images, check your website for broken links, and more. By following these simple tips, youll keep your website running like a well-oiled machine!

Make sure you are optimizing all of your images to reduce strain on your website because this will make it run faster and more smoothly. You can do this by either using an image compression tool like TinyPNG, or you can change the actual settings within Photoshop (or whichever program youre using) to reduce the file size of each image. You should always have the most optimal web hosting environment for your site so everything runs smoothly. For example, if you are using a shared server, try upgrading to a dedicated server or virtual private server so you have more control over things like memory usage. You can also optimize your hosting with tools like WP Rocket or W3 Total Cache to reduce the load on your servers and automatically speed up your site!

Always be sure to update your websites content regularly. Your audience will come back to the same information if they visit multiple times, so always try to have new material up. This can help increase traffic and sales for your business because it shows that you are current and active! Keeping a blog or creating a social media account is a great way to increase your websites content.

Tips for updating content include setting up a blog with a helpful and educational tone. This is the best way to increase traffic and give your business a professional appearance! And, if youre not sure what to blog about, think about and write down everything that goes on in your business. Then narrow it down to three or four topics that come up most often, and youll always have material to blog about!

Every link on your pages must work correctly to keep everything running smoothly! You should always check for broken links before publishing a new page or blog post so any mistakes are fixed right away instead of having visitors click something only to be taken off-site to an error page. Many tools can help you find any broken links on your website. Make sure you are testing your website on different browsers and devices, so you can always make sure it looks right across all browsers! You should test your site to see how it looks on iOS Safari, Android Chrome, Windows IE, Mac Firefox, etc. so there arent any issues when people go to visit your site on their desktop or mobile device!

Make sure that your website is secure by adding security plugins like WordFence or Sucuri SiteCheck to keep intruders away and malware off your site. Because WordPress includes the ability for anyone to upload code, this makes it more vulnerable to online threats, so be sure to stay protected with these security features! Back-ups are critical because they save all of the work that youve done since you created the site in case anything happens! You never want to lose any data if something goes wrong either internally (i.e., human error) or externally (i.e., hacking), so always be sure to back up your website regularly.

Some threats come from outside forces, but some threats come from inside the company. A new method of cyber-attack is called ransomware, where attackers encrypt all data and hold it for ransom. However, you can protect yourself by following good security practices. Your web host should implement a firewall and malware scanning, run regular security updates to your server, and protect against spam email.

While this may not be necessary, knowing how to code in HTML is an incredibly useful skill that will make creating new pages on your website much faster and easier! If youre already familiar with HTML, then its time to brush up by learning some of the latest features like microdata or figure out how to use the HTML5 Audio element. HTML will also help you create more optimized pages and increase the speed of your website, as well as make sure your site is search engine friendly! To start with HTML you need to understand the important structural tags like the div tag and how it is used for formatting. After you get a better understanding of how HTML works, you can start to play with custom CSS!

There are many different ways that you can keep your website running smoothly, but these five tips will help give you a good start! Follow them and become an expert in no time!

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Tips that you should follow to take to make your website run smoothly - AppleMagazine