Ann Arbor
November 21, 2009
New Building in Ann Arbor on Depot Street | Dave Krieger
Ann Arbor - In the News
8 Articles | Page: | Show All
Rally around light rail
Source: Great Lakes Echo, 11/19/2009
A light rail up Woodward would not just be for Detroit. And a commuter rail from Detroit to Ann Arbor wouldn't just be for those two cities. Mass transit, when done right, could coalesce and serve the entire region.

Excerpt:

"Gas prices hit $4 a gallon last year and will go up again," he said. "If we can make it so that commuter rail is faster and cheaper and you won't have to pay to park your car, then people will definitely ride."

The Detroit Department of Transportation predicts 20,000 daily riders on the Woodward line by 2030, with 11,100 roundtrips per day. The Southeast Michigan Council of Governments (SEMCOG) estimates 5,800 daily riders for the Ann Arbor-Detroit line, with four round trips daily.

Rep. Bert Johnson, D-Detroit, whose district includes part of the proposed Woodward Avenue rail route, said it's important for both projects to become a reality. "They are separate plans, but they show regional cooperation."

Businesses would move close to the rail routes and the region would be "more attractive to live, work, and play," he said.

Read the entire article here.
Clive Owen acts on UM's campus
Source: Detroit Free Press, 11/12/2009
Clive Owen, he's so dreamy... and so British. He's also been on the campus of the University of Michigan, not brushing up on his economics but acting, 'cause that's what he does. Just another reason that the film incentives are good for Michigan -- you get to see Clive Owen.

Excerpt:

The University of Michigan doubled as a movie set earlier this week when exteriors were shot for the movie Trust.

The cast and crew filmed Wednesday on the steps of the Michigan Union and at about a half-dozen sites across campus, according to Lee Doyle, director of the University of Michigan Film Office.

Friends star David Schwimmer is directing the drama and Clive Owen and Catherine Keener are starring in it. According to Variety, Owen and Keener play parents who are stunned to find out that their 14-year-old daughter has been victimized by an adult who posed as a teen in a chat room.

Read the entire article here.
The Salvation Army's Red Kettle drive now takes plastic
Source: Great Lakes IT Report, 11/12/2009
No cash? No problem. Men and women ringing the bells outside now take plastic. The nostalgic scene will no longer have the sound of change falling into a tin can, but now more of a swipe and a printing receipt sound.

Excerpt:

The Salvation Army of Washtenaw County will kick off its annual Red Kettle Campaign with an event beginning at noon on Friday, Nov. 20 inside Briarwood Mall. A giant red kettle measuring 6 feet tall and 6 feet around will be set up in the Celebration Center next to the play area in the JCPenney court. 

The Red Kettle Campaign is going high tech this year with the addition of credit card machines at three kettles in Briarwood Mall and one kettle at Sam's Club in Ypsilanti. TSA-WC is the first corps in the state of Michigan, as well as The Salvation Army’s Central Territory, to use credit card machines at its kettles.

"People who don’t tend to carry cash now have a convenient and safe way to donate to our Red Kettle Campaign," said Washtenaw County Coordinator Major John Williams. "The machines don’t hold the credit card data – the data is transmitted through a secure cellular connection."

Read the entire story here.
UM team places 3rd in world in solar powered car race
Source: Great Lakes IT Report, 11/5/2009
A bunch of University of Michigan kids just traveled 1,880 miles through Australia. Not backpacking, however, but powering a solar powered car in an international race. And, as if that wasn't enough, the UM team came up third.

Excerpt:

Though the students who raced Infinium hoped to be the best in the world, or at least the best in UM history, they say they're happy sharing statistics with impressive cars from the past. Michigan finished third in the World Solar Challenge in 1990, 2001, and 2005 and is the reigning North American Solar Challenge champion. The team has won that race five times.

"We still ran a great race," said interim project manager Steve Durbin, a senior aerospace engineering major "We have a reliable car. We didn't meet our overall goal of finishing first, but we proved we are one of the top teams in the world by placing so well in the competition."

Durbin credits the team's dedication and technology for the solid performance. Through the summer, a core of 20 team members worked 80-hour weeks to get the car ready to race. And a state-of-the-art lithium battery donated by A123 Systems helped Infinium achieve a high average speed approaching 60 mph.

Read the entire article here.
Ann Arbor bicyclists and motorists need mutual respect
Source: AnnArbor.com, 11/5/2009
Bicycles and cars are both vehicles, it's just that one is a lot more lethal than the other. So, as Ann Arbor looks to add another 26 miles of on-road bike lanes over the next few years, car drivers will need to keep an eye out, and an eye on, cyclists.

Excerpt:

On the AnnArbor.com Web site, this has been one of the most commented-on topics, and the discussion has been unsettling in what it has revealed about the lack of tolerance between those who travel on four wheels and those who travel on two.

Given that Ann Arbor plans to add another 26 miles of on-road bicycle lanes over five years, along with other efforts to encourage more bike use, it is essential that we as a community improve our level of bicycle and automobile safety.

If you ride a bike, you need to know the rules of the road, and obey them. The failure to stop at traffic lights or signal before you turn is not only unsafe, but results in ill will by motorists toward all cyclists.

Read the entire article here.


Biking  
University of Michigan has Internet mojo
Source: Great Lakes IT Report, 11/5/2009
Got mojo? The University of Michigan does... on the Internet. In a national analysis of universities, UM beat out some pretty prestigious schools (that's not to say UM isn't prestigious) to get the No. 1 ranking when it comes to net coverage, traffic, and social media shout-outs.

Excerpt:

The University of Michigan has topped Harvard University and all other universities in the United States for the amount of public interest measured by media coverage, Internet traffic and social media mentions, according to an independent national analysis released this week.

Michigan (previously ranked fourth) was followed by MIT, Harvard (previously No. 1), Columbia University, the University of Chicago, the University of California-Berkley, the University of Wisconsin, Stanford University, the University of North Carolina and Cornell University.

The survey was part of Austin, Texas-based Global Language Monitor's newest Predictive Qualities Indicator survey using word analysis to measure media trends and "buzz.''

Global Language Monitor President Paul Payack attributed the shift in public sentiment to the 2008 financial markets meltdown that cost Harvard's endowment $11 billion, forcing Harvard and other elite privates that relied on endowments to make major cuts in 2009.

"There's been a flight to quality with increased interest in the Public Ivies like Michigan and Wisconsin as well as more interest in technology, which helped MIT climb from 16th in the previous survey,'' Payack said. "We look at this as a branding analysis, looking at the perceived attributes people are most interested in."

Read the entire article here.
Ann Arbor's South Main Street is a Great Place
Source: Next American City, 10/22/2009
What makes a great place may be relative, differing from person to person, but if you talk to the American Planning Association they'll point you toward Ann Arbor's South Main Street.

Excerpt:

So, what makes a great place? Perhaps unsurprisingly, the APA thinks it's the ability to provide for the pedestrian and bring a community together. It's also about creating a sense of local identity. South Main Street in Ann Arbor, Mich. makes the list of Great Streets because of its diverse range of locally-owned businesses and restaurants housed in architecturally interesting, mixed-use buildings. It's an appealing environment that encourages walking rather than driving; you won't find many surface parking lots here. It's all about creating a space for the surrounding community to socialize, and not in a forced way. Ann Arbor residents now enjoy sidewalk seating at cafes, dozens of market days and street fairs per year, and easy access to public transportation.

Read the entire article here.
Invention central at U-M
Source: Great Lakes IT Report, 10/8/2009
You'd think there was some mad scientist working on the University of Michigan's campus, considering how many inventions were churned out in 2009.

Excerpt:

University of Michigan researchers disclosed 350 new inventions in fiscal year 2009, setting a new record. Royalties from university-developed technologies rose 20 percent during that period, another all-time high.

And despite the state's economic woes, the university licensed eight new startups in the fiscal year that ended June 30, according to the UM Office of Technology Transfer.

"This past year, when we were expecting a slowdown and anticipating three, maybe four, new start-ups, faculty responded -- with eight," UM President Mary Sue Coleman said Monday in her State of the University address. "In the past nine years, faculty have launched 83 start-ups. That's roughly one new business, every six weeks, since 2001.

Added Coleman: "Universities drive economic development. Our faculty are looking the recession in the eye and moving forward."

Read the entire article here.