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Nature Bridges is a leading bridge company that specializes in top down construction of timber bridges and pedestrian boardwalks through environmentally sensitive areas. Through the use of lightweight hydraulic impact and material handling equipment in combination with hand driven auger machines, our top down construction method means the only things that touch the ground are workmen. The only things left behind are footprints and your new bridge.

 

As one of the nation's leading bridge builders, we also construct a wide variety of other development amenities, such as golf cart bridges, free span bridges, architecturally designed trellises, fencing, pavilions, decks and docks. Other amenities you may consider are our timber curbing and guardrails for vehicular bridges, roadside walkways, and timber retaining walls for those projects that require the warmth of wood in lieu of concrete and steel.

 

Nature Bridges is a bridge contractor that prides itself on a solid reputation of superior craftsmanship and meeting our customers' schedules. We require continuing education for our project foremen, bringing the knowledge of the testing laboratory and the field together to continually improve our building techniques.

 

When planning your next project, plan on Nature Bridges!

(850) 385-3234

 

got some projects planned for the future...keep your eyes peeled...

Credit: Casey Wood / Clinton Global Initiative

 

CGI U 2012 EDUCATION WORKING SESSION - Public vs. Private: Who Decides and Who Provides?

 

Moderator:

Deborah Bial, President and Founder, Posse Foundation

  

Participants:

Fabiola Bongbenuoh, Member, Youth Empowerment through Technology, Arts and Media (YETAM) Project, Plan International

Subhash Ghimire, Founder and Director, Sarswati Foundation and Sarswati Peace School

Natalie Hopkinson, Fellow, Interactivity Foundation

Jeremy Kane, Founder and CEO, LEAD Public Schools

Nature Bridges is a leading bridge company that specializes in top down construction of timber bridges and pedestrian boardwalks through environmentally sensitive areas. Through the use of lightweight hydraulic impact and material handling equipment in combination with hand driven auger machines, our top down construction method means the only things that touch the ground are workmen. The only things left behind are footprints and your new bridge.

 

As one of the nation's leading bridge builders, we also construct a wide variety of other development amenities, such as golf cart bridges, free span bridges, architecturally designed trellises, fencing, pavilions, decks and docks. Other amenities you may consider are our timber curbing and guardrails for vehicular bridges, roadside walkways, and timber retaining walls for those projects that require the warmth of wood in lieu of concrete and steel.

 

Nature Bridges is a bridge contractor that prides itself on a solid reputation of superior craftsmanship and meeting our customers' schedules. We require continuing education for our project foremen, bringing the knowledge of the testing laboratory and the field together to continually improve our building techniques.

 

When planning your next project, plan on Nature Bridges!

(850) 385-3234

 

That's a 1st try of my city planning project.

Everything is made in sketch up. Text is in Russian, but there in nothing interesting=)

Nature Bridges is a leading bridge company that specializes in top down construction of timber bridges and pedestrian boardwalks through environmentally sensitive areas. Through the use of lightweight hydraulic impact and material handling equipment in combination with hand driven auger machines, our top down construction method means the only things that touch the ground are workmen. The only things left behind are footprints and your new bridge.

 

As one of the nation's leading bridge builders, we also construct a wide variety of other development amenities, such as golf cart bridges, free span bridges, architecturally designed trellises, fencing, pavilions, decks and docks. Other amenities you may consider are our timber curbing and guardrails for vehicular bridges, roadside walkways, and timber retaining walls for those projects that require the warmth of wood in lieu of concrete and steel.

 

Nature Bridges is a bridge contractor that prides itself on a solid reputation of superior craftsmanship and meeting our customers' schedules. We require continuing education for our project foremen, bringing the knowledge of the testing laboratory and the field together to continually improve our building techniques.

 

When planning your next project, plan on Nature Bridges!

(850) 385-3234

 

City & Guilds of London Art School

 

The Art School’s Architectural Heritage

City & Guilds of London Art School occupies nos. 114-124 Kennington Park Road, a terrace of late 18th century houses, and 19th and 20th century studios built over the gardens behind. The terrace is Grade II listed and stands in the Kennington Conservation Area. The Art School has been on this site since 1879.

 

The houses at nos. 114-124 Kennington Park Road were built in 1788, as part of the first wave of urbanisation in this area. They were designed as one half of a gateway development to a planned grand square by the builder Michael Searles. The projected plans were never fully realised, and the development of the square was carried out on a much-reduced scale, becoming what is now Cleaver Square. Although originally designed as a middle-class street, the growth of London in the Victorian era and the flight of prosperous families to suburbs such as Clapham and Brixton led to a decline in the area. While the 19th-century occupants of the Georgian houses are unknown, it seems quite possible that they were lower middle or working class.

 

In 1879, the South London Technical Art College (City & Guilds of London Art School since 1937) moved into nos. 122-124. Its predecessor, the Lambeth School of Art, had been founded nearby specifically to be close to the Doulton potteries, in order to provide art education to local workers (and mainly women). The first studio sheds, located behind nos. 122-124, were built shortly after 1879. These structures, shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1894, had timber truss roofs. Later on, between 1918 and 1939, the Art School expanded into nos. 118-120, and new studios with steel frame trusses were constructed in the gardens behind. No. 116 Kennington Park Road was purchased by the Art School in 1974, while the final property of the six, no. 114, was acquired in the late 1980s, allowing the stone yard area to be developed.

 

21st-Century Developments

Since 2010, the Art School has embarked on an ambitious programme of renovations and enhancements on its Kennington site. The Masterplan for the project, established under the direction of Alan Higgs Architects, is based on a three-phase delivery:

 

Phase 1 (2010-2014)

Completed over five consecutive summers, Phase 1 consisted of the renovation and upgrade of the six terrace buildings, including refurbishing some 35 studios, creating the expanded Sackler Library, and improving circulation throughout. In 2012, the Foundation Department relocated to the adjacent 1930s Old Vauxhall Telephone Exchange building.

 

Phase 2 (2015-2016)

This phase involves the creation of a new entrance for the Art School by inserting a glazed steel canopy structure forming an atrium in the space between the Georgian terrace and the studio buildings. Following ground level works in 2015, summer of 2016 saw continued developments with the installation of the new roof structure.

 

Phase 3

The final phase will focus on a partial re-development and refurbishment of the studio buildings at the rear of the site, which increase the work spaces for creative practice while protecting the special character and the legacy embodied in its buildings.

[Open House London]

VisiLean for BIM & Project Planning Solution

Children in this village in conflict-affected Mindanao, Philippines enjoy reading books donated by Pittsburgh-based Brother's Brother Foundation through USAID's EDC-coordinated EQuALLS Project. Even during their summer school break, the children borrow the books from the school library, which the community established with a small USAID grant after EQuALLS trained them on education project planning and management.

 

Photo by Leoncio Rodaje, EQuALLS2 Project, at the Oviedo-Baptista Elementary School in Lutayan, Sultan Kudarat, Mindanao, Philippines in June 2010

The Helix Bridge (Chinese: 螺旋桥), previously known as the Double Helix Bridge (Chinese: 双螺旋桥), is a pedestrian bridge linking Marina Centre with Marina South in the Marina Bay area in Singapore. It was officially opened on April 24, 2010 at 9 pm.[1] It is located beside the Benjamin Sheares Bridge and is accompanied by a vehicular bridge, known as the Bayfront Bridge.

 

The bridge complements other major development projects planned in the area, including the highly-anticipated Integrated Resort Marina Bay Sands, Singapore Flyer, Gardens by the Bay and the 438,000 m² business and financial centre which will be ready by 2012. [2]

 

On Tuesday March 31st, 2015 the University of Technology and Education (UTE) in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam launched a new distance learning (DL) classroom equipped with the latest technology in videoconferencing and collaboration software and hardware. This facility will allow UTE to connect with Arizona State University (ASU) and other institutions of higher education around the world to create an interactive channel between faculty and students. These type of global interactions are aimed at increasing the competitiveness of UTE graduates by preparing them with crucial skills needed in today’s workforce, such as: team work, problem solving, project planning, presentation skills and English language training.

The California Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis (left) meets with the President Gayle Hutchinson (right) and AS President to tour the new physical science building and learn more about Basic Needs Project, facilities, pandemic response and student enrollment perspectives on Wednesday, October 7, 2020 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)

Khu đô thị mới thủ thiêm

Credit: Casey Wood / Clinton Global Initiative

 

CGI U 2012 EDUCATION WORKING SESSION - Public vs. Private: Who Decides and Who Provides?

 

Moderator:

Deborah Bial, President and Founder, Posse Foundation

  

Participants:

Fabiola Bongbenuoh, Member, Youth Empowerment through Technology, Arts and Media (YETAM) Project, Plan International

Subhash Ghimire, Founder and Director, Sarswati Foundation and Sarswati Peace School

Natalie Hopkinson, Fellow, Interactivity Foundation

Jeremy Kane, Founder and CEO, LEAD Public Schools

Mike Guzzi (left) leads the California Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis (right) who met with the President and AS President to tour the new physical science building and learn more about Basic Needs Project, facilities, pandemic response and student enrollment perspectives on Wednesday, October 7, 2020 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)

Aerial view over the new Science Building on Saturday, December 5, 2020 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)

The sixth edition of the Globethics.net's flagship event, the Global Ethics Forum, was held in Geneva from 25 to 27 June 2015. Leaders, experts and future leaders from civil society, government, religious and academic institutions as well as from the business sector came together to share their learning and experiences in order to take action together to promote responsible leadership.

 

The Forum welcomed a total of 160 participants from all continents. Over 50 speakers shared their insights in four plenary sessions and 12 workshops, resulting in concrete project plans on the conference topic "Responsible Leadership in Action: The Value of Values." The programme also featured a public evening with a panel discussion, music and a reception hosted by the City of Geneva at the Graduate Institute Geneva. Photographs taken during the Forum give some of the flavour of the event, www.flickr.com/photos/globethicsnet.

 

"The insights shared focused on both parts of the responsible leadership equation: the personal and the organisational level of value awareness, practice and stewardship for stakeholder needs", commented Professor Christoph Stückelberger, Executive Director and Founder of Globethics.net.

 

On the personal level, keynote speaker Musimbi Kanyoro, President and CEO of the US-based Global Fund for Women, emphasised the need for empathy towards the people one serves, as well as sharing, celebrating others and accepting failure.

 

The programme also offered a personal reflection session on the value of compassion and emphasized sharing, openness and gratefulness as core values for the Forum experience.

 

On the organizational level, the gathering focused on overarching tools like organisational training and codes of ethics, integrated reporting and dialogue; sector-specific tools; as well as problem-specific tools such as those used to address gender equality. Workshops were designed to exchange insights on existing tools and then to create a work plan to build upon them for greater impact.

 

As well as providing the opportunity to forge and strengthen invaluable relationships between different actors, the Forum's outcomes include a colourful bouquet of concrete plans to foster responsible leadership in organisations, including: disseminating knowledge about codes of ethics; creating access to sustainable jobs and education; enhancing awareness and knowledge about gender ethics; strengthening values-driven responsible investment; improving Africa-China business relations through further dialogue; developing an integrated values-based sustainability toolkit for business; understanding higher education's impact on community; ensuring knowledge exchange on values-based higher education programmes; fostering ethical elections in DR Congo; and advancing responsible resource management in religious organisations.

 

The 2015 Global Ethics Forum was made possible through the support of the Loterie Romande, the Ville de Genève, the Sri Ramanuja Mission Trust, the Graduate Institute Geneva and Nestlé SA.

 

News items about the Forum and a webcast of the public event at the Graduate Institute Geneva on 25 June can be found on the Global Ethics Forum pages at www.globethics.net/web/gef/conference2015.

Nature Bridges is a leading bridge company that specializes in top down construction of timber bridges and pedestrian boardwalks through environmentally sensitive areas. Through the use of lightweight hydraulic impact and material handling equipment in combination with hand driven auger machines, our top down construction method means the only things that touch the ground are workmen. The only things left behind are footprints and your new bridge.

 

As one of the nation's leading bridge builders, we also construct a wide variety of other development amenities, such as golf cart bridges, free span bridges, architecturally designed trellises, fencing, pavilions, decks and docks. Other amenities you may consider are our timber curbing and guardrails for vehicular bridges, roadside walkways, and timber retaining walls for those projects that require the warmth of wood in lieu of concrete and steel.

 

Nature Bridges is a bridge contractor that prides itself on a solid reputation of superior craftsmanship and meeting our customers' schedules. We require continuing education for our project foremen, bringing the knowledge of the testing laboratory and the field together to continually improve our building techniques.

 

When planning your next project, plan on Nature Bridges!

(850) 385-3234

 

First off, I hope everyone is enjoying the holidays, and spending lots of time with family and loved ones. Happy Holidays to you all!

 

I guess time for some updates: I havent taken photos in a while. I am definitely more of a quality over quantity person. I would love to do a 365 day project, but I'd go mad when I have to post some photos I'm not pleased with. So I stick to having big projects every once in a while, and spending the time to plan them out, shoot, edit, etc. This shot is definitely not "quality", but I really wanted to post a photo before the new year so I have something to look back on.

 

Within the next few days I am applying to Parsons in New York, to attain my bachelors of fine arts in Photography! So that is exciting news, and I will keep you all updated.

 

Also, I believe I am going to be starting an internship soon ( I will post the photographer later on), and I have a lot upcoming projects planned. So stay tuned, I will be posting a lot more this year! Hopefully!

 

Thank you everyone, and Happy Holidays!

 

Strobist: AB800 thru Octa over camera.

Engineers from Fredericksburg based Company A, 116th Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 116th IBCT train with engineers from Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 37th Engineer Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division at Fort A.P. Hill, Va. March 6-7, 2015. The training is part of the Army's Total Force Partnership Program that is designed to promote informal leader development and pushes the units to find shared training opportunities and trade lessons learned. Engineers worked side by side on projects for Fort A.P. Hill building trenches and improving roads. 37th Engineer Battalion engineers were able to sign equipment from the Fredericksburg unit to get additional operating time. In exchange, 116th engineers gained valuable training time and experience because the equipment was already onsite and project planning was completed.(National Guard photos by Maj. Matthew Nowak/Released)

130704-N-SK590-030MAJURO, Marshall Island (July 4, 2013) President of the Republic of the Marshall Islands Christopher Loeak meets with U.S. Navy Capt. Wallace Lovely, Pacific Partnership 2013 mission commander, and Royal New Zealand Navy Acting Capt. Anthony Millar, Pacific Partnership deputy mission commander, about projects planned for Pacific Partnership’s mission in the Marshall Islands. Working at the invitation of each host nation, Pacific Partnership is joined by partner nations that include Australia, Canada, Colombia, France, Japan, Malaysia Singapore, South Korea and New Zealand to strengthen disaster response preparedness around the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Tim D. Godbee/Released)

Khu đô thị mới thủ thiêm

During the April 27, 2016 close-out event for the Lower Birch Creek Watershed Project plan, NRCS engineers, Mark Yerger, Darryl Baker and Paul Smidansky, tour the Hein Coulee structure at Lake Frances. Pondera County, MT.

Students will have enhanced access to online learning opportunities thanks to a new partnership between the university and Quizam Media Corporation. Dr. Rosetta Khalideen, UFV’s Dean of Professional Studies, and Dr. Frank Ulbrich, Director of the School of Business, joined Russ Rossi, President & CEO of Quizam Media Corporation, to sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on behalf of their respective organizations on April 2.

 

The partnership formalizes a path for developing UFV’s project plan to access and customize ontrackTV content for labs, self-paced learning, and other purposes related to UFV credit and non-credit courses. The goal is for UFV to work with ontrackTV to help meet UFV’s strategic plan goals for online delivery.

BELGIUM – Cathedral of Our Lady of Antwerp

 

The Cathedral of Our Lady is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Antwerp, Belgium.

The current church replaces an old Romanesque chapel built in the 10th century in the same place, dedicated to Mary, transformed into a Romanesque church in 1123. From 1352 to 1521, the people of Antwerp erected the largest Gothic church in the Netherlands. Emperor Charles V has the ambition to build a much larger church. The project planned to build a church three times larger than the existing building and equipped with five towers, but the fire on the night of October 5 to 6, 1533 put an end to this dream.

Built in 169 years, it is a Gothic church in the shape of a Latin cross, one of the peaks of Brabant Gothic art.

 

Khu đô thị mới thủ thiêm

Artwork by Benedict Hughes, on show at the end of year in City & Guilds of London Art School. Referencing the Waterloo Helmet, in the style of Grayson Perry.

 

The Art School’s Architectural Heritage

City & Guilds of London Art School occupies nos. 114-124 Kennington Park Road, a terrace of late 18th century houses, and 19th and 20th century studios built over the gardens behind. The terrace is Grade II listed and stands in the Kennington Conservation Area. The Art School has been on this site since 1879.

 

The houses at nos. 114-124 Kennington Park Road were built in 1788, as part of the first wave of urbanisation in this area. They were designed as one half of a gateway development to a planned grand square by the builder Michael Searles. The projected plans were never fully realised, and the development of the square was carried out on a much-reduced scale, becoming what is now Cleaver Square. Although originally designed as a middle-class street, the growth of London in the Victorian era and the flight of prosperous families to suburbs such as Clapham and Brixton led to a decline in the area. While the 19th-century occupants of the Georgian houses are unknown, it seems quite possible that they were lower middle or working class.

 

In 1879, the South London Technical Art College (City & Guilds of London Art School since 1937) moved into nos. 122-124. Its predecessor, the Lambeth School of Art, had been founded nearby specifically to be close to the Doulton potteries, in order to provide art education to local workers (and mainly women). The first studio sheds, located behind nos. 122-124, were built shortly after 1879. These structures, shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1894, had timber truss roofs. Later on, between 1918 and 1939, the Art School expanded into nos. 118-120, and new studios with steel frame trusses were constructed in the gardens behind. No. 116 Kennington Park Road was purchased by the Art School in 1974, while the final property of the six, no. 114, was acquired in the late 1980s, allowing the stone yard area to be developed.

 

21st-Century Developments

Since 2010, the Art School has embarked on an ambitious programme of renovations and enhancements on its Kennington site. The Masterplan for the project, established under the direction of Alan Higgs Architects, is based on a three-phase delivery:

 

Phase 1 (2010-2014)

Completed over five consecutive summers, Phase 1 consisted of the renovation and upgrade of the six terrace buildings, including refurbishing some 35 studios, creating the expanded Sackler Library, and improving circulation throughout. In 2012, the Foundation Department relocated to the adjacent 1930s Old Vauxhall Telephone Exchange building.

 

Phase 2 (2015-2016)

This phase involves the creation of a new entrance for the Art School by inserting a glazed steel canopy structure forming an atrium in the space between the Georgian terrace and the studio buildings. Following ground level works in 2015, summer of 2016 saw continued developments with the installation of the new roof structure.

 

Phase 3

The final phase will focus on a partial re-development and refurbishment of the studio buildings at the rear of the site, which increase the work spaces for creative practice while protecting the special character and the legacy embodied in its buildings.

[Open House London]

I am lucky to know so many amazing people who are willing to go in front of my camera on relatively short notice. This week was super busy, and so my Portrait Project planning and shooting time was minimal. Fortunately, Alyson was more than willing to come out to West Philly and be my model for the week. Alyson is a great singer and actress, and nailed this shot right away. It was exactly what I had envision for this.

    

Only eight more portraits left in the project now. It's hard to believe I've been working on this since January, and that it is almost coming to a close. People like Alyson keep me inspired and motivated.

The last two loads negotiating the overhead traffic signals above the M4 at Calcott. The UK transport project planning, permits & escorts was by Teahan Convoi Service. This load was escorted by Teahan, Convoi Assist, RVT & Thames Valley Police.

130704-N-SK590-027MAJURO, Marshall Island (July 4, 2013) President of the Republic of the Marshall Islands Christopher Loeak meets with U.S. Navy Capt. Wallace Lovely, Pacific Partnership 2013 mission commander, and Royal New Zealand Navy Acting Capt. Anthony Millar, Pacific Partnership deputy mission commander, about projects planned for Pacific Partnership’s mission in the Marshall Islands. Working at the invitation of each host nation, Pacific Partnership is joined by partner nations that include Australia, Canada, Colombia, France, Japan, Malaysia Singapore, South Korea and New Zealand to strengthen disaster response preparedness around the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Tim D. Godbee/Released)

Nature Bridges is a leading bridge company that specializes in top down construction of timber bridges and pedestrian boardwalks through environmentally sensitive areas. Through the use of lightweight hydraulic impact and material handling equipment in combination with hand driven auger machines, our top down construction method means the only things that touch the ground are workmen. The only things left behind are footprints and your new bridge.

 

As one of the nation's leading bridge builders, we also construct a wide variety of other development amenities, such as golf cart bridges, free span bridges, architecturally designed trellises, fencing, pavilions, decks and docks. Other amenities you may consider are our timber curbing and guardrails for vehicular bridges, roadside walkways, and timber retaining walls for those projects that require the warmth of wood in lieu of concrete and steel.

 

Nature Bridges is a bridge contractor that prides itself on a solid reputation of superior craftsmanship and meeting our customers' schedules. We require continuing education for our project foremen, bringing the knowledge of the testing laboratory and the field together to continually improve our building techniques.

 

When planning your next project, plan on Nature Bridges!

(850) 385-3234

 

The Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore, Md., delivered the Coast Guard patrol boat IBIS as the first completed cutter under the 87' Bow-to-Stern project. Planned maintenance for IBIS was completed in 60 days and under budget. IBIS is homeported in Cape May, New Jersey.

The Philadelphia Water Department is dedicated to building community engagement around green infrastructure projects planned through the City's Green City, Clean Waters program. PWD joined volunteers for the annual fall Love Your Park cleanup at Weinberg Park and Mifflin Square and talked about green infrastructure projects coming to the neighborhood.

The Philadelphia Water Department is dedicated to building community engagement around green infrastructure projects planned through the City's Green City, Clean Waters program. PWD joined volunteers for the annual fall Love Your Park cleanup at Weinberg Park and Mifflin Square and talked about green infrastructure projects coming to the neighborhood.

Students will have enhanced access to online learning opportunities thanks to a new partnership between the university and Quizam Media Corporation. Dr. Rosetta Khalideen, UFV’s Dean of Professional Studies, and Dr. Frank Ulbrich, Director of the School of Business, joined Russ Rossi, President & CEO of Quizam Media Corporation, to sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on behalf of their respective organizations on April 2.

 

The partnership formalizes a path for developing UFV’s project plan to access and customize ontrackTV content for labs, self-paced learning, and other purposes related to UFV credit and non-credit courses. The goal is for UFV to work with ontrackTV to help meet UFV’s strategic plan goals for online delivery.

Hobby Horse Template was designed for the Mummers Festival

A sample folklife festival

www.mummersfestival.ca/home/?q=node/2

 

Project Planning for Cultural Festivals

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Dale Jarvis, ICH Development Officer; and Ryan Davis, 2009 Mummers Festival

Cupids 400

Prince of Wales Loyal Orange Lodge #26 (1906)

Cupids, Newfoundland and Labrador

www.cupidscovechatter.com

The sixth edition of the Globethics.net's flagship event, the Global Ethics Forum, was held in Geneva from 25 to 27 June 2015. Leaders, experts and future leaders from civil society, government, religious and academic institutions as well as from the business sector came together to share their learning and experiences in order to take action together to promote responsible leadership.

 

The Forum welcomed a total of 160 participants from all continents. Over 50 speakers shared their insights in four plenary sessions and 12 workshops, resulting in concrete project plans on the conference topic "Responsible Leadership in Action: The Value of Values." The programme also featured a public evening with a panel discussion, music and a reception hosted by the City of Geneva at the Graduate Institute Geneva. Photographs taken during the Forum give some of the flavour of the event, www.flickr.com/photos/globethicsnet.

 

"The insights shared focused on both parts of the responsible leadership equation: the personal and the organisational level of value awareness, practice and stewardship for stakeholder needs", commented Professor Christoph Stückelberger, Executive Director and Founder of Globethics.net.

 

On the personal level, keynote speaker Musimbi Kanyoro, President and CEO of the US-based Global Fund for Women, emphasised the need for empathy towards the people one serves, as well as sharing, celebrating others and accepting failure.

 

The programme also offered a personal reflection session on the value of compassion and emphasized sharing, openness and gratefulness as core values for the Forum experience.

 

On the organizational level, the gathering focused on overarching tools like organisational training and codes of ethics, integrated reporting and dialogue; sector-specific tools; as well as problem-specific tools such as those used to address gender equality. Workshops were designed to exchange insights on existing tools and then to create a work plan to build upon them for greater impact.

 

As well as providing the opportunity to forge and strengthen invaluable relationships between different actors, the Forum's outcomes include a colourful bouquet of concrete plans to foster responsible leadership in organisations, including: disseminating knowledge about codes of ethics; creating access to sustainable jobs and education; enhancing awareness and knowledge about gender ethics; strengthening values-driven responsible investment; improving Africa-China business relations through further dialogue; developing an integrated values-based sustainability toolkit for business; understanding higher education's impact on community; ensuring knowledge exchange on values-based higher education programmes; fostering ethical elections in DR Congo; and advancing responsible resource management in religious organisations.

 

The 2015 Global Ethics Forum was made possible through the support of the Loterie Romande, the Ville de Genève, the Sri Ramanuja Mission Trust, the Graduate Institute Geneva and Nestlé SA.

 

News items about the Forum and a webcast of the public event at the Graduate Institute Geneva on 25 June can be found on the Global Ethics Forum pages at www.globethics.net/web/gef/conference2015.

T. Kagawa; H. Tanaka; Sachio Yamamoto, Chief, Project Planning & Marketing Department, Welltool Co., Ltd., Japan

 

ITU Telecom World 2017

©ITU/KIM

BASICS Project Planning and M&E meeting. Photo by IITA. (file name: DSC_8990).

Okay, this is part 1 of the Pit of Despair. I was really horrified by this back corner when I was starting on Area 1, mostly because Area 1 was spilling backward into it. I couldn't quite get at it with the humongous cutting table in front, but I got through Area 1 somehow and the Pit of Despair turned out to be much less deep than I thought. The rolling cart rolled right into the Fabric Closet to be sorted out later. It contains projects and pieces my mother left in my care. The Fabric Closet was also able to accomodate my own sewing projects, so no worries there.

 

I don't know about the black box of death but it's almost Halloween and a Black Box of Death is more seasonal than a Christmas tree. Which has been there for two years. Um. Or more. Only a cursory vacuuming here because a project bag that contained $20 worth of glass beads for a beaded knitting project broke and spilled the goods all over. I'll be picking those up for a while.

 

Journal Prompt: Day 6 Why clean it and what impact will it have?

It was a horrible mess. I had no access to anything and it was impossible to work. I mean, some people are just waiting around until the "whimsical" part of the program kicks in because they were already pretty tidy, but I was in the group for whom sorting and cleaning was mandatory.

 

I love space. I have enough space in the middle of my room now to hold a dance or spread out a quilt for pinning. I can open up the cutting table and walk all the way around it. I have a cleared off desk for sketching and doing project planning and a clean sewing table in front of a bright happy window where I can sew. My chair, once repaired, will welcome me at my embroidery once again. Nothing but good times here, folks.

 

Of course, it is rather brown. I have the brownest workspace in the world. I am thinking about that. I do love brown. But it is all brown, all the time. Thinking, thinking. NO! I won't paint my woodwork. But I will do other things. Hmmmmm.....

Folklife Festival Organizer Ryan Davis says “Mummering in Newfoundland and Labrador takes on many different forms: it continues as a Christmastime house visit; it has become a type of performance for summertime Come Home Year celebrations; it’s the topic of a still-popular song; and it’s represented in art and craft.”

 

www.mummersfestival.ca/home/?q=node/26

 

Project Planning for Cultural Festivals

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Dale Jarvis, ICH Development Officer; and Ryan Davis, 2009 Mummers Festival

Cupids 400

Prince of Wales Loyal Orange Lodge #26 (1906)

Cupids, Newfoundland and Labrador

www.cupidscovechatter.com

Empress Cultural Centre – Information meeting – April 7 / le 7 avril

Thursday, April 7th 7:30pm-9:00pm / jeudi, 7 avril, 19h30-21h00

5560 rue Sherbrooke ouest, Notre- Dame-de-Grâce,

 

Empress Cultural Centre Board of Directors invites you to a general information session / Leconseil d’administration du Centre Culturel Empress vous invites ...à une séance d’information générale

 

The meeting will provide the opportunity to respond to questions about the current state of the Empress building, the Board of Directors and future project planning

 

Refreshments provided

For more information, or to RSVP, contact Empress at (514) 481-6277 or centre.empress@gmail.com

 

La séance a pour but de répondre à toutes questions sur l’état actuel du bâtiment, sur le conseilet sur la planification de projets futurs

 

Rafraîchissements

Pour plus d’information ou pour réserver contacter l’Empress au (514) 481-6277 ou

centre.empress@gmail.com

 

Join the discussion on Facebook

A "Good News Day", The Scottish Goverment is to create Four Enterprise Areas for Scotland, Scrabster Harbour is one of the 14 sites detailed in the announcement made today by Finance Secretary John Swinney.

The Renewable Energy Enterprise North Area will focus on Hatson and Lyness in Orkney, Arnish in the Western Isles and Nigg and Scrabster in the Highlands.

Scrabster (Highland) - identified as a priority site in the Northern Marine cluster by the National Renewables Infrastructure Plan this 5 hectare site is ideally situated on the Pentland Firth to take advantage of wave and tidal opportunities. There are potential agglomeration benefits when considered in combination with Hatston and Lyness. The site aims to support marine energy projects planned for the South of Orkney and in the Pentland Firth.

Meanwhile the Heavy Lift Pier is progressing, this pier is a core part of Scrabster's development and will hopefully bring a significant amount of work to the harbour and the surrounding area.

 

Scrabster Harbour, Caithness, Scotland.

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From a March 2009 trip with writer William deBuys traveling to Indonesian Borneo (Central Kalimantan, Indonesia) to visit with NGOs Yayorin and Orangutan Foundation UK to explore the social and environmental dynamics of forest conservation in and around the Lamandau Wildlife Reserve. The LWR is a release site for the Bornean Orangutans, the central area for an upcoming Rare Pride Campaign, and site of a proposed community-based carbon trading demonstration site for the UNDP's REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation) program.

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