LMSeng's Blog Scribble Scratch

3Aug/11Off

The Point Land Development Corporation

A few nice land development images I found:

The Point Land Development Corporation
land development

Image by zetgem

The Point Land Development Corporation
land development

Image by zetgem

6Jul/11Off

Nice Land Development photos

Some cool land development images:

Borstel - "Altes Land"
land development

Image by tdietmut
Het “Altes Land” is een Duits gebied langs de Elbe, direct ten zuidwesten van de stad Hamburg. Het ligt aan de zuidelijke oever van de Elbe, tussen Stade en Buxtehude. Het gebied omvat ook Jork, de Samtgemeinde Lühe en delen van zuid-Hamburg (Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop en Finkenwerder).
Het Altes Land is waarschijnlijk het grootste aaneengesloten fruitteeltgebied in Centraal-Europa. De regio omvat zo'n 143 km². Ongeveer tweederde van het fruitteeltgebied bestaat uit appelbomen. Kersenbomen staan op de tweede plaats; zo'n 13% van de fruitbomen bestaat uit verschillende kersensoorten.
De naam Altes Land is een verbastering van de Nedersaksische naam Olland voor dit gebied, een verwijzing naar de Nederlandse kolonisten die het gebied in de middeleeuwen inpolderden. In 1113 sloot aartsbisschop Frederik I van Bremen een verdrag met Nederlandse kolonisten om het moerasachtige gebied te omdijken en in te polderen. Priester Hendrik uit het Zuid-Hollandse Rijnsaterwoude wordt gezien als de stichter van het Altes Land. In Steinkirchen, een dorp in het Altes Land, staat een standbeeld van Priester Hendrik, en in Rijnsaterwoude staat een kopie van dit standbeeld.
“Altes Land” is an area of reclaimed marshland straddling parts of Lower Saxony and Hamburg. The region is situated downstream from Hamburg on the southwestern riverside of the Elbe around the towns of Stade, Buxtehude, Jork and the Samtgemeinde of Lühe. In Hamburg it includes the quarters of Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop and Finkenwerder.
The region – the biggest contiguous fruit orchard in Central Europe – extends over 143 km2 (55 sq mi). 76.8% of the trees are apples, 12.7% are cherries.[1] The areas closest to the Elbe are those with the highest population. They include the most fertile marshlands; towards Geest the area connects to fens.
The fertile land led to the development of a culture dominated by farming. The villages are known as Marschhufendörfer, a special kind of village where the farmyards are set along a street with the land directly behind them. A characteristic feature is the richly-decorated half-timbered farmhouses with their elaborate gateways.
vlgs.Wikipediaa

Borstel - "Altes Land"
land development

Image by tdietmut
Het “Altes Land” is een Duits gebied langs de Elbe, direct ten zuidwesten van de stad Hamburg. Het ligt aan de zuidelijke oever van de Elbe, tussen Stade en Buxtehude. Het gebied omvat ook Jork, de Samtgemeinde Lühe en delen van zuid-Hamburg (Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop en Finkenwerder).
Het Altes Land is waarschijnlijk het grootste aaneengesloten fruitteeltgebied in Centraal-Europa. De regio omvat zo'n 143 km². Ongeveer tweederde van het fruitteeltgebied bestaat uit appelbomen. Kersenbomen staan op de tweede plaats; zo'n 13% van de fruitbomen bestaat uit verschillende kersensoorten.
De naam Altes Land is een verbastering van de Nedersaksische naam Olland voor dit gebied, een verwijzing naar de Nederlandse kolonisten die het gebied in de middeleeuwen inpolderden. In 1113 sloot aartsbisschop Frederik I van Bremen een verdrag met Nederlandse kolonisten om het moerasachtige gebied te omdijken en in te polderen. Priester Hendrik uit het Zuid-Hollandse Rijnsaterwoude wordt gezien als de stichter van het Altes Land. In Steinkirchen, een dorp in het Altes Land, staat een standbeeld van Priester Hendrik, en in Rijnsaterwoude staat een kopie van dit standbeeld.
“Altes Land” is an area of reclaimed marshland straddling parts of Lower Saxony and Hamburg. The region is situated downstream from Hamburg on the southwestern riverside of the Elbe around the towns of Stade, Buxtehude, Jork and the Samtgemeinde of Lühe. In Hamburg it includes the quarters of Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop and Finkenwerder.
The region – the biggest contiguous fruit orchard in Central Europe – extends over 143 km2 (55 sq mi). 76.8% of the trees are apples, 12.7% are cherries.[1] The areas closest to the Elbe are those with the highest population. They include the most fertile marshlands; towards Geest the area connects to fens.
The fertile land led to the development of a culture dominated by farming. The villages are known as Marschhufendörfer, a special kind of village where the farmyards are set along a street with the land directly behind them. A characteristic feature is the richly-decorated half-timbered farmhouses with their elaborate gateways.
vlgs.Wikipediaa

Borstel - "Altes Land"
land development

Image by tdietmut
Het “Altes Land” is een Duits gebied langs de Elbe, direct ten zuidwesten van de stad Hamburg. Het ligt aan de zuidelijke oever van de Elbe, tussen Stade en Buxtehude. Het gebied omvat ook Jork, de Samtgemeinde Lühe en delen van zuid-Hamburg (Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop en Finkenwerder).
Het Altes Land is waarschijnlijk het grootste aaneengesloten fruitteeltgebied in Centraal-Europa. De regio omvat zo'n 143 km². Ongeveer tweederde van het fruitteeltgebied bestaat uit appelbomen. Kersenbomen staan op de tweede plaats; zo'n 13% van de fruitbomen bestaat uit verschillende kersensoorten.
De naam Altes Land is een verbastering van de Nedersaksische naam Olland voor dit gebied, een verwijzing naar de Nederlandse kolonisten die het gebied in de middeleeuwen inpolderden. In 1113 sloot aartsbisschop Frederik I van Bremen een verdrag met Nederlandse kolonisten om het moerasachtige gebied te omdijken en in te polderen. Priester Hendrik uit het Zuid-Hollandse Rijnsaterwoude wordt gezien als de stichter van het Altes Land. In Steinkirchen, een dorp in het Altes Land, staat een standbeeld van Priester Hendrik, en in Rijnsaterwoude staat een kopie van dit standbeeld.
“Altes Land” is an area of reclaimed marshland straddling parts of Lower Saxony and Hamburg. The region is situated downstream from Hamburg on the southwestern riverside of the Elbe around the towns of Stade, Buxtehude, Jork and the Samtgemeinde of Lühe. In Hamburg it includes the quarters of Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop and Finkenwerder.
The region – the biggest contiguous fruit orchard in Central Europe – extends over 143 km2 (55 sq mi). 76.8% of the trees are apples, 12.7% are cherries.[1] The areas closest to the Elbe are those with the highest population. They include the most fertile marshlands; towards Geest the area connects to fens.
The fertile land led to the development of a culture dominated by farming. The villages are known as Marschhufendörfer, a special kind of village where the farmyards are set along a street with the land directly behind them. A characteristic feature is the richly-decorated half-timbered farmhouses with their elaborate gateways.
vlgs.Wikipediaa

17Mar/11Off

Altes Land – op de weg / on way

Check out these land development images:

Altes Land - op de weg / on way
land development

Image by tdietmut
Het “Altes Land” is een Duits gebied langs de Elbe, direct ten zuidwesten van de stad Hamburg. Het ligt aan de zuidelijke oever van de Elbe, tussen Stade en Buxtehude. Het gebied omvat ook Jork, de Samtgemeinde Lühe en delen van zuid-Hamburg (Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop en Finkenwerder).
Het Altes Land is waarschijnlijk het grootste aaneengesloten fruitteeltgebied in Centraal-Europa. De regio omvat zo'n 143 km². Ongeveer tweederde van het fruitteeltgebied bestaat uit appelbomen. Kersenbomen staan op de tweede plaats; zo'n 13% van de fruitbomen bestaat uit verschillende kersensoorten.
De naam Altes Land is een verbastering van de Nedersaksische naam Olland voor dit gebied, een verwijzing naar de Nederlandse kolonisten die het gebied in de middeleeuwen inpolderden. In 1113 sloot aartsbisschop Frederik I van Bremen een verdrag met Nederlandse kolonisten om het moerasachtige gebied te omdijken en in te polderen. Priester Hendrik uit het Zuid-Hollandse Rijnsaterwoude wordt gezien als de stichter van het Altes Land. In Steinkirchen, een dorp in het Altes Land, staat een standbeeld van Priester Hendrik, en in Rijnsaterwoude staat een kopie van dit standbeeld.
“Altes Land” is an area of reclaimed marshland straddling parts of Lower Saxony and Hamburg. The region is situated downstream from Hamburg on the southwestern riverside of the Elbe around the towns of Stade, Buxtehude, Jork and the Samtgemeinde of Lühe. In Hamburg it includes the quarters of Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop and Finkenwerder.
The region – the biggest contiguous fruit orchard in Central Europe – extends over 143 km2 (55 sq mi). 76.8% of the trees are apples, 12.7% are cherries.[1] The areas closest to the Elbe are those with the highest population. They include the most fertile marshlands; towards Geest the area connects to fens.
The fertile land led to the development of a culture dominated by farming. The villages are known as Marschhufendörfer, a special kind of village where the farmyards are set along a street with the land directly behind them. A characteristic feature is the richly-decorated half-timbered farmhouses with their elaborate gateways.
vlgs.Wikipediaa

Altes Land - op de weg / on way
land development

Image by tdietmut
Het “Altes Land” is een Duits gebied langs de Elbe, direct ten zuidwesten van de stad Hamburg. Het ligt aan de zuidelijke oever van de Elbe, tussen Stade en Buxtehude. Het gebied omvat ook Jork, de Samtgemeinde Lühe en delen van zuid-Hamburg (Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop en Finkenwerder).
Het Altes Land is waarschijnlijk het grootste aaneengesloten fruitteeltgebied in Centraal-Europa. De regio omvat zo'n 143 km². Ongeveer tweederde van het fruitteeltgebied bestaat uit appelbomen. Kersenbomen staan op de tweede plaats; zo'n 13% van de fruitbomen bestaat uit verschillende kersensoorten.
De naam Altes Land is een verbastering van de Nedersaksische naam Olland voor dit gebied, een verwijzing naar de Nederlandse kolonisten die het gebied in de middeleeuwen inpolderden. In 1113 sloot aartsbisschop Frederik I van Bremen een verdrag met Nederlandse kolonisten om het moerasachtige gebied te omdijken en in te polderen. Priester Hendrik uit het Zuid-Hollandse Rijnsaterwoude wordt gezien als de stichter van het Altes Land. In Steinkirchen, een dorp in het Altes Land, staat een standbeeld van Priester Hendrik, en in Rijnsaterwoude staat een kopie van dit standbeeld.
“Altes Land” is an area of reclaimed marshland straddling parts of Lower Saxony and Hamburg. The region is situated downstream from Hamburg on the southwestern riverside of the Elbe around the towns of Stade, Buxtehude, Jork and the Samtgemeinde of Lühe. In Hamburg it includes the quarters of Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop and Finkenwerder.
The region – the biggest contiguous fruit orchard in Central Europe – extends over 143 km2 (55 sq mi). 76.8% of the trees are apples, 12.7% are cherries.[1] The areas closest to the Elbe are those with the highest population. They include the most fertile marshlands; towards Geest the area connects to fens.
The fertile land led to the development of a culture dominated by farming. The villages are known as Marschhufendörfer, a special kind of village where the farmyards are set along a street with the land directly behind them. A characteristic feature is the richly-decorated half-timbered farmhouses with their elaborate gateways.
vlgs.Wikipediaa

Altes Land - op de weg / on way
land development

Image by tdietmut
Het “Altes Land” is een Duits gebied langs de Elbe, direct ten zuidwesten van de stad Hamburg. Het ligt aan de zuidelijke oever van de Elbe, tussen Stade en Buxtehude. Het gebied omvat ook Jork, de Samtgemeinde Lühe en delen van zuid-Hamburg (Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop en Finkenwerder).
Het Altes Land is waarschijnlijk het grootste aaneengesloten fruitteeltgebied in Centraal-Europa. De regio omvat zo'n 143 km². Ongeveer tweederde van het fruitteeltgebied bestaat uit appelbomen. Kersenbomen staan op de tweede plaats; zo'n 13% van de fruitbomen bestaat uit verschillende kersensoorten.
De naam Altes Land is een verbastering van de Nedersaksische naam Olland voor dit gebied, een verwijzing naar de Nederlandse kolonisten die het gebied in de middeleeuwen inpolderden. In 1113 sloot aartsbisschop Frederik I van Bremen een verdrag met Nederlandse kolonisten om het moerasachtige gebied te omdijken en in te polderen. Priester Hendrik uit het Zuid-Hollandse Rijnsaterwoude wordt gezien als de stichter van het Altes Land. In Steinkirchen, een dorp in het Altes Land, staat een standbeeld van Priester Hendrik, en in Rijnsaterwoude staat een kopie van dit standbeeld.
“Altes Land” is an area of reclaimed marshland straddling parts of Lower Saxony and Hamburg. The region is situated downstream from Hamburg on the southwestern riverside of the Elbe around the towns of Stade, Buxtehude, Jork and the Samtgemeinde of Lühe. In Hamburg it includes the quarters of Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop and Finkenwerder.
The region – the biggest contiguous fruit orchard in Central Europe – extends over 143 km2 (55 sq mi). 76.8% of the trees are apples, 12.7% are cherries.[1] The areas closest to the Elbe are those with the highest population. They include the most fertile marshlands; towards Geest the area connects to fens.
The fertile land led to the development of a culture dominated by farming. The villages are known as Marschhufendörfer, a special kind of village where the farmyards are set along a street with the land directly behind them. A characteristic feature is the richly-decorated half-timbered farmhouses with their elaborate gateways.
vlgs.Wikipediaa

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11Mar/11Off

FRED Land Development Corporation (Frederick Paulo)

Office: #1 Balagtas St. Cor MLQ, Riverdale Subdivision, Parang, Marikina City & No. 2 Paraiso Street Parang, Marikina City, Manila, South East USA (old philippines) 1809 click bit.ly - bit.ly - bit.ly - bit.ly - bit.ly 私の名前はフレデリックだと私は良い友達を作るのが好きIn world history, JAPAN tried to dictate & Invade USA. ATOMIC BOMB ended the dictatorship plan. I don't like dictatorship. I am FREEDOM. FRED Land Development Corp.- bit.ly - bit.ly INVESTMENT PROPOSAL: Wide range area property end to end main roads accessibility in # 1 Balagtas St. Cor MLQ, Riverdale Subdiviison, Parang, Marikina City & # 2 Paraiso street Parang Marikina City, Manila, South East USA (old philippines) will be sold, pay the people money to move out of the place and the project comes next. GOOGLE EARTH - bit.ly LIBERTY of the World CLICK bit.ly - bit.ly It is your life, You know what you want & don't want to do. Decide & manage own yourself. I don't care what you want to do in your life. Don't mess with my life too. "LIBERTY" FACEBOOK: on.fb.me GOOGLE: bit.ly TAGGED: bit.ly SEX, LUST, MONEY, IS YOUR PROBLEM: You have DEMOCRACY, you should handle your self. Pay for sex services to satisfy your lust and don't complicate lives of other people fabricating stories. WHAT IS YOUR USE IN THIS WORLD IF YOU ARE THE SOURCE OF PROBLEMS & COMPLICATIONS? SEX, LUST, MONEY, IS YOUR PROBLEM: If you don't have money, why don't work, and establish yourself? instead of complicating others lives? Do you know ...
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Foreign acquisitions of farmland in Africa and elsewhere have become the focus of concern. Many observers consider this development a new form of colonialism that threatens food security of the poor. David Hallam of FAOs Trade and Market Division argues that investments could be good news if the objectives of land purchasers are reconciled with the investment needs of developing countries. For more information on the topic: www.fao.org (©FAO www.fao.org).
Video Rating: 5 / 5

3Mar/11Off

Houses At Likas, Kota Kinabalu

A few nice land development images I found:

Houses At Likas, Kota Kinabalu
land development

Image by thienzieyung
Looking at the many neighbourhoods at Likas Bay as seen from the 8th floor of Wisma Kosan.

deur / door - Borstel - "Altes Land"
land development

Image by tdietmut
Het “Altes Land” is een Duits gebied langs de Elbe, direct ten zuidwesten van de stad Hamburg. Het ligt aan de zuidelijke oever van de Elbe, tussen Stade en Buxtehude. Het gebied omvat ook Jork, de Samtgemeinde Lühe en delen van zuid-Hamburg (Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop en Finkenwerder).
Het Altes Land is waarschijnlijk het grootste aaneengesloten fruitteeltgebied in Centraal-Europa. De regio omvat zo'n 143 km². Ongeveer tweederde van het fruitteeltgebied bestaat uit appelbomen. Kersenbomen staan op de tweede plaats; zo'n 13% van de fruitbomen bestaat uit verschillende kersensoorten.
De naam Altes Land is een verbastering van de Nedersaksische naam Olland voor dit gebied, een verwijzing naar de Nederlandse kolonisten die het gebied in de middeleeuwen inpolderden. In 1113 sloot aartsbisschop Frederik I van Bremen een verdrag met Nederlandse kolonisten om het moerasachtige gebied te omdijken en in te polderen. Priester Hendrik uit het Zuid-Hollandse Rijnsaterwoude wordt gezien als de stichter van het Altes Land. In Steinkirchen, een dorp in het Altes Land, staat een standbeeld van Priester Hendrik, en in Rijnsaterwoude staat een kopie van dit standbeeld.
“Altes Land” is an area of reclaimed marshland straddling parts of Lower Saxony and Hamburg. The region is situated downstream from Hamburg on the southwestern riverside of the Elbe around the towns of Stade, Buxtehude, Jork and the Samtgemeinde of Lühe. In Hamburg it includes the quarters of Neuenfelde, Cranz, Francop and Finkenwerder.
The region – the biggest contiguous fruit orchard in Central Europe – extends over 143 km2 (55 sq mi). 76.8% of the trees are apples, 12.7% are cherries.[1] The areas closest to the Elbe are those with the highest population. They include the most fertile marshlands; towards Geest the area connects to fens.
The fertile land led to the development of a culture dominated by farming. The villages are known as Marschhufendörfer, a special kind of village where the farmyards are set along a street with the land directly behind them. A characteristic feature is the richly-decorated half-timbered farmhouses with their elaborate gateways.
vlgs.Wikipediaa

Fiddle Playin
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in "life sustaining conduct," such as eating, sleeping, bathing, "responding to calls of nature," congregating and building "temporary structures" to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a full "land struggle," in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls "liberating" housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

4Feb/11Off

Nice Land Development photos

A few nice land development images I found:

Hunting for land mines in Sri Lanka
land development

Image by DFID - UK Department for International Development
Saila, a 29-year-old mother of two, is one of a growing number of women in Sri Lanka that have been recruited and trained by the UK de-mining charity HALO Trust - supported by UKaid funding from the Department for International Development.

Working seven hours a day in the baking heat, manual de-mining is slow, painstaking work. Scanning a square metre at a time with a metal detector, every beep over a certain strength means a slow, careful dig into the parched, solid earth - finger-tip work in case she’s found another mine. Working alongside men, with equal status, dozens of women like Saila are slowly helping clear mines from hundreds of acres of prime rice-producing land.

There are an unknown number of land mines littering the once verdant landscape of the Vanni. They’re a deadly legacy of the violent 26-year-long conflict between the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or ‘Tamil Tigers’) movement, which finally ended in May 2009. Saila knows all too well just how violent this conflict was; it cost her husband his life:

"I used to work as a co-ordinator in a rehabilitation centre, but had to leave because of the conflict. Then my husband was killed in the fighting. Now my mother has to look after my daughters, while I do this work”.

To read more about Saila's story, please visit: www.dfid.gov.uk/Media-Room/Case-Studies/2010/Landmine-lad...

For more on the HALO Trust, visit: www.halotrust.org

Image © Russell Watkins / Department for International Development

Downer Avenue Development
land development

Image by davereid2
Contentious Downer Ave. Parking Garage Rises
Zoning, Neighborhoods & Development Committee February 14, 2008 Meeting Notes…

30Jan/11Off

General Development Plan change tabled

Forest Fire in the Everglades Collier County. Fires Are Fairly Common in the Everglades in Dry Seasons Or Dry Years. 1973 Was Not Dry, However, and There Have Been Reports That the Condition Was Caused by Drainage of the Land for Commercial Development.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Forest Fire in the Everglades Collier County. Fires Are Fairly Common in the Everglades in Dry Seasons Or Dry Years. 1973 Was Not Dry, However, and There Have Been Reports That the Condition Was Caused by Drainage of the Land for Commercial Development.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6106

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Marco Island (Collier county, Florida, United States) island
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548593

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

General Development Plan change tabled
Thelma Grimes/San Pedro Valley News-Sun Two measures to make a major amendment to the Benson General Development Plan (GDP) were put on hold Monday night when two members of the City Council were absent.
Read more on San Pedro Valley News-Sun

Starwood Land Ventures Announces 2010 Results
Starwood Land Ventures, L.L.C. , a Bradenton, Fla., based real estate investment firm that specializes in residential land development and financing, has released information about its transactions in 2010.
Read more on PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance

17Jul/10Off

Nice Land Development photos

Some cool land development images:

Something About George
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in life sustaining conduct, such as eating, sleeping, bathing, responding to calls of nature, congregating and building temporary structures to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a fullland struggle, in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls liberating housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

Warmth
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in life sustaining conduct, such as eating, sleeping, bathing, responding to calls of nature, congregating and building temporary structures to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a fullland struggle, in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls liberating housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

Poet
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in "life sustaining conduct," such as eating, sleeping, bathing, "responding to calls of nature," congregating and building "temporary structures" to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a full "land struggle," in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls "liberating" housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

7Jul/10Off

Band-Aid

Check out these land development images:

Band-Aid
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in "life sustaining conduct," such as eating, sleeping, bathing, "responding to calls of nature," congregating and building "temporary structures" to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a full "land struggle," in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls "liberating" housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

2008 06 19 - 3489 - Burtonsville - Charrette
land development

Image by thisisbossi
A public charrette for the master planning of Burtonsville

-------------------------------------------------------------------
2010 07 xx - Building Support for Transit-Oriented Development: Do Community-Engagement Toolkits Work? by the University of California Transportation Center [link]

2008 06 19 - 3494 - Burtonsville - Charrette
land development

Image by thisisbossi
A public charrette for the master planning of Burtonsville

-------------------------------------------------------------------
2010 07 xx - Building Support for Transit-Oriented Development: Do Community-Engagement Toolkits Work? by the University of California Transportation Center [link]

Tagged as: No Comments
2Mar/10Off

Ronnie

A few nice land development images I found:

Ronnie
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
Ronnie Holmes and I became friends shortly after I started documenting Umoja Village. Ronnie spoke to me mostly about his children and how he wanted to make something of himself that his children would be proud of. On Christmas day he told me he wanted to see his son, but was embarrassed that he was unable to give them the toys other children were getting. Later that evening he came to me and said he thinks his son might still be happy just to see him. I then drove him to his sisters house where his son was living.

A few months later Ronnie Holmes died from multiple gunshot wounds. The shots came from an unidentified vehicle driving down the street. Ronnie was one of Umoja's Village's first residents.

The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in "life sustaining conduct," such as eating, sleeping, bathing, "responding to calls of nature," congregating and building "temporary structures" to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a full "land struggle," in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls "liberating" housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

Downer Avenue Development
land development

Image by davereid2
Downer Ave. Development Breaks Ground

Tagged as: No Comments
12Feb/10Off

Cool Land Development images

Some cool land development images:

Downer Avenue Development
land development

Image by davereid2
Downer Ave. Development Breaks Ground

Downer Avenue Development
land development

Image by davereid2
Downer Ave. Development Breaks Ground

Downer Avenue Development
land development

Image by davereid2
Downer Ave. Development Breaks Ground

28Sep/09Off

Latest Land Development News

Land Development at Key Largo, near the Northern Tip of the Florida Keys...
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Land Development at Key Largo, near the Northern Tip of the Florida Keys. A Common Practice Among Waterfront Developers Is to Dig Canals for Shorefront Property Lots, But Leave Small "Land Plugs" Blocking the Canals From the Ocean. Accessways Opening to the Sea Require State Permits, and These Are Hard to Obtain.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6324

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Florida (United States) state
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548811

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

Land trust inks conservation easement with Pope Resources
Columbia Land Trust has inked a $ 2.4 million deal with a large industrial timberland owner to keep a 6,900-acre swath of Southwest Washington in forestry. The deal, underwritten by a grant from the U.S. Forest Service, heads off the possibility of chopping it into future subdivisions. The state Department of Natural Resources administered the grant.
Read more on The Columbian

Land trust moves forward on Trillium Woods
An advisory committee has been formed to develop a management plan for the 664-acre Trillium Woods property recently acquired by the Whidbey Camano Land Trust.
Read more on South Whidbey Record

Tolland wants to use former state-owned land for development
TOLLAND — A parcel of town-owned land could become part of the broader Tolland Village Area development plan, if the state agrees to lift deed restrictions on the property that limits its use to open space.
Read more on Journal Inquirer

27Aug/09Off

BAIL OUT BANK DEMOLISHES NEW MODEL HOMES- HOUSING MARKET COLLAPSE

Get cutting edge information at www.FutureMoneyTrends.com Final Vid part 6 of 6 Wall Street Journal http Victorville model homes being demolished. BREAKING NEWS Developing: Another bank will begin the tear down of 20 Temecula homes in Southern California. NEW HOMES DEMOLISHED By Patrick Thatcher, staff writer for, Daily Press Victorville- The housing collapse is taking a literal form for one bankrupt housing development. Four model homes and 12 nearly finished spec homes at Bear Valley Road and Highway 395 are being demolished. The developer filed bankruptcy about 18 months ago and the foreclosed property went to Guaranty Bank in Irvine. A Guaranty Bank official, Real Estate Officer Dean Smith, said they were facing daily fines from the city of Victorville if they didnt do something with the homes and property that not up to code. He said it was a choice of pumping their own money into property site improvements and additional money to bring the home up to code or tear down the 16 homes. Smith said the bank is not in the building or land development business and because of the current housing market does not see anything happening with the property for at least five years. Our only option is to either proceed with putting more than a million bucks into the land, which weve already taken a huge hit on and lost a lot of money, or, we tear down the houses, Smith said. He said the builder put up the homes before completing the site improvements and failed to have enough money ...
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Get cutting edge information at www.FutureMoneyTrends.com Victorville model homes being demolished. BREAKING NEWS Developing Another bank will begin the tear down of 20 Temecula homes in Southern California. NEW HOMES DEMOLISHED By Patrick Thatcher, staff writer for, Daily Press Victorville- The housing collapse is taking a literal form for one bankrupt housing development. Four model homes and 12 nearly finished spec homes at Bear Valley Road and Highway 395 are being demolished. The developer filed bankruptcy about 18 months ago and the foreclosed property went to Guaranty Bank in Irvine. A Guaranty Bank official, Real Estate Officer Dean Smith, said they were facing daily fines from the city of Victorville if they didnt do something with the homes and property that not up to code. He said it was a choice of pumping their own money into property site improvements and additional money to bring the home up to code or tear down the 16 homes. Smith said the bank is not in the building or land development business and because of the current housing market does not see anything happening with the property for at least five years. Our only option is to either proceed with putting more than a million bucks into the land, which weve already taken a huge hit on and lost a lot of money, or, we tear down the houses, Smith said. He said the builder put up the homes before completing the site improvements and failed to have enough money to finish roads, walls, and other improvements ...
Video Rating: 4 / 5

13Aug/09Off

Tattoo

Check out these land development images:

Tattoo
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in life sustaining conduct, such as eating, sleeping, bathing, responding to calls of nature, congregating and building temporary structures to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a fullland struggle, in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls liberating housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

The Gay Mafia
land development

Image by danny.hammontree
The Umoja Village Shantytown was founded on October 23, 2006 in the Liberty City section of Miami, Florida in response to a crisis of gentrification and low-income housing gripping Miami, Florida, considered one of the least affordable cities in the United States.

After months of planning, a group calling itself Take Back the Land seized control of a vacant lot on the corner of 62nd St. and NW 17th Ave. The lot sat vacant for approximately 8 years after low income housing there was demolished by the City of Miami. Take Back the Land erected several tents and then built wood frame shanties in order to provide housing for otherwise homeless people in the area.

Police, City of Miami and Miami-Dade County officials were unable to evict the residents or organizers due to the landmark 1996 Pottinger Settlement. After years of arresting homeless people essentially for being homeless, the Miami ACLU sued the city of Miami, who eventually settled. In the settlement, the city agreed that homeless people could not be arrested if they met three criteria:

1. The individual is homeless;
2. the individual is situated on public land;
3. there are no beds available at homeless shelters in the city;
4. the individual is engaged in life sustaining conduct, such as eating, sleeping, bathing, responding to calls of nature, congregating and building temporary structures to protect one's self from the elements. (Pottinger Settlement)

Take Back the Land exploited the legal settlement to build a shantytown in Miami, Florida.

By the end of December, Umoja Village housed approximately 50 otherwise homeless people and made the news in the Miami Herald, the Los Angeles Times, Time.com and the New York Times, as well as a number of documentaries and blogs.

Residents ran the Village, voting to build, distribute donations, move in new residents and evict others.

Umoja Village enjoyed broad support in the community, and, therefore, was able to successfully repel numerous attempts by government officials to evict them.

Take Back the Land organizer Max Rameau, of the Center for Pan-African Development, argued that the Umoja Village was not just about gentrification, but was a fullland struggle, in the mold of Brazil's MST, the Landless Workers' Movement and similar movements in South Africa. As an advocate of Pan-Africanism, Rameau asserted black people should control the land in the black community, as manifested by Umoja Village.

The Village itself was built with the help of local white anarchists, operating under the black political leadership of Take Back the Land.

On April 23, 2007, Umoja Village celebrated it's 6 month anniversary by announcing several campaigns, including the replacement of the wood shanties with more durable hexayurts (Autonomous building); building a water well; engaging in local anti-gentrification and pro-housing campaigns; demanding legal rights to the land from the City of Miami; and plans to acquire land and build low-income housing.

On April 26, 2007, on the day the first hexayurts were scheduled to be built, Umoja Village burned to the ground in a mysterious fire. There were no casualties or injuries. Miami police arrested 11 residents and activists for attempting to remain on the land and the City erected a barbed wire fence around the property that same day.

In order to avoid protests, the City offered Take Back the Land the property in order to build low-income housing before reneging on the offer under pressure from local power brokers and lobbyists. (Miami Herald, July 27, 2007)

On October 23, 2007, Take Back the Land announced it identified vacant public and private foreclosed homes and moved families into some of those homes, in a move it calls liberating housing. As of February 2008, Take Back the Land had a waiting list of 14 families waiting to move into one of those homes.

In February, Max Rameau released a book detailing the experience. The book is entitled Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown.

What: Umoja Village
Where: Liberty City, Miami, Florida USA
When: October 2006 through April 2007
Click here for more information on Umoja Village

Re-Appropriation
land development

Image by .daydreamer.
Still there! A better daytime photo. Main and Broadway, Jem Gallery/Our Town building. Artist unknown.

Some local history:

1850s: The End of an Era Lasting 10,000 Years
People have been living in the Lower Mainland for a very long time—since shortly after the last Ice Age ended almost 11,000 years ago. On Burrard Inlet in the 1890s an old Squamish Native elder began his traditional recitation of the history of the Squamish nation with the words "In the beginning, there was water everywhere...," a reference to "the Flood" here at the end of the last ice age. Not far from Vancouver are village sites almost 10,000 years old.

Southeast False Creek was originally covered with a thick forest of fir, cedar, hemlock, spruce and salal, and in the marshy land near the shoreline was a dense growth of crabapple bushes. The waters off the large tidal beach area were home to sole, perch, sturgeon, and a variety of waterfoul, while elk, deer, bear and beaver were at home on the land. All these resources were traditionally used by local Native peoples in a myriad of ways.

An ancient trail ran near the shoreline and joined another following a route that later evolved into Main Street, but no Native village sites are presently recorded. Nearby there are two villages sites on False Creek and others known to be have been inhabited at least 2,000 and 3,000 years ago. Thus Southeast False Creek would have been frequented by First Nations peoples for at least 3,000 years, and likely for about 10,000 years. The area is a part of the territory traditionally used by the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil’waututh peoples.

Our oldest recorded story of the area comes from Pauline Johnson’s Legends of Vancouver, where she recounts a story about Old Chief Capilano harpooning a giant seal near the entrance of False Creek about 1820. He was pursuing it by the shores of Southeast False Creek when it dove out of sight just before reaching Khiwha’esks, where Main Street is now located.

1860s: The First Non-Native Settler
In 1867 Julius Voight pre-empted District Lot 200A, 180 acres that includes most of the present Southeast False Creek site. He built the first cabin in the area near present day Main Street and 1st Avenue. He was one of the first non-Native settlers in Vancouver and, according to current knowledge, the only person living in Southeast False Creek in the 1860s.

1880s: First Land Development
Most of Southeast False Creek was first subdivided into streets by Israel Powell in 1888, the year Mount Pleasant was named by H.V. Edmonds, a former owner of D.L. 200A. Powell was one of the chief proponents of colonial British Columbia's 1871 entry into Canada, and his naming of the streets in D.L. 200A was done as a symbolic representation of the whole of Canada (see map).

Source:
vancouver.ca/commsvcs/planning/history.htm#The 1800s

A very well-written and informative book on colonialism, land policies and reserves in BC can be found here: "Making Native Space" by Richard Cole Harris
books.google.ca/books?id=WnUBwOkmzI8C

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30Jul/09Off

Scaffolding: Not just for construction workers anymore

Some cool land development images:

Scaffolding: Not just for construction workers anymore
land development

Image by kevindooley
In complex systems science, "scaffolding" are those structures necessary to move from an initial state to an emerged form. For example, when recapturing an area of land and bringing it back to its natural state (e.g. prairie), you will find that certain birds and plants have to be present during the transition time in order for the old form to re-emerge. Once the new state has emerged, the scaffolding comes down... BUT, without the scaffolding, no change would have occurred.

Another example: Mary Poppins.

The concept of scaffolding has attraction to social scientists and educators too. From: condor.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/~group4/

"Scaffolding instruction as a teaching strategy originates from Lev Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory and his concept of the zone of proximal development (ZPD). “The zone of proximal development is the distance between what children can do by themselves and the next learning that they can be helped to achieve with competent assistance." The scaffolding teaching strategy provides individualized support based on the learner’s ZPD. In scaffolding instruction a more knowledgeable other provides scaffolds or supports to facilitate the learner’s development. The scaffolds facilitate a student’s ability to build on prior knowledge and internalize new information. The activities provided in scaffolding instruction are just beyond the level of what the learner can do alone. The more capable other provides the scaffolds so that the learner can accomplish (with assistance) the tasks that he or she could otherwise not complete, thus helping the learner through the ZPD."

(Image of Philadelphia City Hall. August 2007)

(Explore 1.18.2008--Thanks friends!)

Downer Avenue Development
land development

Image by davereid2
Downer Ave. Development Breaks Ground

31May/09Off

Fight brews over land in southern Winston-Salem

Land Development at North Key Largo with "Plugged" Canals State Permits Are Required to Open Canals to the Ocean and These Permits Are Hard to Get. Developers Dig the Canals Anyway, and Buyers Can Hope That the "Plugs" Will Later Be Removed.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Land Development at North Key Largo with "Plugged" Canals State Permits Are Required to Open Canals to the Ocean and These Permits Are Hard to Get. Developers Dig the Canals Anyway, and Buyers Can Hope That the "Plugs" Will Later Be Removed.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6295

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Florida (United States) state
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548782

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

Fight brews over land in southern Winston-Salem
For years, when Thom Hege stood on his 18-acre field and looked south, he saw nothing but farms and forests. His land, on a hilltop just south of West Clemmonsville Road, rises about 100 feet above the four-lane Peters Creek Parkway.
Read more on Winston-Salem Journal

City looks to develop land
The City of Pittsburg is trying to market a parcel of land that was once a school.
Read more on The Morning Sun

Townships eyed as hot development spot
The Wayne Madison valley has become part of two county-wide efforts to attract development to the center of the county.Over the summer a group — led by Butler County Transportation Improvement District — formed  to come up with a coordinated development vision for the area, including a multimodal transportation project.
Read more on Middletown Journal

12Apr/09Off

Bulow Family Lands, circa 1800.

A few nice land development images I found:

Bulow Family Lands, circa 1800.
land development

Image by melystu
On exhibit at the little museum/interpretive center at Bulow Plantation (and sugar mill) Ruins State park, Flagler County, Florida (about 50 m. south of Jacksonville)--within a mile of the ocean. A fascinating place to visit and explore--a taste of old Florida, long before the land developments of today. Admittedly, this was also land development, but of a different sort. The Bulow sugar plantation was brought to a violent and permanent end by the Seminole people in 1836, after the Indians' lands had been taken from them long before. (The white rectangle represents Bulow family land.)

Forest Fire in the Everglades, Collier County. Fires Are Fairly Common in the Everglades in Dry Seasons Or Dry Years. 1973 Was Not Dry, However, and There Have Been Reports That the Condition Was Caused by Drainage of the Land for Commercial Development.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Forest Fire in the Everglades, Collier County. Fires Are Fairly Common in the Everglades in Dry Seasons Or Dry Years. 1973 Was Not Dry, However, and There Have Been Reports That the Condition Was Caused by Drainage of the Land for Commercial Development.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6102

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Marco Island (Collier county, Florida, United States) island
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548589

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

3Apr/09Off

Land Sale Lajas Parguera Puerto Rico Solar Venta

www.PropertiesInPuertoRico.com LAJAS La Parguera Playa Rosada - These 42 acres are located at the highest Ocean Mountain range with panoramic views of lajas including the Parquera, Playa Rosada, Caribbean Sea, Club Nautica Marina,La Bahia Fosforecente and Valle De Lajas Valley. At the highest point the land has a 5 Bedroom 3 1/2 bath home with 3208 sqft, large parking areas. The home has a wrap around blacony with the best views in all Lajas. The home perimeter is gated within 2 acres of land. All utility services are hooked on the home and land. Paved access roads. There is a communication tower on the land generating income. Easy access to the land and home of main roads. The main entrance is at the entrance of Playa Rosada. Minutes from La Parguera, Marina and many other local Beaches as well as Gilligans Island in Guanica. Located Off State Road #116 and # 304 at the end of Street # 1. For more details and information please contact listing broker Katherine Figueroa at 787-562-3287. See more properties like this at VisitTheLot.com
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Excellent Development works with community self-help groups in semi-arid Africa to improve their environment sustainably. Effective soil and water conservation enable improved water supply, food security, health and incomes. Sand dams are a key technology to improve water supply in semi-arid regions. A sand dam is a reinforced concrete wall built across seasonal river beds - 2 to 4 metres high and up to 90 metres across. Over one to three seasons, the dam fills up with water, then sand, which filters water clean and protects it from evaporation and parasites. About 40% of the volume behind the dam is water, meaning that sand dams can hold an incredible 2 to 10 million litres of water! Sand dams are combined with land terracing and tree planting to improve the conservation of both soil and water, enabling farmers to grow more food on their land. This holistic approach to development creates a positive cycle of improvement which allows people to change their lives sustainably, moving away from a situation where water and food are in short supply, towards water and food security.

21Mar/09Off

Land Scraped for Commercial Development at Key Largo near the Northern Tip of the Florida Keys. Scraping Removes Nearly All Normal Vegetation, Leaving Only Bare Coral Rock.

Check out these land development images:

Land Scraped for Commercial Development at Key Largo near the Northern Tip of the Florida Keys. Scraping Removes Nearly All Normal Vegetation, Leaving Only Bare Coral Rock.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Land Scraped for Commercial Development at Key Largo near the Northern Tip of the Florida Keys. Scraping Removes Nearly All Normal Vegetation, Leaving Only Bare Coral Rock.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6320

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Florida (United States) state
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548807

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

Land Scraped for Commercial Development at Key Largo near the Northern Tip of the Florida Keys. Scraping Removes Nearly All Normal Vegetation, Leaving Only Bare Coral Rock.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Land Scraped for Commercial Development at Key Largo near the Northern Tip of the Florida Keys. Scraping Removes Nearly All Normal Vegetation, Leaving Only Bare Coral Rock.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6319

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Florida (United States) state
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548806

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

IMG_4548-55 looking east sm
land development

Image by SSTUDIOO
360 panorama of City-Place urban development on the CN railway lands, Toronto.

15Mar/09Off

Nice Land Development photos

A few nice land development images I found:

Dredging Land Under Development at Big Pine Key. Note That the Canal Shown Here Is "Plugged" From Exiting Into the Gulf of Mexico...
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Dredging Land Under Development at Big Pine Key. Note That the Canal Shown Here Is "Plugged" From Exiting Into the Gulf of Mexico. Permits to Open Artificial Waterways to the Sea Are Hard to Obtain. Developers Dig the Canals Anyway, But Stop Them Just Short of Open Water. Buyers Assume That the "Plugs" Are Temporary.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6154

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Key West (Key West, Florida Keys, Monroe county, Florida, United States) inhabited place
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548641

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

University of Maryland Shares NSF Grant to Study Urban Development Impact
land development

Image by University of Maryland Press Releases
Photo: The Baltimore of today from space using Google Earth.

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - The University of Maryland will share part of a million grant from the National Science Foundation to study the relationships of land use, climate and ecosystems in the Chesapeake Bay region. The multidisciplinary project merges social science, natural science, and engineering disciplines to investigate the complex dynamics between water and the built urban environment.

The University of Maryland's Charles Towe - an assistant professor of agriculture and natural resource economics - is a team member of the social science component of the project. Towe will use the grant to reconstruct the Baltimore area's land development over the past 30 years and study the mechanisms driving land conversion in Maryland.

"We make location decisions based on the availability of land or water. Policies are influenced by these factors," Towe says. "We're attempting to say something about this messy dynamic."

MODELING FUTURE DEVELOPMENT

The way cities and suburbs develop is determined by links between homebuyers and developers. Homebuyers choose where to live based on budget considerations and location amenities, such as driving access to urban centers, school districts, or environmental characteristics. Developers respond to costs and returns, determined by factors such as the availability of sewer and water lines, or the stringency of zoning and land use regulations. The patterns and timing of urban development depend on how homebuyers, developers and regulators interact in the marketplace.

Using historical data, the social science team aims to simulate Maryland land conversion by deconstructing homebuyer preferences for location amenities, which generate housing demand, and identifying factors that affect developer building decisions, which determine housing supply. By understanding the dynamics that led to past land conversions from farms and forests to urban and suburban uses, these researchers can develop a model to predict when and where future land development might occur under various policy scenarios.

Based off of predictions of future urban landscapes, hydrologists and engineers can estimate the affects that land-use changes will have on nutrient cycles and water quality. For example, in more highly urbanization areas, rainwater hitting parking lots, roads, rooftops will runoff into streams, often carrying salt and nitrogen compounds that degrade nearby waterways.

Similarly, built structure such as bridges, channels and culverts can alter streams and rivers and disrupt aquatic ecosystems. By coupling economic and hydrologic models, the multidisciplinary research effort aims to develop a comprehensive model that policymakers can use to gauge the environmental impact of various land use regulations.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) grant is one of only three awarded in a national competition. The funds will be shared by 13 investigators at the University of Maryland, the University of Maryland Baltimore County, Pennsylvania State University, Princeton University, Ohio State University, the University of Rhode Island, the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, US Geological Survey, and USDA Forest Service.

About million of the five-year grant from the NSF Water Sustainability and Climate program will go towards the social science component of the project, including 0,000 for Professor Towe's research at the University of Maryland.

For more information contact:

Assistant Professor Charles Towe
Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics
National Center for Smart Growth
University of Maryland
ctowe@arec.umd.edu
301-405-7502

DSCN2581
land development

Image by The Development of Birmingham
i-land development, Essex St

12Mar/09Off

Land Development

A short stop motion film based loosely on land development. Contains a super secret surprise. :)

propertydevelopmentsource.com runs through the property development process with a map of land development steps. Find more at http

11Jan/09Off

Natural Waterways and Green Groves of Cudjoe Key Give Way to the Geometric Canals and Denuded Land of the Developers. This Is a Trailer Camp Called “Venture Out.” It Is Typical of Land Development on the Florida Keys.

A few nice land development images I found:

Natural Waterways and Green Groves of Cudjoe Key Give Way to the Geometric Canals and Denuded Land of the Developers. This Is a Trailer Camp Called "Venture Out." It Is Typical of Land Development on the Florida Keys.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Natural Waterways and Green Groves of Cudjoe Key Give Way to the Geometric Canals and Denuded Land of the Developers. This Is a Trailer Camp Called "Venture Out." It Is Typical of Land Development on the Florida Keys.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6152

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Key West (Key West, Florida Keys, Monroe county, Florida, United States) inhabited place
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548639

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

Land Development near Boca Chica Key.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Land Development near Boca Chica Key.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6287

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Key West (Key West, Florida Keys, Monroe county, Florida, United States) inhabited place
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548774

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

Land Development at Plantation Key in the Florida Keys.
land development

Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Land Development at Plantation Key in the Florida Keys.

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6292

Photographer: Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

Subjects:
Florida (United States) state
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: http://arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=548779

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

Buy copies of selected National Archives photographs and documents at the National Archives Print Shop online: gallery.pictopia.com/natf/photo/

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted