Showing posts with label American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American. Show all posts
on 28 May 2013

Years ago at the University of Maryland, I taught "Economic Determinants in Architecture," an elective course introducing architecture students to the real world of capitalism and showing how that world influences design and development. Students learned that market and financial conditions, along with governmental fiscal and monetary policies, can profoundly influence what gets designed and built.

These lessons will be refreshed as government-backed mortgage funding provided by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration diminishes. The effects of more stringent underwriting standards - higher down payment requirements and lower loan ceilings -and tighter credit will ripple through the real estate industry, dampening home buying and construction. At the same time, demand for rental housing will increase, which means architects, including my former students, will have more multi-family projects to design.

Tougher mortgage financing standards are likely to slow creation of exurban, single-family subdivisions, which means less sprawl. While this is bad news for many homebuilders, it may be good news for smart-growth-minded jurisdictions. In areas well served by transportation infrastructure, counties and municipalities are crafting new master plans calling for development or redevelopment at higher densities with mixed-use buildings and lots of apartments. Examples in this region include Tysons Corner in Fairfax County; Potomac Yards in Alexandria; National Harbor in Prince George's County; the White Flint area in Montgomery County, and downtown Columbia, Md.

Rising market demand for rental housing is already a fact, the result of economic recession, rising unemployment, flat or falling home prices and more-conservative loan practices. For a growing portion of the American population, the probable reality is that conventional home ownership will be economically unfeasible and, with gradual or no appreciation in home value, relatively unprofitable. Increasing numbers of American households will rent.

But will this be detrimental to American society and culture, perhaps signaling the end of the American dream of home ownership?

Tomorrow's reality will not be a nightmare. Rather it will be the manifestation of a common-sense, rational concept disregarded during the housing bubble years: Homes should be bought and owned only by people who can sustainably afford to pay the full gamut of home ownership expenses, including mortgage principal and interest, taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance and repairs. For others, renting will be the economically prudent and necessary choice. Yet it can be a desirable choice.

Rental desirability will depend on several factors:

l Favorable location and multi-modal transportation options within a community, including convenient access to good jobs, good schools, ample shopping, restaurants, recreation, entertainment and cultural facilities.

l Adequate housing unit size and layout. Rental dwellings must be conceived as "homes," with more apartments designed to accommodate families with children.

l Higher levels of aesthetic and construction quality. Apartment buildings and individual apartments must be commodiously planned with well-designed kitchens and baths, soundproofed walls and floors, ample daylighting, reliable elevators, well-appointed public spaces and attractive landscaping.

l Convenient, shared amenities such as parking, outdoor terraces and gardens, playgrounds, swimming pools and spas, meeting and exercise rooms.

l Affordable rents. Desirability will always depend on rental rates being a reasonable percentage of total household income.

Although somewhat affected by tighter credit, rental housing will be less constrained by changing mortgage finance practices because most projects are funded privately without government support. Unfortunately low-income tenants will continue to struggle, since their rents are made affordable through government subsidies. Regardless of what Fannie, Freddie or FHA do, public-sector budget cutting is likely to reduce housing subsidies and cause considerable pain for low-income families.

Destined to be more urbanized, America will increasingly resemble European metropolises, where renting a home is more commonplace and bears no social or economic stigma. For some of America's next generation of citizens, the American dream of home ownership, and more specifically of owning a single-family detached home in a suburban subdivision, will be less compelling and harder to achieve. This is why rental housing must become a desirable choice and not merely an acceptable necessity.

Roger K. Lewis is a practicing architect and a professor emeritus of architecture at the University of Maryland.


View the original article here

on 6 Apr 2013
Kelly Clarkson

Now that classic rock week is in the rearview mirror, season 12 of American Idol chugs along with a new theme: “Song I Wish I Had Written.”

The top six, which include five girls -- Janelle Arthur, Candice Glover, Kree Harrison, Amber Holcomb and Angie Miller -- will each perform two songs on the April 10 show.

PHOTOS: 'American Idol Live': The Season 10 Tour In Pictures

And on Thursday’s results show, two Idol winners return: Kelly Clarkson, the viewer favorite that started it all, and season 10’s Scotty McCreery. The former will perform her new single, “People Like Us.” McCreery’s song has yet to be announced.

Another unknown: whether this year's season’s sole male hopeful will advance or if Lazaro Arbos has reached the end of his Idol road.

VIDEO: 'American Idol' Season 12: Top 10 Finalist Red Carpet Interviews

Clarkson recently announced that she and Maroon 5 are teaming up for the 2013 Honda Civic Tour, which kicks off Aug. 1 in St. Louis and runs through Oct. 5.

Twitter: @Idol_Worship


View the original article here

American Idol season 12 rock results judges L

It's official: Lazaro "I Forgot the Lyrics" Arbos is the new Sanjaya Malakar. Not only is the Florida ice cream scooper of questionable talent, but his mere presence in this self-serious competition seems like a cruel joke.

That being said, Lazaro -- who, as if by some miracle of the Idol gods, wound up in the top three Thursday along with the deserving Kree Harrison and Angie Miller -- certainly has fans in his corner, despite not knowing the words to any of his songs. Come on, Lazaro, you have a whole week to learn the music. Stage fright? Not an excuse. Get over it.

Also: WHO IS VOTING FOR HIM? Speak up or forever hold your peace! I'd love to get my hands on a  demographic breakdown of Idol voters but I would wager that these blocs are rooting for Lazaro: people with heinous taste in sing-testants; people from the Sunshine State; moms and grandmas who want to pinch his cheeks (and then some); ice cream scoopers. And don't rule out the mobilizing power of Vote For The Worst.

(Conspiracy theory time: Did Nigel Lythgoe plant Lazaro in hopes that he would create a Sanjaya-like spectacle and thus drive up ratings? If so, it's not working: season 12's numbers are disappearing faster than Lee DeWyze's career. Some people blame "boring contestants." When the going gets tough, send in the clowns: remember season six, Jordin Sparks' year? What a snoozer. Fortunately, Sanjaya was there to make us laugh for about five minutes, overstaying his welcome thanks to a big push from VFTW.)

STORY: 'American Idol' Burning Questions: Why Can't Lazaro Remember the Lyrics?

But back to Lazaro. The latest victim of his improbable run on Idol? Burnell Taylor, the second-to-last man standing, voted out by an America immune to his endearingly sweet nature and proven singing ability. Using his last life line, Burnell brought Mariah Carey to tears with a soulful reprise of "Ready For Love" -- however, the judges decided not to use the save. 

Elsewhere on stage: Burnell's close friend and fellow finalist Candice Glover ruined her eye make-up from crying. During his last-ditch performance, Burnell serenaded both Candice and Amber Holcomb, for whom he harbors an adorable crush. (Copy that for Jimmy "Creepy Uncle" Iovine, who commented, all-creepy-like: "It seems like her legs are getting longer.")

Joining Burnell in the bottom two: Janelle Arthur, aka Nicki Minaj's "Little Marshmallow," who won over the panel on Wednesday with a country-fied take on Billy Joel's "You May Be Right." However, Janelle has the bad luck to be stuck in the same category as fellow Nashville upstart Kree, this season's one to beat.

In a new twist, the panelists were asked to submit their picks for the top three: while Nicki, Keith Urban and Randy Jackson agreed on Angie, Amber and Kree, Mariah opted for Candice instead of Angie. (Let's face it: Candice, like Jennifer Hudson before her, is just too damn good for the show. If she gets the boot, probably because Lazaro stuck around for another week, then she'll be singing circles around her castmates in no time.)

Thursday's episode featured super-foxy piece of eye candy Casey James, another Idol alum who made good, crooning "The Good Life," and Carrie Underwood sang something but I forget since I am still swooning over Casey.

MOVING ON: Did America get it wrong -- or right -- by voting off Burnell? Am I being unfairly harsh on Lazaro? And in your opinion, which of the girls stands the best chance of becoming the first female to win Idol since dinosaurs roamed the Earth? Sound off in the comments.

Twitter: @ErinLCarlson

Email: erin.carlson@thr.com


View the original article here

American Idol season 12 rock results judges L

It's official: Lazaro "I Forgot the Lyrics" Arbos is the new Sanjaya Malakar. Not only is the Florida ice cream scooper of questionable talent, but his mere presence in this self-serious competition seems like a cruel joke.

That being said, Lazaro -- who, as if by some miracle of the Idol gods, wound up in the top three Thursday along with the deserving Kree Harrison and Angie Miller -- certainly has fans in his corner, despite not knowing the words to any of his songs. Come on, Lazaro, you have a whole week to learn the music. Stage fright? Not an excuse. Get over it.

Also: WHO IS VOTING FOR HIM? Speak up or forever hold your peace! I'd love to get my hands on a  demographic breakdown of Idol voters but I would wager that these blocs are rooting for Lazaro: people with heinous taste in sing-testants; people from the Sunshine State; moms and grandmas who want to pinch his cheeks (and then some); ice cream scoopers. And don't rule out the mobilizing power of Vote For The Worst.

(Conspiracy theory time: Did Nigel Lythgoe plant Lazaro in hopes that he would create a Sanjaya-like spectacle and thus drive up ratings? If so, it's not working: season 12's numbers are disappearing faster than Lee DeWyze's career. Some people blame "boring contestants." When the going gets tough, send in the clowns: remember season six, Jordin Sparks' year? What a snoozer. Fortunately, Sanjaya was there to make us laugh for about five minutes, overstaying his welcome thanks to a big push from VFTW.)

STORY: 'American Idol' Burning Questions: Why Can't Lazaro Remember the Lyrics?

But back to Lazaro. The latest victim of his improbable run on Idol? Burnell Taylor, the second-to-last man standing, voted out by an America immune to his endearingly sweet nature and proven singing ability. Using his last life line, Burnell brought Mariah Carey to tears with a soulful reprise of "Ready For Love" -- however, the judges decided not to use the save. 

Elsewhere on stage: Burnell's close friend and fellow finalist Candice Glover ruined her eye make-up from crying. During his last-ditch performance, Burnell serenaded both Candice and Amber Holcomb, for whom he harbors an adorable crush. (Copy that for Jimmy "Creepy Uncle" Iovine, who commented, all-creepy-like: "It seems like her legs are getting longer.")

Joining Burnell in the bottom two: Janelle Arthur, aka Nicki Minaj's "Little Marshmallow," who won over the panel on Wednesday with a country-fied take on Billy Joel's "You May Be Right." However, Janelle has the bad luck to be stuck in the same category as fellow Nashville upstart Kree, this season's one to beat.

In a new twist, the panelists were asked to submit their picks for the top three: while Nicki, Keith Urban and Randy Jackson agreed on Angie, Amber and Kree, Mariah opted for Candice instead of Angie. (Let's face it: Candice, like Jennifer Hudson before her, is just too damn good for the show. If she gets the boot, probably because Lazaro stuck around for another week, then she'll be singing circles around her castmates in no time.)

Thursday's episode featured super-foxy piece of eye candy Casey James, another Idol alum who made good, crooning "The Good Life," and Carrie Underwood sang something but I forget since I am still swooning over Casey.

MOVING ON: Did America get it wrong -- or right -- by voting off Burnell? Am I being unfairly harsh on Lazaro? And in your opinion, which of the girls stands the best chance of becoming the first female to win Idol since dinosaurs roamed the Earth? Sound off in the comments.

Twitter: @ErinLCarlson

Email: erin.carlson@thr.com


View the original article here

Kelly Clarkson

Now that classic rock week is in the rearview mirror, season 12 of American Idol chugs along with a new theme: “Song I Wish I Had Written.”

The top six, which include five girls -- Janelle Arthur, Candice Glover, Kree Harrison, Amber Holcomb and Angie Miller -- will each perform two songs on the April 10 show.

PHOTOS: 'American Idol Live': The Season 10 Tour In Pictures

And on Thursday’s results show, two Idol winners return: Kelly Clarkson, the viewer favorite that started it all, and season 10’s Scotty McCreery. The former will perform her new single, “People Like Us.” McCreery’s song has yet to be announced.

Another unknown: whether this year's season’s sole male hopeful will advance or if Lazaro Arbos has reached the end of his Idol road.

VIDEO: 'American Idol' Season 12: Top 10 Finalist Red Carpet Interviews

Clarkson recently announced that she and Maroon 5 are teaming up for the 2013 Honda Civic Tour, which kicks off Aug. 1 in St. Louis and runs through Oct. 5.

Twitter: @Idol_Worship


View the original article here

Kelly Clarkson

Now that classic rock week is in the rearview mirror, season 12 of American Idol chugs along with a new theme: “Song I Wish I Had Written.”

The top six, which include five girls -- Janelle Arthur, Candice Glover, Kree Harrison, Amber Holcomb and Angie Miller -- will each perform two songs on the April 10 show.

PHOTOS: 'American Idol Live': The Season 10 Tour In Pictures

And on Thursday’s results show, two Idol winners return: Kelly Clarkson, the viewer favorite that started it all, and season 10’s Scotty McCreery. The former will perform her new single, “People Like Us.” McCreery’s song has yet to be announced.

Another unknown: whether this year's season’s sole male hopeful will advance or if Lazaro Arbos has reached the end of his Idol road.

VIDEO: 'American Idol' Season 12: Top 10 Finalist Red Carpet Interviews

Clarkson recently announced that she and Maroon 5 are teaming up for the 2013 Honda Civic Tour, which kicks off Aug. 1 in St. Louis and runs through Oct. 5.

Twitter: @Idol_Worship


View the original article here

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