Wednesday, November 29, 2017

A Very Arabesque Roundup

Here at Jungalow, we are inspired by all sorts of silhouettes. Our new found love is the ‘arabesque’. Arabesques are a fundamental element of Islamic art. Its design is biomorphic which means the order and unity of nature are represented by floral patterns. How beautiful is that? We love nature based design and are always thinking of ways to bring the outside in.

  1. Calabash Pendant | Anthropologie
  2. Gold Wavy Accent Mirror | World Market
  3. Tiled Embroidered Pillow Cover | Pottery Barn
  4. Patterned Velvet Pillow | Anthropologie
  5. Orange Bailey Area Rug | World Market
  6. Lacework Bed | Anthropologie
  7. Serafina Jug Vase, Brass | Lula & Georgia
  8. Morocco Key Hook | Anthropologie
  9. Black and White Ceramic Knobs Set of 2 by World Market
  10. Ivory and Chinois Green Adilah Towel Collection | World Market


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Pressure Cooker Guinness Beef Stew

Pressure Cooker Guinness Beef Stew

You guys, I get so much joy out of converting slow cooker recipes into brand spanking new versions for the electric pressure cooker.

There are so many advantages to doing this! Everything cooks much faster, so there’s no need to plan ahead—yet you can also leave the food on the “Keep Warm” setting if you don’t get to it right away. Total flexibility.

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Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Commissioner Saltzman has backed away from demand for congestion pricing on I-5 at the Rose Quarter

“We don’t want it [pricing] as a poison pill for the entire project. We want to be at the table with them [ODOT] as the process happens.”
— Matt Grumm, senior policy advisory for Commissioner Dan Saltzman

Just three months ago Portland City Commissioner Dan Saltzman was seen as a bulwark against the I-5 Rose Quarter project. Since then he has completely backed away from his insistence that congestion pricing be implemented before any lanes are added to the freeway.

The State of Oregon and the City of Portland are itching to spend $450 million to add lanes to I-5 and make changes to surface streets around the Rose Quarter. The project faces staunch opposition. Many of the critics think widening a central city freeway in 2017 is a bad idea and before doing so, it makes sense to implement congestion pricing. If people have to pay to use the freeway, the thinking goes, perhaps demand will decrease so much that current traffic problems will disappear and we’ll save millions of dollars.

On September 1st, Saltzman agreed with them. Three months later, not so much.

Saltzman’s initial statement on this issue was clear. He wanted to, “Include congestion/value pricing before the project breaks ground to ensure maximum congestion relief and overall environmental benefits.” That statement was heralded by transportation reform advocates and especially the group No More Freeways PDX. It put Saltzman on the other side of the Oregon Department of Transportation who has made it clear they don’t feel this section of I-5 is the right place to try congestion pricing.

Fast forward to October 18th when the project came up at a City Council work session and it was clear Saltzman was beginning to sing a different tune. We noted how his language had changed from wanting congestion pricing “before the project breaks ground” to “prior to the opening” of the project. Saltzman said he didn’t want to see the entire I-5 Rose Quarter project “fall by the wayside” because of an insistence on congestion pricing. Saltzman, Mayor Ted Wheeler, and high-level PBOT planning staff all agreed that they want congestion pricing; but no one was willing to draw a line in the sand around this particular project.

This Thursday (11/30), Saltzman plans to introduce a resolution at City Council that will further codify Portland’s strategy for congestion pricing. The resolution doesn’t even mention the Rose Quarter and it makes no point at all about timing.

Here’s the language:

“Direct the Portland Bureau of Transportation to work with the Oregon Department of Transportation to implement the Oregon State Legislature’s “value pricing” on I-5 and I-205; and to work with the Bureau of Planning and Sustainability to research and evaluate best practices for congestion pricing strategies”

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This change in tune from Saltzman hasn’t gone unnoticed by the No More Freeways PDX group. They’ve issued an action alert and are urging people to show up on Thursday to support an amendment that would require congestion pricing before the project moves forward.

In an interview today, Saltzman’s Senior Policy Director Matt Grumm said their shifting stance is a result of learning more about the I-5 Rose Quarter project. Grumm said Saltzman fully supports the project in large part because of how it will invest in surface street, non-freeway improvements. “We want this project to happen. We have no problem with adding two lanes and shoulders for a quarter-mile if they add the [freeway] caps and restitch together the neighborhood above,” he said. “It’s a good project that we need to support.”

Grumm admitted their initial statement about pricing seemed, “A little too aggressive.” “We don’t want it [pricing] as a poison pill for the entire project,” he added. “We want to be at the table with them [ODOT] as the process happens.” In addition to giving ODOT the “political backing of the largest city in the state,” Grumm said the council resolution is meant to spark local planning and policy work to make congestion pricing throughout our system more of a standard procedure in the near future.

When asked about the idea that pricing traffic through the Rose Quarter before adding any new lanes might save millions of dollars and negate the need for additional lanes altogether, Grumm said Saltzman just doesn’t see it that way. “Congestion pricing would help minimize congestion, but that doesn’t minimize the need for a shoulder.” Grumm added that he feels not having a place to pull a car over for breakdowns on a freeway is “ridiculous.”

This project has become a Rorschach test. To Saltzman and others who support the project, it’s a benign operational improvement to the freeway with much-needed improvements to surface streets as the cherry on top. Those who oppose it see something far more ominous: a mega-freeway project we can’t afford that will make driving even more popular and convenient. As always, the truth is likely somewhere in the middle.

Learn more:

I5RoseQuarter.org — ODOT project page
ODOT Portland Region Value Pricing Committee (meets next on December 7th).
Should Portland try congestion pricing? It might be able to avoid a $450 Million dollar mega freeway expansion – Sightline, 11/28/17
➤ Watch a brief interview about congestion pricing with the Director of the City of Stockholm Transportation Department Jonas Eliasson — Streetfilms, 11/28/17

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

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Bigwigs hear community concerns about notorious North Columbia-Midway intersection

N Columbia Blvd Town Hall -13.jpg
Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek (left) listens to a constituent who has lived north of Columbia for over 40 years.
(Photos: J. Maus/BikePortland)

For decades, people who live in a part of St. Johns north of Columbia Boulevard and west of Portland Road have hoped and prayed for street safety improvements. Cut off from nearby schools, markets and restaurants by an urban freeway where people drive large trucks and cars way too fast, residents of this part of our city have been ignored for a long time.

Now, thanks to a $1.5 million set-aside in the recently passed House Bill 2017, changes are finally coming.

Last night at Roosevelt High School the Portland Bureau of Transportation Director Leah Treat, Portland Public Schools Superintendent Guadalupe Guerrero, and Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek (who represents this area of north Portland) hosted an event to gather input about how to improve safety at the notorious intersection of Columbia and Midway.

“Now we have some money, so let’s make the best use of it.”
— Tina Kotek, state representative

“None of us who live in north Portland need to be reminded we have a lot of accidents out here,” Speaker Kotek said during her brief remarks, “And now we have some money, so let’s make the best use of it.”

Also speaking last night was a sixth grader from nearby George Middle School. “I’m worried my friends will get hurt because of fast trucks,” she said. And a leader of the PTA at Roosevelt High who lives north of Columbia referred to it as, “A neighborhood that’s completely isolated, like a little island.”

The neighborhood in red is cut off from the rest of St. Johns because of Columbia Blvd. $1.5 million has been allocated to improve the intersection marked with a yellow star.

PBOT Director Leah Treat was also in attendance. After saying she, “brought the idea of Vision Zero to the City of Portland” when she became director four years ago, Treat said her agency will request a speed limit reduction on Columbia Blvd and add speed reader boards (signs that tell people how fast they’re going). “We need people to slow down,” Treat told the crowd.

The main focus last night was for people to share feedback on how to make the intersection safer. They did this by having one-on-one conversations with Kotek and city staff around a series of posterboards and interactive displays.

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PBOT offered six possible “improvements”: rectangular rapid flash beacon, reduce speed limits, install curb extensions, remove vegetation, install refuge island, and raise the existing, non-motorized bridge overpass. (Noticeably absent from this list were things like a road diet, a roundabout, or a full traffic signal.) According to the amount of dots next to each one, reducing speed limits was the most popular improvement, followed by flashing beacons.

Columbia at Midway is a challenging intersection for many reasons: Depending on where you cross the five daunting lanes, it can be anywhere from 60 to 75-feet from one curb to the other; ibuirgardt’s a major freight route which means the State of Oregon controls much of its fate; Columbia crosses Midway at a diagonal and North Astor (a small residential street) also intersects with it.

View westbound on Columbia at Midway. Astor is on the right and George Middle School is upper left.

I spoke to several people last night who have live north of Columbia. They told harrowing tales.

“One of my friends found a human ear in his yard, and mailed it down to city hall.”
— A man who lives north of Columbia

“It’s a free-for-all,” said one man who has lived in the neighborhood since 1979. He recalled two occasions where he found body parts in the road after a collision. “One of my friends found a human ear in his yard,” he said, “and mailed it down to city hall.” He was very frustrated that nothing has changed with the intersection despite its gruesome history. He and an older woman in her 60s told me the place they’ve lived for over 40 years is often referred to as, “The grey area.” “They don’t know what to do with our streets,” the woman said angrily. “I’m 67 and I have a disability, and I have to walk across Columbia there because I’m too old to use the overpass and there aren’t even sidewalks for me to get to safer crossings.” “There are always meetings like this, but that’s as far as it goes,” the man standing next to her chimed in, “Nothing is going to come from this.”

N Columbia Blvd Town Hall -12.jpg
Trinity Gibbons.

Trinity Gibbons lives right at the corner of Midway, Columbia and Astor. Gibbons told me she responds to crashes outside her door about twice a month. “It takes seeing someone crash to really understand this. It’s crazy to me.” When she sees kids out in the street, she feels an obligation to tell them to not cross there and use the overpass — but they almost never listen to her. Then she shared a story:

“One weekend there was a whole family out there on bikes. They were lost and looking for Kenton Park (several miles away). I told them to not cross there but they did it anyways. And then there young daughter crashed in the middle of Columbia. I thought, ‘What are we doing here?! This is crazy!’ So I just had to come to this meeting tonight.”

One of Portland’s best transportation thinkers, Jim Howell, was also there last night. He’s shopping around an idea that would tame Columbia for the entire two mile segment between Burgard and Portland Road. Howell’s “Columbia Blvd Safety Plan” (PDF) would: reduce the speed limit to 35 mph (from 40); restripe the road from five standard lanes to three and add a protected, two-way bikeway along the south side; install a traffic signal at Midway (make Astor a cul-de-sac); and improve TriMet bus service. Howell thinks Columbia is “overbuilt” with just 6,000 average daily trips. A high-quality bikeway on Columbia would connect the existing Peninsula Crossing Trail to Chimney and Pier parks and the multi-use path adjacent to Lombard in the Rivergate industrial area that gets people to Kelley Point Park and the 40-mile loop path (see below).

At this point, PBOT is just taking input and it will likely be many months — hopefully not years — before a design is chosen and constructed.

Stay tuned for more opportunities to get involved as this project moves forward.

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

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Snip Doodles (Snickerdoodle Coffee Cake) + First Look at BraveTart Cookbook

Snicker Doodle Coffee Cake

“So I have a complaint about your snickerdoodle recipe!” I told New York Times bestselling author Stella Parks as I interviewed her recently at Omnivore Books.

Stella and I have been friends for years, but I had to be honest with her. “How come your snickerdoodle recipe uses baking powder? For me, classic snickerdoodles have baking soda and cream of tartar!”

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Monday, November 27, 2017

Product review: The Sport Series long sleeve jersey from Wabi Woolens

Testing Wabi Woolens jersey -5.jpg
(Photos: J. Maus/BikePortland)

I’m picky when it comes to jerseys these days. It’s probably because I’ve been riding and racing long enough that I’ve become a curmudgeon and I don’t have patience for second-rate stuff. And being “in the industry” means I’ve come across some of the best kit available.

Bullshit 100 ride-5
Harth Huffman testing his product in 2013.

Take for example, the latest from Portland-based Wabi Woolens. Wabi was founded in 2008 by Harth Huffman, a high school teacher and entrepreneur who loves to ride. Like many of us, Huffman also loves wool jerseys. But unlike most of us, he’s taken that love to the next level by designing, sourcing, sewing, and selling wool jerseys to fellow riders.

I got my first look at Huffman’s work on an adventurous ride that explored unpaved backroads of Washington County back in 2013. Huffman and his stout Rivendell tackled the rough ride with respectable aplomb. If this guy knows his way around a jersey as well as he knows his way around a bike, I thought, I should probably check one of them out.

The latest from Wabi is the Sport Series Chevron long sleeve. Huffman said it was his best work yet and he was eager to share it with me. He’d seen me in an Icebreaker wool jersey and wanted to know how Wabi compared.

Honestly, it’s not really a fair fight. The quality and finish of the Wabi jersey is head-and-shoulders above anything I’ve worn from Icebreaker. Of course Wabi is a boutique brand, with an attention to detail and hand-made quality a huge company like Icebreaker (recently purchased by VF Corporation, Smartwool’s parent company) can’t touch. Another factor in Wabi’s favor is that it’s made entirely in the U.S.A. The fabric is produced here and sewn in the Portland region.

The fit

The Sport Series is made to fit snug. Wabi calls it a “sleek and snug, race-inspired fit.” I was initially put off by how snug it was right out of the box, but Huffman assured me it would “relax” after washing and wearing. He was right. Think of it like a good pair of jeans that feels a bit tight when you first get them, but after washing and wearing a few times they get to know your shape and become super comfortable.

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I don’t know much about fabric, but this jersey feels luxurious. The wool is very soft and the attention to detail is top-notch. The substantial cuffs, the ample collar, and the way the fabric almost completely covers the zipper, make it feel more like a nice sweater you’d wear for dressy occassions than a bike jersey. In fact if this thing didn’t have rear pockets and a full zip up front, I’d definitely wear it to a nice dinner.

If this thing didn’t have rear pockets and a fully zip up front, I’d definitely wear it to a nice dinner.

One of my jersey pet-peeves is when the zipper folds awkwardly and bulbs out; but with this one, the zipper lays down nicely. Wabi has found that sweet spot between a piece of kit that has everything where you want it, but nothing where you don’t.

In the rear, the Sport Series doesn’t disappoint. There are three full-sized pockets, plus a zippered pocket in the middle. The rear drops a few inches for extra coverage.

Wabi says their Sport Series is made for spring and fall. I’ve worn it in winter too and found that it can be comfortable from the low-to-mid 40s to mid-to-upper 50s. My go-to set-up so far this winter (when it’s not raining) is to wear it with a long-sleeve base layer and a light vest. The jersey itself is so comfortable and snug that it works well as a layer. Another thing that makes this jersey versatile is how it looks. The blue/black colorway and chevron, combined with the high-quality wool aesthetic give it a classic retro look; but the cut and the fit means it’ll also look fine in a speedy group ride.

At $195, it’s a bit more expensive than other options on the market. But if you appreciate high-quality kit and you like to buy and use things made in the U.S. by a Portlander who loves to ride as much as you do, this jersey is well worth it.

Learn more about this jersey at WabiWoolens.com.

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

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On eve of North Portland traffic safety town hall, a man was hit and killed last night on Fessenden

7000 block of Fessenden.

A man was hit and killed last night just two blocks from where young Bradley Fortner was nearly killed while walking to school last year.

Portland Police reported late last night that a man was “struck by a vehicle in the 7000 block of North Fessenden.” That would put it near the intersection of N Midway, which is relatively busy with a taqueria, a corner store, bus stops, and apartment complexes. We don’t know many details yet, but police say it was a hit-and-run and they’re looking for a dark colored sedan with front-end damage.

By our count, this is the 48th traffic-related fatality in Portland so far this year (the Portland Bureau of Transportation, who uses state and federal criteria to count fatalities, has the number at 43). There were 44 fatalities on our roads in 2016 and December is typically one of the deadliest months of the year.

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Last night’s tragedy is very timely because just a few blocks south at Roosevelt High School, Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek will host a town hall on traffic safety tonight. The event will focus primarily on how to improve safety on N Columbia near George Middle School where Fortner was hit last year.

Columbia Blvd is on PBOT’s High Crash Network and neighbors have clamored for safety updates for many years. As we’ve been reporting, there’s an upwelling of transportation activism in St. Johns and other north Portland neighborhoods. This latest death will only make it stronger.

We hope to see a big turnout at tonight’s event. 5:30 pm at Roosevelt High School. More details here.

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

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