Salvemos Las Lomas Headline Animator

En defensa del patrimonio urbano de la ciudad

Las Lomas de Chapultepec es un fraccionamiento residencial diseñado y desarrollado en los años 20's, sobre las colinas ubicadas al poniente de la ciudad, bajo el concepto urbanistico suburbano americano de la epoca, respetando la orografia y los collados que permiten el drenaje natural y areas de absorcion del agua de lluvia; se le doto con parques, calles amplias y avenidas jardinadas, que siguen las curvas de nivel del terreno, lotes grandes y reglamentaciones para mantener la densidad de construccion baja con mucho jardin, casas abiertas con setos perimetrales bajos en lugar de bardas; se le dotó de varios centros de barrio para alojar comercios y servicios necesarios para los vecinos, a distancias caminables.
Al paso del tiempo, por sus cualidades humanas y urbanisticas intrinsecas, se convirtio en la mejor y mas prestigiada colonia residencial de la ciudad.
A partir de la regencia del Sr. Hank, y como consecuencia del cambio al uso del suelo en las 7 manzanas entre la Fuente de Petroleos y Prado Sur/Prado Norte, autorizado sin consultar a los vecinos y aprovechado por el mismo, inicia el deterioro y la destruccion de la colonia; se construyen edificios de oficinas, que trajeron poblacion flotante, muchos autos y con estos comercio informal y ambulante, los cuidacoches, invasion de las calles con autos estacionados durante todo el dia, y la saturacion del transporte publico.
Simultaneamente, en Bosques de las Lomas, cambian el uso de suelo a los lotes del circuito Ciruelos y Duraznos, autorizando edificios de oficina, con identicas consecuencias. La apertura del puente de Monte Libano a Tecamachalco primero, el de Cofre de Perote después y el llamado Puente Viejo, permitieron la invasion de la colonia por miles de autos de residentes en Tecamachalco, La Herradura, y mas recientemente Interlomas y los desarrollos inmobiliarios en esa zona del estado de Mexico, colonias desarrolladas sin planeacion urbana integral, sin dotarlas con vias de acceso independientes y perimetrales a Lomas de Chapultepec y Cuajimalpa. En el colmo de falta de planeacion, se desarrolla Santa Fe/Bosque de Lilas sin las vias de acceso necesarias, ni servicio de trasporte publico adecuado, y las calles de acceso, existentes desde hace años, no se arreglan para que opere un transporte publico de calidad y asi absorber parte del aforo vehicular que transita entre el sur poniente y Santa Fe/Lilas, sin ingresar a las Lomas, por tal motivo todos los automoviles atraidos a estos desarrollos son obligados a transitar por Paseo de la Reforma, Palmas y Virreyes, Constituyentes/Observatorio desde y hacia el Periferico, unica via para llevarlos al norte hacia Ciudad Satelite o al sur hacia San Jeronimo y Viaducto al oriente.
El problema tiene solución, pero ésta no es ampliar vialidades ni hacer obras que incentiven y faciliten la movilidad en automovil con 1 ocupante, sino en ofrecer transporte publico de calidad que transporta 200 personas por autobus y hacer que quien causa el congestionamiento, el automovilista, pague por ello, en beneficio de los mas.

martes, 7 de diciembre de 2010

Que amas del lugar donde vives, con tus propias palabras

Ejercicio adecuado para hacer un analisis personal de donde vives, que te gusta o te disgusta, que quieres preservar o cambiar, que razones tuviste para elegir vivir donde lo haces, se han cumplido o no. etcetera.

Amplify’d from www.grist.org

Why you love the places you live, in your own words
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by Sarah Goodyear





1 Dec 2010 8:56 AM





























































Last
week, I put out a question to you, dear readers: Why do you love the place you
live?


I got
to wondering about the idea because of the recently released results of a
Gallup survey called "Soul of the Community," which shows that people feel
attached to places primarily because of qualities like beauty and social
openness, rather than more hard-edged economic factors.


Nebraska farm"Our place on earth," write William and Crystal of Darby Springs Farms in Ceresco, Neb.Photo: Darby Springs Farms


The
response from you was immediate and tremendous. You sang the praises of cities
and farms and towns and the middle of nowhere. What I read from you all really
moved me. Thanks for opening a window into your lives.


Here's
a selection of your responses, edited for space and clarity:


My hometown is
the best. We are located in the Black Hills of South Dakota in a small valley
with mountains on three sides of us. We have an awesome view and one of the
best canyons in the world. Our local creek, Spearfish Creek, freezes from the
bottom up, and we hold the record for the most extreme temperature change. This
town is Spearfish,
S.D.


-- Sande Barrett Bihlmaier


I love Durham, N.C., because it is a small
town with a passion for all that is homegrown, sustainable and
community-oriented. We are famous for innovation and entrepreneurship, our
foodie culture, and our amazing art and music scene. It's got a rich history
and is also a bit rough around the edges. As one Durham resident puts it,
"If you don't like living next door to witches or Hindus, people with black
or brown faces, kids with spiky purple hair, or gay folks who are firmly out of
the closet, this is definitely not the place for you. Because Durham is for the
rest of us."


-- Crystal Dreisbach


The Cleveland Museum of ArtThe Cleveland Museum of Art.Photo: Michael ShanePlease be seated,
but I am going to praise a city that has been the brunt of jokes for decades --
poor, bedraggled, down on its luck, never winning a sports championship, Cleveland, Ohio.


There was a classic old T-shirt that came out of one of the more horrific
periods of the city's history that explains my sympathy -- if not love -- for
Cleveland. It showed the skyline of Cleveland, buried in snow, with the simple message,
"Cleveland: You gotta be tough." Against all odds and any sense of
reason or logic, I find the ethos expressed in that T-shirt to be appealing.
Especially in the face of all we are going to be hit with in the future, I
think that ethos will get us through better than "Kumbaya" ever will.


I love Lake Erie. A lot of people do, and they crowd the lakefront parks to get
their fix. The metroparks surrounding the city are an asset, even though they
are run by a bunch of golf addicts whose idea of nature is the 15th hole. In
spite of this numbskull mentality, there are still plenty of areas in the
system that are worth hiking and biking through.


It is a gritty place, but when you get tired of the grit, it is easy for you to
escape to some really bucolic places in upper New York State and Canada. So
that is why I like this tough city.


-- Randy Cunningham


Anchorage, AlaskaAnchorage, Alaska.Photo: retro travelerI love where I
live almost exclusively because of the combination of stunning natural beauty
and world-class parks and trails. In Anchorage,
Alaska
, I've skied down miles of coastal trail, looking at moonlit ice floes
scattered across frosty mudflats. I can drive 20-30 minutes to a trailhead and
hike or ski off into the wilderness of the Chugach mountains. In between, there
are over 100 miles of trail winding throughout town. I go salmon fishing near
downtown, dodge moose almost daily, and have seen eagles, bears, marmots,
foxes, swans, owls, all kinds of cool birds, lynx, and a wolverine within 20
miles of my house.


Sure, those greenbelts and trail systems thread their way through a sprawled-out
wasteland of box stores and strip malls; driving habits are terrifying (we go
for manly vehicles in lieu of drivers' ed -- or common sense); mass transit is
nearly nonexistent; the earth is flat and cooling (so I'm told); and it's
generally a Guns, Trucks, and God social climate. But I still keep meeting
other crazy backcountry skiers, winter bike commuters, even the occasional
wild-eyed treehugger. It doesn't hurt that local beer, food and music are
excellent when the weather isn't.


-- snowchicken


Certainly
your attitude about where you live makes a huge difference. Even when I lived
in sprawling south Florida, I managed to find the sweet spots. But it irritated
me to no end to have to drive through hell to get to my favorite hiking trails.
Finding those spots now is not quite so challenging. We moved to Brunswick, Maine.


What needs
some serious attention in Maine? Mass transit. But I think when you can manage
to look around you at least once a day and think, "Man, I am so grateful I
live in such a beautiful place" -- well then, you scored.


-- mainemama


Jersey City skyline at sunsetThe Jersey City skyline at sunset.Photo: Sarah GoodyearI love my Jersey City, N.J., neighborhood because
of:



  • View of Manhattan and the Hudson River from my living room window.

  • Density -- the opposite of sprawl. Each human takes up less acreage.

  • Living
    in a high-rise means we get to meet congenial neighbors. And we also get to
    kvetch about those other neighbors that sometimes put their garbage into the
    recycling boxes in the compactor room.

  • Walking distance to stores, restaurants. Easy neighborhood for bicycling.

  • Walking distance to the local marina and sailing club. Sailing along the
    Hudson, in view of Manhattan.

  • Extremely short walk walk to PATH trains into Manhattan, and Hudson-Bergen
    Light Rail.


-- Max-Perkins-Lives


I live in
a rural area on California's central coast, in the Santa Lucia mountains. It's beautiful country, especially in
the spring, with a great variety of wildlife, including mountain lions, eagles,
(golden and bald), and even a few condors! My family is privileged to live on a
piece of property with a good well, so we can grow a vegetable garden, and
fruit trees.


We also have a wonderful and diverse selection of neighbors and a community
hall, where the locals have potlucks, concerts, yoga classes, and an informal
little farmer's market.


The ecological downside to living in a rural area is this: In order to work,
shop, or even get together with friends, you generally have to drive.
"Neighbors" are much farther apart here than they would be in town.
But there's always a trade-off somewhere -- some of us are city people, and
some of us just aren't city people, and I fall into the latter category.


-- Storm Dragon


Guadalupe RiverThe Guadalupe River, with San Jose in the distance.Photo: Angelo MercadoI love San Jose because I know the way.


I know the way to avoid the 101 when it's insane, and the 87 when it's slow. I know the way to the giant purple building downtown with the museum where children
are encouraged to touch. I know the way to find the best place to watch the banks of the might Guadalupe
River when it's been raining and swelling and attracting ducks and herons of
all types.


I know the best way through downtown to my classes at San Jose State, the one I
called "my goat path," which takes you past a great coffee shop, through the
convention center, and into the park with the giant sculpture of the Feathered
Serpent. I know the way to the best public restroom, where the doors extend almost all the
way to the floor and there's classical music playing.


I know all the ways around the city: north from the Alviso Sloughs with its old
ghost town, and south to the Santa Cruz Mountains with the windy, forested
roads. East from
one sacred mountain, Mount Hamilton, and its neighborhoods of excellent bahn mi sandwiches, to the other sacred mountain in the west, Mount Uhmunum, which means
"Resting Place of the Hummingbird."


I know the way because this is where I was born and raised, and no place will
ever feel more free, more alive, or more home than here.


-- Eliza Thorn


Where to
start? Had you asked me this six months ago I would have laughed hysterically.
However, Memphis, Tenn., is really
coming around. We just had a seven-mile trail added to our already huge urban
park trail system. This trail gets you virtually anywhere in Memphis by bike no
matter where you are. I am happy to say that once spring hits I will be what we
call spittin' distance from four huge farmers markets, all complete with CSA
opportunities and good organic meat. I can't be too dishonest and pretend to love the city as a whole, but I feel
like it's cleaning up, and that's what I love.


-- Hannah Giles


I was just
thinking how amazing London was
yesterday on a brisk wintry walk through the narrow streets of "The City." The
place is oozing history, yet glowing with modern intervention, a dynamic mix of
architecture, people, music, ideas, expression, spaces, cultures, and cuisines.


I'm always fascinated by the numerous squares and wide open parks. In some you
can't see the immense city that surrounds them. In some you can even see deer,
whilst the bustling streets lay only hundreds of yards away.


What is it without the people? The way people can still have regard for each
other (most at least), although they are among tides of millions. A desire to
improve, to change, yet a strong sense of tradition and custom. Passion, styles
and opinions collide, yet an overall sense of conduct prevails.


The issues
for me are that it is spread out, forcing me far from work just to be able to
live in a small apartment, and pretty expensive.


-- ianr11


Playing dominoes in Little Havana.Playing dominoes in Miami's Little Havana neighborhood.Photo: Ben BeiskeI love Miami like I love my family: it's mine! But I've also got a pile of reasons why Miami
is the most amazing city around.


Miami's the only real immigrant city in the
world: meaning immigrants get the chance to truly run the place.


Given the rate of change in the world, we need
the lessons of Miami: how to welcome the different, not just into low-paying
jobs and poor neighborhoods, but right into the halls of power.


-- Albert Harum-Alvarez


People, people, people are
what attach me to a place.  Why do I stay in New York City? -- because of my friends, and also because of all
the interesting people I bump into on a daily basis. All of my
communities here -- my bed-bug-ridden building, my congregation, my
neighborhood, my daughter's school -- are full of the most entertaining,
thought-provoking, moving characters. Would this be true anywhere but
NYC? Maybe, in other giant, world-class cities, but it's hard to imagine
this variety and richness of humanity coexisting anywhere but here. Every
day I have some unexpected and fascinating conversation. This is why I
love NYC.


-- Sam Maser


Baltimore is a gritty, honest city -- but that's what makes it so beautiful to me.
Everywhere you go small groups of people are working on great projects. The
city has underground art galleries, collectives, independent bookstores, huge
community farm, all created by normal people like you and me. ... Yes -- there's
poverty, homelessness and more abandoned buildings that you can even count, but
out of all that not so great stuff comes a city of people who work hard and do
amazing things.


I'm an environmental activist and organizer --
but every time I drive into the city on 95 and see the giant smokestacks from
the incinerator that says "Baltimore" I get goosebumps (the good
kind). And to me that's how you know you're home.


-- Rachel Fauber


Bike path in Boulder, Colorado.Boulder, Colo., has miles of protected bike paths.Photo: Richard JohnsonBoulder, Colo., became my choice as a new home. Reasons:


1. As a gay person I wanted
to be some place where I was welcomed for who I am, not what I am. I was sick
of all the anti-gay politicians and religious fundamentalists in the south.
Boulder's a very welcoming community and wide open to new ideas and eccentricity.
It's very easy to get involved here.  


2. Boulder is located
in a dramatic natural environment, right at the literal edge where mountains
meet plains.


3. The city's built
environment is attractive, with a very vibrant downtown, no billboards, a 55-foot
height limit, attractive streetscapes, strict development controls, and
attention to detail.


4. The city is compact
and surrounded by about 150,000 acres of greenbelt acquired over the last 45
years by the city and county governments. The city's crown jewel is that open
space, and the recreational opportunities it allows, along with wildlife
habitation protection and land leased for organic farming and
ranching. 


5. The presence of a
major university (CU) helps attract creative people and assists with the arts
and cultural scene and the healthy economy.


6. Boulder's in the
forefront of research on climate change, the "green" economy,
alternative transportation and community sustainability. It also puts
great emphasis on sidewalks, bike paths and lanes and public transit.


7. Being 45 minutes
from central Denver allows one to live in a smaller community while having easy
access to the amenities of a large city.


I hope this doesn't sound too
much like a chamber of commerce spiel, but I certainly found Boulder to
have been a great choice for my "second life."


-- Eric Karnes

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