By Taylor Anderson, PE on September 25, 2009
Yesterday, I mentioned that even though none of the daily rain events amounted to more than 10-year storm event, the cumulative effect of a week’s worth of storms manifested itself as a 100-year storm on Monday and into Tuesday.
Turns out that the US Geological Survey is actually saying that in many cases, this was a [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, flooding, lake lanier, water wars
By Taylor Anderson, PE on September 24, 2009
Gwinnett County filed a notice of appeal on a federal ruling earlier this year that would no longer allow most of metro-Atlanta use Lake Lanier for its drinking water, despite the fact that it is its primary potable water reservoir and has been for decades.
That this is even an issue, despite the fact that the [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, flooding, infrastructure, lake lanier, water wars
By Taylor Anderson, PE on June 1, 2009
The Atlanta Business Chronicle had a good summary of the housing news around the metro area today. Below is a small portion of a lengthy article.
For the 12-month period ending in March, Atlanta saw 8,972 housing starts — ranking No. 5 out of the metro areas tracked by Metrostudy. Houston topped the list with 22,502 [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, real estate, residential market
By Taylor Anderson, PE on May 28, 2009
The amount of news on the housing front over the last week or so is staggering. If you’re keeping up with the articles I share, you’re on top of the game. (If you use an RSS reader, use this feed…) However, I wanted to add a little to the mix of articles and organize them [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, economy, real estate, residential market
By Taylor Anderson, PE on May 18, 2009
Metro-Atlanta was not geographically located very well for the now 5.7+ million inhabitants that call it home. First, the only major water source is the Chattahoochee River, a very small river by drainage basin standards, especially where it feeds metro-Atlanta’s primary drinking source – Lake Lanier. The topography is extreme for a large city – [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, balancing law, georgia dot, infrastructure, rail, transportation
By Taylor Anderson, PE on March 17, 2009
In my previous blog, I had said the next blog would be about Atlanta’s infrastructure. I still plan on doing that blog – in fact, I think infrastructure is the single most important long term investment for the future of Atlanta (and the United States). I was saddened to see how few dollars (around 5%) [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, real estate, residential market
By Taylor Anderson, PE on February 16, 2009
As the recession takes a firm grip on Atlanta land development, what does the future look like for this once burgeoning beacon of land development? Getting out the crystal ball, also known as the Atlanta Business Chronicle, and putting a few stories together, we can start to see what’s in store.
Atlanta’s skyline will likely remain [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, barack obama, economy, industrial development, social land development
By Taylor Anderson, PE on January 31, 2009
How’s that for a title?
One amazing tool that many folks don’t know about or understand is called an RSS feed. My blog has one. My company has one. And I’ve even set one up to feed the most current news in land development, with an obvious focus on the southeast and, in particular, the southeast. [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, economy
By Taylor Anderson, PE on December 16, 2008
David Brooks wrote an interesting piece in the New York Times regarding today’s trends in how people that once lived in the suburbs are changing their expectations of what the suburbs should be. The article in its entirety is rather interesting for a number of reasons. He talks about the emerging town centers that we [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, barack obama, infrastructure, social land development
By Taylor Anderson, PE on December 15, 2008
As with many things that government does, laws with good intentions often have very bad consequences. Such was the case of Georgia’s “Balancing Law” – the law which requires that equal amounts of Georgia Department of Transportation’s budget be spent equally among the states 13 congressional districts.
Taking a look at Georgia’s congressional district map, you [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, balancing law, georgia dot, infrastructure