Thursday, May 31, 2007

STUFF MEG WANTS TO DO ON OUR NEXT TRIP


Eats:
  • EL CHILE CAFE - HOME OF THE PUFFY TACO!
  • BBQ at Salt Lick (about half an hour outside Austin) is supposed to be awesome
  • Chuys is supposed to be great Tex Mex
  • Magnolia Cafe for breakfast
  • Guerros for Tacos on South Congress (should do this sometime that is not during the middle of the big block party)
  • Iron Cactus roof patio!!!!

LUKE WILSON'S AUSTIN

I don't know why I'm posting this, I guess he just seems like a pretty cool guy for a celebrity, and he has some fun recommendations.

Monday, May 28, 2007

A GREEN CITY

There are a lot of reasons we're moving to Austin, but the biggest is so that Meg can study green building in a green city. MSN reported today on The 10 Greenest Cities in America, and Austin was at the top of the list:

The politics in Austin, Texas, home base of Whole Foods Market and Lance Armstrong (at least part of the year), have earned it the title of “the blueberry in the bowl of tomato soup.” But the city’s energy portfolio could make it known as the ray of sunshine in the field of oil pumps. If you want to sign up for green power from Austin Energy, possibly the greenest power grid in the country, you can get in line—this year’s demand was unpredictably high, and they’re fresh out. Austin’s growing list of proactive energy maneuvers is, to say the least, striking. Not only does Austin lead the country in wind power and biodiesel production, but it has built advanced plug-in hybrid vehicles into its energy strategy.

As part of the recently announced Austin Climate Protection Plan, all facilities, fleets and operations will be carbon-neutral by 2020, and 100 percent of city facilities will be powered by renewable energy by 2012. There will also be CO2 caps and reduction plans for all utility emissions, something the federal government hasn’t dared do. According to Roger Duncan, Austin Energy’s deputy general manager, the city is ramping up to make both residential and commercial building codes the most energy-efficient in the nation, starting by making all new single-family homes “zero net-energy capable”—meaning they could produce as much energy as they use—by 2015, and increasing energy efficiency by 75 percent in all other new construction. The Clean Energy Incubator, sparked by the National Renewable Energy Lab and managed by the University of Texas at Austin, works closely with the power utility and serves as a test bed for budding startup companies to develop green technologies ranging from solar, biofuels and wind to Internet-controlled irrigation systems.

It's a really exciting time and a really exciting place for Meg to be going back to school.