Vernal Equinox

APOD says it’s the first day of spring today. Brr! We’ve spent most of it doing mop-up leafleting across the city to cover deliveries that have missed either our regular days or their regular deliverers.

We took a break over lunchtime that stretched a little to include the bank holiday showing of the Wallace and Gromit short.  And it’s a good job we did, because during that, the forecast icy shower happened, including horizontal freezing rain.

It cleaned up again almost immediately, but I’m very glad I was indoors when it hit.

Sustainability in planning

Since I joined Nottingham’s planning committee nearly three years ago, I have made sustainability a big part of all the comments I make. It’s much more cost effective to include sustainable measures in buildings during construction than to retrofit them to a building after it is completed.

Since I started asking the question “how green is this building?” details of sustainability now normally get a specific paragraph in every report. And during my time on the committee, the Council took advantage of new Government powers to include a “Merton rule” in our planning policy that says that new buildings over a certain size or covering a certain amount of land now have to find 10% of their energy requirements from sustainable sources.

My next battle is about getting a wider recognition that 10% is a minimum, not a target. The helpful tool “Building for Life” has as one of its 20 questions, “Does the building out-perform statutory minima?”

This week’s planning committee on Wednesday was one of the shortest I have ever been at, with only three planning applications. The first of these was for a new FE college on Carlton Road, and had an excellent sustainability statement that covered many of the things I talk about every month. You can read the full report on the Council’s Committee Online page (opens a Word Doc) but here is the sustainability section:

Sustainable design has been key to the design of the building and it has been confirmed that a Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method (BREEAM) ‘Excellent’ rating will be achieved. In order to achieve energy efficiency the building will incorporate a wood-fuel boiler plant; heat recovery; exposed thermal mass; positioning of building to maximise daylight; natural ventilation; minimisation of heat loss; rainwater collection and the efficiency of plant and systems will be maximised through the use of a digital Building Energy Management System. It has also been clarified that an intranet connection will be available to allow teachers and students to view the energy that the building is utilising as a teaching resource for energy efficiency.

In addition to that, we heard that the college are considering bat and bird boxes on the trees and open spaces on the site, which helps tick a few more biodiversity boxes.

We also had three “issues reports” where people who are going to be asking for planning permission in the near future and get the chance to test the waters at committee. This is usually only for very big applications, and this week we discussed a potential private hospital in the new University Boulevard Science Park (unlikely to pass – Science Parks are not good places for hospitals); new student housing on Alfreton Road (fairly good scheme, could be improved) and a stunning scheme for a new dual use church-cum-conference centre.

My new financial advisor

I have a new financial advisor.  He’s two, has four fluffy feet and a trunk.

His current financial tips (at the bottom of the post):

  • Try to spend just a little bit less and save just a little bit more – every penny in a savings account is just that little bit more liquidity for the banking system and we’ll be that little bit closer to getting through this.
  • Now might be the time to see how much money you can save by taking some Green economy measures around the house – check out your insulation and your low energy light bulbs.
  • And if you think your finances are in trouble, try to get some help – the fewer people there are in difficulty the sounder the economy will be.

I guess the idea borne out of Tuesday night’s pub discussions of using what little savings I have to buy a canalboat are Not a Good Idea Right Now.  Turns out proper narrowboats are rather more expensive than I thought, but I could afford to buy something called a “cruiser,” some of which are more than capable of being used for short canal based holidays.  And Nottingham has ready access to some good canals and one of the most navigable rivers in the country.

Of course, leaping into canal boat ownership on a whim without ever having actually been on a canal boat holiday is almost certainly unwise.

Cruiser boats are about the same cost as a couple of other things I’ve been considering buying lately.  Caravans at Butlins in Skegness (I thought it might be an interesting non-standard investment, but I think it would be a lot more hassle than the very small return you might get). And hot air balloons (which would be very interesting, but has more upkeep costs than either a caravan or a boat, in that you would need to get and maintain a special private pilot’s licence).

Interestingly, all three would probably have the side-effect of needing a much bigger car with a tow bar.

Tweets on 2008-03-19

  • Belatedly realising that wannedring around council whistling The Red Flag could be misconstrued #
  • Just giving planning permission for an ice-cream parlour. Sorely needed in Nottingham. #
  • Unbelievable! Residents’ meeting ended in 25 mins with no new issues. Definitely home in time for Torchwood. #
  • Almost relieved to be back to Land of my Fathers again after this afternoon’s red flag incident. #
  • Watching Torchwood. It’s pretty weak. #
  • Ha! Torchwood prop is a Vosene bottle painted silver! #

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Political dynasties

There’s something a little strange about political dynasties in a democracy.  Two Bushes in the Whitehouse. The Benn family. The attempts of Prescott fils to get onto the green benches.

But nothing quite as strange as Matthew Taylor’s discovery. He was adopted, and didn’t discover his birth parents’ history until late in life.  Taylor was elected to parliament at the young age – long before he discovered his great-grandfather had also been an MP.  It’s a fairly exclusive club, so quite a co-incidence to discover a relative you didn’t know you had was also a member.

New design

The tuit fairy (1) has arrived and I have wasted spent a few hours redesigning the layout of the blog and updating all the plugins, so that I am now bang up to date across the board. Wonder how long that will last.

In the process, I seem to have killed the blogroll. This may not be a bad thing – many of the entries were to colleagues who have shuffled off this mortal blogosphere.

But there are some 114 115 blogs I read regularly according to my Google Reader OPML and it would be nice to reflect this in the gaping void in column three over there –>

Apart from anything else, it’s part of the community of bloggers to have links to the people you read.

Nothing I have tried has quite worked. I don’t want to enter the full 115 into the WordPress links manager. Various weird things have happened when I have tried to use Google Reader’s “clip” function, including disabling my entire website, apparently for me only. Dataflame’s live customer service people managed to fix it, but I am not entirely sure what went wrong.

Bah. Any good OPML widgets out there?

I have also finally succumbed to the near ubiquitous Lib Dem Buttons. Not least since I was asked to design one recently!


(1) tuit fairy, brings the round tuit. As I will do that when I get a round tuit.  Pronounced too-it not tweet. Got there yet?

Tweets on 2008-03-17

  • @miketd I only found out about Duffy when you blogged about her, and my other half had the same reaction. #
  • Church newsletter says "Alleluia, Christ is risen!" Bit premature, seeing as how he hasn’t been crucified yet. #
  • Still, it has led to Welsh hymn tune Hyfrodol replacing Welsh national anthem Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau as the thing going round my head. #
  • Parade for St Patrick in city centre looks very busy. #
  • Wondering if there’s something wrong with Nottingham phones – weird things happen when I try and phone out. #
  • Off downstairs to prod the chicken soup again #

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