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Vitamin_N

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Posts posted by Vitamin_N

  1. Quote

    Charlotte Douglas, or CLT, already ranks among the world’s 10 busiest airports

    It's good to be clear on what is meant by "busiest". You can define it by number of flights or number of passengers. Charlotte is #7 by the former metric and #23 by the latter.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_busiest_airports_by_aircraft_movements

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_busiest_airports_by_passenger_traffic#2023_statistics

     

    • Thanks 4
  2. 7 hours ago, carolinaboy said:

    Could someone more knowledgeable than I about electric vehicles enumerate for us the benefits of EV's over traditional internal combustion vehicles?

    The selling point of EVs is that they use lower amounts of greenhouse gases. This point has been overstated unfortunately as many calculations advancing the cause do not adequately account for the cost of everything that goes into the EV. For example, you need a bunch of lithium for those batteries, and mining is dirty work that uses a lot of fossil fuels. And more copper production will be needed to electrify everything and even current levels of copper production are problematic from an environmental perspective. The nation of Panama was recently shut down for weeks over a copper mine protest (here's the link, insert function not working for some reason: https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2023/11/30/panama-celebrates-court-order-to-cancel-mine-even-as-business-is-hit).

    That's not to say EVs can't work but the technology and infrastructure are far from ready for prime time. Two things in particular are needed:

    (1) lots of nuclear power plants--the EROEI (energy return on energy invested) of nuclear dwarfs any other fuel source and its carbon footprint is miniscule compared to any other energy source. EVs are currently mostly powered by coal or natural gas: (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_sector_of_the_United_States#Electricity_generation)

    (2) an order of magnitude breakthrough in energy storage. Chemical batteries won't do the trick, we need solid state electrical storage. This would make electrical cars as well as wind and solar power much more economical and the government wouldn't have to mandate anything.

    • Like 1
  3. 21 hours ago, CLT Development said:

    My parents went from Myers Park, to Blowing Rock, and then looked at a place at the Senior Living Tower recently and dear lord was it expensive, like $10,000 a month for a 800 sq foot one bedroom with no care included.

    Yep, I went to a presentation for the new tower on Morehead on behalf of my parents and iirc it was anywhere from $6k to maybe $15k per month depending on how big of a unit. The caveat I'd make is that they don't require a massive six-figure fee up front the way some other places do but they make up for it with higher monthly charges.

    • Thanks 1
  4. On 11/15/2023 at 11:02 AM, Windsurfer said:

    Did you forget nuclear?  After all, the bulk of our electricity in this area is from Maguire.  Biden is pro-nuclear and it looks like more generating plants will be approved.

    I  am well aware of nuclear and am in fact invested in a Duke Energy uranium supplier but it's a smaller source of electrical power nationwide. Gas is something like 40%, coal 20-25%, and nuclear 10%.

    Quote

    This argument of not enough "baseload generation" is getting old. I see it often on all the forums. Must be a talking point. 

    If it's that old then surely you have a rebuttal to it? I've yet to see one. "Must be a talking point" is snark. Do better. 

    • Like 1
  5. On 11/13/2023 at 1:13 PM, Windsurfer said:

    Two, the point of "EVs" is that they end CO2. 

    They don't though. They are most likely to be powered by coal and natural gas. "But what about wind and solar," one might ask... They're still a small proportion of total electric generation and they are not capable of providing baseload generation so in the absence of a quantum leap in battery technology and cost they will remain a sideshow. Moreover when talking about EVs you also need to take into account the tremendous amount of mining (and therefore energy for that mining) that would be needed to supply the additional lithium, copper, and other metals. It is not currently feasible to have electric-powered mining equipment.

    • Like 2
  6. On 3/25/2023 at 6:39 PM, kermit said:

    I found the very pro-development / pro-change attitudes so common in Charlotte to be a really refreshing change from the 'we gotta keep our college town a tiny college town forever' perspective of the Triangle.

    Chapel Hill is certainly an offender in this regard. There's a ring of retail just over the border since they don't want to approve filthy, dirty retail within their borders. Which is why you have, for example, the Walmart on 15-501 in Chatham County is literally 500 feet from the county line. Or the large shopping centers on the other side of 15-501 about 500 feet into Durham County. Or Southpoint Mall just two miles into Durham County. Not that Walmart is something to aspire to but a while back I had a real estate professor who owned a shopping center in Chapel Hill who loved it because the town's antipathy for retail meant he could charge higher rents.

    That said the development seems to have changed up somewhat in the last few years--there's more high-density residential (think beige Southend apartment buildings) than there used to be. But a lot of it's scattershot and not really being done within the context of an urban framework.

    • Like 2
  7. 2 minutes ago, Reverie39 said:

    Hm. I would have expected Charlotte metro to be approaching or at the 3 million park close to 2030.

    It's growing by about 30k per year in that table so if you extrapolate that 3 more years you're at 2.96MM, give or take

  8. On 4/4/2022 at 11:20 AM, atlrvr said:

    So last Friday (on April Fools Day no less) a rezoning was filed for a site plan amendment.  The sole purpose of the request was to reduce/remove the left-hand turn lanes from Baldwin onto 3rd (from both directions, the neighborhood and coming from 4th), add a bike lane, and to slightly adjust the cross-walks.  The justification was to accomodate CDOT proposed intersection improvements.

    I mean, I'm not sure if this was a technical requirement that CDOT needed (and is paying for this rezoning) or if this is some sign of life here.

     

    There was a stoplight on the rezoning amendment, was that on the original site plan? In any case, the light and crosswalks will make that section of the road a lot more pedestrian-friendly. I live a few blocks from there and I've dashed across 3rd street many a time as there is nowhere to cross between Queens and Charlottetowne.

    • Like 4
  9. 8 hours ago, CharlotteWkndBuzz said:

    Sorry for off topic but I’ve said years ago this is the biggest, most underutilized, secret green space in uptown that majority of ppl don’t even know exists. Would be a nice sized dog park. Honestly  surprised it hasn’t  been developed being right off the light rail stop.

    Yes! It was even nicer (and more secret) before they took down the hedges surrounding it several years ago. I used to go there during lunch occasionally for a bit of quiet time in a green space and there was never more than 1 or 2 people there.

  10. 15 hours ago, CarolinaDaydreamin said:

    The increase in cost is due to extremely high demand more than it is parts increase. Its like the old Yogi Berra quote "nobody goes there anymore bc its so crowded".

    I can't speak to the demand side of the equation but commodities have been going nuts for the past year which is no doubt playing a big role in the cost increases. Chip shortages haven't helped either.

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