Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts

Friday, October 12, 2012

Housing is Boring – Trains are Not



Old Topic
I have a stack of reports on my desktop on the rosy outlook for housing. Even Las Vegas is showing signs of recovery. But please, stop already. I believe that every newspaper, trade magazine, and housing blogger (Et tu, Brute?) is looking for housing articles and lights at ends of tunnels. Sure housing will turn around, it HAS to. As I have written before it is just plain demographics and the current affordability of housing. Why wouldn’t housing sales go up with low prices and extremely low mortgage rates – some now as low as 3%.

So housing is boring. Is that shimmering glow on the horizon the nascent sun, giver of life? No, it’s the latest housing statistics from the feds. So please, just stop. It is worse than predicting the rise and fall of the stock market based on the fight plan of a flock of crows. So please just tell me once and while – like at the end of the quarter. I really don’t care what the affordability is in Kansas. Kansas of all places – home of rainbows, tornadoes, and munchkins. So please stop. I will try to follow my own ruminations and keep housing on the back burner for a while. No thanks needed.

Acela by Amtrak
New Topic
I have for the better part of two years beat the High-Speed Rail in California over the head with anything I could find: old railroad ties, lengths of steel rail, and stiff necked politicians all in an effort to find some reality in the notion of flying across California's Central Valley at 250 miles per hour. But your humble blogger here has had a small epiphany, but like a good politician I will not change my stance on the 100 billion dollar two-rail boondoggle underway in California.

We were traveling from New York to Boston just last week and took the Acela train. Now I know you Eastern-Seaboarders just role your eyes over us California provincials (with great justification), but I have to admit that the train is very cool and the most surprising thing is that it works. We left on time and arrived on time. It flew along the rails at what felt like speeds of almost a hundred miles an hour (it has gone to 150mph according to Wikipedia). It extends to Washington D.C. on the south and Boston on the north. It is one of the few Amtrak lines that make a profit. In fact (according to Wiki) the two lines (fast and local) through this corridor provides half of Amtrak’s total national revenue.

Trains are a heck of a lot more enjoyable than airplanes – especially today. United Airlines and other carrier’s economy seats were redesigned by a group sponsored by the Spanish Inquisition. After five hours in one of their seats you would confess to sleeping farm animals. Trains have wide aisles, you can actually watch your luggage from your seat, they serve free drinks (in First Class – which really isn’t worth it), and they actually deposit you in the heart of the city. Gee!

I know, I know, I have challenged the Cal HSR for years, and will continue to do so. We can’t afford it, period. No more than I can afford a Bentley GT Coupe (my favorite automobile), just because I want it doesn’t mean I will get one. Why doesn’t the governor try real hard to fix the current track alignment and equipment of the Coast Starlight that goes to LA along the coastal corridor. Make it work like the Acela (use the Four Season Hotel model of customer satisfaction) – everything is there – especially the most important element, people. It currently carries 1/10th the traffic of the Acela and makes less than 10% of the same revenue. Sadly the reviews tend to show the service and scheduling to be less than acceptable (actually awful) and this is biggest reason for its poor reception in California (GO HERE).

As any hotelier can tell you it is the service and the respect for your guests by the staff that is paramount and in the case of travel, adherence to schedules as well. But without competition or alternatives people will drive or fly. Governor don’t try and fix the problem with a new train – fix the old one.

I actually enjoyed the Acela experience (I’ll slap myself later).

Stay Tuned . . . .

Friday, April 6, 2012

The Top Ten Porta-Potties

What is it with this love of listing the top ten anythings in America? I just don’t get it. I ran across an article this week (HERE) that listed the best cities for raising kids, because like a good transient American, once you have a few of the rug rabbits you will move just to make the little munchkins and your life better. I really doubt it.

Grand Rapids was listed as the best, now I’ve been to Grand Rapids and yes it is pleasant (I have relatives who lived there, once), but please. Is it the best place in the whole country for families? It sits in the middle of the one of the most depressed economic regions in the country with some of the highest taxes, highest unemployment (which I heard was improving), and winters that are well just - winter. The article justifies their rankings but I just wonder. The next two are Boise, Idaho and Provo, Utah (well out of most normal air and interstate highway connections), and both are urban islands in the middle of huge tracks of desert and are far removed from denser coastal areas.

Following Provo are Youngstown, Ohio and Raleigh, North Carolina. The article states if you want excitement go to New York or Chicago. If you want glitz and glamour go to Miami. But if you to get home early enough to see the kids (I think most commutes in these cities are three minutes), and the value of your home never collapsed due to the bubble – then again it didn’t go up with the bubble either, and if you like the quiet life when you retire because your kids have escaped to the big city, these towns are for you. And please comment below, can’t wait to hear your justifications.

CNN just posted today their 10 Fastest Growing US Cities:
  • Charlotte, N.C. (Nice town)
  • Raleigh, N.C.
  • Cape Coral, Fla.
  • Provo, Utah (again!)
  • Austin, Texas
  • Las Vegas (no, really?)
  • McAllen, Texas (you have got to be kidding)
  • Knoxville, Tenn. (my niece just moved there)
  • Greenville, S.C.
  • San Antonio, Texas (just don’t get it!)
With the exception of Austin and maybe Charlotte why would anyone uproot themselves to move to any of these places? And Las Vegas, it just beggars the mind.

But back to listing the five or ten Bests of Somethings (BOS). I have compiled my own list of city and urban top five’s, I tried to do ten but I was usually stumped after five, so here they are:

BOS towns for bagels:
  • Manhattan
  • Brooklyn
  • The Bronx
  • Staten Island
  • Miami
(do you see the common thread?)
BOS cities known for their reduction in front-yard lawns:
  • Phoenix
  • Scottsdale
  • Albuquerque
  • Manhattan
  • Yuma

BOS  Five communities for peace and quiet (GO HERE)
  • Sun City, Arizona
  • The Villages, Florida
  • Mesquite, Nevada
  • Any Del Webb – Pulte community
  • Grand Rapids, Michigan (see above)
BOS Cities with the best sidewalks:
  • New York City – most anywhere
  • Chicago’s Michigan Ave. and near Northside
  • Boston’s Faneuil Hall Marketplace Area
  • Scottsdale, Az. and Kierland Commons and Scottsdale Quarter (except for the crossing at N. Scottsdale Road
  • San Jose’s Santana Row
  • South Beach, Miami
  • Santa Barbara, Ca.
  • Savanna, Georgia
  • Seattle, Wash – some areas are just great
  • Washington D.C. Pennsylvania Ave. 
 (and why do most start with S?)

Not included:
  • Rodeo Drive – Please, should be renamed Rodeo Dive
  • Market Street, San Francisco – ongoing disaster after spending millions
  • Las Vegas – cluttered and almost dysfunctional – that’s why it’s fun
Every week we are bombarded with these lists. Top ten: Billionaires, Cars, Cruise lines, restaurants, colleges, and many, many others. But there are Top Ten lists that can’t be compiled: Politicians, Porta-potties, Lotteries, and Cold Callers. You might think about your own top ten’s, worth a conversation over a glass of wine. BTW, what’s your favorite top ten wines?

Stay Tuned . . . .