Author: Serkadis

  • Hyundai Sonata Hybrid, Turbo confirmed for 2010 New York Auto Show

    The 2010 New York Auto Show is just around the corner and Korean automaker has something special planned for the Big Apple. Delivering the news through Twiter, Head of Product Planning Scott Margason said to look out for the “2011 Sonata Turbo and Hybrid at the 2010 New York Auto Show.”

    The 2011 Hyundai Sonata is currently on sale with prices starting at $19,195 for the base GLS model. Power for the 2011 Sonata GLS comes from a 2.4L direct-injected 4-cylinder making 198-hp and 184 lb-ft of torque. The 2011 Hyundai Sonata SE starts at $22,595 and is powered by a 2.4L 4-cylinder uprated to 200-hp.

    Click here for more Hyundai Sonata news.

    2011 Hyundai Sonata:

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Twitter


  • 2011 Hyundai Sonata Turbo and Hybrid will debut in New York

    Filed under: , ,


    2011 Hyundai Sonata SE – Click above for high-res image gallery

    When we got our first in-person look at the 2011 Hyundai Sonata at the Los Angeles Auto Show, we were pretty impressed with what we saw. The Korean automaker delivered on expressive design for its all-important midsize offering while promising a potent 198 horsepower, 2.4-liter four-cylinder engine with a class-leading 35 miles per gallon highway. But the promises didn’t end there. Hyundai also mentioned that it would utilize a turbocharged and direct-injected four in place of a V6 offering, and a hybrid version of the Sonata that utilizes technologically advanced lithium polymer batteries. But we haven’t heard much about the turbo or hybrid models post-LA, until now.

    Product Planning head Scott Margason reportedly popped onto Hyundai’s official twitter page to inform us that the 2011 Sonata Turbo and Hybrid would make their grand entrance at the 2010 New York Auto Show. With three distinct variants of the Sonata and a price of entry under $20,000, Hyundai could stand to gain quite a bit of street cred (and market share) in the hyper-competitive midsize segment. We can’t wait for details on specs, but with the media days at the New York show scheduled to start March 31, we reckon we’ll know soon enough.

    [Source: Twitter]

    2011 Hyundai Sonata Turbo and Hybrid will debut in New York originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 15:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Tax increase backers protest budget cuts in Springfield

    More than 1,000 people who depend on Illinois government for services and paychecks are visiting the state Capitol to lobby for higher taxes.

    They say the state cannot fix its $13 billion deficit solely through spending cuts. They argue that such deep cuts would gut state programs, from road repairs to prisons to addiction treatment.

    They held a rally Wednesday and then fanned out through the Capitol to lobby individual lawmakers.

    The event was organized by the Responsible Budget Coalition, which includes groups such as Voices for Illinois Children, AARP and the Illinois Federation of Teachers.

    Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn supports a tax increase and wants to pass it this year. But the Republicans competing for his job say they would balance the budget without raising taxes.

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Census offers hope to jobseekers

    Chiquita Massey is looking for part-time work to bring in some extra cash when she retires from the Army later this year.

    Julie Shirley hasn’t yet found a full-time job in her field.

    Both of them – and thousands of others – are turning to the U.S. Census Bureau for temporary jobs this year. The bureau is recruiting part-time census takers for $13.50 an hour to help locate households and conduct interviews with residents.

    Already, roughly 5,000 people have applied and taken the census exam in the 14-county Peoria area. About 300 already have been hired and an additional 1,200 to 1,300 will be hired, said John Timerman, the local census office manager.

    “Generally, we’ve had pretty good results. I’m sure a lot of it has to do with the unemployment rate,” Timerman said. “The rural areas are harder to recruit people.”

    Massey of West Peoria tested on Tuesday at the city offices at Twin Towers in hopes of building her resume. “I’d like to find out how it works and understand the census better myself. It would be a good transition job.”

    Nationwide, an estimated 1 million people will be hired. The census, which is mandated by the U.S. Constitution to occur every 10 years, will take place in mid-March, and surveys are due April 1.

    The census serves as a funding tool for communities, as $400 billion a year is allocated to state and local governments.

    “It’s better to try and be employed these days than not give it a try at all,” said Shirley of Chillicothe. “I thought this would be right up my alley. I can relate to people easily and it’s not out of my comfort zone.”

    Former Peoria Heights Village Administrator Tom Horstmann characterized his experience in trying to get a census job as “an exercise in futility.”

    He hoped to become a local census office manager and first applied in fall 2008. He took a management test in Rockford because tests weren’t yet being offered in Peoria. After hearing nothing, he contacted the Chicago census office in January 2009.

    One month later, he was told officials were unable to find his materials or test. He filled out another application on Dec. 29 and learned his test score was 93 percent, but hasn’t heard anything since.

    “Like I have said all along, this organization does not impress me one iota,” Horstmann said. “No wonder they have so much trouble collecting accurate numbers. And yes, accurate numbers are key to municipalities and their futures.”

    The Census Bureau estimates that the community stands to lose up to $1,000 each year, for the next 10 years, for every person not counted in the census.

    Testing will continue through April. Any related job responsibilities likely will end in late July or early August.

    “Just because they took the test and they’re qualified doesn’t mean they still want the job. We have to keep the pool up. Once you hire them, they don’t always stick around either,” Timerman said. “It’s a constant flow of people.”

    Timerman noted if anyone has taken the test and passed, not to fret if they haven’t yet received a call. “We will be hiring left and right. It starts off slow and boils really quick.”

    Karen McDonald can be reached at [email protected].

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Astronauts unveil station’s new window on world

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) – In a highly anticipated grand finale to their mission, astronauts opened the shutters on the International Space Station’s new observation deck Wednesday and were humbled by “absolutely spectacular” views of Earth from inside the elaborate atrium of windows.

    The $27 million lookout opened each of its seven eyes one window at a time as the crews of the station and shuttle Endeavour carried out their third and final spacewalk.

    It was the moment everyone had been waiting for: The round central window – the largest ever flown in space – was the first exposed as astronauts inside cranked open the shutter as they sailed 220 miles above the South Pacific.

    “As expected, the view through window seven is absolutely spectacular,” space station commander Jeffrey Williams said. “When we have the others around it open, it will give us a view of the entire globe. Absolutely incredible.”

    Mission Control set the night’s mood by beaming up a recording of Jimmy Buffett’s “Window on the World.”

    “I don’t think space station’s ever going to be the same after this,” Mission Control said in a congratulatory call.

    The astronauts closed the round shutter covering the window, which measures 31 inches across, after three minutes to test the mechanisms. They repeated the process until all the windows were checked, opening the last two as the linked shuttle and space station flew above France and Greece.

    It was a satisfying conclusion to this construction mission for the 11 astronauts. Though Nicholas Patrick and Robert Behnken completed a multitude of other chores during Tuesday night’s spacewalk, including opening valves on an ammonia coolant line they previously installed on Tranquility, a new room that the astronauts connected to the space station last Friday.

    “Great job raising the curtains on the bay window to the world,” astronaut Kay Hire called out to the spacewalkers.

    “I look forward to the view from inside,” Patrick said.

    Mission Control wanted the shutters opened while the spacewalkers were still floating outside so the two men could intercede if something jammed. Behnken and Patrick stayed a safe 10 feet or more from the windows while the shutters were raised. The last thing NASA wanted was to have one of them inadvertently kick a window or bang it with a tool bag.

    The observation deck is part of Tranquility, a more than $380 million addition. Space shuttle Endeavour delivered the European compartments last week.

    The Italian-built dome – 5 feet tall and nearly 10 feet in diameter – is designed to offer sweeping 360-degree views of the home planet and outer space, as well as the space station itself. It’s not just for the crew’s viewing pleasure; a robotic work station will be installed early Thursday, providing direct views for astronauts when they operate the station’s big mechanical arm.

    Six trapezoid-shaped windows encircle the dome. In the middle is the circular window.

    During normal operations, the space station crew will be able to keep the round window unshuttered most of the time, along with a couple others. But the windows facing along the direction the outpost is orbiting will need to be closed, except during robotic operations, to protect the fused silica glass against micrometeorite strikes. Each window has four panes.

    The shutters swung open when the spacewalkers were back inside. The nearly six-hour excursion ended a little early because of the risk of elevated carbon dioxide levels in Behnken’s suit; he was fine, but flight controllers did not want to take any chances.

    Endeavour and its crew of six will depart the space station Friday and return to Earth on Sunday.

    The next shuttle visit has been delayed. Discovery had been scheduled to blast off in mid-March with spare parts and science experiments, but a string of unusually cold weather stalled preparations. The launch is now targeted for April 5.

    Only four more shuttle flights remain.

    On the Web

    NASA: nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/main/index.html

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Reports of crimes to Champaign-Urbana police

    Area police report  the following:

    CHAMPAIGN

    • Beverly Cinema, 910 Meijer Ave.: Woman’s wallet taken from counter where she had left it Monday.
    • Huber’s, 1312 W. Church St.: Window forced open Sunday but nothing apparently taken.
    • Wal-Mart, 2610 N. Prospect Ave.: Woman’s wallet stolen Monday from shopping cart.
    • 3900 block of boulder Ridge: Window broken Monday to get in vehicle; GPS unit stolen.

    URBANA

    • 1000 block of West Stoughton Street: Person tried to get in home about 2:35 a.m. Wednesday but fled when confronted by resident.
    • 1200 block of Linview Avenue: 85-year-old woman invited man she did not know into her home Monday to do work; her wallet was stolen.
    • 100 block of South Gregory Street: Vehicle door spray-painted between Friday and Tuesday.
    • 1800 block of Michigan Avenue: Black purse, black and white wallet, debit card, Social Security card, cell phone and iPod stolen from vehicle Sunday.
    • 800 block of West Oregon Street: Credit card reported stolen Monday.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Third defendant in Haigh murders pleads guilty for 30 years in prison

    URBANA — The oldest of a trio who murdered a Champaign couple in their home more than three years ago has been sentenced to 30 years in prison.

    Russell Pitcher, 52, pleaded guilty Wednesday morning before Champaign County Judge Heidi Ladd to the July 1, 2006, first-degree murder of Jerry Haigh.

    Pitcher was serving a prison sentence in Iowa for sexual exploitation of a minor when he was charged in February 2009 with murders of Mr. Haigh, 58, and his wife, Sue Haigh, 66.

    On July 4, 2006, the Haighs were found fatally beaten and stabbed in their home in the 1700 block of Scottsdale Drive. Their murders went unsolved for more than a year until co-defendant Crystal Myrick 32, implicated herself, her former boyfriend Kenneth Sean Kelly, 37, and Pitcher in the brutal slayings.

    Kelly pleaded guilty first to Jerry Haigh’s murder in August 2008 and was subsequently sentenced to 50 years in prison. Myrick was tried for the murders in October 2009 and convicted of both. Ladd sentenced her to natural life in prison.

    At Myrick’s trial, Pitcher testified that all three of them went to the Haigh home on July 1, intent on robbing the couple. Kelly claimed to have known the couple and believed that they kept money in their house.

    While all three defendants gave differing versions of how the murders were carried out, it was clear  all three were present. And all three admitted they participated in mopping up the bloody scene with bleach and other cleaning fluids that stymied Champaign police in their efforts to gather physical evidence.

    But for Myrick’s own admissions after her conviction and eight-year prison sentence for residential arson in 2007, the murders might still be unsolved.

    Because of Pitcher’s willingness to testify at Myrick’s trial — he admitted he twice cut Mr. Haigh’s throat — Assistant State’s Attorney Troy Lozar offered him the plea to 30 years. He will have to serve 100 percent of that sentence.

    Urbana attorney Tom Koester was appointed to represent Pitcher.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Man charged over stolen car in high-speed chase

    URBANA – A Champaign man who led police on a high-speed chase through parts of the city early Saturday has been charged with possession of a stolen vehicle.

    Amandre McGill, 23, who listed an address in the 700 block of North Prospect Avenue, was arrested about 12:10 a.m. after he was found hiding under a porch in the 300 block of Elmwood Drive.

    A Champaign police report said an officer tried to stop a car with expired registration on Walnut Street in downtown Champaign around midnight Friday.

    The car took off fast, running at least three red lights and almost hitting two Mass Transit District busses. Because of traffic and the speed of the fleeing car – estimated at more than 70 mph – police ended the pursuit.

    Not long after, the car crashed into a parked truck at the corner of Clark and Flora streets and its two occupants fled.

    When residents of the 300 block of Elmwood reported someone trying to get in their house, police searched and found McGill hiding under a porch.

    Police also learned that the car had been stolen late Friday night from the Circle K on North Lincoln Avenue in Urbana. It belonged to Enterprise Rent-A-Car.

    The passenger who got out and ran was charged with misdemeanor obstructing a peace office.

    McGill was released from the county jail after posting bond Tuesday. He is due back in court March 30.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Restaurant owner Lorenzetti is mourned

    Visitation will be held Thursday for longtime Southland restaurant owner Carlo Lorenzetti, who died Sunday at age 79.

    Mr. Lorenzetti owned Carlo’s Restaurant in Chicago Heights; Livio’s Restaurant & Bar ion St. John, Ind.; and Gourmet Pizza by Carlo in Flossmoor. He died at Ingalls Hospice in Harvey.

    Mr. Lorenzetti loved his customers and the feeling was mutual, daughter Carla Lorenzetti said today.

    “We’ve heard from so many people. It’s just been unbelievable. He touched so many people,” she said.

    Visitation will be from noon to 9 p.m. Thursday at Panozzo Bros. Funeral Home, 530 W. U.S. 30, Chicago Heights.

    A funeral Mass will be said at 10 a.m. Friday at Infant Jesus of Prague Church in Flossmoor.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Federal deficit at $430.7B through January

    The federal deficit through the first four months of the budget year is running at a record-breaking pace, even though the deficit in January was slightly smaller than expected.

    The massive tide of red ink reflects the continued fallout from a deep recession and a severe financial crisis. It highlights the formidable challenges President Barack Obama will face in trying to get the deficit down to more manageable levels.

    The Treasury Department said today that the deficit for January totaled $42.63 billion. That left the total of red ink so far this budget year at $430.69 billion, 8.8 percent higher than last year, when the deficit soared to an unprecedented level of $1.42 trillion.

    Obama, in sending Congress a new budget plan on Feb. 1, projected that this year’s deficit would hit $1.56 trillion and would remain above $1 trillion for three consecutive years. He forecast the 2011 deficit, for the budget year that begins next Oct. 1, would total $1.27 trillion.

    The administration today marked the anniversary of the passage of the $787 billion economic stimulus bill, maintaining that it has worked to stave off a second Great Depression while acknowledging that more must be done to put people back to work.

    While Republican critics have attacked the stimulus spending as ineffective, Obama said it had kept up to 2 million people on the job and the government needed to do even more to fight an unemployment rate that currently stands at 9.7 percent.

    However, the administration contends that it will begin to tackle the deficit problem in 2011. In his budget, Obama offered a down-payment on deficit reduction, a three-year freeze on discretionary government spending outside of defense and homeland security.

    Obama on Thursday plans to announce creation of a deficit panel headed by Erskine Bowles, a former White House chief of staff in the Clinton administration, and former Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.).

    The commission will be charged with reporting back by the end of this year on what steps Congress and the administration should take to get the deficit down to a level of 3 percent of the overall economy, a point that economists believe is manageable. Last year’s deficit equaled 9.9 percent of GDP, the highest point since World War II, and would climb to 10.6 percent of GDP this year.

    The $42.63 billion deficit for January was down from a $63.46 billion deficit in January 2009 and was below the $47 billion forecast of private economists.

    But the January imbalance still marked a record 16th straight month that the government’s books have been in the red, going back to October 2008.

    Through the first four months of the current budget year, outlays total $1.12 trillion, down 3.9 percent from the spending through the same period in 2009. But revenues, hurt by the lingering impact of the recession on tax receipts, were down even more, falling 10.4 percent to $693.02 trillion for the period from October through January.

    The huge deficits are being caused by the impact of a severe recession, which has trimmed the government’s tax receipts and raised spending on such programs as unemployment insurance and food stamps. The deficits also reflect the billions of dollars being spent from the $787 billion stimulus program passed in February 2009 and the $700 billion financial bailout program Congress passed in October 2008 to stabilize the banking system.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Brosnahan leaves office early

    Burke likely to be appointed to finish term

    State Rep. James Brosnahan (D-Evergreen Park) abruptly ended his legislative career this week, retiring almost a full year before his term ends.

    While Brosnahan announced last fall he would not seek re-election to another two-year term, he was expected to serve the remainder of his current term, which ends in January 2011. Instead, he quietly left Springfield last week, filed a resignation letter and plans to focus more fully on his law practice. The city of Blue Island recently hired him as chief legal counsel.

    Brosnahan’s decision sets in motion a process to immediately replace him. The Democratic township and ward committeemen of the 36th District will vote on a candidate to fill the seat for now. Consensus is building around Kelly Burke, of Evergreen Park, who won the Democratic nomination Feb. 2.

    Burke beat a fellow Democrat, Michael Macellaio, who was supported by House Speaker Michael Madigan (D-Chicago). So far, Madigan is open to seating Burke, even though he fought hard against her during the primary.

    If she receives the appointment, Burke gains an advantage heading into the fall election, during which she’ll face Republican Richard Grabowski, of Hometown. She’ll have a few months of legislative experience under her belt, a leg up on fund-raising and a wealth of contacts.

    Burke said Wednesday she is interested but wants to take a few weeks off after a grueling primary.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • The Peabody Petition to the EPA by Robert Ferguson, SPPIblog.com

    Article Tags: PETITION, Robert Ferguson

    Peabody Energy has filed a petition [executive summary] with the EPA asking them to reconsider their findings that greenhouse gases released by human activities “threaten the public health and welfare of current and future generations.” The Peabody Petition was filed in light of the massive evidence of the manipulation of the IPCC process—a processes highly prized by the EPA—which has been exposed by the Climategate emails. The EPA conducted little-to-no assessment of their own into the science of climate change, but instead relied heavily on the work of the IPCC—work which the Petition shows, in no uncertain terms, is tainted and unreliable.

    The full Petition is one of the strongest cases yet presented that the EPA’s reliance on the IPCC Assessment Reports is misplaced, scientifically as well legally. It includes an in-depth look at the behind-the-scenes manipulation that took place with such topics as the “hockeystick,” tree-ring divergence, the “trick,” the warm early Holocene, the Medieval Warm Period, the surface temperature record, Freedom on Information requests, scientific peer-review, journal contents, and many other topics.

    Here is an excerpt (from the 200+ page Petition) that provides a general summary of the science problems:

    Source: sppiblog.org

    Read in full with comments »   


  • CHART OF THE DAY: If You Thought The American Economy Was Juiced By Stimulus, You Haven’t Seen Anything Yet

    For all the criticism about massive U.S. stimulus spending ‘not working’, and warnings of an imminent economic downturn once stimulus is removed, here’s a simple rebuttal — most of the administration’s stimulus spending hasn’t even hit the economy yet. Thus it’s absurdly premature to judge its impact or fear its withdrawal.

    As shown by the pie chart below, only 1/3 of the U.S. recovery stimulus from the The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 has been used so far. The amount spent and amounting from tax cuts is only 35%, in blue below, according to stimulus watchdog Propublica.

    Almost 2/3 of the stimulus is still on the way, as shown below in shades of red.

    The stimulus wasn’t meant to be entirely spent in 2009, but rather over the course of multiple years. Thus it is completely disingenuous to decry the total stimulus cost in relation to the current economic rebound — since this stimulus program has just begun. Wait to see it actually hit.

    For investors, this means that the U.S. economy won’t be forced off of life support any time soon. Stimulus is far from surefire, but the wind will remain behind your back in 2010. Note the stimulus even includes massive amounts of tax cuts for those who think markets know better than government in these matters:

    chart of the day, stimulus spending


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  • More Assassin’s Creed 2 DLC hitting tomorrow

    No more need for Ezio to stay his blades any longer, the next round of downloadable content for Assassin’s Creed 2 is hitting the online stores tomorrow.

  • Images from Ash Wednesday services

    Click image to close

    Gallery Image

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    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • BREAKING: Three Tesla executives killed in Palo Alto plane crash

    A plane crash this morning in a residential neighborhood in East Palo Alto, killed three people onboard said to be Tesla Motors executives.

    According to SF Gate:

    The plane crashed on the 1200 block of Beech Street near Pulgas Avenue about 7:55 a.m., said Lt. Ray Lunny of the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Department. A house on the street was damaged and the plane destroyed three cars, Lunny said, but there were no reports of injuries on the ground.

    Ian Gregor, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration, said the plane was a twin-engine Cessna 310 that had taken off from Palo Alto Airport, about a mile to the southwest, and was bound for Hawthorne Municipal Airport in Los Angeles County.

    The plane was owned by Doug Bourn a senior electrical engineer for Tesla Motors, the electric-car company said. Tesla has yet to release a statement about the crash.

    Update: It has been confirmed via Twitter that CEO Elon Musk was not on board.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: SFGate


  • Geneva Preview: 178-hp Volkswagen Polo GTI revealed

    Filed under: , , ,

    2011 Volkswagen Polo GTI – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Volkswagen‘s taken the wraps off its all-new Polo GTI ahead of its official debut at the Geneva Motor Show, and while the hotted up hatch appears to be a scaled down version of its Golf brethren, it’s more devoted to the original GTI’s ethos than its larger sibling.

    Sharing an engine with the SEAT Ibiza Cupra, the Polo GTI packs a 178 horsepower and 184 pound-foot punch from its turbo- and supercharged 1.4-liter gasoline-powered four. VW’s XDS differential receives power from a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox, allowing the GTI to scoot to 60 in 6.9 seconds and on to a top speed of 163 mph.

    Pricing hasn’t been set for the European market yet, but expect the GTI to carry a £18,000 sticker when it arrives in August. And if VW decides to pull the trigger and bring the Polo to the U.S., here’s hoping the GTI can sneak on board the ship. Press release after the jump.

    Continue reading Geneva Preview: 178-hp Volkswagen Polo GTI revealed

    Geneva Preview: 178-hp Volkswagen Polo GTI revealed originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 14:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • First round of DLC for RE5 now on Xbox Live, tomorrow for PSN

    Those who’ve played Resident Evil 5 as of late may have already downloaded the 163MB update to v2.00, compiling Versus Mode, the extra episodes, and Mercenaries Reunion into one convenient item on the main menu. For today,

  • The Series in Windows Phone 7 Series means regular “on the fly” OS updates

    windowsphoneIt has not been clear what the Series in Windows Phone 7 Series means.  Now PCMag has been able to clarify the strangely elongated name.

    Microsoft’s Rena Lunak explained "Series" means that Windows Phone 7 will be continuously updated, and that phones will be able to receive updates – just like Google Android phones or Apple iPhones. There will no longer be dot or even more minor point updates, in fact there will only be one Windows Phone 7s that can be upgraded on the fly.

    Of course this is great news. Now if Microsoft could only convey this without such a clumsy name…

    Read more at PCMag here.

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  • Overhauling Existing Infrastructure


    In its latest issue, Popular Science presents a set of ideas for renovating America’s out-dated infrastructural systems. In many cases, the ideas presented leapfrog existing infrastructural solutions and offer dramatic innovations. Popular Science argues that “the solution isn’t patches, it’s an overhaul.” A range of ideas are outlined for transportation, water, sewage, telecommunications, and other areas.

    Transportation

    Popular Science argues: “Chicago road crews are scrambling to fill 67,000 potholes a month. Communities in Pennsylvania rely on 100-year-old water pipes made of wood. Squirrels still cause widespread blackouts. The country’s 600,000 bridges, four million miles of roads, and 30,000 wastewater plants desperately need attention.”

    Use Elevated Trackless Train Systems: “To save the multibillion-dollar cost of clearing 24-foot-wide swaths for new track, trainmaker Tubular Rail wants to shoot trains up to 150 mph over existing infrastructure through a series of elevated rings 100 feet apart. As it passes through each ring, the 400-foot-long carbon-fiber car is pushed along by electrically powered steel rollers. To save juice, the motors gear up only as a train approaches; up to 90 percent of the kinetic energy of the train can be recaptured as the rollers wind down.”

    Integrate Concrete That Heals Its Own Cracks: To prevent additional bridge failures, concrete could heal itself when cracks form. ”A new concrete mix developed by Victor Li, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Michigan, contains unhydrated cement grains that are activated when exposed to carbon dioxide in air and water from rain—exactly what you’d find in a small crack in the road. The reaction produces a calcium carbonate seal, restoring the slab to its normal load-bearing capacity.” Read more transportation ideas

    Water 

    “Our water infrastructure is older than our roads and power grid, with many pipes sitting in trenches dug by hand in the 1800s. In parts of the Northeast, up to 50 percent of our clean water leaks into the ground between the treatment center and the tap. Across the country, we lose an average of seven billion gallons of drinking water a day to leaks—and we have an 800,000-mile network of pipes that needs constant monitoring and repair. We also use far too much energy treating all our water, regardless of its end use, and piping it long distances.”

    Mimic the Water Purifying System of Plants: “Plants pull water into their roots by osmosis, using tiny channels called aquaporins, a method that doesn’t require any energy. Now a Danish company called Aquaporin is developing a membrane based on that same principle to extract pure H20 from saltwater at about a third of the cost and a tenth the energy of conventional reverse-osmosis systems. The membrane’s protein channels, each just a few nanometers across, allow a stream of water molecules—and only water molecules—to pass single file at a rate of one billion per second. No pumps are needed to force the water across the channels.”

    Clot Leaking Water Pipes: “Scottish oil-and-gas company Brinker Technology has a no-dig system of pipe repair that mimics the way clots form at a cut. When a leak is detected, a service truck could drive to a nearby fire hydrant and pump in Platelets—squishy, rubberlike cubes and balls ranging in size from less than a millimeter to nearly two inches across, depending on the size of the leak. The Platelets travel in the pipe until the outflowing pressure pulls them toward to the crack. There, they bunch together to form a long-lasting clot. Utilities don’t even need to know exactly where the leak is located.”

    Reline Old Pipes Instead of Laying New Ones: “Another way of fixing broken pipe without summoning the backhoes is to coat it with a new inner lining—already common today in sewage pipes, which are under less pressure because they rely on gravity to move their contents along. But Missouri-based Insituform Technologies’s new InsituMain liner can withstand the internal forces of pressurized pipe, allowing in-place repair of drinking-water mains. Instead of a full-length trench, two access points (up to 700 feet apart) are cut on either side of the broken pipe. Then workers insert at one end a flexible liner made from a felt-and-glass-fiber composite and soaked in thermosetting epoxy resin and pull it through the inner walls of the crumbling pipe. Exposing the liner to steam or hot water stiffens and seals it, leaving it flush with the inside of the pipe.”  Read more water ideas

    Sewage

    “Every year, Americans produce 12 trillion gallons of wet sewage and burn 21 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity to clean it to drinking-water standards. Why not put the smelly stuff to good use? Thanks to clever new technology, sewage will be reclaimed to provide power, produce fertilizer and, eventually, yield clean water.”

    Turn Wastewater into Fertilizer: “Believe it or not, the wastewater of 100,000 people could yield an annual crop of about 200 tons of high-grade fertilizer. The Vancouver company Ostara hopes to use this fact to overcome our shrinking supply of recoverable phosphorus rock, one of three essential components of modern fertilizer. Ostara’s PEARL Nutrient Recycling system extracts phosphates and other minerals like ammonia from municipal wastewater and then churns the nutrients into safe, slow-release fertilizer pellets sold under the name Crystal Green. The challenge is sequestering the urine, which accounts for just 1 percent of sewage by volume. One solution: source-separated toilets (think: a little bowl within a big bowl), already being tried in Sweden and Denmark.” 

    Tap Sewage for Energy: “Bruce Logan, a professor of environmental engineering at Penn State University, has designed a microbial fuel cell to turn the chemical energy in sewage directly into electricity—and clean the sewage in the process. Bacteria housed on a graphite fiber anode break down the fats, proteins and sugars in sewage, freeing up a steady stream of electrons, which the bacteria transfer directly into the electrode. Those electrons move to the cathode, providing electrical power and, at the cathode, producing hydrogen gas.” Read more sewage ideas

    Image credit: Popular Science