• The Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S E Performance is quite a name, quite a car
    arstechnica.com
    1,032 lb-ft The Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S E Performance is quite a name, quite a car Few four-doors eat corners quite like this one. It sounds pretty special, too. Jonathan M. Gitlin Feb 4, 2025 12:13 pm | 19 Credit: Jonathan Gitlin Credit: Jonathan Gitlin Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreMore than ever, automakers are clamoring to be part of Formula 1. Buoyed by Drive to Survive, the sport's reach rivals its popularity at any time in the past, despite having to compete with myriad more demands for our time. The carmakers get cachet from their participation, and just occasionally, something they build for the racetrack trickles down into something you can buy in the showroom. Such is the case with today's car, the (deep breath) Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S E Performance four-door.Although the team hasn't had the same amount of success since the introduction of ground effects in 2022, Mercedes-AMG won seven championships on the trot between 2014 and 2020. High Performance Powertrains, based in Brixworth, got the hybrid formula just right, eclipsing the power and drivability of rivals at Ferrari, Renault, and Honda and helping Lewis Hamilton secure more Grands Prix wins than anyone else in history.The boffins at Brixworth got together with their counterparts at Affalterbach, where the AMG gets applied to Mercedes. The result: This plug-in hybrid powertrain uses the same 2170 cylindrical cells in its battery pack as cars like the Mercedes AMG F1 W10 EQ Power+, albeit slightly more of them, as the road car has a capacity of 6.1 kWh (4.8 kWh net). The pack feeds an electric motor with a nominal 94 hp (70 kW) and 236 lb-ft (310 Nm), but it's capable of 201 hp (150 kW) for 10-second bursts. Mercedes already does an AMG version of the S-Class, but if you want something sportier and less plush, there's the AMG GT four-door coupe. Jonathan Gitlin Mercedes already does an AMG version of the S-Class, but if you want something sportier and less plush, there's the AMG GT four-door coupe. Jonathan Gitlin Pops, bangs, and crackles come out of this end. Jonathan Gitlin Pops, bangs, and crackles come out of this end. Jonathan Gitlin Mercedes already does an AMG version of the S-Class, but if you want something sportier and less plush, there's the AMG GT four-door coupe. Jonathan Gitlin Pops, bangs, and crackles come out of this end. Jonathan Gitlin That's only part of the AMG GT 63 S's powertrain, however. Under the hood is a hand-builtsigned, even4.0 L twin-turbo V8. And what a V8 it is, too, with 630 hp (470 kW) and 664 lb-ft (900 Nm) on tap and a soundtrack that makes you wonder if a World War II warbird is in the vicinity. The combined output of 831 hp (620 kW) and 1,032 lb-ft (1,400 Nm) is prodigious indeed.The powertrain has been tuned for power delivery, not maximum efficiencythat isn't the job of a car wearing the AMG badgeand has an almost-dizzying amount of drive modes, suspension settings, and levels of battery regeneration, all configurable from Mercedes' flat UI infotainment system that can be a little busy to look at but which remains very intuitive (and comes with rather excellent voice recognition). In fact, this might be the least-distracting implementation of MBUX I've encountered so far.When you first start the AMG GT 63 S, it defaults to electric mode, as long as the battery has some charge in it. Top speed is capped at 87 mph (140 km/h), and the electric motor has more than enough torque to make using this mode perfectly pleasant. Your neighbors will appreciate the silence as you leave in the morning, too. There are three levels of lift-off regen, up to the highest setting, which is a one-pedal driving mode. The Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S engine bay. Jonathan Gitlin The Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S engine bay. Jonathan Gitlin The engine plaque, signed by Roberto Nobile. Jonathan Gitlin The engine plaque, signed by Roberto Nobile. Jonathan Gitlin The front brakes are mighty indeed. Jonathan Gitlin The front brakes are mighty indeed. Jonathan Gitlin The engine plaque, signed by Roberto Nobile. Jonathan Gitlin The front brakes are mighty indeed. Jonathan Gitlin Comfort fires up the V8 as necessary but will defer to the electric motor whenever possible. It upshifts the nine-speed transmission early, and with the dampers set to Comfort as well, this is the mode you'd use with passengers on board. Because the car is meant to be a performance hybrid, the powertrain will use spare engine power to recharge the battery pack whenever it can and will fully charge the pack in about 30 minutes of driving.One mode maintains the battery's state of charge, another is for slippery conditions, and then there's Sport, Sport+, and Race. These offer escalating levels of performance, with more boost from the electric motor supplementing the raucous V8, faster shift times from the transmission, sharper throttle maps, and more regenerative braking. Finally, there's an individual mode for you to pick your own settings.Power delivery is biased toward the rear wheels, but the nine-speed transmission will send some of the V8's power to the front wheels if it detects a loss of traction at the rear.Race mode is probably a little too hardcore for most day-to-day driving, but the ability to decouple the dampers from the powertrain, and thus have the engine in Sport+ but the dampers in comfort, for example, means you don't have to sacrifice the throttle response or the chesty V8 soundtrack on roads with less than perfect tarmac. The interior is extremely red. Other less-red colors are also available. Jonathan Gitlin The interior is extremely red. Other less-red colors are also available. Jonathan Gitlin Rear seat comfort is not quite S-Class levels, but it's not bad. Jonathan Gitlin Rear seat comfort is not quite S-Class levels, but it's not bad. Jonathan Gitlin There's a bit of hump in the trunk for the battery pack Jonathan Gitlin There's a bit of hump in the trunk for the battery pack Jonathan Gitlin Rear seat comfort is not quite S-Class levels, but it's not bad. Jonathan Gitlin There's a bit of hump in the trunk for the battery pack Jonathan Gitlin Turn-in feels immense thanks to the 21-inch front wheels, and this AMG is a car that positively loves to corner. It's so eager to turn in, particularly if there's a little supportive camber, that I started to daydream of finding a banked oval to spend the day lapping. It also proved to be slightly more efficient than the numbers on the Monroney sticker indicatedover a week, I averaged 28 mpg (8.4 L/100 km).With a starting price of $194,900, the AMG GT 63 S E Performance four-door coupe is not a cheap car, but neither are rivals like the Porsche Panamera Turbo S. I was very pleasantly surprised by the AMG four-door, and I fell in love with how supportive its seats are, despite the bright red leather that would not be my first (or even fifth) choice for an interior color. But I do question whether it has sufficient curb appealdespite that F1-derived powertrain, the organizers at the launch of DC's F1 Arcade did not deem it worthy of a parking spot out front. It seems like Mercedes-AMG needs to do some outreach.Jonathan M. GitlinAutomotive EditorJonathan M. GitlinAutomotive Editor Jonathan is the Automotive Editor at Ars Technica. He has a BSc and PhD in Pharmacology. In 2014 he decided to indulge his lifelong passion for the car by leaving the National Human Genome Research Institute and launching Ars Technica's automotive coverage. He lives in Washington, DC. 19 Comments
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  • Grand canyons formed on moon in minutes after colossal asteroid strike
    www.newscientist.com
    A view of two large canyons on the moon radiating from the Schrdinger basinNASASVSErnie T. WrightA vast impact crater near the moons south pole was formed by an asteroid moving at more than a kilometre a second, releasing energy when it struck equivalent to 130 times that of all the nuclear weapons in existence. Now, researchers say two unusually narrow and straight canyons that splay out from its centre were formed in less than 10 minutes by a chain of secondary debris impacts.David Kring at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, Texas, has researched the 312-kilometre-wide Schrdinger crater for 15 years. Part of that was to develop possible landing sites for NASAs Constellation programme which sought to return people to the moon but was ended in 2009. The canyons radiating from it have long fascinated him.Theyre basically hidden, in some sense mysterious, because theyre on the far side [of the moon], says Kring. And so theyre commonly overlooked.AdvertisementTo learn more, Kring and his colleagues have now used computer models to investigate the origin of two canyons, or rays, that extend northwards from the crater. One is Vallis Schrdinger, which is 270 kilometres long and 2.7 km deep, while the second, Vallis Planck, is 280 km long and 3.5 km deep. For comparison, the Grand Canyon in Arizona is 446 km long and up to 1.9 km deep.But while that was carved by water over millions of years, the lunar canyons are clear, straight grooves formed by vast impact forces in less than 10 minutes, says Kring. The dramatic asteroid strike would have spread dust and rubble over the whole of the moons surface, but also into space and onto Earth. Untangle the weirdness of reality with our subscriber-only, monthly newsletter.Sign up to newsletterThe researchers suggest that it would also have driven debris across the lunar surface fast enough to cause craters outside the main one, and these could have been focused into narrow regions by irregularities in the regolith, the loose material that coats the moon.With their models, the researchers calculated that an asteroid impact an estimated 3.81 billion years ago would have been capable of creating the required speed and direction of debris to create the canyons.You have rock thats hitting at a kilometre per second, maybe 2 kilometres per second, and that can be devastating, says Kring. We knew that the Schrdinger impact produced these rays, but the processes involved needed some detailed attention.Kring says the findings will be reassuring for NASAs Artemis III mission to put astronauts on the moon in the region of the south pole, as the ejected regolith from Schrdinger wont be deep enough in any of the proposed landing spots to seriously hamper geology experiments. If they had been planning to land north of Schrdinger, where far more material landed, then they would have faced an extremely deep layer that masked earlier geology.A view of the canyons looking straight down at the moons surfaceNASASVSErnie T. WrightMark Burchell at the University of Kent, UK, says the research goes some way to prove that the canyons are formed by chains of impacts, but doing so for sure would require up-close investigation.The ultimate proof would be someone bringing back a rock from one of these canyons, or some rocks, says Burchell. Then you just cut them up and there will be grains of minerals in there which have been shocked [by impacts], and some of them have changed their structure as a result.Journal reference:Nature Communications DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-55675-zTopics:the moon
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  • The shocking discovery that our gut microbiome drives ageing
    www.newscientist.com
    HealthA new understanding of our relationship with our "friendly" gut microbes shows they actually have a dark side and help cause ageing. Here's how to fight back 4 February 2025 Yehrin TongAs human beings, we are all keepers of a vast menagerie. Every surface of our bodies, inside and out, is teeming with microorganisms. We have microbiomes on our skin, in our mouths and other orifices and especially in our intestines.In recent years, we have grown accustomed to thinking of these internal residents as benign, even essential to our health. Our guts are said to be full of friendly bacteria and other microorganisms that do us favours in return for us giving them a cosy home. That is true to some extent, but new research on the role of the gut microbiome in ageing is pointing to what would constitute a profound rethink of this relationship.In this emerging view, our gut microbes arent our friends, but an enemy at the gates. Far from being mutually beneficial, our relationship with them is more like a war of attrition a war we eventually lose. However, there are ways to postpone the inevitable.The gut microbiome is a community of perhaps 100 trillion microorganisms bacteria, archaea, fungi and viruses that dwell inside our intestinal tract, most abundantly in the colon. It is established early and stays with us throughout our lives, though it is in constant flux. Its a very complex, very dynamic community that depends on what we eat, who we interact with, says Dario Valenzano at the Leibniz Institute on Aging Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI) in Jena, Germany.The ageing microbiomeIt also changes as we age. For most of our lives, the composition
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  • I tried 5 different kinds of canned chili, and there's only one I'd eat again
    www.businessinsider.com
    Updated 2025-02-04T18:17:58Z Read in app I tried chili from brands Hormel, Wolf Brand, Amy's, and Campbell's to find the best option. Abigail Abesamis Demarest This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? I reviewed five kinds of canned chili from the supermarket to find the best-tasting option.The meat-free version of Amy's chili was tasty, but Campbell's Chunky chili mac was my favorite.Still, none of these canned versions even held a candle to homemade chili.Chili is warm, comforting, and filling, but it requires a fair amount of chopping and simmering to build those complex flavors. Fortunately, canned options offer a cheap and convenient way to enjoy the classic meal.To find the best option out there, I reviewed five kinds of canned chili from Hormel, Wolf Brand, Amy's, Campbell's Chunky, and Campbell's Well Yes.I compared versions with beans and heated up each chili in the microwave following the instructions on the respective cans for consistency's sake. Here's how they stacked up. Hormel's take had what I'd consider a classic, canned-chili taste.Hormel's chili contained a lot of beans. Abigail Abesamis Demarest When I think of canned chili, I think of Hormel's, so I tried it first.I followed the can's instructions and warmed the chili in a microwave-safe bowl for two to three minutes, stirring halfway through.Hormel's chili was the most bean-forward. Each bite was mostly beans. Theflavor was very mild, and I couldn't pick up much spice.I didn't even notice the Amy's chili was meat-free.Amy's chili has tofu chunks instead of meat. Abigail Abesamis Demarest This meat-free take on chili has bits of tofu in it, but it's so convincing I didn't realize it was vegetarian until reading the can afterward. I heated it up in the microwave for two minutes.I thought it was the best-looking chili of the bunch with a thin, pourable consistency.I could smell and taste the bell peppers, which gave the chili a nice, bright profile. There was a lightness to the flavor and texture that I also enjoyed.Amy's take had a more homemade taste to it. It's labeled as a medium chili, but I didn't find it too spicy, despite having a low tolerance.Wolf Brand's chili had a smoother consistency and a lot more spices.Wolf Brand's chili would pair nicely with cheese to make a dip. Abigail Abesamis Demarest I needed to take out my can opener for this chili, as it was the only one without a convenient pull tab.Upon taking it out of the microwave after two minutes, I noticed a skin had formed on top of the chili. Fortunately, when I mixed it in, it didn't seem to impact the texture or flavor.I got a lot more spice from Wolf Brand's chili but no heat. The spices were the predominant taste, with the beans adding a little texture but not a lot of flavor.This option was also much smoother than Hormel's. I could see this pairing well with cheese for a delicious chili dip.Campbell's Chunky chili mac was surprisingly good.Campbell's chili mac had a noticeable tomato flavor. Abigail Abesamis Demarest Faced with limited options at the supermarket, I decided to throw this chili mac into the mix.Like Amy's chili, this Campbell's Chunky meal had a pourable consistency and was easy to transfer into a microwave-safe bowl. I heated it up for just under three minutes.This chili tasted better than it looked. The macaroni offered a surprisingly nice texture.Unlike some of the other options, which had a bean-forward flavor, the soft pasta made for a lighter bite that required less chewing.It was also the first chili I tried that had a noticeable tomato flavor. It wasn't gourmet by any means but it was pretty decent for a canned chili and had a nice, mellow taste.Campbell's Well Yes veggie chili would make a solid on-the-go option.This Campbell's chili comes in a microwave-safe container. Abigail Abesamis Demarest This soup comes in a microwave-safe container, which is convenient to take on the go.I heated it up for a minute and 15 seconds and gave it a stir before digging in. I thought the plastic lid was a little tricky to remove without touching the hot metal rim or spilling the chili.This veggie chili was the thinnest of the bunch, more reminding me of a minestrone soup. I liked that I could see the vegetables, but it just didn't scream "chili" to me.It was the spiciest of the ones I tried, but not overpoweringly so.None of these canned options compared to the rich flavor of homemade chili, but some were decently tasty.For great chili, I think you may be better off making a batch at home. Abigail Abesamis Demarest If you're a passionate chili fan, chances are the canned variety won't impress you. As found in this taste test, these options generally sacrifice flavor and texture for convenience.Though Amy's organic chili had a nice, bright flavor and was the best-looking of the bunch, I kept going back to Campbell's Chunky chili mac.I know pasta isn't a traditional ingredient in chili, but let's face it: None of these canned versions held a candle to the homemade stuff.For a microwaveable meal, the chili mac was pretty tasty. It's the one variety on this list I'd want to eat again.This story was originally published on February 2, 2022, and most recently updated on February 4, 2025. When you buy through our links, Insider may earn an affiliate commission. Learn more.
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  • 'New toys' are back on the menu at Apollo as it looks to M&A to grow
    www.businessinsider.com
    On the firm's final 2024 earnings call, CEO Marc Rowan said the firm is exploring "modest M&A."The firm's acquisition of Argo Infrastructure Partners is a "prototype" of what Apollo is planning.Instead of growth for AUM's sake, the firm plans to buy businesses that expand what it can invest in.One of Marc Rowan's favorite refrains as CEO of Apollo has been "no new toys." So central has been this philosophy of focusing on execution instead of growing through M&A or new initiatives that it was the theme of the firm's 2023 holiday video.That time has now passed, Rowan suggestedPointing to the firm's acquisition last month of Argo Infrastructure Partners, a $6 billion assets-under-management firm with a track record of infrastructure investments, Rowan said the firm plans to acquire companies that stand to help expand Apollo's lending capabilities."You should expect us to continue to do modest M&A along the same lines where we are quite focused on increasing our capacity to originate," Rowan said.Rowan's comments come amid a brightening picture for deals across the economy, stirred by the perception of a more business-friendly federal government and improving economic picture. At the end of last year, Apollo rolled out a five-year plan to double its private credit assets under management to $1.2 trillion.Rowan took care to say that the firm's dealmaking ambitions are "modest." He pointed to BlackRock's 2024 acquisitions in private credit and other alternative asset managers as an example of a broader convergence of public and private markets a key Apollo theme.BlackRock plans to buy private-credit firm HPS Investment Partners and private-market data platform Preqin for $12 billion and $3.2 billion, respectively, and has already purchased investors Global Infrastructure Partners for $12.5 billion.Apollo's acquisitions, by contrast, will be "small-scale" said Rowan, saying they will help the firm create more products for large public asset managers, like BlackRock, to access the private markets.Apollo's private credit ambitions have so far been fueled by its insurance arm, Athene, with Apollo using Athene's balance sheet to fund its lending needs. When asked about the possibility that some large insurance assets may soon come up for sale, Rowan responded by saying the firm isn't going to just grow for growth's sake."For us, growth is not just about growing the assets," Rowan said, adding that the firm already had to capital to lend a record $70 billion-plus last year. Instead, the firm wants to grow where it can lend, with Argo as a "prototype.""We are focused on expanding capabilities that can be immediately accretive buying something that in and of itself does not fit with our franchise," Rowan said. Apollo now has access to more than 20 individuals with experience investing in infrastructure, and those individuals now have much more capital to tap into and many more ways to invest.
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  • The far right is going green?
    www.vox.com
    In my view, climate change is real and it is an existential threat. My inclination is to take dams down.The toxic chemicals that pollute our air, our water, our soils end up in our own bodies. They ruin our health in the same way that they ruin nature.Those might sound like comments from a pretty typical environmentalist: a liberal Democrat who probably reveres the outdoors and enjoys hiking, thinks about their carbon footprint, and tries to eat less meat. Instead, they were spoken by a key member of President Donald Trumps coalition: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.In recent years, when hes appeared on podcasts and campaign ads, Kennedy whos on track to become the secretary of Health and Human Services often brought up environmental concerns, like how pesticides are poisoning Americans, and sang the virtues of healthy soil. A Senate panel voted on Tuesday to advance Kennedys nomination to the full Senate. A vote is expected in the coming days.Im an environmentalist, he told right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro last April. Kennedy has the credentials. He spent more than two decades working as an environmental attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), a mainstream green group, and later helped found the Waterkeeper Alliance, a nonprofit that advocates for clean water. He fought polluters including the coal industry, chemical companies, and the US Navy.Thats what makes his current political alignment so surprising: Kennedy is now firmly enmeshed in the far right, and part of Team Trump the single worst environmental president our country has ever had, according to some of Kennedys former colleagues. Trump, a climate-science skeptic, rolled back more than 100 environmental rules during his first term. And on his first day in office, he signed a raft of executive orders to boost oil and gas production and roll back environmental safeguards.RFK Jr. visits the Capitol on December 18, 2024, to meet with West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito. J. Scott Applewhite/Associated PressKennedy was a longtime Democrat, and his migration to the far right has shocked many of those who have known him. But hes not alone in this journey. Its part of a much broader shift in the environmental movement. For decades, most mainstream green advocacy groups and top environmental scientists have been largely aligned with Democratic policies and leaders. Now, however, many people who are advocating for conservation, including clean water, air, and soil, have fallen into the far right and voted Trump into power. Its not uncommon to hear right-wing influencers talk about regenerative agriculture or Kennedy supporters raising concerns about environmental pollutants. While its not clear how much power they will ultimately wield in the Trump administration, they represent a new and increasingly visible right-wing environmentalism or what sociologist Holly Jean Buck has called para-environmentalism.Kennedys rightward trajectory and new position within the MAGA movement are the latest indication that ideas that were once a core part of environmentalism are veering in a strange direction, Buck, an associate professor at the University of Buffalo, wrote in Compact magazine in November. Call it para-environmentalism. Like other para-phenomena, such as paramilitaries or the paranormal, para-environmentalism exists outside of the realm of official institutions and structures at least for now.Across even the farthest stretches of the political spectrum are shared environmental goals: healthier land and healthier people. Everyone wants that. What stands in the way of a more unified environmental movement is that different political blocs have wildly different approaches to making the planet healthier. People on the far-right tend to distrust institutions including science agencies and big green groups, which form the backbone of the mainstream environmental movement. Members of this group also oppose action that centers on carbon and climate change; their concerns are more local, whether about water quality or immigration and grocery prices.This leaves the modern green movement in a tough spot as it stares down four more years under Trump. How can its leaders work with a coalition of people who see them, the mainstream, as part of the problem and should they? Get in touch with us!Do you have feedback or a tip to share? Wed love to hear from you. Reach out to benji.jones@vox.com.Meet the far-right environmentalistConserving nature wasnt always considered at odds with the Republican Party. In fact, the movement to protect wildlife was born from the minds and actions of GOP leaders. More than a century ago, elite, Republican hunters most famously, Teddy Roosevelt witnessed the decline of charismatic species like bison and used their power to protect them. They supported, and in some cases helped create, environmental institutions like the national parks system.That legacy of conservation lives on to an extent in the modern Republican Party. The waning number of hunters and anglers of today still lean more conservative, partly due to their stance on gun rights. And by and large, they back mainstream conservation policies, such as protecting public access to federal land, said Aaron Weiss, deputy director at the Center for Western Priorities, a group that advocates for public lands. Theres also a crop of moderate conservatives, including many youth, who worry about climate change and support conservation and clean energy.This new brand of far-right environmentalism that Kennedy embodies is something different. My reporting, including more than a dozen interviews with sociologists, conservative influencers, and mainstream environmentalists, identified two loose and partly overlapping strains. One consists of those who rail against environmental toxins as part of Kennedys Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) coalition. Another comprises back-to-the-land libertarians who see salvation in growing ones own food, maintaining healthy soil, and embracing self-sufficiency.A controlled burn released a dark plume of smoke over East Palestine, Ohio, following the Norfolk Southern train derailment in 2023. Gene J. Puskar/Associated PressMAHA environmentalism is rooted in a fear that were all being poisoned that pesticides, food additives, seed oils, and chemicals in the air are the root of chronic illness in America. The perpetrators, they claim, are Big Agriculture, Big Pharma, and other big corporations. A core belief is that industries have infiltrated federal agencies like the Food and Drug Administration that should be keeping Americans safe. Many of the most outspoken MAHA figures promote and sell alternatives to conventional foods and health care, such as nutritional supplements. (MAHA figures including Kennedy also frequently assert that vaccines are unsafe and cause autism. Neither claims are supported by decades of scientific research.)I recently spoke with Reinette Senum, a blogger and former mayor of Nevada City, California, who has spoken out against what she says are covert efforts to manipulate the atmosphere. Senum, who identifies as MAHA, describes herself as a former environmentalist and recovering climate change believer.A number of experiences fueled her distrust of climate science. More than a decade ago, when Senum worked for a building-efficiency organization in California, she raised questions about whether retrofitting buildings is so resource-intensive that it actually offsets the climate benefits, she said. The managing director of the organization, known then as the California Building Performance Contractors Association, told her that those calculations didnt exist, she said. I believed in alternative energy, and I realized it was a lie, Senum said. Senum later had a smart meter installed in her home. Shortly after, she said, she started having trouble sleeping and became extremely sensitive to sound symptoms that she attributes to the smart meter. (Smart meters, as well as 5G and GMO foods, are all dubious for many in the MAHA movement, some of whom happen to reside in my hometown of Fairfield, Iowa.)Trump visits Valdosta, Georgia, on September 30, 2024, after it was hit by Hurricane Helene. Michael M. Santiago/Getty ImagesLike many other MAHA followers, Senum said she is worried about the environment, and the dark forces that pollute it, whether or not theyre visible. And like some mainstream environmental organizations, shes fighting against geo-engineering, large-scale modifications to the planets climate to limit warming, a field that is still largely experimental. The problem with left-wing green groups, Senum said, is that theyve become too fixated on the climate change boondoggle and have ignored what people are actually concerned about.Nobody talks about water quality, she said of left-wing environmentalists. They dont talk about air quality. They dont talk about pollution. They dont talk about heavy metals in the air. Or GMOs. The left environmental movement literally got infiltrated and usurped by climate change. Theyre so hyperfocused on that that theyre no longer focusing on the environment.A representative from Kennedys team told Vox that Kennedy was unavailable for an interview, in December. The representative did not respond to subsequent emails, including a detailed request for comment.The other, overlapping strand of far-right environmentalism is more focused on land and soil. A number of influential figures, including US Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and farmer Joel Salatin, advocate for locally grown food and farms that are free from the influence of Big Government and Big Business. Pastoral libertarians, as you might call them, glorify an earlier time before industrial agriculture, and are obsessed with the purity of what we eat and drink. What we are witnessing in the growing prominence of far-right environmentalism of recent years is a revival of an older kind of ecological and political thinking, a traditional attachment to home, to soil, to blood, Leigh Phillips wrote in Noema. Cattle on a ranch that practices regenerative agriculture in Cimarron, New Mexico. Mario Tama/Getty ImagesMuch of the far right has embraced regenerative agriculture a squishy term that broadly refers to farming practices that are meant to regenerate, or improve, the health of land rather than degrade it. These practices include planting cover crops that can improve soil health and avoiding chemicals that degrade it. Regenerative agriculture has caught on among far-right figures likely because it enables a person to have a more self-sufficient farm, requiring fewer inputs, such as pesticides made by big companies and subsidized by the federal government. Advocates of the practice say it also produces more nutritious food.Regenerative agriculture, its the truth, said RC Carter, a rancher in Wyoming who sells what he calls nutrient-dense beef. He didnt vote in the recent presidential election, doesnt trust most Democratic or Republican leaders, and resists being clumped into any one group. The only way you can get nutrient-dense food is if it comes from healthy soils, Carter told me.People are so confused and so lost, and if youre eating healthy food, that is a foundational piece to having clear thoughts.What unifies this new brand of environmentalismThe most apparent trait that unites these far-right perspectives is distrust of the government, of large scientific organizations, of big corporations. Distrust is so potent that even quality information produced by these institutions, whether on vaccine safety or climate change, doesnt break through and alter beliefs. I saw this firsthand in East Palestine, Ohio, following the train derailment in early 2023. There were legitimate criticisms of the government response, but government data on air and water quality had little bearing on whether residents, the majority of whom voted for Trump in 2020 and 2024, felt safe.But theres another, more opaque thread among right-wing environmental beliefs, according to Jesse Bryant, a sociologist at Yale University: a yearning for a religious or pseudo-religious purity. The idea here is that our ecosystems, our soils, our bodies, and our minds are polluted whether by pesticides or by liberal ideas and that makes it harder to access God, or spiritual enlightenment. Its very clear having spent a lot of time in far-right online spaces that purity and pollution binaries drive a lot of [right-wing] ideologizing, said Bryant, who studies environmental perspectives in far-right communities. This perspective likely stems from Christian culture and beliefs, a powerful force in right-wing politics. According to Christian teachings, human bodies are made in Gods image, and so they are naturally pure. Pollution, or impurity, is akin to sin. And sin can weaken our relationship with God. Similarly, from a New Age spiritual perspective more common among members of the MAHA coalition loading our bodies with impurities, which could include pesticide-ridden foods, is considered an impediment to reaching spiritual enlightenment.That these ideas influence political views are supported by a 2012 study published in Psychological Science. It found that people who identify as conservatives tend to be less concerned about the environment than those who identify as liberal, yet they are motivated to protect nature with messaging around purity. We found that reframing pro-environmental rhetoric in terms of purity, a moral value resonating primarily among conservatives, largely eliminated the difference between liberals and conservatives environmental attitudes, the authors wrote. In a conversation with right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson in August, Kennedy said, the reason that we protect the environment is because theres a spiritual connection. When we destroy nature, Kennedy said, we diminish our capacity to sense the divine, to understand who God is and what our own potential is and duties are as human beings.Ben Hickey for VoxIdeas around purity and nature have also been used over the years to justify racism and abuse. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the US government, in the name of protecting nature, forcefully removed Indigenous people from their lands to establish national parks. The very definition of wilderness areas promoted the idea that an unpeopled, wild landscape was pristine, pure, and unspoiled, even though Indigenous people lived on such lands for tens of thousands of years. These racist perspectives that people, and especially brown people, are an impediment to achieving the ideal nature were popular even among mainstream environmentalists in the 20th century. And theyve lingered. Trumps racist remarks about immigrants, such as saying in 2023 that illegal immigration is poisoning the blood of our nation, is merely another iteration of a purity-pollution dichotomy that has long been present among environmentalists.Seeds of truthMany of the environmental concerns raised by members of the far right, MAHA and MAGA alike, are rooted in fact. Pesticides can be dangerous, especially to farmworkers and native insects, including bees. Studies in rigorous journals have linked pesticide exposure to, for example, increased mortality in US adults, ADHD in children, and Alzheimers disease. Earlier this month, a study linked exposure to the herbicide Glyphosate to a reduction in birthweight.Industrial farming has utterly devastated native ecosystems across the Midwest and completely removed at least a quarter of the topsoil in the Corn Belt. Compared to that loss, regenerative agriculture no matter how you define it is a more sustainable option.A tractor sprays pesticides on a farm in Centreville, Maryland, on April 25, 2022. JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty ImagesMore than a third of Americans have at least one major chronic disease, such as diabetes, especially people who are living in the Southeast. And the prevalence of these illnesses is increasing, in part, because of poor nutrition. Big corporations and billionaires do influence US policy and government agencies, and its a problem. Federal and state lobbyists spent more than $46 billion between 2015 and 2023, according to OpenSecrets.Their concerns are grounded in real things, said Buck, the University of Buffalo sociologist and author of After Geoengineering: Climate Tragedy, Repair, and Restoration and Ending Fossil Fuels: Why Net Zero Is Not Enough.But although the far right is pointing out legitimate problems which concern mainstream environmentalists, too supporting Trump and deregulation is likely only going to make them worse.For example, if this new environmental coalition wants to solve the problem of corporate influence, theyre going to run into challenges: In Trumps first two years in office, his administration enabled unprecedented corporate capture of federal regulatory agencies, according to a 2019 report. The report outlines how, for example, the National Association of Manufacturers, a trade association, sent his administration a wish list of 132 regulations to act on, and his government followed through on the bulk of them. In his first term, Trump was incredibly friendly to polluters. His administration rolled back more than 100 environmental rules, including those meant to curb toxic air pollutants, limit pesticide exposure, and protect streams from coal mining debris problems caused largely by big companies. Under his administration, some EPA scientists say they were pressured to downplay the risks of new chemicals, according to reporting by ProPublica. Trump has already indicated that his new administration will be similarly favorable to Big Business and billionaires. In a December post on his platform Truth Social, he said, any person or company investing one billion dollars, or more, in the United States of America, will receive fully expedited approvals and permits, including, but in no way limited to, all environmental approvals. The process for getting project approvals is partly meant to ensure they dont harm US citizens or sensitive ecosystems. Trump, meanwhile, has already named former chemical industry executives to top posts at the Environmental Protection Agency. Elon Musk at Trumps campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on October 5, 2024. JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty ImagesMeanwhile, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk the worlds richest man, who helped propel Trump to victory has shown his ability to influence high-stakes government decision-making. Musk and other tech titans were key players in Trumps transition team, involved in hiring decisions for his incoming administration, the New York Times reported in December. Musk, along with Amazons Jeff Bezos and Metas Mark Zuckerberg who are collectively worth close to $1 trillion attended Trumps inauguration, and were seated in front of the presidents Cabinet picks.More broadly, a push to deregulate which Trump and his base widely support is at odds with efforts to curtail harmful chemicals and our exposure to them. Regulations are designed to prevent harmful substances from entering our soil, water, and air. This doesnt mean theyre working perfectly or doing enough or easy to follow, but pollution would likely be worse with fewer of those rules in place. Regulations are about setting a level playing field so that business can go out and do its job and earn profits, but make sure that you dont have bad actors out there skewing the playing field by harming folks because it benefits their bottom line, said Matthew Tejada, senior vice president of environmental health at NRDC. Without regulations, said Tejada, a former EPA senior staffer, you get a race to the bottom, meaning the worst actors the companies least focused on, say, reducing air pollution set the standard for other companies.Regulatory experts I spoke to were clear that if RFK Jr. wants to crack down on food dyes and pesticides, he would need to pursue new regulations and not tear existing ones down. His ability to do that will be limited, even if hes confirmed to lead HHS.I dont think hes going to beat Big Food, said Ken Cook, president and cofounder of Environmental Working Group, an advocacy organization focused on ridding environmental toxins from food and water. He cant walk down the hall to FDA and say, Hey, all these food additives are banned in Europe so were going to ban them here. Industry is going to push back and theyre probably going to win. This points to an obvious rift in the new administration and the modern Republican Party: Trump has curried the favor of billionaires and deregulatory crusaders and yet members of his coalition say they want to reign in corporate influence and pollution. But although those attitudes are at odds, it might not matter. Most people support Trump not because of his stance on environmental issues but because of his rhetoric around immigration and the economy. Its also not clear how large or powerful this new band of right-wing environmentalists really is, and whether they can really influence the administration. Some Trump administration appointments already seem to be in direct tension with the MAHA coalition. Fire engulfs a home in the Altadena area of Los Angeles on January 8. Research shows that climate change can worsen wildfires. Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty ImagesJust as support for Trump and deregulation is at odds with a desire for a healthy environment, so is an allergy to climate action.Many MAHA and MAGA people with environmental concerns tend to criticize clean energy and downplay the impacts of the oil and gas industry. Part of that belief stems from a rejection of globalization and hyper growth a more traditional conservative ideology. A self-sufficient, pastoral lifestyle doesnt mesh with a highly modern, massive solar farm that centralizes energy production (let alone the huge, power-hungry data centers that Trumps new friends in the tech industry demand to support the growth of artificial intelligence).These beliefs are reinforced by misinformation. This includes claims that lifetime carbon emissions of EVs are comparable or higher to combustion cars. (Theyre not.) Or that clean energy sources pollute the environment more than fossil fuels. (They dont.) Or that offshore wind turbines are killing whales. (Theres no scientific evidence to suggest that.)Theyre all made in China and when they explode which one did off of Nantucket a month ago they put shards into the water so you cant swim without getting cut, Kennedy said of offshore wind turbines on a podcast in September. (Last summer, blades of the turbine, which was manufactured by an American company, folded over and broke off into the ocean.) Theyre killing the whales. The environmental movement doesnt care. They built these and they are destroying the whale populations and everybody knows it.This isnt correct. The reality is that oil, gas, and coal have been federally subsidized for hundreds of years. Their staying power is in part the result of big government. Even if you ignore the impacts of climate change, these fuels have been definitively tied to air pollution including nitrous oxides, carbon monoxide, and ozone, compounds widely known to harm human health. A peer-reviewed study published in the journal Environmental Research in 2021 attributed more than 10 million premature deaths each year, globally, to air pollution from burning fossil fuels. Its not surprising that people who live near petrochemical plants have higher rates of cancer. (That doesnt mean clean energy sources are pollution-free theyre definitely not. But comparatively, they are a heck of a lot safer.)Then of course there are the impacts of rising temperatures, which are increasingly hard to ignore. The planet is about 1.3 degrees Celsius warmer today than it was in the late 1800s. Yes, there have been hotter periods in Earths past, but not during modern civilization and the warming has never happened this fast.Human populations and ecosystems are struggling to keep up with the rate of change. In the Florida Keys, for example, extreme ocean temperatures have helped wipe out coral reefs, a critical structure for dampening waves that flood coastal communities during hurricanes. Healthy coral cover in the Keys has declined by at least 90 percent in the last half century. Monroe County, which encompasses the Florida Keys, overwhelmingly supported Trump in the past election.Against this backdrop, Trump has put drill, baby, drill at the center of his agenda. On his first day in office, he signed several executive orders intended to accelerate fossil fuel production. These include trying to open up vast stretches of Alaskan wilderness to drilling and logging, and eliminating efforts to protect poor communities from pollution.Chris Wright is sworn in during his Senate confirmation hearing on January 15. Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesA protester at Wrights confirmation hearing. Kayla Bartkowski/Getty ImagesTrumps pick to run the Department of Energy is also telling, though unsurprising. Chris Wright is the founder, CEO, and chair of the board of Liberty Energy, one of the nations largest fracking services companies. In a video on LinkedIn in 2023, he said, there is no climate crisis, and were not in the midst of an energy transition, either.Whats next for the environmental movement?Trump is back in the White House, and many environmental problems wildfires, hurricanes, habitat loss are worse today than ever before. Where does the environmental movement go from here?Fortunately, there is common ground between far-right and mainstream environmentalists: a desire for clean air, water, and soil, and accountability for big corporations that negatively impact the environment. Among these disparate factions, polluting companies are a common enemy, even though the Republican Party has traditionally, and under Trump, favored polluters. We have far more in common than we dont, said Ben Jealous, the executive director of the Sierra Club, one of the nations oldest and largest environmental organizations. When you hear Americans of any political stripe express concern about pesticides, express a desire for clean air, clean water, and healthy food, express a preference for anything related to reviving small farms what that affirms for me is that our issues, our [environmental] agenda, is more popular than either party.The Sierra Club and other big green groups acknowledge that they need to do a better job at talking about these common concerns. We cant talk about gigatons of carbon equivalents, said Tejada of the NRDC. Like nobody knows or cares. We can talk about the fact, though, that a storm hit West North Carolina a couple months ago that left $60 billion worth of damage that nobody knows how to pay for.Ben Jealous, executive director of the Sierra Club, speaks at a climate protest in Washington, DC, on March 21, 2023. Matt McClain/Washington Post via Getty ImagesAs Jealous put it, the problem with the environmental movement is not what we say, its literally how we say it.Green groups could adjust their messaging, and perhaps get more of the right behind their cause. This may work in local fights to protect a city park, for example, or clean up a stream. It is not, however, in the publics interest to abandon efforts to tackle climate change; lowering carbon and expanding clean energy are integral to those efforts. Plus, ditching carbon from the green vocabulary wont suddenly dissolve political divides. There are much bigger hurdles to building a more unified environmental movement. Common among the far right is what Whitney Phillips, a media studies researcher and co-author of a forthcoming book on anti-liberalism, calls anti-liberal demonology: the idea that liberals, a group that is not clearly defined, are an evil force that is polluting the real America. Most mainstream green organizations, Democratic policymakers, and scientists again, pillars of the modern environmental movement are seen as liberal and thus deeply mistrusted. To the far right, they are inextricably linked to the very pollutants, the impurities, that theyre trying to get rid of (even though these groups are arguably doing more than any other to clean up pollution).Without resolving these deeply entrenched trust issues, its unlikely that far right and mainstream environmental leaders will be fighting these problems together. If youre trying to work with people who are on the left, but you hate people on the left, Phillips said, how the fuck is that supposed to work?Umair Irfan contributed reporting.Update, February 4, 2025, 12:15 pm: This story was originally published on January 28. It has been updated with new details about steps to confirm Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. See More:
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  • El Salvador Backs Away From Its Bitcoin Experiment
    gizmodo.com
    By Matthew Gault Published February 4, 2025 | Comments (0) | Salvadoran Roxana Reyes works as a cashier in a warehouse that receives payments and transactions in bitcoin in Berlin, El Salvador on January 20, 2025. Photo by MARVIN RECINOS/AFP via Getty Images Bitcoin is out of power in El Salvador after lawmakers in the country rushed to change laws around the cryptocurrency following a deal with the International Monetary Fund. San Salvador and President Nayib Bukele wanted a loan from the IMF for $1.4 billion dollars and the IMF agreed so long as the country agreed to scale back its pro-Bitcoin laws. El Salvadors congress, which is dominated by Bitcoin-loving Bukele allies, agreed. The legislation passed on a vote of 55-2, modified 6 articles of the Bitcoin law, and repealed 3 others. Bitcoin is still considered legal tender in El Salvador but is no longer currency, meaning its adoption is optional. Businesses can now choose whether or not theyll accept Bitcoin instead of being forced to by government mandate. The state will also no longer accept Bitcoin as a form of payment for taxes and debts and its scaling back investment in the Chivo Wallet, the state-backed crypto-wallet. Bukele and El Salvador went all-in on Bitcoin in 2021. After his election, the young leader pushed through laws to make Bitcoin legal tender and hyped up huge projects he said would change his countrys economy. He planned a massive Bitcoin city and announced it on stage amid laser-eyed memes, aliens, and a light show. The plan was to build the city around a volcano in the shape of a physical Bitcoin and capture geothermal energy from the Volcano to mine cryptocurrency. In Bukeles vision, the number would go up. Forever.It didnt come to pass. The economy of El Salvador has gotten so rough, in fact, that it needed to reach out to the IMF for a loan to stabilize itself. The ousting of Bitcoin from El Salvador has been on the IMFs radar for a long time. There are large risks associated with using Bitcoin as legal tender, especially given the high volatility of its price. We dont recommend it. In the short-term, the costs and risks largely outweigh the benefits, it said in a 2022 statement criticizing the countrys economy. Meanwhile, Bukeles lackeys swear that El Salvador is still a Bitcoin-friendly country. But not that friendly. The push to adopt cryptocurrency has been a flop among normal people. Less than 12% of the country has used Bitcoin and Bukele admitted that it has not had the widespread adoption we hoped in an interview with TIME.But Bukele told the magazine that the Bitcoin push built the countrys brand and made people think of things other than violence and prison when they thought of El Salvador. But violence and prison are back in the news following Bukeles meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio. El Salvador is famous for its massive supermax prisons. The horrifying monstrosities house tens of thousands of prisoners. Bukele and Rubio met over the weekend and the El Salvadorian president offered up prison space to America. The U.S. could, he said, put anyone they want inside his concrete nightmares, including American citizens. Ruibo and the Trump administration are shopping around for places to house people the country is deporting as part of its immigration crackdown. Rubio and the White House said there are no plans to deport and house American citizens in foreign prisons.But the offer is on the table. In El Salvador, Bitcoin is out of fashion and prisons are very much in.Daily NewsletterYou May Also Like By Matthew Gault Published January 31, 2025 By Matt Novak Published January 29, 2025 By Lucas Ropek Published January 24, 2025 By Matthew Gault Published January 23, 2025 By Matt Novak Published January 22, 2025 By Todd Feathers Published January 16, 2025
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  • Jurassic World Rebirth Takes Place in a Time When People Think Dinosaurs Are Pass
    gizmodo.com
    In the very first Jurassic Park, the scene where Grant and Sattler realize theyre on an island populated by dinosaursthe presumably long-extinct creatures theyve spent their lives studying and obsessing abouthas become maybe the classic Spielberg moment of wonder. Jaws drop, sunglasses come off, and the majesty feels real (before things take a turn for the terrifying, at least). But Jurassic World Rebirth takes place several decades later, in a time when people have since become jaded about coexisting with dinosaurs. Ahead of a new trailer for the film (dropping tomorrow), Vanity Fair shared a feature with first-look photos from the film, as well as interviews with stars Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali, and Jonathan Bailey; director Gareth Edwards; producer Frank Marshall; and writer David Koepp. Koepp is returning to the Jurassic series after penning the first two installments, the 1993 original and 1997s The Lost World: Jurassic Park, and he picked up on that idea of people growing complacent about the scientific miracle in their midst for the new films story. Speaking to Vanity Fair, Marshall teased how that became a big theme for Rebirth, which takes place five years after 2022s Jurassic World Dominion. [Koepp] came up with this idea that dinosaurs were pass now. People were tired of them. They were an inconvenience. People werent going to museums to see them or to petting zoos. They were just in the way. And the climate was not conducive to their survival, so they were starting to pass away and get sick. But there was one area around the equator that had the perfect climate and temperature and environment for them. This allowed Edwards to craft a shot that mirrors another iconic scene in Jurassic Park: when the When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth banner falls amid the climactic dino vs. dino battle (as the surviving humans scuttle to get the hell out of there). In Rebirth, Marshall said, The banners coming down again [Jonathan Baileys character is] a scientist at a museum thats closing up their dinosaur exhibit. (You can see that image from Vanity Fair at the top of this post.) Acting like dinosaurs are no longer a fearsome threat is a terrible idea, something that Jurassic World Rebirth will no doubt be demonstrating in no uncertain terms. Well see more in the trailer tomorrow, and learn the full story when the movie hits theaters July 2. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, whats next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.
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  • Castelar House / SOLAR
    www.archdaily.com
    Castelar House / SOLARSave this picture!HousesMadrid, SpainArchitects: SolarPhotographsPhotographs:Adri Goula Lead Architects: Pablo Canga, Ana Herreros More SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!To restore an edifice means neither to maintain it, nor to repair it, nor to rebuild it; it means to reinstate it in a finished state, which may in fact have never existed at any given time. Eugne Viollet le-Duc. Building on the Built Cities and buildings have many lives. For decades a lack of feeling for the remains of the past, the incapacity to see them as depositories of collective memory, has contributed to the destruction of our built heritage. The erosion of our built history has led to a pendular reaction and the sacralization of heritage, the freezing of the object in time, sometimes without the rigor that such a crystallization would deserve. Casa Castelar is an ideological and aesthetic exercise on how to incorporate the memory and entropy of the already existing taking advantage of thermodynamic and informational capital into a contemporary project, from an angle having little to do with dogmatic preservation.Save this picture!Save this picture!Typological Recovery - Carried out in the 19th century outside the capital, the Madrid Moderno development comprised ninety-six houses designed in accordance with hygienist ideas of the garden-city, of which barely fourteen have survived the real-estate strain that has pressed upon the neighborhood since the 1970s. The commission involved refurbishing one of them, the deficient state of which made it necessary to redo the structure behind the listed facade. In the knowledge that the sites heritage value lay beyond neo-Mudejar bonds and the distinctive lookout in front, we opted to recover the buildings original scheme. Thanks to a series of strategic operations and demolitions, which eliminated additions that had crowded the plot, the 1890 layout of an L around a courtyard reappeared, containing the new program. The interior is characterized by the concatenation of regular rooms connected by large voids to the stairwell, generating crossed views as one ascends but without causing any loss of visual references, which remain constant.Save this picture!Save this picture!Craftmanship vs. Technology - While the front was reconstructed in accordance with classical restoration procedures whereby templates are drawn up, woodwork is done manually, and traditional crafts are harnessed, all at a slow pace the rear facade was given large openings and a skin of recycled aluminum perforated and cut by numerical control. This lightweight system facilitated construction and ensured easier maintenance, as well as any dismantling and reuse in the future. With such duality tradition vs. innovation, craft vs. industry the house has two contrasting facades. It is a Janus with the countenance of another time, concealing behind it a face of the future. Ecological Ethics - Because buildings of the past are valuable caches of materials, energy, and human effort, the task of transforming them becomes an ecological imperative bound to re-shape our built landscape. While preserving existing elements, the project has put in bioclimatic strategies and systems thermal insulation, new joineries, aerothermal solutions, and the optimization of cross ventilation that have reduced energy consumption by over 70%.Save this picture!Consciente de que el valor patrimonial reside ms all de los aparejos neomudjares y el distintivo mirador, el proyecto apuesta por la restitucin del esquema original de casa. Gracias a una serie de intervenciones y demoliciones estratgicas, que eliminaron los aadidos que colmataban la parcela, se logr recuperar la tipologa de 1890 en L en torno a un patio alrededor del cual se distribuye el programa. A nivel espacial, el interior se caracteriza por la concatenacin de estancias regulares conectadas mediante grandes huecos con la caja de la escalera, dando lugar a una serie de vistas cruzadas que acompaan el ascenso sin perder la referencia visual constante tanto entre ellas como con el patio.Save this picture!Save this picture!Artesana vs tecnologa. Mientras que la fachada exterior se rehabilit siguiendo modelos clsicos de restauracin, donde la elaboracin de plantillas, la ebanistera artesanal y la recuperacin de oficios tradicionales se desarrollaron a un ritmo lento; en la fachada trasera se recortaron grandes huecos y se revisti con una piel de aluminio reciclado, perforado y cortado por control numrico. Este sistema constructivo ligero facilit la instalacin, as como el posible desmantelamiento, reutilizacin y mantenimiento en el futuro. La dualidad entre tradicin e innovacin, y artesana e industrializacin aplicadas en ambas fachadas, dotan a la vivienda de dos frentes de marcado contraste. Un Jano con rostro de otro tiempo detrs del que se esconde otro fijo en el porvenir.Save this picture!Save this picture!tica ecolgica. Los edificios del pasado son valiosos depsitos que acumulan materiales, energa y esfuerzo humano, por lo que su transformacin se erige como un imperativo ecolgico que, sin duda, dar forma a nuestro paisaje construido. Adems de la conservacin de elementos existentes, se han implantado estrategias y sistemas bioclimticos aislamiento trmico, nuevas carpinteras, instalacin de aero-termia y la optimizacin de la ventilacin cruzada que han permitido reducir el consumo energtico en ms de un 70%.Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessAbout this officeSOLAROfficePublished on February 04, 2025Cite: "Castelar House / SOLAR" [Casa Castelar / SOLAR] 04 Feb 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1026402/castelar-house-solar&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • FAA creates No Drone Zone around Super Bowl LIX
    www.popsci.com
    A general view exterior of Caesars Superdome, home of the NFL New Orleans Saints, on October 13, 2024 in New Orleans, Louisiana. Credit: Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty ImagesShareOver the weekend, the Federal Aviation Administration officially designated the airspace above the Caesars Superdome as a No Drone Zone during and ahead of the big game. Drone operators who do fly their devices into the restricted area, accidentally or otherwise, could have their drones confiscated or receive hefty fines up to $75,000. The decision comes just weeks after a hobbyist drone collided with a plane helping combat wildfires in California and amid an uptick in drone sightings around the country.Starting at 1:30 p.m. CST on game day (Sunday, February 9) the FAA will prohibit drones from flying within a 1.5 nautical miles radius and 2,000 feet in altitude of the Caesars Superdome. The restricted area space will expand to a 30 nautical-mile radius and 18,000 feet in altitude between 4:30 and 10:30 p.m CST that same day. There are also additional flight restrictions around Lafayette Square in downtown New Orleans occurring during the day all this week starting Tuesday, February 4. The FAA also issued additional temporary flight restrictions around the New Orleans area for general (non-drone) aviation pilots.At the request of the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Aviation Administration will establish airspace restrictions over Super Bowl LIX, to be played February 9, 2025, at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, LA, the FAA wrote in a flight advisory. An FAA spokesperson told Popular Science they expect nearly 7,000 non-drone aerial takeoffs and landings and 600 aircraft parked at local airports during Super Bowl week.The FAA is working with law enforcement, the aviation community and the National Football League to ensure safe, secure and efficient aircraft operations for Super Bowl LIX, the FAA spokesperson said. Pilots flying near New Orleans from Feb. 6-11, 2025, must be aware of temporary flight restrictions, follow special air traffic procedures and comply with additional operational requirements that will be in effect for Super Bowl LIX.Drones can disrupt games and pose safety risksUnauthorized drones flying in restricted areas can cause major disruptions. In 2023, a nationally televised Ohio State-Maryland college football game was temporarily suspended after a drone was spotted flying overhead players. More recently, a referee called a rare administrative timeout with five minutes remaining in the third quarter of the Ravens-Steelers playoff game after a drone was visibly spotted in the area. The delay sparked an ongoing law enforcement investigation. These arent isolated incidents. The National Football League (NFL) says it has reported a staggering 20,000% increase in unauthorized drone activity during games between 2017 and 2023. In some cases, like last years Summer Olympics, some teams have even been accused of using drones to spy on their opponents.These drones can also present possible security risks. Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee chair and Michigan senator Gary Peters previously told NBC Newsworried enough about these concerns that theyve sent counter-drone teams armed with jamming technologies to major sporting events like the World Series. But theres an appetite for even more action. Officials from the NFL urged US lawmakers late last year to fast-track legislation that would expand the US governments authority to intervene and destroy drones over stadiums. That bill was ultimately rejected but could be reintroduced this year.The FAA also regularly issues temporary drone flight restrictions during natural disasters in an effort to reduce possible collisions with first responder aircraft. People who break those rules can cause real damage. Just last month the Los Angeles County Fire Department was forced to ground a SuperScooper firefighting aircraft after it collided with a consumer-grade hobbyist drone. The drone pilot, who reportedly co-founded one of the game developers behind the Call of Duty franchise, pleaded guilty to one count of unsafe operation of an unmanned aircraft last week. As part of that plea deal, the pilot agreed to pay full restitution to the Government of Quebec, which supplied the plane, as well as a company that repaired it. He also agreed to complete 150 hours of community service. Hobbyist drones flying in unauthorized airspaces also contributed to an uptick in mid-air close-call events during Hurricane Helene rescue efforts.Part of the explanation for this apparent rise in drone sightings and interference is due to the fact that high-quality, consumer-grade devices are simply cheaper and easier to access than ever before. The FAA estimates the total number of recreational drones in the US could reach 1.82 million by 2027. And while recreational drone operators are technically required to complete a UAS Safety Test with details about restricted areas, many drone hobbyists inevitably end up flying without a certification.
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