Wednesday, June 25, 2008

More

We are having another storm tonight with flash flood warnings. I read the weather forcast earlier today for strong winds, rain and hail.

The 500-year level of flood waters fell pretty fast (about a week). So, Hwy 6 in Coralville was open last night. I was invited to have cake in Coralville for Oliver who turned 5. My first time venturing outside my little part of the universe on the Northeast side of Iowa City.

As I drove down Hwy 6 through what used to be the vibrant Coralville strip, it really hit me. Looking at these vacated businesses--restaurants, hotels, strip malls, small businesses with large FULL dumpsters outside and no other signs of activity. When I drove back at 9:30 PM, it was completely dark. This was the part of town that was always lit, always active. Words really cannot describe.

Cedar Rapids is the same on a much larger scale. I read in the newspaper that half the homes that were flooded will need to be demolished.

Just unreal, but it is real.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Sending the Sandbags South

Last week was filled with anxiety and this past week was filled with relief. The river crested earlier than originally predicted and that was very good. The headline on the newspaper earlier in the week announced that we are sending our sandbags to those that live south of us. Hopefully they won't get flooded as bad.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Tow Zone

I've been getting calls and emails from family and friends who live outside of Iowa. They want to see if I'm okay and if it's as bad as it looks on the news. Yes to both. Over 3/4ths of the state has been declared a disaster zone. Recently the Federal declaration went through. This means FEMA can start giving financial assistance to those directly affected.

Cedar Rapids, just 30 miles north of Iowa City has been devastated by the flood. So, we've been monitoring what has happened up there. The local TV stations have been covering the flood by interrupting regularly scheduled shows. I find that there is only so much of this coverage I can watch because it can be overwhelming.

Around 4PM yesterday the tornado sirens went off. I had seen the clouds roll in and was monitoring them from home. The TV news weatherman assured us that the clouds are too high to produce a tornado. I think people are overly cautious right now because there are thousands of people volunteering to fill and stack sandbags.

Fortunately, I live on high ground. So my stress is just what is going on around me and preparing for the possible residual affects that can happen to the city--loss of power, and ironically, loss of water.

I live 2 blocks east of the University of Iowa campus and four blocks from where the Iowa River has flooded. My neighborhood these days is like a ghost town because most of the traffic has been cut off.

Yesterday afternoon the river flooded the UI power plant. This means that MidAmerican Energy is now powering the UI in addition to Iowa City. On my street MidAmerican has put up "Tow Zone" signs as they are working to lay pipe to the UI campus. They will be working on this for the next two days.

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Architecture Quote

"Modern architecture had two reasons to exist. One is the desire, on the part of the architects, to be different. And the other is the desire, on the part of the builders, to be cheap."

Mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot, in an interview with MoMA's Paola Antonelli archived in seedmagazine.com

Page 30, Architect magazine, under tribute to Ralph Rapson, 1914-2008