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Woman “invents” shade, seatless bus stop. $10k a pop. We need to repeal the 19th amendment.

Bender

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Full Member
Minuteman
  • Feb 12, 2014
    12,725
    44,674
    Cheyenne WY.

    Los Angeles ridiculed for 'life-changing' female shade poles​

    The $10,000 shade poles could be the most pointless council architecture in the world
    ByDavid Millward, US CORRESPONDENT23 May 2023 • 6:00am
    The Sombrita barely provides enough shade for two people

    The Sombrita barely provides enough shade for two people CREDIT: LADOT
    A Los Angeles bus shelter with no seats has drawn ridicule after claiming its purpose was to provide potentially ‘life-changing’ shade to women and minorities.
    The so-called Sombrita, which cost $10,000, is essentially a pole with a lip that provides some shade, or a solar-powered light at night-time.
    It has been mooted as potentially the most pointless piece of civic architecture in the world, rivalling anything produced by Britain’s councils.
    The Los Angeles Department of Transportation said the 6,000 new shelters for stops with narrow pavements were vital to protect women using the transport network and hailed it as “low cost” infrastructure.
    “The lack of essential amenities like shade and lighting isn't just a simple inconvenience. For women and gender minorities — half of our population — it can change the trajectory of their lives,” said Chelina Odbert, founding principal of the Kounkuey Design Initiative, which developed the structures with input from female transit riders.
    The Sombrita is around 18 inches wide and barely provides enough shade for two people even when the sun is at the right angle.
    According to images posted online, the light at night also leaves the pavement below almost pitch-black, illuminating only the upper portion of the pole.
    The shade poles have copped widespread backlash

    The shade poles have copped widespread backlash
    Kounkey said the design was a response to the fact that only one quarter of LA’s bus stops have shelters. They added that a typical bus shelter costs $50,000 and requires the co-ordination of eight separate government departments.
    “The first-gen Sombrita was designed to avoid permit and multi-agency co-ordination,” Kounkey said in a statement posted on social media. It was meant to “meet these City standards: be less than 24” wide… be entirely on the pole… and be removable.”

    The shade-pole prompted scorn far beyond Los Angeles.
    “It's basically a sundial that will occasionally cast shade onto the adjacent bench,” said Twitter user Scott Davis.
    “Now obviously, La Sombrita fails to accomplish the goals of a bus shelter: it provides no seating, almost no shade, and no protection from the elements,” wrote Sam Deutsch in the journal, Belter Cities.
    “While politicians and planners celebrating this silly structure are obviously deserving of criticism, the story behind this joke of a bus shelter is actually quite revealing of the broader failures of American transportation infrastructure.”



    https://archive.ph/o/AWsHb/https://...ngeles-ridiculed-female-shade-poles-sombrita/
    A "tight space" in Los Angeles with "La Sombrita" in it, versus a typical London bus shelter with seating for six, local daytime and nighttime route maps, timetables, and a digital display board showing what and when the next buses are. #LaSombrita


    Photo of La Sombrita device, a pole with some mesh panels, in place on a wide sidewalks with people passing by and benches nearby


    Photo of a London bus shelter on a narrow sidewalk. It is a roofed structure with a bench seat for six people supported on a solid wall with glass panel centre. A digital display board hangs from one end showing the times and route numbers of the next buses. A panel on the shelter wall has maps of the daytime and nighttime bus services in the region around the stop. A pole at the end of the stop where the bus halts has route timetables mounted to it.








    4b9b3fdc15d319450a9c7215c5b2d534de89cc45.jpg


    Kounkuey [KDI]

    @Kounkuey
    Now that La Sombrita, our first prototype for bus stop lighting and shade in tight spaces, has been installed, we wanted to share more context on this device:
    10:15 PM · May 21, 2023








    Read the full conversation on Twitter

    78


    Reply


    Copy link
    Read 3 replies

    “The wildest part about La Sombrita is that they held a full-on press conference,” said Alec Stapp, co-founder of the Institute for Progress think tank.
    “If my bus stop shade/light thing cost $10,000 and provided neither shade during the day nor light at night, I would simply not talk about it.”
    Local authorities in Barnsley, Brighton, Nuneaton or Prestwich, may not have the weather of Los Angeles or celebrity voters like Jack Nicholson, Kim Kardashian or Angelina Jolie.
    But the next time bus passengers there are huddling under shelter from the latest downpour, they can always console themselves by knowing things could be worse. They could be in Los Angeles.


    6F6DC258-C6E3-43FA-9241-4D302CC95A08.jpeg


    78F2895B-F261-419F-87D1-9AD1F0FEBC4A.jpeg
     
    Not gonna lie, that would come in handy when trying to use a phone on a bright day. I wouldn't exactly call it "life changing", but rather a simple solution to a 1st world problem. :D
     
    I think the question Bender is trying to ask is, can pigeons land on it and breed?
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Ronws
    $10,000 for $200 worth of materials made into something that provides neither shade nor light at night. I guess the only redeeming feature is that if this was a Federal Government project it would be 1 Million Dollars per light post, take 1 year per pole to be put in, and have to be done by one handed, bisexual, latinx, small business women...
     
    • Like
    Reactions: mewillis
    guillotine-executions-device-sketch-vector-28162826.jpg

    the very device she should implement next she can be the first politician to do the right thing for her state maybe it will catch on and spread to every state (one can only hope it would .)
     
    Yeah, someone is definitely getting a kickback on these useless things.
     
    Herein lies the key to all govt involvement in the “save the planet” movement. They pay “scientists” to tell them temperature changes mean the world is ending(if the scientists conclude that the world has always had temperature changes they are out of a job). Then they funnel billions of dollars toward “green initiatives” and you can bet your last dollar(or billion dollars)that 90% of the companies receiving those funds will be in the club. A lot of them literally start companies to do pointless work just to gobble up the money their buddies earmark for them. They of course then donate a percentage back to the campaign of the people who funneled the $ to them to perpetuate the scam…..the largest scam in the history of the world. They’ve made people believe that the earths temp should never change even though it has clearly always changed.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: KYAggie and Bender
    Hold on a second...

    "Normal" bus stops run $50k and this little pole runs $10k?

    Where the fuck are these numbers coming from and why is nobody swinging at the end of a rope over this?
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Bender
    Hold on a second...

    "Normal" bus stops run $50k and this little pole runs $10k?

    Where the fuck are these numbers coming from and why is nobody swinging at the end of a rope over this?
    Cuz we too busy rubbing our dicks on guns, boats and beer companies, meanwhile our government has been literally stealing everything from us. And “Muh Pension” cops do nothing to stop them, elections are stolen, children kidnapped and abused, drugs and guns sold and traded like candy, but here we are as a collective doing nothing about it.
     

    Los Angeles ridiculed for 'life-changing' female shade poles​

    The $10,000 shade poles could be the most pointless council architecture in the world
    ByDavid Millward, US CORRESPONDENT23 May 2023 • 6:00am
    The Sombrita barely provides enough shade for two people

    The Sombrita barely provides enough shade for two people CREDIT: LADOT
    A Los Angeles bus shelter with no seats has drawn ridicule after claiming its purpose was to provide potentially ‘life-changing’ shade to women and minorities.
    The so-called Sombrita, which cost $10,000, is essentially a pole with a lip that provides some shade, or a solar-powered light at night-time.
    It has been mooted as potentially the most pointless piece of civic architecture in the world, rivalling anything produced by Britain’s councils.
    The Los Angeles Department of Transportation said the 6,000 new shelters for stops with narrow pavements were vital to protect women using the transport network and hailed it as “low cost” infrastructure.
    “The lack of essential amenities like shade and lighting isn't just a simple inconvenience. For women and gender minorities — half of our population — it can change the trajectory of their lives,” said Chelina Odbert, founding principal of the Kounkuey Design Initiative, which developed the structures with input from female transit riders.
    The Sombrita is around 18 inches wide and barely provides enough shade for two people even when the sun is at the right angle.
    According to images posted online, the light at night also leaves the pavement below almost pitch-black, illuminating only the upper portion of the pole.
    The shade poles have copped widespread backlash

    The shade poles have copped widespread backlash
    Kounkey said the design was a response to the fact that only one quarter of LA’s bus stops have shelters. They added that a typical bus shelter costs $50,000 and requires the co-ordination of eight separate government departments.
    “The first-gen Sombrita was designed to avoid permit and multi-agency co-ordination,” Kounkey said in a statement posted on social media. It was meant to “meet these City standards: be less than 24” wide… be entirely on the pole… and be removable.”

    The shade-pole prompted scorn far beyond Los Angeles.
    “It's basically a sundial that will occasionally cast shade onto the adjacent bench,” said Twitter user Scott Davis.
    “Now obviously, La Sombrita fails to accomplish the goals of a bus shelter: it provides no seating, almost no shade, and no protection from the elements,” wrote Sam Deutsch in the journal, Belter Cities.
    “While politicians and planners celebrating this silly structure are obviously deserving of criticism, the story behind this joke of a bus shelter is actually quite revealing of the broader failures of American transportation infrastructure.”



    https://archive.ph/o/AWsHb/https://...ngeles-ridiculed-female-shade-poles-sombrita/
    A "tight space" in Los Angeles with "La Sombrita" in it, versus a typical London bus shelter with seating for six, local daytime and nighttime route maps, timetables, and a digital display board showing what and when the next buses are. #LaSombrita

    Photo of La Sombrita device, a pole with some mesh panels, in place on a wide sidewalks with people passing by and benches nearby
    Photo of a London bus shelter on a narrow sidewalk. It is a roofed structure with a bench seat for six people supported on a solid wall with glass panel centre. A digital display board hangs from one end showing the times and route numbers of the next buses. A panel on the shelter wall has maps of the daytime and nighttime bus services in the region around the stop. A pole at the end of the stop where the bus halts has route timetables mounted to it.







    4b9b3fdc15d319450a9c7215c5b2d534de89cc45.jpg


    Kounkuey [KDI]

    @Kounkuey
    Now that La Sombrita, our first prototype for bus stop lighting and shade in tight spaces, has been installed, we wanted to share more context on this device:
    10:15 PM · May 21, 2023



    Read the full conversation on Twitter
    78
    Reply

    Copy link
    Read 3 replies

    “The wildest part about La Sombrita is that they held a full-on press conference,” said Alec Stapp, co-founder of the Institute for Progress think tank.
    “If my bus stop shade/light thing cost $10,000 and provided neither shade during the day nor light at night, I would simply not talk about it.”
    Local authorities in Barnsley, Brighton, Nuneaton or Prestwich, may not have the weather of Los Angeles or celebrity voters like Jack Nicholson, Kim Kardashian or Angelina Jolie.
    But the next time bus passengers there are huddling under shelter from the latest downpour, they can always console themselves by knowing things could be worse. They could be in Los Angeles.


    View attachment 8147320

    View attachment 8147321
    So a branch of my family drove a herd of cattle into Los Angeles in 1841, from Texas, population was 165 souls, people were tough and self defining, flash forward 182 years and people are just lazy dumb fucks, who cannot tell their ass from a hole in the ground. Another branch of my family drove a heard of cattle, from Texas, into Los Angeles in 1849, population was about 1,600, after the Mexican-American War. These carpetbaggers are disgraceful, what a shithole of idiots.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Bender
    I think the question Bender is trying to ask is, can pigeons land on it and breed?

    The question we should be asking is.. why aren’t these dumb broads in the kitchen. Making sammiches. Like nature intended.

    Last checked, there is shade in the kitchen.

    And if you make a good sammich, you attract a husband who buys you a car, so you don’t have to ride public transport like some Pathetic, poor, unwed skank with too many cats and an eating disorder.

    Do men have to explain everything??

    Sirhr
     
    A long time ago, way back in the before times, I think some states required actual field experience in the chosen subject for whichever engineering or architecture degree you were pursuing. Civil engineering? Spend a day breaking your back bent over tying rebar with chicken wire for a parking lot.

    Electrical engineer? Here is a shovel with your name on it. Even better, learn from your own mistakes. We had a saying in commercial electrical work. Nothing teaches you to bend pipe better than having to pull wire. About the second time you have to pull through someone else's Salvador Dali scupture, you learn.

    Architect? You need to get out there and weld on a tail on a truss before you tell others.

    Then, the requirements were erased so that handicapped people and women could qualify for the engineer stamp from their states.

    Add to that, Steve Buscemi's brilliant line in "Armageddon."