Friday, June 14, 2013

Phoenix Sky Harbor SkyTrain

Roadboy Gets a Tour

One of the primary reasons I relocated to Phoenix can be summed up in two words: "Sky Harbor". Sky Harbor allows me to fly to meetings all over the western US and return home the same night.

Based on 5 minutes of google research I now know that Sky Harbor is busier than Toronto's Pearson, Amsterdam's Schipol, Boston's Logan, and both New York's JFK and LaGuardia airports.

Yet, as much as I appreciate Sky Harbor, and I do, it has always felt like it is two steps behind. Such a big airport, whose passengers always have to take a bus to get anywhere (except its dog parks!)

Terminal 4 waited a decade after completion to finish its parking garage that is built, wait for it, above the terminal!

Yes, finishing the garage years after the terminal was complete, made a project that would otherwise have initially cost a lot and made it cost five times a kings ransom!

Plus, only twenty years after construction, Terminal 4 is getting lots of new escalators including (finally) "down" escalators linking floors 2 and 3.

But no worries, all increased costs, caused by deferring improvements, don't cost Phoenix taxpayers anything.....unless they fly. Airport improvements are financed by passenger fees.

Today, Phoenix's architectural community was provided a very nice tour of our SkyTrain automated people mover system linking the 44th St. Metro light rail stop to the East Economy parking garages and Terminal 4. 

The SkyTrain begins in sort of a big shiny elevated Oscar Meyer wienermobile you enter from a big concrete outdoor space with kind of odd blue aluminum ceiling that, we were told, looks nice at night when lit by LED's. By day, not so much.

The Entry Plaza
"Blue Stratus" Ceiling Art 

The peoplemover itself was very, very cool. Although traveling at only 28-35 MPH it felt pretty zippy. The whole trip from light rail to Terminal 4 takes 5 minutes. But what is neat is that along the way the train rises up to glide over an active taxiway via a bridge as long as a football field that is elevated high enough to let a 747 with an elevated tail (due to a flat tire in its nose gear - No, I am not making that up) pass under it!

Aboard The Automated People Mover

Yep, right here in Phoenix we have the only elevated train over an aviation taxiway in the world!

View Approaching the Taxiway Flyover  

Gliding Over a CRJ 
(Camelback Mountain Beyond)

The SkyTrain stations are designed to be consistent with the current modernist aesthetic: "corporate sensory deprivation" executed using grey metal panels and fritted glass. Signs of life in the building are provided by the clothing worn by the passengers themselves, the lovely epoxy terrazzo floors and the glass art wall.

The Bright Terrazzo
in The Link From Light Rail to SkyTrain

Arizona Artist Daniel Mayer's Stunning "Trace Elements"

Despite being the sixth largest city in the US, and full of amazing architects (many on the tour) the airport selected architects from somewhere else. The materials they selected and design they created make no attempt to relate to Phoenix Arizona. The new SkyTrain terminal could be picked up and moved pretty much anywhere.

The Aesthetic: Steel Over Grey With Fritted Glass

To the contractor I extend kudos, some of the finest concrete work I have seen in Phoenix! The concrete columns are as smooth as a baby's butt.

Some fine print:
1. You cannot ride SkyTrain to Terminal 3 until 2015 and you will never be able to ride SkyTrain to what is today known as Terminal 2 as T-2 is destined to become a memory.
2. You can check a bag and get a boarding pass in the SkyTrain terminal.
3. Airport baggage crews are now required to park personal cars near the SkyTrain station. Being used to pushing passengers out of the way (whether at elevators, through TSA lines and now SkyTrain, a shift shoved their way on the train with us treating passengers with the same gentle courtesy they give our luggage.....
4. There is a cell phone lot available at the 44th St. SkyTrain terminal.
5. SkyTrain operates 24 hours a day. (But I'd be very wary of connecting to Metro at night at that station unless you are part of a group.)  
6. SkyTrain is "free" (i.e. paid for by passenger fees).
7. The project certified as LEED* Gold

Someday SkyTrain will extend all the way to the new consolidated rental car facility. Till then......keep paying those Cactus League surcharges and enjoy those shuttle buses.

Now that SkyTrain is running lets all pray it (and its wonderful landscaping) gets maintained better than the already tragically dismal, yet almost new, and formerly lovely, Metro light rail station that it serves.


Roadboy's Travels © 2013


* LEED is the acronym for the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design sustainability rating system. Think of it as sort of a sustainability board game. LEED is completely voluntary. Building owners who elect to participate must hire LEED certified designers and pay a LEED "certification" fee to prove that their completed project met LEED sustainability goals. LEED was created, and is operated by, the US Green Building Council. 

Friday, June 7, 2013

Summer In Phoenix

Don't Fear It!


I've been a Phoenician now for almost 20 years.

Taking a moment to let that sink in....

I grew up and lived my first 18 years in a house my dad built in Oakland. Then at 19 pure wanderlust kicked in. Over the next decade I lived in Coeur d'Alene and Moscow Idaho, Seattle, Anchorage, San Jose, and Hawaii before eventually relocating to the Valley of the Sun.

Now, I should point out that I have loved every place I have ever lived. But....perfect year round weather in the bay area actually became kinda boring....

And in Seattle I got tired of rationalizing why I was enduring 11 months of crap weather for that one amazingly beautiful month each summer (Hint: always around SeaFair).

In Coeur d'Alene summers could be really nice or week upon week upon week of grey dreck.   

In Alaska summers were short but came with 21 hours of daylight and enormous mosquitos. 

So here I am living in a place where summers replicate the surface of the sun.... 

But, after all these years I find summers here fall into kind of a nice cycle.

In May as the heat returns we start making mental notes where the shady parking is.

By June our beloved winter visitors are long gone, and our best restaurants suddenly have reasonable wait times for a great table under a mister. City streets are much less crowded (and much more sane) and evenings offer a perfect time to take a dip in our warm backyard pools to ponder the stars.

By July we are experiencing our amazing summer monsoons. These are electrical storms of epic proportions with lightning chains that fill our summer skies. They typically deliver rain in sheets and afterwards the fragrance of creosote fills the desert air.

In August our European visitors arrive. Mostly German and French they stay only briefly usually on their way to rent a houseboat on Lake Powell. By August 6th or so many of the kids in Phoenix are beginning to  return to school. And when Labor Day arrives (signaling the close of summer for everyone else), Phoenicians are kind of going a bit crazy. So we try to make a desperate weekend trip to San Diego, Payson, Flagstaff or Prescott.

But summer clings on getting the last digs in and our 100° plus days roll right on until around October 15.

So for those that are adventurous (or a contrarian traveler like me - I love Alaska in winter hoping for a view of an aurora borealis) consider summer in AZ!

Moonrise Over the Red Rocks of Sedona
A 4 or 5 star resort room costing $300 in winter is $120 (or less) in summer. The pools are splashy, many offer family barbecues, water slides or lazy rivers. At night there are dive-in movies!

And while here, you can visit indoor delights with bulletproof air conditioning (which was invented here) there is the Arizona Science Center, the Heard Museum, the Phoenix Art Museum or the amazing new MIM Musical Instrument Museum.

The Phoenix Zoo has misters and the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum just outside of Tucson offers special evening programs showcasing their nocturnal critters. For sports you can take in a D'backs game. Many just use Phoenix for a home base to go visit the Grand Canyon, gaze at the stars at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, or go spend a day or two in a jacuzzi surrounded by the red rocks of Sedona.

There is Only One Grand Canyon
So, scratch skanky old Las Vegas off your list. Be bold, bring sunscreen, come visit Phoenix or Tucson in summer!

Enjoy a big loud monsoon!

Your wallet will thank you.

And after two or three days in a big old pool, making new friends, so will your kids.


Roadboy's Travels © 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Along The Way

Scrapbook Shots


After family gatherings, no activity offers Roadboy more photo opportunities than travel. Sometimes it is a view from the airplane window (yes, airplane windows still captivate me). It might be a momentary interaction with locals along the way. Of all the (thousands?) of travel photos I've snapped over the years here are a few of my favorites. These are worth clicking to make larger.

From Italy....

Bicycle Riders 
New Years Day 
The Borghese Gardens, Rome 

Sunset Venice

Women On the Road to Pienza
(Thank You Clif)

From France....

Wall Art 
Angouleme, France
(Home of the Annual Bande Dessinee International Comic Arts Festival)

Parking in Paris
Parisians Leave Parked Cars in Neutral / Hand Brake Off
(You Nudge The Cars in Front and Back  - Creating Enough Space to Depart)
My Hotel Receptionist Said...   
"It Would Be So Rude to Park a Car With the Brake Engaged!"

From Lisbon...

Building Supergraphics 
Lisbon, Portugal

Lisbon Below
The Santa Justa Lift
Lisbon, Portugal

The Cloister
Sintra, Portugal

From Spain...

Granada From The Alhambra

From Los Angeles...

The Amor Arms 
Los Angeles, California

The Victor Clothing Co. Mural
A Tribute to Anthony Quinn
Los Angeles, California

From Chicago...

Metropolis 
Rotating Second Floor Art 
The "Upstairs" Gallery
The Blackstone Hotel 
Chicago, Illinois

Inside of "The Bean"
Chicago, IL

From Oregon...

Multnomah Falls

From Utah...

The Kennecott Open Pit Copper Mine

From Above Nashville...

An Aviator's Moonlight

Cheers! From Roadboy!


Roadboy's Travels © 2013


Thursday, May 9, 2013

Canine Yin and Yang and Another Year!


Roadboy Passes Another Milepost


Just a quick post to say hi to everyone as another birthday passes. I share a birthday with Billy Joel (and Billy and I are just a day after Harry Truman). Funny, I don't feel as old as the guy I see in the mirror.

This birthday has some extra joy attached to it as number one son graduates tomorrow (Summa Cum Laude from Arizona State University - indeed a final GPA that reflects almost 4 years of solid perfect).

Here is Ms. M's 2013 birthday card for me!


Our two pups expressed as yin and yang. 

I wish you all the best.

Especially you graduates and all you mom's out there!


Roadboy's Travels © 2013


Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Travel Somewhere Amazing

Look at This!


Update 5-22-2013 Thank You Everyone! 
552 backers from 24 country's funded Ms. M's Kickstarter $25,880 
Hinges Arc 1 "Clockwork City" is now assured to become a beautiful hardbound book.  

My hit counter informs me that Roadboy now averages nearly 1,500 hits a month. Sheesh! I never dreamed I'd host so many visitors. Thank you!

Roadboy gives me the freedom to take you with me wherever I go, sharing whatever happens along the way. 

But, the places I go all start with very real journey's, whether via foot, train, plane, bicycle or automobile.

This visit I want to take you to a place far more spectacular and difficult to reach. Make no mistake it exists. And after you arrive, you may have trouble returning. It is the land of "Hinges" and it is spectacular. 

So click here for a short visit to Clockwork City. When you are through exploring, please travel one more place. It is a place where you can make someone's dream come true. That someone is my daughter who would like to publish the whole 100+ richly illustrated Hinges series. So now please click here. 

And think of it. Wouldn't a lushly illustrated and autographed first edition copy of Hinges go a long way to making you a hero when someones's graduation or birthday comes around or save it for holiday gifting?

Personally, I want one all for myself. 


Roadboy's Travels © 2013

Sunday, April 21, 2013

The West Fork of Oak Creek

Sedona's Perfect Family Hike


Sedona is 2 hours away from America's 6th largest metropolis. This results in a sometimes overwhelming hoard of visiting Phoenicians. 

In winter they seek the magic of snow dusting Sedona's red rocks. In summer Sedona spells immediate relief from America's most extreme metro-urban heat sink.

Of course what Phoenicians also find are overpriced hotel rooms, a lot of good (and some not-so-great but frequently very jammed) restaurants, crowded narrow streets filled with shops pitching candles, t-shirts, art glass, crystals, and made in China kokopellis.

But, the good news is that the real Sedona is still there. You just have to venture away from the roadways and wear good shoes.

A wonderful easy hike for families is the West Fork of Oak Creek in the Coconino National Forest. It is a 9 miles miles north on 89A. It is Sedona's most popular trail (for good reason.) It is served by a parking lot that fills up early. The daily fee is $9 / car (includes 5 hikers) or if you walk in the fee is $2 per hiker. A couple of $40 annual passes are also available covering all of Sedona's various trails.

The west fork trail starts with a bridge over the creek. It then meanders past an old apple orchard (which was blooming this week) and the ruins of an original homestead. The trail then moves into the deep slot canyon. The trail is easy and well marked. There are numerous places where you must cross the creek so water shoes are a good choice. Bring sunscreen and snacks, and (in summer), maybe a swim suit under hiking shorts to enjoy the cool spring water. The developed trail takes you about 3 miles in the canyon (so 6 miles round trip.) The actual trail runs 14 miles, but much of that is in wilderness areas where the trail is simply a walk (sometimes a swim!) in the creek.

In summer there is a lot of poison oak along the way, so beware.

Remnants From the Homestead 

Zane Grey's Inspiration for "The Call of the Canyon"
(It is Hard Not to Look Up)

A Great Slide Rock 
(A Great Stop WIth Kids, About a Mile In)

Lots of Fragrant Pines
(A Friend Clued Me In - The Bark Smells Like Butterscotch!)  

Crystal Clear Water

This is a hike that is just made for families. Go and enjoy! Phoenicians can leave home by 8:00 am, drive, hike, and easily be home in time for dinner. 

Of course if you can spend a day or two hiking and perhaps camping, well thats even better!


Roadboy's Travels © 2013

Saturday, April 13, 2013

DC's Delicate Necklace of Blossoms

The Backdrop For Three Striking Memorials

The beautiful cherry trees that grace Washington DC have quite a legacy. The history involves Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore (the first female board member of the National Geographic Society), Jokichi Takamine (the Japanese chemist who discovered adrenaline), Marian Fairchild (the daughter of Alexander Graham Bell), and first lady Helen Herron Taft. 

I won't try to recite the whole (somewhat involved) origin of the trees here. Lets just say after much lobbying, and a few false starts, the efforts of many resulted in the planting of thousands of cherry trees along the reclaimed Potomoc tidelands from 1912 to 1920. 

Today, Washington DC's annual Cherry Blossom Festival attracts visitors from all over the world. And when their delicate blossoms burst open it creates a magical world particularly along the Tidal Basin.

The Tidal Basin Cherry Blossoms
The Washington Memorial (Undergoing Earthquake Repairs) Beyond

Up Close

A Canopy of Color

The blooming trees provide visitors and residents alike a special time to enjoy a picnic, rent a paddle boat, or just snap loads of pictures of the photogenic blooms. The blooms also result in thousands of visitors experiencing the three beautiful memorials that reside along the Tidal Basin. 

The most prominent memorial is the iconic Jefferson Memorial which dates back to 1943. Due to WWII the bronze sculpture of Jefferson was not cast and installed until after the war in 1947. The memorial, based on a design by architect John Russell Pope, was completed during the presidency of Jefferson's admirer Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Nearly 50 years later a new 7.5 acre memorial dedicated to Franklin Delano Roosevelt took its place along the Tidal Basin. The series of outdoor "rooms", designed by the celebrated San Francisco landscape architect Lawrence Halprin, features water cascading from one room to the next. As it flows into each room the waterfalls get larger and more complex symbolizing the increasing challenges posed as FDR moved through his presidency. 

Tour Guides describe the symbolism of the water as follows:
• A Single Large Drop - The Wall Street Crash
• Multiple Stairstep Drops -  The creation of the Tennessee Valley Authority
• Chaotic Falls - World War II
• A Still Pool - Roosevelt's Death
• A Wide Array Combining Earlier Waterfalls -  A Retrospective of Roosevelt's Life

The Crash and Great Depression


World War II

FDR's Expression of Fear For A Post War World

FDR's Beloved Scottish Terrier Fala

The FDR Memorial is beautiful anytime, but especially so when the nearby trees are in bloom. I also love the way this remarkable memorial is illuminated at night.

The newest memorial is dedicated to Martin Luther King, Jr. This memorial, designed by San Francisco's ROMA Design Group, was selected from over 900 entries from 52 countries. It was dedicated October 16, 2011.

The memorial slices a "Stone of Hope" from a "Mountain of Despair". The stone of hope steps forward and contains a powerful, larger than life, sculpture of Dr. King. The Sculpture gives the impression he is looking across the Tidal Basin toward the horizon. The memorial site is framed by cherry trees that will bloom each year during the anniversary of his death.

A 450' inscription wall contains fourteen excerpts from King sermons beginning in 1955 with the Montgomery bus boycott and ending in 1968 just four days before his assassination. 

The King Memorial 

A Stone of Hope


Sculpture Detail

While the official description states the Dr. King is looking at the horizon. My own feeling is he may not simply be looking at the horizon. Perhaps he sees the Jefferson Memorial whose construction closed a whites-only swimming beach. Hopefully he can see the nation we can finally become.


Roadboy's Travels © 2013