NY Interior Design Legislation
7.7.08 | IDLNY (Interior Designers for Legislation in NY) has for the
3rd consecutive time in the past few years succeeded in
obtaining the unanimous approval of both houses of the NY State
Legislature of a bill (Senate Bill S3659) that would restrict the use of
the title of Interior Designer.
What Ever Happened?
4.21.08 | During NeoCon 07, an alarm was sounded for the interior
design profession. The warning was loud and clear: a serious decline in
the pool of interior design educators was and is putting our profession
in jeopardy. We realized we need to do something fast to continue
fostering future generations of interior designers with the ever
increasingly complex skill set demanded by our clients. The original
Call to Action Dialogue at NeoCon 07 to address the declining pool of
interior design educators, sponsored by Kimball Office, was well
attended by interior design educators and practitioners. It became
clear that the problem has many challenging and disparate components.
Catalyst 07 Keynote: Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
9.17.07 | Robert Kennedy, Jr. was the Catalyst Breakfast keynote
created for NeoCon Xpress by IIDA So.CA. He was introduced by Barbara
Dunn, Gensler, president elect, who noted that, well before
environmental vigilance became fashionable Robert Kennedy, Jr.,
was already there. His career includes his work as an environmentalist,
non-profit executive, law professor, and author of The New York Times
best seller Crimes Against Nature (HarperCollins 2004).
2006: The Year in Review
1.15.07 |
From January to December, 2006 from the pages of offi ceinsight.
Turning Green into Gold: Can Ethanol Satisfy America’s Thirst for Oil?
11.27.06 | Ethanol is all the rage. Were being told that
ethanol will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and cut our nations
dependence on foreign oil. The Bush administration has been promoting
ethanol as the renewable, homegrown alternative to gasoline since the
2005 State of the Union Address. Earlier this month Bill Clinton
and Al Gore stumped in California for
a $4 billion tax to fund research for alternative energy vehicles and
bio-fuels. General Motors has spent barrels of cash on its marketing
campaign, Live green, go yellow, referring to the corn from which most
U.S.
ethanol is made.
Right now automakers are hard at work pushing their 2007 flexible-fuel vehicles (FFVs), which are designed to run on either gasoline or E85 a blend of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline. According to a recent Harris Interactive survey of vehicle owners more than half of them were interested in purchasing a flexible-fuel vehicle (FFV) mostly for reduced dependency on petroleum and improved fuel economy.

