Out With the Old, in With the New

November 11, 2008 - 12:34 AM by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: General 

Israel is full of villages – “k’farim,” in Hebrew. There’s Kfar Tabor, Kfar Vitkin, Kfar Shemaryahu, Kfar Habad – and my personal favorite, Kfar Saba. Most of these villages were established decades ago, usually as agricultural settlements.

And some of Israel’s many k’farim may still be largely involved in agriculture – probably the ones way up north or down south. But as the Tel Aviv-centered megalopolis expands ever outwards, and better highways and rail links bring the periphery closer to the center, many of the k’farim in the center of the country have found a new way to grow profits – with real estate, as developers buy up the old free-standing houses, many with large lots, and magically turn them into luxury apartment buildings, offices, malls, and all the other features of Israel’s increasingly urban/suburban landscape.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing, of course; people gotta live, and as crowded as Israel is, there is still plenty of open space in the Galilee, and especially the Negev. While many farms and fields in the Sharon region, for example, have been turned into homes and stores, effective Israeli methods of land reclamation has turned large parts of the Negev into flourishing farmland, with everything from vegetables to fruit to grain growing nicely.

In Israel, as in much of Europe, the city centers are the most expensive places to live, and the further out you move, the cheaper the home. But when enough people move far enough out, that location gets an “upgrade,” and turns into a city, in and of itself. And that’s what’s been happening to almost all of the small towns, the k’farim, that once surrounded Tel Aviv. The villages are still there, in name – but now many of them are big cities.
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Living as I do in a town not too far from Kfar Saba, I’ve seen the process unfold there over the past few years. First came the mall in the middle of town; then came the new luxury buildings and homes, with real estate shooting up in value by hundreds of percent within a couple of years. Then, they built the new park, a sure sign that Kfar Saba was no longer a “k’far,” which would have its own natural open spaces. Now, the developers have moved on to the edge of town; the funky industrial zone, which really was dedicated to industry (not shopping, like in a lot of other towns), is getting a huge sandlar111109.jpgcombination office/mall space, which will take up about five big city blocks!

Thus the photos accompanying this piece: I may have come across some of the last “authentic” original agricultural-era homes in Kfar Saba. Someone still lives in the house with the sign in the top photo (there’s a satellite dish on the roof), but apparently they got an offer they couldn’t refuse, because it appears that a “luxury building” is going up on the site.

At least we’ll still have the shoemaker, (“sandlar”), whose little shack is seen in the bottom photo. This structure must have been built decades ago, but whoever owns it still has some principles, it seems – no “for sale” signs are up on this one, yet. Maybe the municipality should buy it out in order to preserve it – and let the next generation get a sample of “the way it was.”

Harvesting rays, finally

September 10, 2008 - 8:06 AM by · 1 Comment
Filed under: A New Reality, Business, Environment, General, Technology 

The Tenne solar power stationIt’s hard to believe, but the private solar power station that Moshe Tenne recently activated on his Negev farm is actually the country’s first. Israel Electric (IEC), the state-run monopoly utility, has been both praised (for its international business savvy) and criticized (for its wasteful ways) in the press lately, but its innovative new program to offer compensation to private do-gooders who feed power back into the grid seems to be working.

The Tenne family established its farm three years ago, and makes its living from a sophisticated dairy barn with 70 cows producing about 800,000 liters of milk a year.

Tenne’s power plant has thin-film solar panels made by Sharp on 600 square meters of the cowshed’s roof. He also installed another array of multicrystal silicon solar cells, a different technology. These are mounted on systems that track the sun during the day and are spread out over about a dunam of his farmland, about a quarter acre. The arrays were installed by the company Solar-Power. Tenne paid for the new power generating system with loans and out of his own funds.

The customers will settle accounts with the IEC by offsetting the power they sell back to the electric company each month against the rest of the electric bill, based on the readings of new electric meters. The system is already powering the farm, and will be hooked up to the national grid in another two weeks.

Tenne reportedly spent NIS 1.3 million on building the power plant, which he estimates will pay for itself in electric bill savings within six years. He’s already hard at work installing wind turbines as well.

But the strange part of this story is that despite Israel’s reputations for technological innovation, sunny weather and apprehensions when it comes to energy, it took until the summer of 2008 for IEC’s incentive program to pave the way for projects like these. (Although to be fair, a private Jerusalem firm called Luz has overseen the construction of nine California solar power plants.)

The country has been working on plans for non-grassroots solar power farms for at least five years, and one such proposal could mean the launch of the biggest plant of its kind in the world. Prof. David Faiman, director of Ben-Gurion University’s National Solar Energy Center in Sde Boker, estimated in 2003 that solar energy plants in the Negev could potentially produce all the country’s power on just 225 square kilometers of land, so it will certainly be interesting to see where this trend takes us.

Foto Friday

August 1, 2008 - 7:50 AM by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: General, Life, Sports 

My husband is one of those alarming adventure types. He’s always into some kind of action sport – either mountain biking, snowboarding, surfing, offroad motorbiking or paragliding.

I remember him leaping off a steep cliff on a paraglider some years ago. It was his first time, and he’d had no training that I could see. After about 30 minutes he yelled down to a friend as he circled above the cliff top – “So how do I land?”

You get used to it gradually. As well as the occasional hospital visits for broken fingers, stitches, torn ligaments, and a range of other – thankfully – minor injuries.

The one thing about these trips is that he gets to go to all sorts of places off the beaten track that most of us never get to see. On a recent offroad motorbike trip to the Negev, he came back with these beautiful pictures.

Makes me almost wish I’d gone with him… yeh right.

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Foto Friday – BGU Through Dani Machlis’ Eyes

June 20, 2008 - 12:05 AM by · 1 Comment
Filed under: A New Reality, Art, Foto Friday, General, Life 

Dani Machlis is staff photographer for Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. You might think his job entails an never-endlng parade of faculty head shots and donor dinners, but in fact, it affords him endless creative opportunties. Sent to shoot the new Alon Building for High Tech on the University’s Marcus Family Campus, Machlis came back with a stunning composition in blue and gold.

Dani Machlis - Alon Building, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Photo by Dani Machlis

A visit to the Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research at the University’s Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, yielded an image that captures the tactile satisfaction of hands-on research.

Dani Machlis - DSC water research - Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Photo by Dani Machlis

The last image, entitled “Wow”, placed first in the news and features category of American University’s May photo competition. Machlis captured the fire dancers in motion amidst the clatter of plates and cutlery, at the University’s recent Board of Governors’ meeting. The din of dinner fades into the background and Machlis captures BGU’s essence: a magical oasis of advancement and technology emerging, mirage-like, out of the desert night.

Dani Machlis - Wow
Photo by Dani Machlis

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