Podcasts about siteworks

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Latest podcast episodes about siteworks

Texas Emerging Leaders
Kyle Kieke, Owner of Recon Siteworks and Veteran U.S. Army Intelligence Officer

Texas Emerging Leaders

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Jun 21, 2021 49:06


Kyle Kieke is the owner of Recon Siteworks a commercial concrete company and has experience as a construction manager, project superintendent, project manager, and as a human intelligence collector (35M) for the United States Army for 6.5 years. This episode is not for the faint of heart as Sean, Chris, and Kyle drill down to discuss leadership in a raw and unfiltered fashion. Snowflakes cover your ears!Learn more by visiting ReconSiteworks.com.Featuring:Kyle Kieke, Recon SiteworksSean Christian, Podcast OfficerChris Sanger, Chief Creative OfficerTo join our team.  Go here!Disclaimer: The comments herein are considered to be the personal comments of the speakers and not to be mistaken for advice in any way. Copyright 2021 Sanger Syndicate LLC. All Rights Reserved.

The CRE Project
The Impact of E-Commerce and Digital Strategy - Nick Egelanian

The CRE Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 57:52


In this epsiode we sit down with a really compelling guest that educates us on the history, current state, and future of retail real estate evolution. Considered a leading expert on retail and the shopping center industry, Nick A. Egelanian pioneered the segmentation of retail into Commodity & Specialty sub-groups as the author of the retail chapter of the Urban Land Institute's Professional Real Estate Development: The ULI Guide to the Business, 3rd Edition in 2012. Mr. Egelanian served as VP of Real Estate & New Store Development for Crown Books and FAO Inc/Zany Brainy before forming SiteWorks Retail Real Estate Services in 1992. As President of SiteWorks, Nick has worked with clients including Stuart Weitzman, Balducci's, Jos. A. Bank, Starbucks, Justice, Lane Bryant, & Zoës Kitchen. Nick has also advised an array of owners & developers throughout North America, including Vornado Realty Trust, Cadillac Fairview, Madison Marquette, Ramco-Gershenson Properties Trust & Bayer Properties, with whom he partnered in the development of over 1.5M sq ft of Specialty Retail. He is currently acting as the chief retail advisor to Sagamore Development, the developer of nearly 250 acres of waterfront property in Baltimore, MD that will house Under Armour's new 4M sq ft headquarters facility & up to 1.5M sqft of retail in a 15M sqft mixed-use development. Mr. Egelanian is an active speaker & writer on retail trends & the evolution of the retail industry, & has coined the phrases “Post-Department Store Era” & “Convergence Era” in his numerous articles & editorials in publications such as Shopping Centers Today, Chain Store Age, Shopping Center Business, & the ULI's Urban Land Magazine. Nick teaches retail real estate development in the Colvin Real Estate Development graduate program within the UMD's School of Architecture, Planning & Preservation in College Park, MD & is a faculty member at the ICSC's Univ of Shopping Centers in Philadelphia & Riordan School in Miami. He earned a Doctor of Law (J.D.) degree at the George Washington Univ National Law Center in 1982 & a BS degree in Finance from UMD, College Park in 1979. We hope you enjoy this episode as much as we did!

Light Logic
Landscape Lighting Maintenance with Steve Hoover from Siteworks LLC.

Light Logic

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2021 18:46


Welcome to s2e5 of The Light Logic Podcast. On this episode we talk about the maintenance side of landscape lighting with Steve Hoover from Siteworks LLC.      

maintenance landscape lighting steve hoover siteworks
Sisteria Podcast
Summer Series: #MeToo, Creativity and the Law

Sisteria Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2019 57:56


This episode is an edited version of a live recording we did in November 2019 titled #MeToo, Creativity and the Law in Australia. The event was hosted in partnership with Melbourne-based community group And Also Presents, recorded at Siteworks in Brunswick, supported by the Moreland City Council Community Grants Program.

Wednesday Breakfast
Fires Blazing, Refugees in Indonesia, Anti-Trolling, An Education in Menstrual Cycles and Campaigning for the Tarkine in Tasmania

Wednesday Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2019


Hosted by Eiddwen, Rob and Jess  || 3CR is proud to acknowledge the Kulin Nations as true owners and custodians of the lands from which we broadcast. We pay respect to their elders past and present and acknowledge that their sovereignty was never ceded and a treaty has yet to be signed ||[21:22] There's been a lot of reportage around the catastrophically large scale of fires burning in the Amazon in both Brazil and Bolivia. With 90,000 fires raging and smoke plumes you can see from space we explore the deeper political context to these fires, why they were lit and whose interests they serve. Fernanda Santos is a Brazilian activist and organiser who speaks to us about the social and political realities in Brazil that allowed the Amazon fires to happen. [32:03] JN Joniad is a community organizer and refugee from Burma, one of many refugees and asylum seekers trapped in Indonesia with no work rights, no freedom of movement and dwindling hopes of resettlement. The last few weeks have seen a resurgence of refugees raising their voices against the punitive Australian law refusing resettlement of recognized refugees if they registered in indonesia after 2014. JN Joniad speaks to us about the current situation in Indonesia. [50:00] Fiona Patten from the Reason Party comes onto the show to chat with us about the anti-trolling bill that she and her party have recently introduced. We talk to Fiona about what trolling is on the internet and why it's such an important issue to address. Fiona discusses the debate around harrassment and bullying via the internet and how she and her party are working to overcome it. Head to https://fionapatten.com.au to find out more. [65:32] Menstruation frustration? Freya talks to us about menstruation cycles and period positivity while growing up and leading productive adult lives in accordance to our cycles. Freya is running an upcoming workshop called Period Witches this Sunday for individuals between 16-18 going into exams with their period. The event will be held at Siteworks in Brunswick this Sunday, book tickets at www.ramonamag.com [79:08] Brittons Timber has recently acquired the Speciality Veneers Somerset Mill in Tasmania. Brittons acquiring this mill means that they will continue to gain tax-payers money towards the logging and destruction of Tasmania's Rainforests. Scott Jordan from The Bob Brown Foundation speaks to us about campaigning to protect and list the Tarkine Region as a World Heritage Listed Site by 2020 and how continual corporate ownership in the Tarkine Region is affecting Tasmania. To find out more, head to https://www.bobbrown.org.au  Music:Talking bout rev – Tracy chapman The Revolution Was Postponed Because of Rain - Brooklyn Funk Essentials The Revolution Will Not Be Televised- Gil Scott Heron QUEENDOM – Aurora   

Art Smitten - The Podcast
Blood is Thicker Than Hummus interview

Art Smitten - The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2019 7:42


Catherine Holder and Pearce Hessling of production company Little Dirt Path speak to co-hosts Aurora and Tom about their interactive play Blood is Thicker Than Hummus. Catherine and Pearce's show is running at Siteworks from May 24th until June 9th. For more information, head to littledirtpath.com.au or visit their official Facebook page. Segment originally aired Wednesday, May 15th. Produced by Sim Monga; edited by Tom Parry. Image courtesy of Little Dirt Path.

CANVAS: Art & Ideas
17 September | Benjamin Law, Deborah Kelly and Siteworks with Barbara Campbell and Kath Fries

CANVAS: Art & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2017


This week Canvas: Art & Ideas talked sexuality and bodies, birds and bees. Writer and journalist Benjamin Law discussed his Quarterly Essay: Moral Panic 101, Equality, Acceptance and the Safe Schools Scandal. We talked about Public Body .02 at Artspace with iconic Australian artist Deborah Kelly. Plus, Bundanon's annual Siteworks program is themed 'birds and bees' this year — we were joined by exhibiting artists Barbara Campbell and Kath Fries to hear what's in store. Tracks by Post Motel.

OPB's State of Wonder
Jan. 7: Year In Review: Can Artists Afford Portland, Art Glass Apocalypse, New Mayor & More

OPB's State of Wonder

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2017 51:42


2016 was packed — packed! — with big arts stories, both locally and nationally (we're still mourning you, Bowie and Prince, Cohen and Jones, and all the other dynamos). We decided to spend our first episode of 2017 looking back at some of them and updating them for the new year.Art Glass MeltdownWe should have known 2016 was going to be a doozy last January, when one modest Forest Service research project turned the Northwest’s storied art glass industry upside down. Oregon’s two major suppliers, Bullseye Glass Co. and Uroboros Glass, stopped most production while everyone tried to figure out what the studies meant. In May, Washington state’s Spectrum Glass became the first to announce its closure, and then in September, Uroboros announced it would close its doors after 44 years. A California company called Oceanside GlassTile has announced it will buy both and move their production to Mexico. We review a mid-year feature, and hear from Uroboros founder Eric Lovell, who's in the process of shelving his business.PNCA Closes the Museum of Contemporary Craft, And the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education Buys Its Downtown Space - 12:13In February, the Pacific Northwest College of Art announced that it would close the Museum of Contemporary Craft. The college was losing more than $200,000 a year keeping it operational, and ultimately concluded that students and faculty simply weren't engaging with it enough to justify the cost. The building has been sold for $5 million, and the collection moved over to PNCA's home at 511 Broadway. We review what happened and the outcry in the craft community, then meet the buildings new owners, the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education.Where They Landed: Revisiting Displaced Artists From Troy Laundry - 22:35Affordable workspaces for artists have been dropping like flies: the Towne Storage Building, Conduit Dance, Northwest Dance Project, Polaris Dance Theater, Shaking the Tree, Third Rail Repertory Theatre — every month it seemed like another performing set of studios or arts organization lost its building. Then, at the end of June, word came that the Troy Laundry Building in Southeast Portland had been sold. For nearly 40 years, it housed dozens of artists in what was the city’s oldest artists cooperative. We listen back to part of our June story, and seek out some of the artists who were sent searching for new space (hint: it's nigh impossible to fit art supplies and a Christmas tree both in the living room).Ted Wheeler Takes Office - 31:09Portland's new Mayor is Ted Wheeler, former State Treasurer and Multnomah County Commission Chair. The city is waiting to see how he'll handle the economic, social, and cultural issues that have wracked Portland with growing pains. We review a few things he told us at last January's Candidates' Forum for Art and Culture. Then we sit down with Jean-Pierre Veillet of the design/build firm Siteworks, architect Tony Belluschi, and urban designer Mike McCullough to talk about some of the planning and bureaucratic challenges that may define Wheeler's term.The Color of Now, Revisited - 40:28After the heartbreaking week in July when first Alton Sterling was shot in Louisiana, then Philando Castile in Minnesota, and then five police officers in Dallas, we put together a show exploring how local artists were responding to the shootings, from MCs Mic Crenshaw and Rasheed Jamal to the painter Arvey Smith.We started the show at an event called the Color of Now, where an actor performed a piercing monologue from a touring production called "Hands Up: 7 Playwrights, 7 Testaments." The event continued with a conversation between Color of Now organizer Chantal DeGroat and "Hands Up" director Kevin Jones, of the August Wilson Red Door Project, and we invited them into the studio to see how their year has gone since, and to ask how the election has affected their continuing work.

DrSonique
Milk and Honey

DrSonique

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2016 6:23


A stereo mix extracted from a site specific x8 channel audio resonator sound-sculpture installed for Siteworks at the Bundanon Trust NSW, Australia. http://www.sonicobjects.com/index.php/projects/more/milk_and_honey

SFNaim - The nth Guides
infront says WordPress Sucks, or does it?

SFNaim - The nth Guides

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2012


infront, makers of Siteworks, recently wrote an ‘awesome’ post on why you shouldn’t be using WordPress. Lets take a deeper look at what they wrote and at SiteWorks, their in house CMS. SiteWorks Pricing Siteworks Screenshots