By: | 2010-04-15 | Real Estate As a result of homogeneous suburban neighborhoods and highway commercial sprawl, a strong emphasis is being placed upon the design and form of our built environment. One of the driving influences is to design places for people instead of the car. read more
By: Alice Chen | 2011-05-06 | Press releases In terms of current situation of China's convention and exhibition industry, exhibition halls and urban infrastructure fail to meet the demand of the industry's development in first-tier cities due to high concentration of brand exhibitions, which leads to the transfer of the industry to the second-tier and even third-tier cities. read more
By: gaga | 2011-01-15 | Business Suitable species The earthworm species (or composting worms) most often used are Red Wigglers (Eisenia foetida or Eisenia andrei), but European nightcrawlers (Eisenia hortensis) also may be used. Users refer to European nightcrawlers by a variety of other names, including dendrobaenas, dendras, and Belgian nightcrawlers. Blueworms (Perionyx excavatus) may be used in the tropics. However, P. excavatus worms are not suitable for worm compost bins in most of the contiguous United States read more
By: hotxueboy | 2010-10-09 | Corporate Company overview General Motors GMT800 truck assembly line. In 2009, General Motors employs approximately 244,500 people around the world. The Renaissance Center located in Detroit read more
By: Peter Bane | 2010-04-04 | Environmental Ten years ago, a dozen of us set out boldly to go where few had gone before: Envisioning a human-scale community designed and built in harmony with the natural world, we wanted to show a healthier way for humans to live with each other while treading lightly on the earth. We thought we could leave behind the greed, selfishness, alienation, and destructive habits of US culture and create a more meaningful life together by living more simply, closer to nature, and by helping other people to make similar changes in their own lives and circumstances. read more
By: zerryxu | 2011-07-22 | Technology BYD 7 in Xi'an, Beijing, Ping Shan, Huizhou, Shanghai, Changsha, Shaoguan world-class automotive manufacturing facilities throughout the country and more than 500 sales and service center. It has made a complete supply chain integration, R & D, design read more
By: Shawcap Working | 2011-07-04 | Finance ACCORDING TO the International Monetary Fund (IMF) "World Economic Outlook," China's output will surpass that of the United States in 2016 – only five years from now, writes Martin Hutchinson, contributing editor at Money Morning. read more
By: Chris Darling | 2011-02-23 | Business Chris Darling represents A Track-Out Solution in Las Vegas, Nevada. Offering expertise in green building standards and state-of-the-art recycling programs, the company is committed to preserving the environment as well as providing innovative waste removal solutions for residents and business owners across Las Vegas. read more
By: Audry Rose | 2010-03-29 | Gardening For thousands of years, the rose has been a symbolic flower of love all over the world. While hundreds of beautiful and fragrant flowers are grown, nothing can match the elegance of the rose. Many people appreciate the rose bush from afar, believing that growing this type of flower is simply too difficult. read more
By: gaga | 2011-01-17 | Business Waste management Collection Feces is excreted into a container or bucket, and is sometimes collected in the container with urine and other waste. Often the deposition or excretion occurs within the residence, such as in a shophouse faced with overpopulation. This system is used in isolated rural areas and is important in developing nations or in areas that lack the adequate infrastructure to have running water read more
By: xt | 2010-10-10 | Small Business www.bbg.org/ Brooklyn Botanic Garden (BBG) is a botanical garden in the borough of Brooklyn in New York City. Located near the Prospect Heights, Crown Heights, and Park Slope neighborhoods read more
By: witch | 2010-10-09 | Negotiation Names The names of the Hudson River make a complicated story. It was called Muh-he-kun-ne-tuk, the Great Mohegan, by the Iroquois, or as the Lenape Native Americans called it in Unami read more