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Coronavirus and overtourism: How the pandemic relieved Amsterdam of its tourist problem

Construction Test

It is a major tourist draw, famous for the sight of sex workers soliciting from behind their windows and the many coffee shops where visitors can light up a joint. Charlotte Schenk, 35, lives in one of the brick canal buildings surrounding the monumental Old Church with her young family and has felt the changes firsthand. .”

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Putting 9 senior living market trends into perspective

BD+C

For developers and operators of senior living communities, the upper-income part of the market has the most potential for financial success but also the most options. At The Terraces, the newest edition for independent living at Southminster, in south Charlotte, N.C., It’s important, but it’s not enough.

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Location Focus: Florida – Rebounded And Ready

Business Facilities

Florida’s rebound from the recession has created an economic environment that has been drawing even more businesses to the state. Cape Coral hosts diverse investment zones, commercial corridors and industrial parks suitable for a wide range of corporate and entrepreneurial pursuits. percent, construction which grew by 3.9

Florida 46
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Installing Value - Contractor Magazine

Contractor Magazine

According to the EPA, potable water heating is the second most expensive energy draw in the American residence, accounting for roughly 15% of a home’s energy use. According to the EPA, potable water heating is the second most expensive energy draw in the American residence, accounting for roughly 15% of a home’s energy use.

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Centers of Technology: The Future Is Now

Business Facilities

P redictions about the speed of technological advances usually invoke a formula known in the semiconductor industry as “Moore’s law,” first postulated in 1965 by Gordon Moore, the co-founder of Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel. By Jenny Vickers. From the September / October 2017 Issue. Photo: shutterstock.com).

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Those Days Are Over

Business Facilities

The bill generated a national backlash and boycotts (including a petition to move the NCAA’s headquarters and its March Madness basketball tournament out of Indianapolis) that cost the state’s convention and tourism industries an estimated $60 million. Three months later, then-Gov.