Do you dream of starting your own business? Before you take the plunge, be sure business ownership is right for you by analyzing these five key areas.
Month: June 2016
12 Ways to Start A Business – Find the real opportunities
Looking for ways to start a business? Want to avoid scams? Here are 12 time-tested ways to find good business ideas on your own.
House in San Juan / Díaz Paunetto Arquitectos
© Víctor Díaz Paunetto
- Architects: Díaz Paunetto Arquitectos
- Location: San Juan, San Juan, Puerto Rico
- Design Architect In Charge: Víctor Díaz Paunetto, AIA
- Area: 3700.0 ft2
- Project Year: 2016
- Photographs: Víctor Díaz Paunetto
- Collaborators: Arq. Ariel Santiago, Danniely Staback Arq. Néstor Lebrón AIT ,Arq. Jorge González AIT ,Arq. Roberto Guadalupe, Jimmie Vélez
- Consultants: Green Engineering Group – Structural; DRS Engineering – Electrical
- Contractor: 504 Construction Managers; Daniel Isado PE
- Addition Area: 1,200 sqft
© Víctor Díaz Paunetto
From the architect. The remodeling and expansion of this existing residence was developed for a family of four members. The site of approximately 1,270 m2 is located on the highest point of the street of a well-known suburban housing development in San Juan. On clear days, part of the city is visible from the second floor on the east side of the house.
© Víctor Díaz Paunetto
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© Víctor Díaz Paunetto
Our arrival to the project was given under atypical circumstances. The previous architect that was working on the design of the house had passed away and the contractor was fired from the project after the completion of the pool and pool house. We were asked to evaluate the work built so far and to proceed with the redesign of the terrace, reconsider the relationship between the master bedroom with the exterior, and redefine the front of the house in a more distinctive manner. Once the design was completed the client hired a new contractor with the required knowledge and capacity to finish the first phase of the project.
© Víctor Díaz Paunetto
Some of the objectives in this project included taking advantage of the topography, responding to existing views, and maximizing natural ventilation and light. We proceeded to expand and open the public areas to the west facing the street, which allowed us created a new image for the house and a more continuous and ample space, as well as establishing a better connection between the interior and exterior spaces of the house. Having the main façade facing west, we decided to turn the problem of direct afternoon sun heat and light into an opportunity to create an element that gave a distinctive character and a new identity to the residence. In this sense, we proceeded to create what could be perceived as a sculptural relief made of a long-lasting material that could serve as a sunscreen and to give privacy. This sunscreen creates a play of light and shadows in the interior, which helps define the spaces through the constant light changes and projections. The cellular sunscreen, contextualized in reference to the client’s medical profession, created an organic array made of weathering (corten) steel which generates a tridimensional pattern. Although initially design by hand with an intuitive cellular pattern, we drew upon parametric programming technology that helped us develop the precision needed to be laser cut at a metal workshop and accuracy needed during the on-site assembly.
© Víctor Díaz Paunetto
The concept for the remodeling and expansion of this residence focused in opening the interior and exterior public spaces by creating a floor plan that allowed for a more fluid movement through the space, better illumination and spatial amplitude. The design’s formal expression uses a contemporary vocabulary made up of simple lines and forms, in an effort to establish a better relationship between the original structure, what our colleague left us, and our new design, as well as to achieve a more cohesive reading of the structure. We continued the use of concrete as the main construction material and the white color present in the original structure, which along with glass and weathering (corten) steel dominate the architectural language.
© Víctor Díaz Paunetto
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Tate Modern releases movie showing construction of Herzog & de Meuron’s extension
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The 7 Steps To Creating A Habit
You’re reading The 7 Steps To Creating A Habit, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’re enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.
As I’ve studied habits over the years, I’ve found that every trick, tactic, or app is just a manipulation of the same behavioral components. Some habit advice is logistical such as scheduling everything into your calendar. Other bits of advice are more emotional like tying the habit with who you are as a person. In any case we are changing the same variables over and over again. I call these variables dimensions.
Here are the 7 dimensions of a Habit.
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Self-Knowledge
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Planning
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Momentum
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External Accountability
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Environment & Convenience
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Meaning
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Identity
Now just knowing what they are doesn’t change your habits much so let’s dig a little deeper into each.
Self-Knowledge
There are two types of Self-Knowledge when it comes to habits. There are your likes and dislikes, you’re most likely pretty clear about these. You know whether you prefer running or lifting, chicken or tofu.
But there’s another aspect – how you respond to certain incentives and strategies. For that we turn to Gretchen Rubin, author of three New York Times bestsellers including her latest novel Better Than Before, which in part talks about using your Self-Knowledge to create habits that work for you.
More specifically, she explains how everyone falls into a framework of one of four different Habit Tendencies: Upholder, Questioner, Obliger, or Rebel.
Knowing your tendencies will tell you whether you would do well with an accountability partner, a new phone app, or that you should abandon trying to make habits work all together.
Rubin has an assessment online that will give you a report on your framework, take the habits quiz here.
Being clear and honest about what your tendencies and desires are will determine how effective all the other dimensions will affect you.
Planning
Planning is useful because it decreases the cognitive load of taking action. By writing out the time, place, and materials of your habit, you need less willpower to follow through with the behavior. For people who are internally accountable, having this sort of clarity is great.
When trying to control bad behavior we need a different type of planning called Implementation Intentions. These are creating “If _____, then _____” for handling potential failure points.
“If I get the urge to eat a cookie, then I will eat a banana and wait 20 minutes before making a decision.”
“If I find myself surfing online, then I will save the page I was on for later, and then block that website (and similar ones) for the rest of the day.”
As a general rule, the aim should be to simplify the planning as much as possible. A simple but not easy system that you can say in a sentence or two will be more useful than a long program that must be followed with precise detail.
External Accountability
People in tune with others around them, often extroverts, do well with having other people keeping them in check. For these, setting a money bet with a friend might be the only tactic they need for changing their habits. For others, joining groups and attending meeting can be an annoying waste of time.
There is a wrong way to use external accountability. You can hear the explanation from popular TED Speaker Derek Sivers here.
The gist is that you shouldn’t tell anyone and everyone about your personal goals because there’s a dumb part of our brain that’ll mistake talking about your plans for actually making progress. So when you scream from the roof tops, or from your Facebook page, that you’re going to do a Marathon, you may be less likely to run today.
Environment & Convenience
We underestimate how our behaviors can be decided by simple convenience. We’ll miss the gym because making the 10 minute drive is a hassle, we’ll eat the sweet because they’re right in front of us, and we’ll stay up late because it’s easier to stay online than to shutoff and get ready for bed.
Say you want to eat healthier and you know that even a few small changes can have a dramatic effect over time. Instead of relying on sheer will to change your behavior, simply act on the following question.
“How can I make it twice as easy to eat ____________, ___________, and _____________ while making it twice as hard to eat, ___________, ____________, and _____________?
Taking the necessary steps to surround yourself with good foods instead of bad ones almost guarantees you’ll eat better.
Meaning
If you ever find yourself saying “I need to [insert good habit] more” but never actually doing anything about it, you may have a meaning problem. Often times, we have trouble moving forward with a habit because we aren’t clear about what we expect to get out of it. Or we don’t really want to do it at all.
This is the difference between the vague “I work out because it’s good for me” and “I do strength training so that I can have better energy throughout the workday, weigh ten pounds less in six months, and be able to run around with my future kids.”
When your motivation begins to fall after the initial habit ‘honeymoon’ period, having a deep, meaningful ‘why’ will help keep you moving.
Identity
“I run because that’s who I am.”
While Identity one of the most powerful dimensions, it’s difficult to use.
The best way to make a habit part of your identity is to make them Value-Based Habits. Meaning you identify a core value of yours that is related to the habit and you learn to adapt your habit based off that value.
Momentum
Momentum connects with us on an emotional level and on a neurological level as our brain builds the skill of performing this habit again and again. Combining both the emotional and the pragmatic makes Momentum a very powerful dimension to use. This is the reason daily habits are easier to create than non-daily or weekly ones.
For some people Rebels, a daily schedule may make them feel trapped by having this obligation ahead of them everyday. However, Rebels are rare and you’re probably not one of them.
Insights on Dimensions
There is no strongest dimension. While you could make a case for Self-Knowledge or Identity ,it truly depends on the person. As we touched on earlier, some dimensions may not resonate with you at all while you may have one or two dimensions that could pull all the weight for you.
Only use 2 or 3 per habit. This may seem like you’re missing on an opportunity for a super strong habit that’s not true. Using 5 or 6 dimensions will only make your habit worse as it becomes more difficult to follow. Also realize that most of us only halfheartedly use one dimension (planning) with our vague intentions. Keep it simple.
No Carrots. It’s been found that giving yourself a reward after a good habit does not help you stick with it. The only exception is if the reward is given infrequently and is meant to further the habit it’s rewarding, such as buying new running shoes after running 100 miles this month. In terms of punishments, the social embarrassment from not following through with a group (see external accountability) is the main healthy ‘stick’ you can use.
Think about the last habit you’ve successfully made a part of your life, which dimension was it based off of? Try to use that one again while working on your new habits.
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This Post is written by Alex Romero, he teaches the fundamentals of building stronger, easier habits on his blog: Uhabit
You’ve read The 7 Steps To Creating A Habit, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’ve enjoyed this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.
Adobe Rolls Out Big Update for Photoshop CC, Smaller Updates for the Rest of Its Apps
Adobe’s pushing out a big update to its suite of creative cloud apps, most notably to Photoshop, which gets a slew of new features, including content-aware crop, match font, and more.
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These Salad Bases Are Easy to Make, Will Stay Fresh and Crisp All Week
Vibrant, fresh salads are one of my favorite lunches, but I don’t always have the time to stop and make one in the middle of my workday. Traditional, leafy bases can get limp and slimy if you make them ahead, but The Kitchn has come up with five fresh salad bases that stay crisp all freaking week.