Showing posts with label project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label project. Show all posts

Friday, 25 November 2011

Green Smoke Announces the Winners of its Video Project

Miami, FL (PRWEB) October 28, 2011

This past summer, Green Smoke, the leading provider of electronic cigarettes, launched their summer video project which acted as a platform for their customers to tell their stories. Fans of Green Smoke e-cigarettes were given 1 month to create their videos and were encouraged to be as creative as possible. The top 3 videos would receive $ 1500 in cash, and $ 1000 would be awarded to the video with the most YouTube likes and to the video with the most Social Media shares. Every other video entry was awarded $ 50 and every video filmed in a creative location was awarded $ 150.


Over the course of the month more than 40 videos were submitted from places all over the United States and even as far away as Australia. On September 8 the voting was closed and the video makers were given a month and a half to promote their videos and get as many likes on YouTube and Social Media shares as they could.


The top 3 winners were handpicked by Green Smokes staff and the winners are:

Leg Up Farm A Contestant in Global Pepsi Contest; Project Would Help Brand New Facility for Children with Special Needs

York, PA (PRWEB) October 4, 2010

A new Pennsylvania-based center for children with special needs is a contender to win $ 250,000 in a global contest sponsored by Pepsi. Leg Up Farm (LUF) successfully submitted an entry for the Doing Good: 101 texting competition that would make possible some exciting new additions to its brand new facility that caters to families not just patients. The entry had to make it past a team of Pepsi judges in order to qualify and now the winners will be chosen by popular vote. To vote for Leg Up Farm, you can text 103318 to Pepsi (73774) or vote online. You can vote daily through October. For more information, visit http://www.refresheverything.com/legupfarm.


Pepsis contest is broken into six categories in which the projects will benefit the planet, neighborhoods, arts and culture, food and shelter, health, and education. LUFs entry falls in the health category and would allow the novel new therapeutic center to incorporate sensory gardens into its environmentally friendly design. Leg Up Farm is a hands-on program that provides not just speech, physical and occupational therapy for its patients all together in one central location, which is in itself rare but art therapy, dance therapy, an indoor horse arena/barn and an interactive town center that makes the center a fun destination for families not just a one-stop shop for therapy appointments.


Known as Rainbow Gardens, Leg Up Farms sensory gardens would enhance the environment in which therapy services are delivered to children and their families, make the spaces accessible to persons with disabilities and allow people to enjoy and benefit from nature a core theme of Leg Up Farms approach to therapy for children with special needs.


The Rainbow Gardens will provide walking paths, a meditation garden, and other visual and sensory stimulation for children. The gardens will be designed and installed with minimal impact to the environment and are designed to provide fresh-air opportunities to the children, increased respect for and education about the environment (including the role of wildlife, insects, vegetation, fresh air and sunshine in sustaining us), an understanding about food production, an assistance dog respite area and space for recreation and exercise.


Leg Up Farm opened in April 2010. Founded by Louie Castriota, the father of four, the farm was inspired by his daughter Brooke, 14, who was born with mitochondrial disease.


Leg Up Farm believes that every child is special and that everyone involved in a childs life must work together . . . from family and friends, to doctors and therapists, to teachers, volunteers, and community members. The "Rainbow Gardens" will improve a child's life all while caring for our environment and inspiring a sense of community in the process.


Leg Up Farm will hold an open house on Saturday, Oct. 16, noon-4 p.m. at its new facility in Mount Wolf, Pa., just north of York. Festivities will include the first-ever viewing of the centers new indoor horse arena/barn, an opportunity to meet LUF staff and tour the center, and the unveiling of the centers official live mascot.


For more information on Leg Up Farm, visit http://www.legupfarm.org. To speak with Castriota, call 717-870-3293.


Interesting sidenotes: Louies daughter Olivia is a York College exchange student currently at St. Johns University in York, England. She casts her votes from overseas. Out of 160 grants awarded since February 2010, only one from Pennsylvania has secured funding.


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More College Text Press Releases

Gallaudet University Breaks Ground on Newest Campus Development Residence Hall Project Expands DeafSpace Architectural Concept

Washington, DC (PRWEB) April 26, 2011

Gallaudet University unveiled specifics on its newest campus development at a groundbreaking ceremony featuring remarks by Gallaudet President T. Alan Hurwitz, District of Columbia Ward 5 Advisory Neighborhood Commission Chair Bill Shelton, and Washington Post columnist Roger Lewis, among other local area notable guests.


Chartered in 1864 by President Abraham Lincoln, Gallaudet University is the worlds only accredited liberal arts university for deaf and hard of hearing students that offers a bilingual learning environment in American Sign Language and English.


The groundbreaking took place at the future site of the universitys Living and Learning residence hall, also known as LLRH6. The new residence hall is the second construction project on campus that incorporates an emerging architectural concept known as DeafSpace, in which building design features are used to maximize deaf peoples visual access in educational, work, and living environments.


For 147 years, Gallaudet University has served as an innovator for education, communication and language for people who are deaf or hard of hearingand a way of life for many deaf people around the world, said Hurwitz. The considerations of deaf people in terms of visual and communications accessibility are unique [and] extend beyond the classroom to our living and working environments.


DeafSpace emphasizes sensory awareness, mobility and proximity, acoustics, and light and color treatments. The first structure built on the Gallaudet campus using the DeafSpace concept is the Sorenson Language and Communication Center which opened in 2008.


LLRH6 will serve to expand the DeafSpace approach to a unique mix of residential, academic and social spaces to foster lively interaction within a visually attuned environment, said Hansel Bauman, Gallaudet University director of design and planning. The academic spaces are open to the entire student population and will include a CoLab, a flexible studio space where students can work collaboratively on innovative projects; and the Terrace Lounge, the main social space with a terraced floor configured to the gentle slope of the site. Students can either gather in multiple small study groups on the terraced spaces or gather in a large group to watch a movie with clear sight lines to all parts of the space, noted Bauman.


The LLRH6 project team was assembled with the assistance of a selection committee that included Gallaudet students, faculty, and staff as well as representatives from the surrounding Washington, D.C., community. To further promote community involvement, Gallaudet has recently hosted several job fairs to identify qualified District of Columbia residents, with preference given to candidates of Ward 5 and the Trinidad community, for construction jobs at the project.


In addition, sustainable design strategies will be employed to obtain LEED Silver Certification by the U.S. Green Building Council, including the introduction for the first time ever to campus a geothermal heating and cooling system, as well as water-saving and high efficiency fixtures, recycled and regional content and materials, and the use of mechanical (HVAC), electric, and plumping systems installed with a focus on efficiency and controllability.


Our hope is that as we continue to introduce new building and construction initiatives, such as the universitys 2012-2022 master plan and beyond, we can further develop opportunities for greater sustainability, as well as create jobs and career development opportunities for our students as well as community residents, said Hurwitz.


The $ 16 million new residence hall will house 175 students and total 60,000 square feet across five stories. Commons areas of the structure will be open to the entire campus community. The project is expected to be completed by the summer of 2012.


The LLRH6 project team consists of:


Builder: Sigal Construction