Formula 1 has struck a deal to host a second race on the shores of the United States of America, with Miami set to join the calendar in 2022.
Here’s your ultimate guide of what to expect from the 19-turn temporary street circuit – the US’s 11th F1 location – in Miami Gardens…
Look at this fun video from Red Bull Motorsports designed for the launch of the new Miami circuit.
(source: facebook.com/RedBullMotorsports, formula1.com)
For now, it’s still a ghostly, magical chip of land that seems to have escaped from Manhattan and floated off into the harbor. But there is some big-time development in the offering.
Here is the full article from Curbed.
(source: curbed.com picture: curbed.com / Barbara Bestor Architects)
“Single family and condo new signed contracts combined have roughly doubled annually for the third consecutive month. New inventory for single families and condos has increased year over year for the first time in twelve months of tracking as seasonal patterns return.”
(source: millersamuel.com)
“New signed contracts for all three property types combined expanded annually for the past three months. The new signed contract gains were significantly larger for this March and April because the year-ago period marked the early days of the pandemic lockdown. New inventory jumped annually for the most recent two months for the same reason.”
(source: millersamuel.com)
Round-the-clock subway service in New York City resumed May 17 after more than a year of late-night, pandemic-related closures.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo made the announcement in late April wrapped it into a broader swath of reopening announcements that end most pandemic-related capacity limits and eliminate restaurant curfews.
“The city that never sleeps is slowly—but surely—living up to its name again and waking up from the COVID-19 pandemic, but so should the subway system—and ASAP,” Sen.Schumer said in a statement.
Cuomo …
Federal health officials declared that fully vaccinated people could go into most environments regardless of crowd size without a face-covering or without social distancing.
The guidance does come with a few caveats. CDC officials said that people will still need to wear face-coverings when traveling on airplanes, buses, trains and on public transportation. Fully vaccinated people will also still need to keep their faces covered in hospitals and long-term care facilities, officials announced.
As of Wednesday 5/12, more than 7.9 …