I was
once designing a proposal for a mandatory two - hour court - based education program to be offered by volunteer lawyers, and in the space of a single afternoon I was able to sign enough people up that biweekly sessions could be provided with each volunteer only teaching two sessions a year.
Not exact matches
Once NASDC chose the 11 winning
proposals (see sidebar below), it established a three - phase process for refining, implementing, and marketing these
designs.
Once they have done this, they fill out the project
proposal sheet; on one side of this sheet is a list of some potential resources, on the other is the know / wonder chart — a graphic organizer
designed to help them decide what they already know and what they might need to discover to do their project.
For the Miami fountain... they began with van Bruggen's suggestion of the juicer — Oldenburg had
once designed a soft Silex juicer as a
proposal for a monument in Manhattan's Columbus Circle.
My first thought upon seeing this project in Streetsblog was that where we
once had the Bilbao Effect, where every second - string town would build a starchitect -
designed museum to attract attention, now we have the High Line Effect, where every old bridge gets a
proposal for a park.