Home » Archives for March 2012 » Page 72
Page 72«..1020..71727374..8090..»
Church notes -
March 10, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Burlington Baptist Church, 1225 Hagemann Ave., will hear the pastor, Kendall Adams, give the message, "Luke 4:14-20," at the 10:15 a.m. service Sunday, and his message, "Overcoming Temptation Part 2," at 6 p.m. Sunday.
Calvary Baptist Church, 2710 West Ave., will hear the Rev. Simeon give the message, "Final Instructions," at the Sunday morning service with the Scripture Acts 20:28-38. The evening service starts at 6 p.m.
Christ Episcopal Church, 623 N. Fifth St., will have a narrated Eucharist at 10 a.m. Sunday. Win Boyd will explain the Episcopal service and why the worshippers do what they do. There will not be a sermon.
CityChurch Burlington meeting at The Burlington, Third and Valley streets, second-floor ballroom, will hear Steve Youngblood speak at 10 a.m. Sunday. He will give the sermon, "The Power to Change." The first-floor Prayer Center is open from noon to 1 p.m. daily for community prayer and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday and 8 to 10 p.m. Friday for worship and intercession.
Advertisement
Des Moines County Catholic Parishes are hosting Des Moines County Catholic Family Reunion, inviting those who have been away from the church to join a group from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Saturdays at SS. Mary and Patrick's Parish Center, 420 W. Mount Pleasant St., West Burlington.
Faith Lutheran Church, 3109 Sunnyside Ave., will hear the Rev. Wayne Weissenbuehler's sermon, "Such a Deal!" at the 10:30 a.m. communion service Sunday. Mid-week Lenten worship with Messiah starts with supper at 6 p.m. Wednesday. Council meets at 7:45 p.m. at Messiah.
First Christian Church, 1221 Park Ave., will hear Bill McConnell speak at the 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. services Sunday. He will give the first of a two-part sermon, "The Secrets of Spiritual Growth." A blood pressure clinic will be between services in Fellowship Hall. Crosstown High is 5:30 p.m. Sunday.
First Christian Church, 961 Walnut St., Hamilton, Ill., will show the movie, "Soul Surfer," at 7 p.m. March 16, inviting all ages for free. Popcorn and drinks will be provided.
First Congregational Church, 313 N. Fourth St., will hear the Rev. Jim Francisco's sermon, "Questioning Our Faith," at the 10:15 a.m. service Sunday. Melissa Fell will speak on her recent mission trip to Haiti at 6 p.m. Tuesday. Admission is free.
Original post:
Church notes
The Arlington County Board has approved a loan to a non-profit that would fund the construction of an 83-unit affordable-unit apartment building on Columbia Pike.
The Board voted 4-0 to lend up to $6 million to the non-profit developer AHC Inc., which is headquartered in Arlington. The building would be located at 5511 Columbia Pike and replace a Shell gas station, part of a parking lot, and some other undeveloped land.
Funding for the project would come from the county's Affordable Housing Investment Fund, as well as from the AHCMultifamily Revolving Loan Fund, which is made up of federal Community Development Block Grant funds.
It is through public-private partnerships like this that the County is working to preserve affordable housing opportunities on Columbia Pike as the corridor redevelops, County Board Chair Mary Hynes said in a statement. This is an important investment that will help ensure that Columbia Pike, even as it is revitalized with more ground-floor retail, more public spaces and new housing, remains affordable for working people.
The six-story structure would include nineteen apartments affordable to families making 50 percent of the area's median income ($53,750 for a family of four). 64 units would be affordable to families earning 60 percent of the area median income ($64,500 for a family of four).
Read more:
Arlington Approves Affordable Housing Loan
Firm's success carved in stone -
March 10, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Kenneth Burnettes business supplying furniture production companies with plywood ended after a mass migration of the companies to China.
He decided to switch gears, buying an established company making custom countertops out of natural stone.
Last August, he bought Stoneworks Custom Countertops, a business that has been around for more than a decade that uses an elaborate computerized saw that cuts granite, marble and quartz to exact dimensions.
I was in plywood fabrication for more than 20 years, the Rocky Mount native said. As furniture plants began to shut down, my customer base began to disappear. I had to lay off 25 people and shut down.
Stoneworks uses a computer numerical control machine to slice the natural stone.
Some other companies carve out stone countertops with handtools in a garage, he said.
We have a $330,000 CNC saw. Its called a fabrication center, he said. The uniqueness of this company is that we create a digital file of the kitchen or the bathrooms, and that information is digitally transferred to the saw, so that the tolerances in which we operate are much tighter than without CNC equipment.
The countertops are made in Rocky Mount. His company serves Eastern North Carolina from Morehead City up to Rocky Mount over to Elizabeth City, with a sales office and showroom in Greenville.
That enables me to get business in Greenville, New Bern and Morehead City, he said.
His company has retained most of the employees who were working under the previous owner.
See original here:
Firm's success carved in stone
Category
Countertops | Comments Off on Firm's success carved in stone
Introducing House Proud in Belmont. Interior Decorator Sue Morris, known as "The Design Coach," specializes in working with budget-minded clients. Morris, who has lived in Belmont with her family for 16 years, is a former textbook editor who returned to school in 2002, taking courses over a few years toward a Certificate in Decorative Arts.
The Design Coach was born during those years, as friends and friends-of-friends started asking Morris for help with their decorating dilemmas. She works in an informal but organized way as a consultant for clients who are looking for anything from a few paint colors to whole-house updates.
Visit wickedlocal.com/Belmont/blogs/houseproudinbelmont to learn more.
How did you get interested in decorating?
I think my interest in decorating started when I was very young and would create houses for my Barbies out of cardboard boxes! I spent a lot of time decorating those houses. Much later, when my husband and I bought out first house, I found that I really loved the decorating process. I truly enjoyed going to the paint store or the fabric store to pick out colors or fabrics. To me, drawing a floor plan is a good time. As I talked to other people, I realized that not everyone enjoyed the process... in fact, many of them found it painful.
What do you love most about decorating?
I love seeing how something as simple (and inexpensive) as a gallon of paint or a new light fixture can really transform a room. Since I have a home office, I spend a lot of time in my house, and I know how important it is to feel comfortable in your own home, and part of that is knowing that your home looks the way you want it to. That doesn't necessarily mean it looks like a home in a decorating magazine, but your home should reflect your taste and what feels comfortable to you. I love helping people realize that goal.
Was there a project you worked on that you are most proud of?
If so, what was it and why are you proud of it? My favorite project to date was actually my own home -- our summer cottage in RI. We practically rebuilt the whole house two years ago so I had to choose finishes -- from paint colors to light fixtures, tile, counters, and so on -- from a distance and often very quickly. I chose about 30 light fixtures over the course of one weekend. It was nerve wracking at times, and as with all construction projects, it went on much longer than we anticpated, but it was also very gratifying. Decorating a beach house is so fun because you tend to use a more whimsical approach and often choose materials and fixtures that you might not consider using in a full-time house. Our house ended up being featured in Builder and Architect magazine a year ago.
Why did you want to have a community blog?
Read the original post:
Introducing Wicked Local Belmont's newest community blogger
Category
Interior Decorator | Comments Off on Introducing Wicked Local Belmont's newest community blogger
FRANKENLUST TOWNSHIP Robert Hardt grew sick and tired of picking up the remains of his mailbox after snowplows and snow knocked it loose.
So this winter he did something about it.
Before the snow started to fly, Hardt built wooden protectors for four of the mailboxes along southbound M-84 in Frankenlust Township.
"When you have snow being thrown, we used to have to replace two or three (mailboxes) a year," the 44-year-old Hardt said. "It's happened several times. I don't even keep track. We started putting (the protectors) together this year. We drill some holes and cement them down."
Hardt lives in one of the houses along M-84 with his family and rents out the other three houses next to his to tenants. With the new additions in front of the mailboxes, Hardt hasn't had to pick up his mailbox this year.
The line of four mailboxes along M-84 isn't the only place where the wooden protectors are being seen. They have dotted the area, whether done by professionals or at home in their own garage.
"It's getting to be more in popular demand," Hardt said. "I think some people just do it themselves. I see more and more of them put out, especially on highways such like this. If you travel along M-20 towards Mount Pleasant, I bet 50 percent of the people out there have them."
Hardt, who is the owner and works at Asphalt Bituminous Concrete, said that the wooden protectors for the mailboxes took him about 45 minutes to 1 hour to build and that all he needed was a few 2x6 wood boards, screws and some cement for the ground.
Hardt said that building it with gaps in the protector allows some of the snow to get through, but not enough to damage the mailbox.
"We've had a wet snow this year," Hardt said. "That's why there is a gap there. It let's some of it come through, but not all of it."
More:
Mail savers: Wooden mailbox protectors becoming new fad in Saginaw, Bay City region
Category
Garage Additions | Comments Off on Mail savers: Wooden mailbox protectors becoming new fad in Saginaw, Bay City region
HARRISBURG, IL (KFVS) -
Saturday kicks off a week-long effort to help get displaced storm victims started on repairing or replacing their homes.
A team of students and faculty from the SIU School of Architecture will be at the Harrisburg Public Library from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, March 10, and every day through March 17.
They'll be offering free residential design services to families whose homes were damaged or destroyed.
The architects and architects-in-training will visit the home sites, take pictures and collect information about the location. Then they'll evaluate what remains of the home. Based on interviews with the families, they'll create working drawings to repair or replace the homes.
"They'll design new homes at no cost to homeowners to walk them through the entire process of putting their homes back together," said Harrisburg Mayor Eric Gregg. "Those are things you don't think about on day one, but you definitely think about it going forward because that's a huge need. There are hundreds of homes that have been damaged and if you've got people who are experts willing to come in and help us, we're going to greet them with our arms wide open."
SIU organizers say the goal is to offer a valuable service to families at this early stage, to help them plan and begin preparing for the future as well as offer students valuable hands-on learning experience.
Homeowners are encouraged to bring in photographs of their home before the tornado to help with the design.
Copyright 2012 KFVS. All rights reserved.
Read the original post:
SIU architects to help Harrisburg tornado victims redesign homes
Category
Architects | Comments Off on SIU architects to help Harrisburg tornado victims redesign homes
Leicester manager Nigel Pearson was disappointed with his team's performance in the 3-1 defeat to in-form Reading.
Mikele Leigertwood gave put the Royals ahead after 15 minutes before Jason Roberts and Simon Church scored late on to wrap up the points, meaning Neil Danns' injury-time goal was only a consolation.
Pearson said: "Reading are good team in a rich vein of form but we contributed to our own downfall.
"We need to start games better. The annoying thing is that we have caused problems by not applying ourselves in the right way in the first half. I will have to consider making changes.
"To make the play-offs now is a massive task. We have had two games this week where we have contributed massively to our own downfall. I am unhappy about the way we have gone about the game.
"There's a lot of hard work to be done because that was not good enough and I will be demanding a reaction in our next game against Birmingham."
See original here:
Pearson: Architects of our own downfall
Category
Architects | Comments Off on Pearson: Architects of our own downfall
LOWELL -- The roofing and siding company from New York that performed work at Westminster Village has been penalized by the state for operating without a valid workers-compensation policy in place.
In late December, the state Department of Industrial Accidents issued a "Stop Work Order" to the roofing and siding contractor after officials determined the company did not have a valid workers' compensation policy for work at the complex on Pawtucket Boulevard.
Since then, the state has fined Upstate Roofing and Siding of Monroe, N.Y., $700 and has debarred the company from bidding or participating on any public contracts in the state for the next three years, said Greg Freed, a spokesman for the state Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development.
"If a company fails to carry workers' compensation insurance coverage and injuries occur, injured workers are left to fend for themselves," said Philip Hillman, the director of the Department of Industrial Accidents. "Workers' compensation insurance pays for necessary medical treatment and offsets lost wages associated with injuries or illnesses incurred on the job."
The company was permitted to resume work after providing proof of workers' compensation insurance and paying the fine, Freed said.
Also in late December, the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration issued an "Imminent Danger" notice to Upstate Roofing and Siding.
Inspectors from OSHA's Andover office observed
OSHA's inspection of the site is continuing, said OSHA spokesman Edmund Fitzgerald.
Upstate Roofing and Siding's office was closed yesterday and a voicemail left was not returned.
Prior to the roofing problems, electrical contractors closed up walls after doing wiring work in about 100 units and before calling for city electrical inspections of the work.
Read more from the original source:
State fines roof firm at Lowell complex
Category
Roofing | Comments Off on State fines roof firm at Lowell complex
CONCORD, N.C. --
CONCORD, N.C. -- In an effort to be more competitive with other utility providers, Concord will now offer rebates for customers who install high efficiency heat pumps in their homes.
Concord City Council members approved the rebate program unanimously at their meeting on Thursday, following some debate over the programs merits. Concord will offer a rebate of $400 per unit for efficient heat pumps installed in new or existing homes.
The cost of power has been going up, said Electric Systems Director Bob Pate. People have been seeing increases. Were not unlike Duke and co-ops and Electricities. They have heat pump programs.
The program rebate resembles what Power Agency cities such as Monroe, High Point, and Gastonia are offering their customers, according to Concord officials. Union Power does not offer a rebate but they offer to finance the total replacement cost of a more energy efficient heat pump. Duke Energy offers a rebate program for higher efficiency heating and cooling equipment.
The program is a way to help lower the customers cost with an added benefit of helping to lower the citys peak demand during the summer, city officials said.
Approximately 56 percent of the energy use in a typical American home can be attributed to heating and cooling, making it the largest energy expense in the home, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.
Heat pumps are considered a good energy-efficient alternative to furnaces and air conditioners for climates with moderate heating and cooling needs, according to the Department of Energy.
Heat pumps use electricity to move heat from a cool space into a warm, making the cool space cooler and the warm space warmer.
They move heat rather than generate it. The most common type of heat pump is an air-source heat pump, which transfers heat between your house and the outside air. Households that heat with electricity can reduce their electricity use by 30 to 40 percent by using a heat pump, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. High efficiency pumps also dehumidify better than standard central air conditioners, lowering energy use while increasing cooling.
Read the rest here:
Concord rebate plan turns up heat on utility competitors
Kitchen Fixes on a Budget -
March 10, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Theres an old saying that the kitchen is the heart of the home. It serves not only as a place to cook and eat, but also as a place to gather. A place where homework gets done and mail is sorted. A desirable kitchen can raise the value of your home and make the time you spend in it more productive and enjoyable. Kitchen renovation can easily get out of hand, but there are ways to revamp your cooking space without emptying your wallet. Before you do anything related to finances, decide if you are going to do a small-scale or large-scale kitchen renovation. This will help you make smarter choices throughout the process.
Budgeting When you have a clear vision of how far you want to take your kitchen renovation, figure out exactly how much you can afford to spend and draw up a budget. DIYLife.com suggests building extra cash into your budget for the inevitable surprises that pop up as you go. The website also says you should write up a list of renovation priorities. This way, you know what to eliminate if your start running low on funds. If you are having trouble determining a ballpark estimate for how much your kitchen transformation will cost, CraftsmenNetwork.com has a handy kitchen remodeling calculator that factors in area and time constraints.
Where did the money you are planning to use for your kitchen remodeling come from? Is it from a stash you set aside for a rainy day, or did you get a loan specifically for the renovation? This will make a difference. Remember to include fees that come along with borrowing and how much you will have to pay in interest when drawing up your budget.
If you want a large-scale kitchen renovation, be aware that you may have to leave your house during the project. If you cant stay with a friend or relative, you will have to spend money renting a room or apartment. Even if you decide to stay, you will be going about your daily life without a kitchen for a period of time, which means more restaurant bills and take out tabs. Think about your options and factor these extra costs into your budget.
Keep track of your finances as you go. This will help you stay on budget and see how much wiggle room you have. If you wait until the project is almost complete to fill in your spreadsheet, you may discover you have strayed far away from your original budget. Small-scale remodeling Instead of gutting the whole kitchen and replacing everything but the kitchen sink (and maybe that too), you have the option of improving your kitchen and giving it a noticeable makeover by making small changes. You can reface your old cabinets and drawers with veneer instead of getting all new doors.
Selecting the right color paint can make all the difference in a room, and you can save money by doing the painting yourself. A word of caution: you might want to stay away from trendy kitchen colors, as these may make your kitchen undesirable when you go to sell your house. Getting new and improved light fixtures can help brighten up your kitchen, not to mention make it more ecofriendly.
Internal changes can also help transform your kitchen. Cut some of that cabinet clutter by investing in organizers. These can open up more storage place while saving you the time and frustration that goes along with rummaging through your cabinets. Something as simple as that can make you feel better about your kitchen and save you thousands of dollars.
Read more from the original source:
Kitchen Fixes on a Budget
« old entrysnew entrys »
Page 72«..1020..71727374..8090..»