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While avocado and harvest gold appliances are nowhere to be found in most kitchens in 2012, some classic color trends, such as a black-and-white kitchen, are unlikely to ever fade from popularity. In addition to classic color schemes, homeowners and interior designers are looking for ways to wash their kitchens in light and color that are both neutral and innovative.
Nadia Subaran, senior designer and co-owner of Aidan Design in Bethesda, said, Some customers come in with a color palette in mind or are focused on a particular selection, such as hardwood flooring to connect with other floors in the home. Other customers want a specific tile or cabinet color to establish the theme for their kitchen.
People still love the classic white, black and beige palette, but they are adding a more contemporary flair with colors like gray, mushroom, oyster and slate.
Homeowners today are remodeling their older kitchens to open them up to the family room, to the outdoors or both, said Patricia Tetro, a principal and owner of Bowa in McLean.
Everyone wants their kitchen to be light and open, so were seeing more people wanting white cabinets instead of dark woods, Ms. Tetro said. Our customers are looking for clean lines, with fewer details on the cabinets. Sometimes in a larger kitchen well still see a more elaborate center island, but in general people are less formal now and they want to keep their kitchen in line with the furniture in other rooms.
When choosing a color palette for a kitchen, consumers need to be aware of the variations in color created by natural light versus artificial light.
If a kitchen doesnt have a lot of windows and doesnt have under-cabinet lighting, its better to choose a lighter backsplash, said David Benson, part-owner and vice president of sales for Architectural Ceramics in Rockville. A kitchen with a lot of natural light offers more options.
Eve Fay, a colorist with Farrow & Ball, a paint and wallpaper manufacturer in the District, said lighting is important for safety in the kitchen as well as aesthetics.
Natural light is great, but if you have a darker space, you need to bring in additional lighting and lighter paint colors, Ms. Fay said. You should also eliminate the lines of contrast between where colors begin and end. For instance, in a small, dark space, you should paint everything the same color, from the trim to the walls to the ceiling.
Not only does natural light influence color choice, but so do other colors within a room. In the kitchen, the appliances, flooring, walls, counters, cabinets and backsplash must be considered together.
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Cover story: Lightening up in the kitchen
Written by Susan Shultz Thursday, March 08, 2012 09:00 AM
The Ring's End office building was included due to a "clerical error," Darien Housing Authority Commissioner Cyndy Ashburne said.
In the certified letter dated Feb. 29, obtained by The Darien Times, notice was given that "Viking Construction, Inc. has filed an application with the Town of Darien Building Official for approval to demolish existing dwellings at 1-30 Allen O'Neill Drive, 190, 194, 198, 202, 226, 234 Norotan Avenue [sic], 186, 234 West Avenue, and 3,5,9,11,21 Elm Street, Darien, CT."
Project developer Arthur Andersen also told The Darien Times there was no actual risk of demolition to the building.
The redevelopment, which would double the developments' homes in density, finally received approval from the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority in late August and broke ground last month.
The state had turned down the Housing Authority twice before on the request for $2.47 million of 9% low-income tax credits that will come in two parts.
The plan would double the current 53 single-family home units to 106 townhouse-style units.
Anderson said the demolition notice "should have read 186 Noroton (corner of West and Noroton)."
"We are correcting the notice and sending new ones. Sorry for the mistake," he said.
Ashburne said "we did not file a request to demolish the wrong building."
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‘Clerical error’ had Ring’s End slated for demolition
JUNEAU The Dodge County Board of Supervisors will consider spending up to $6.2 million to renovate Clearview North facility and possibly demolish the countys office building when it meets later this month.
The five-member Clearview North study committee will give a special presentation on its proposed plans to the board at the March 20 session. Those plans include moving the human services and health departments, creating a specialized community based residential facility, and creating a central storage area for the maintenance department, all at the Clearview North facility on Home Road in Juneau.
The members of the study committee were appointed in April of 2011 to consider the options available for the building when residents of the facility are moved to new quarters currently under construction across the street.
The building options that committee members considered included selling the building; razing the structure and selling the property; renovating it entirely for human services and health department; or renovate the building for multiple uses.
The committee hired Engberg Anderson in December 2011 to prepare a report on the building. After receiving the report, the committee opted to study renovating the building for multiple uses.
Selling it did not seem to be an option, study committee Chairman Glenn Stousland of Beaver Dam said. No one wants it. If we leave it for Unified Services, we still have to heat it. It did not make good economic sense not to use this building, he added.
After 11 meetings, the committee is suggesting the county consolidate all programs and operations of the Dodge County Human Services and health department into the north building. The Unified Services are currently located in the facility. That would move all the operations now being conducted in the Dodge County Office Building, 143 E. Center St., Juneau, to the Clearview North building.
The committee states in the resolution the county would make efforts to sell the vacated office building, but in the event those efforts are unsuccessful, razing the four-story structure would be considered.
Human Services Director Eric Pritzl discussed with the committee his presentation to the board on the benefits and challenges of a move to Clearview North.
In December I assembled a building team to talk about design, Pritzl said. There will be several benefits to the consumers, he added.
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Dodge County to consider use for Clearview North facility
Dee Ryan
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LOWELL -- A kitchen redo or bathroom remodeling is no laughing matter -- unless you're someone like Dee Ryan, who can poke fun at herself and make others laugh.
That's the Tewksbury native's goal in DeeConstruction, a one-woman comedy she'll show off in a staged reading at 7 p.m. Monday, March 26, at Merrimack Repertory Theatre.
"I got addicted to home repair -- electrical rewired, plumbing re-pipes, French-door upgrades and landscaping makeovers -- when we were living in L.A. and I started writing these short pieces about it as part of my comic ladies support group," Ryan said recently by phone.
Over several years and varying stages, it has evolved into the show she brings to Lowell.
"It's been done in a bunch of theaters in L.A. and also at a theater in Reston, Va., and the Pittsburgh Public Theater," she said. "It's been about eight years and the thing about the piece is that it's very personal and a lot of people will recognize themselves in it."
It chronicles her odyssey across the turbulent waters of tyrannical contractors, siren architects, monster neighbors and clueless husbands.
Bringing it to Lowell came about after her husband, Austin Tichenor -- co-creator, director and performer of the Reduced Shakespeare Company -- brought it to the attention of MRT artistic director Charles Towers when RSC was in Lowell this season for its Christmas show.
"Charles loved it, but said he already was planning a one-person show, so
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'DeeConstruction' a woman's comic take on renovation
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Snooki’s baby talk -
March 8, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Having a baby sure changes things.
Just ask Jersey Shores Nicole Snooki Polizzi, the hellion-turned-homebody who, after weeks of speculation and denial, finally admitted that she is expecting a bundle of joy.
No more peeing on porches. Those days are over, said Polizzi, who is in her 15th week of pregnancy.
The pint-sized, pouf-haired party girl, known for her wild reality TV antics, tells Us Weekly magazine she is a changed woman now that motherhood is around the corner.
Though shes excited now about the prospect of being parents with fianc Jionni LaValle, bliss wasnt exactly her first reaction.
Getty Images
WITH CHILD: Dad-to-be Jionni LaValle lives it up with then-immature Snooki last summer, before the pregnancy.
S--t, she said to herself at the time. Ive been drinking. I was worried. It was New Years Eve and we were in Vegas, so I did go crazy.
Viewers know that crazy is practically Polizzis middle name. Her antics include a 2010 arrest for creating a public nuisance and an all-out brawl with roommate Angelina Pivarnick over a guy.
And, of course, theres that whole peeing on the porch thing.
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Snooki’s baby talk
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Argyle razing to start -
March 8, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
By JOY BROWN
STAFF WRITER
Demolition of the Argyle apartment building in downtown Findlay is expected to finally begin this morning.
Officials initially hoped the razing would happen shortly after a Feb. 23 fire tore through the building. The damaged, structurally unsound building forced city officials to close off the 500 block of South Main Street.
But the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency determined that asbestos present in the building will require extensive cleanup, a decision which has slowed the demolition process.
Agency spokeswoman Dina Pierce said that because materials containing asbestos caught fire, the asbestos fiber became airborne and contaminated the rest of the building.
"A survey done after the fire found friable (broken) material in the roofing and some of the floor tile," Pierce said.
"It's very hazardous if it's airborne," Pierce said of asbestos. "It can cause some very serious health problems."
The finding changed the scope of the project. Instead of removing the asbestos first and then tearing down the building, which is what typically happens with most demolition projects, the entire Argyle must be treated as a toxic structure, Pierce said, because the asbestos can't be separated from the rest of the material.
Officials and building owners had been urging the EPA to agree to quick demolition of the building. The city declared the site a public emergency in order to expedite the project, and the owners hired Charles Construction Services of Findlay as the general contractor for the razing.
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Argyle razing to start
By Catherine Kavanaugh, cathy.kavanaugh@dailytribune.com @catherinekav
David Dalton/Daily Tribune Regenia Paige, a massage therapist with Health Source, works on Paul Anderson of Royal Oak during Wednesday's South Oakland Business Expo.
ROYAL OAK Dry ice isn't just for storing cold food and making faux fog on Halloween.
The solid form of carbon dioxide packs a punch as a cleaning agent for everything from greasy machines to mold in attics, soot in fire-damaged homes and tartar build-up in hardwood barrels, which explains why Dry Ice Works counts Traverse City-area wineries among its clients.
Gordon Mahrle, co-owner of the Southfield-based business, introduced his services to more potential customers Wednesday at the South Oakland Business Expo at Club Venetian.
The cleaning process blasts dry ice pellets through a nozzle at dirt and grime. As the pellets strike the surface, they instantaneously turn to gas in an explosive state of charge that lifts away the contaminants and leaves behind no residue.
"Dry ice blasting is green, fast and doesn't create any secondary waste," Mahrle said. "It's relatively new and the equipment is expensive. It's
not like you can go to Home Depot, spend $500 on a power washer and be in business."
That's how some competitors on the power-washing side of his cleaning business started. In response, Mahrle diversified into dry ice blasting about a year ago. He joined the seventh annual expo for his first time to spread the word.
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South Oakland Business Expo a good introduction to businesses
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Posted at 6:02 pm March 08, 2012
Tags: Entrepreneurship, Handicrafts
By Nikka Garriga
MAKATI CITY, METRO MANILA Within a year of being an interior decorator, Madonna Liza Cruz thought about doing handcrafted accessories out of her fascination for pieces made of beads.
I was really into beadwork until eventually, I realized it didnt give that much room for me to create more unique designs, Donna says.
She then started researching about other materials, which led her to discover polymer clay, a kneadable material that hardens its form when exposed to high heat.
It was through this that Donna also stumbled upon workshops on making crafts out of polymer clay offered by Angeli Sobrepea, who is famously referred to as the The Beadlady.
With P5,000 as start-up capital plus everything she learned after attending a beginners course, Donna came up with Crazy Notions accessories combining beads, clay and other materials.
Her designs would vary from mini-cupcakes to flowers and other cutesy stuff as she herself describes her creations.
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Pinoy art inspires this entrepreneur’s handmade accessories
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Hands on with the new iPad -
March 8, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Talk about pressure. Apple launches have always had an element of Willy Wonka-esque hype about them, but Wednesday's launch of the new iPad had more of an element of suspense than many before it. How successful would Apple be in presenting its iconic tablet to the world, for the first time not overseen by Steve Jobs? And would the new device be impressive enough to stand up to the smorgasbord of new tablet devices expected to be launched on Microsoft's Windows 8 operating system? Some were even willing to stake money on what could be unveiled: a betting firm removed the wagers it was offering on the tablet after an immediate run of money.
Although most of us had predicted that Apple's new tablet would be called the iPad 3, the company has decided to shy away from its usual numbering system and just call it the new iPad'. Not surprising, considering that apart from becoming slightly thicker and heavier, there aren't any major changes to the look and feel of the tablet. Those who were after a new look iPad will be disappointed: it's the same 9.7-inch tablet as its predecessor. There are neither new slots, nor the revamped magnetic cover that many had hoped for. But inside, there was a different story.
Apple does seem to have addressed some of the gripes that users had with the iPad 2. Topping that list was the camera, something Apple has clearly spent a lot of time on. The iPad 2 was endowed with a measly 0.7-megapixel, fixed focus camera at the rear, but the new iSight camera has a 5-megapixel sensor, auto focus, auto face detection and auto exposure lock, and lets you record video in 1080 p Full HD. There's also helpful backlighting to assist you in dimly lit surroundings. There are also small details I appreciated, such as when you hold the iPad up to take a picture a little camera icon appears on the right hand side of the screen, which allows you to click more easily on the screen than having to fumble for the bottom button. A feature I didn't try was the image stabilisation when you film a movie, but which Apple demonstrated during the presentation.
The new 3.1-million pixel Retina Display does make photos look fantastic: I contrasted it with an iPad 2 and sure enough those once clear-looking iPad 2 photos had a distinctly fuzzy feel to them in comparison. Compare it to the old 1,024x768 resolution on the iPad 2, the 2,046x1,536 pixel density is miles ahead of the competition. With nearly 50 per cent more colour saturation, the pinks and reds of images I saw were particularly vivid on the new tablet. Opening up the iBook app I zoomed further and further into a page but each letter looked just as distinct no matter how far you zoomed in or out.
They've also introduce iPhoto to the tablet for the first time, with lots of nifty editing features, which you can bring up in the form of a palette at the touch of a corner of the screen. There's something called edge detecting which allows you to brighten the colour of for example a red bridge by roughly moving your finger over it, without adjusting the colour of things surrounding it. Its also got the ability to help you select similar pictures and pick the best one, and has little tweaks that allow you to adjust it to suit a right or left-handed person.
The new iPad includes an upgrade to its processing unit. The dual-core A5 chip has been replaced with an A5X processor and a quad-core graphics processor and will run on an updated operating system, iOS 5.1. Existing iOS 5 users can upgrade to version 5.1 as of now.
Some of Apple's games partners have produced games to show off the new HD screen technology, and I had a go at a new one called Sky Gamblers Air Supremacy, a simulated dogfight. So clear were the images that as my aircraft lurched and swerved as I moved it around, I almost feel a bit giddy.
There were other welcome tweaks to existing software: for example Garage Brand, which impressed me a lot on the iPad2 (I must admit I have never used it since!) has a new Jam session feature which allows up to four tablets on the same network to play and record together as a band. iMovies also has a new feature that helps you create trailers using standardized format options.
There were additions I found less impressive the voice dictation for starters. You can use it when you want to send an email or write in the Notes section, or even Tweet. It seemed to suffer the same weakness as Siri, the personal assistant, on the iPhone 4s, struggling to recognise some accents or function in a noisy room. It had issues recognising and typing even my simple question: What time is it? though I must admit it was somewhat better when I used the speaker on the headphones to command it.
Other aspects I was more neutral about. The new A5-Z processor, introduced to let the device keep up with its new graphics capabilities, didn't speed things up. I timed how long it took me to open up the Photos and iBooks apps on the new iPad and the iPad 2 and it took just as long. There's also no improvement on battery life you get the same 10 hours.
Originally posted here:
Hands on with the new iPad
March 08, 2012 12:00 AM
SAN ANDREAS - Calaveras County officials are considering code changes that would make it easier to build a cozy cottage for grandma behind the main house.
Right now, county rules in some cases ban construction of additions or accessory dwellings that could provide a relatively low-cost way to house an aging relative, a college student who needs a studio, or a young couple.
"In the areas where we have sewer and water and you can walk to the store and walk to the school, we don't allow it," said Rebecca Willis, the county's planning director.
Calaveras County code bans accessory dwellings on lots of one acre or less. Willis said second units are built only in rural areas, typically those with 5-, 10-, 20- and 40-acre lots, or exactly where officials have sought to prevent housing sprawl.
A state law enacted in 2003 requires local jurisdictions to make it easier for property owners to build so-called "mother-in-law" units. Calaveras County officials in 2005 adopted a housing element "implementation program" that made it the county's goal to lift the ban on accessory dwellings on lots of less than an acre. That same plan also called on the county to revise its code on accessory dwellings to make that code consistent with state law.
Seven years later, neither goal has been met. Willis said county planners are at work on the task. One first step happened Feb. 23 when the Planning Commission held a public hearing on the county's accessory dwelling rules.
Calaveras County's code conflicts with state law in several ways. For example, Calaveras code provides for a public hearing and notification of adjoining property owners before permits are issued for an accessory dwelling. But state law bans any such requirements if they are more restrictive than the local rules for getting the permit to build the first home on a lot.
The goal of the state law is to make getting permits for a second unit just as easy as getting them for the first home.
Willis said county officials issue about 10 permits a year for accessory dwellings. She expects that to grow once the rules are revised.
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Calaveras County Restrictions on so-called mother-in-law quarters may be loosened
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