Categorys
Pages
Linkpartner


    Page 10«..9101112..20..»



    621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina Introduction – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 09:07 Steve Dutton and Emily give a brief introduction, to spotlight our latest antique home restoration in Wilmington North Carolina, with 11-year-old daughter, Sophie, performing camera-person duty.

    Link:
    621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina Introduction - Video

    Curb appeal 101: Outside 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 09:26 With my Daughter, Sophie, having way too much fun filming my clunky walkaraound, we try to give you a flavor for this abslutely GORGEOUS antique home we just restored.

    See the original post:
    Curb appeal 101: Outside 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina - Video

    Farmers Porch, 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 09:32 OK, Maybe I'm getting a little corny now, but this wrap-around porch is truly a thing of beauty on this house.....What you're missing is all the giggling Sophie and I are doing between takes.....

    Read more from the original source:
    Farmers Porch, 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina - Video

    Living Room, Fireplace 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 09:36 Even the video does not do the floors in this house the justice they deserve----but I feel it important to point out some of the features that we KILLED ourselves to preserve and restore in this relic of a home.

    See the article here:
    Living Room, Fireplace 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina - Video

    And then there’s the KITCHEN—621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 09:46 We only did one take on this clip---if we were to do another, I would have coached Sophie to back up a little---she tended to zoom in----but the part where Emily walks right in was to precious to delete!

    Read the original post:
    And then there's the KITCHEN---621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington, North Carolina - Video

    Master Bedroom/Bathroom 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 09:59 Wait til you see the vanities and mirror, trimmed in Cherry......stunning!

    See more here:
    Master Bedroom/Bathroom 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina - Video

    Hallway bath, 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 10:02 Some really cool features, including the cedar-clapboard-siding-becomes-wainscoting in this full bath.

    More here:
    Hallway bath, 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina - Video

    Front bedroom, 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina – Video - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    22-04-2012 10:05 These old homes are almost always at a lack for storage space! The pull-down steps we install add not only easy access for servicing utilities, but added storage space!

    View post:
    Front bedroom, 621 Tennessee Ave., Wilmington North Carolina - Video

    New phase for Historic Cherry Hill - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    ALBANY The first phase of stabilizing Historic Cherry Hill, an 18th-century Georgian mansion, has been completed, and the second phase, which includes a recent refurbishing of the windows, is under way.

    While work continues, visitors on Saturday received a rare, behind-the-lath peek at the distinctive 1787 yellow clapboard house on a rise above South Pearl Street that was home to five generations of the Van Rensselaer and Rankin families.

    These restoration tours are conducted in what amounts to construction zone, with plaster dust on the wide-plank pine floors, ladders and tools stacked in the corners and fireplaces blocked by antique furnishings sealed up tightly in archival boxes and protective plastic.

    Kerry Lippincott of Elmira did not want to miss the work-in-progress.

    "I was told this was a stop I had to make," said Lippincott, an educator at the Chemung Historical Society, who arrived a day early for a Museums in Conversation conference in Albany that runs Sunday through Tuesday. "It was a great tour and very unusual to see a house while it's undergoing a restoration."

    Tom Howson of Latham was sent as an assignment from his professor for an online course he's taking through Hudson Valley Community College called Interpretation of American History.

    "It's pretty interesting to get to see the mold and the rot in a historic house," Howson said. "I liked that we got to see it disassembled and learned how it will all get put back together."

    "It's real easy to take old houses like this for granted," said Pat Mackenzie of Clifton Park. "This is my first visit, and I was impressed enough to want to come back to see it when it's all done."

    It will take at least two more years to complete the four-stage restoration. It is being funded with a $575,000 challenge grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, along with more than $650,000 in state grants. The $1 million restoration is part of a $2.3 million campaign that will also establish an endowment for the property.

    "We're pleased with how work is progressing, but we have a lot of fundraising left to do," said Director Liselle LaFrance, who noted the not-for-profit organization needs to raise $198,000 by July to meet the next benchmark of the NEH challenge grant.

    Read more here:
    New phase for Historic Cherry Hill

    Restoration of huge bay wetland near Redwood City nearing completion - April 23, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    For hundreds of thousands of motorists driving along Highway 101 every day, it is a vast expanse of dirt and grass, framed on the north by Oracle's world headquarters and on the south by the Port of Redwood City.

    But to environmental groups and biologists, it is a crowning symbol of the ongoing restoration of San Francisco Bay, 2,635 acres that prove not everything has been diked, filled and paved.

    Now a six-year effort to restore Bair Island in Redwood City to tidal wetlands -- bringing back conditions not seen since the late 1800s, along with a wide range of ducks, herons, egrets, salmon, even harbor seals to the heart of Silicon Valley -- is reaching its apex. Work crews with heavy machinery are hauling in up to 500 dump trucks of dirt a day, reshaping the landscape after decades of political battles.

    Work began in 2006 and is set to be completed in December, with access for hikers, bicyclists and school groups expected by next year.

    "We're in the home stretch," said Eric Mruz, manager of the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge, which is leading the project.

    Crews supervised by engineers from the nonprofit group Ducks Unlimited are raising Inner Bair Island, the part closest to Highway 101, by 2 feet. To do that, they are hauling in 1.5 million cubic yards of dirt -- enough to fill 100,000 dump trucks. The work is intended to undo years of erosion and sinking, caused by diking the land off from the bay.

    "As soon as you get the proper elevations, boom, the seeds just take hold," Mruz said. "In a year you'll see pickleweed and other plants. Then fish and birds. You'll see the start of a new marsh."

    Ironically, the project has been slowed by efforts to save taxpayers money.

    Dirt cheap

    When work began in 2006, the Fish and Wildlife Service estimated it would be completed in 2009 and cost $12 million. Now it will be finished three years later but will cost $6.9 million. That's because federal planners had expected to have to buy all the dirt. But after talking with construction contractors, they realized extra dirt is often a liability for builders, who have a tough time disposing of it.

    See more here:
    Restoration of huge bay wetland near Redwood City nearing completion

    « old entrysnew entrys »



    Page 10«..9101112..20..»


    Recent Posts