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    The gardens were established in 1978 by John R. Anderson and landscape architect Hoichi Kurisu – Video - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder


    The gardens were established in 1978 by John R. Anderson and landscape architect Hoichi Kurisu
    The gardens were established in 1978 by John R. Anderson and landscape architect Hoichi Kurisu on the site of Anderson #39;s home. They were inspired by Anderson...

    By: Amazing place To tourist World

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    The gardens were established in 1978 by John R. Anderson and landscape architect Hoichi Kurisu - Video

    Landscape Architect 2 – Video - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Landscape Architect 2
    Interest in the career.

    By: rxm6084

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    Landscape Architect 2 - Video

    Professional Landscape Architect for FL Residents | Michael J Phillips Landscape Architecture, Inc – Video - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Professional Landscape Architect for FL Residents | Michael J Phillips Landscape Architecture, Inc
    Michael J Phillips Landscape Architecture, Inc can make your outdoor space paradise. If you want an awe inspiring landscape or irrigation design. Anything ca...

    By: MJPhillipsLA

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    Professional Landscape Architect for FL Residents | Michael J Phillips Landscape Architecture, Inc - Video

    SCRAPBOOK: Garden Club awards yard of the month for February - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The home of Tony and Jone James of 1348 Earl Court in Conyers has been selected for the February Landscape of the Month Award by the Conyers Garden Club. The yard is highlighted by neatly pruned boxwoods, Burfordi hollies and nandinas placed in the yard with a beautifully maintained centipede/St. Augustine lawn. The yard is also highlighted with crepe myrtles, azaleas and a Kwanzan cherry tree. (Special Photo)

    The home of Tony and Jone James of 1348 Earl Court in Conyers has been selected for the February Landscape of the Month Award by the Conyers Garden Club. The yard is highlighted by neatly pruned boxwoods, Burfordi hollies, and nandinas placed in the yard with a beautifully maintained centipede/St. Augustine lawn. The yard is also highlighted with crepe myrtles, azaleas and a Kwanzan cherry tree. (Special Photo)

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    SCRAPBOOK: Garden Club awards yard of the month for February

    Renovated Habitat for Humanity focuses on refurbishing homes - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Published: Friday, March 6, 2015 at 1:05 p.m. Last Modified: Friday, March 6, 2015 at 1:05 p.m.

    She paused a moment to survey the bare room that once was a kitchen, and would be again. She smiled. "Oh, yeah, it'll be worth it, too." Because by the end of the year, barring any unforeseen hurdles, this two-bedroom, two-bath on a quiet cul-de-sac in Silver Springs Shores will be hers.

    Lofton and her son, Gregory, are among a current batch of Habitat for Humanity clients logging "sweat equity" to qualify for a new or, as here, like-new home. And they can finally leave the wood-frame house with collapsing floors, mold, leaking roof and no heat or air conditioning on Ocala's west side.

    "Sure, it's a lot of work," said Gregory, 21. "But it'll pay off in the end. To not put your foot down and have it go through the floor "

    The Loftons' new home stems from a partnership forged nationally between banks, with their daunting inventory of abandoned and foreclosed houses from the Great Recession, and Habitat for Humanity, with its legion of lower-income clients who'd like nothing more than to move into one of them.

    The banks donate the properties to Habitat, which refurbishes them to like-new through the work of volunteers and prospective new homeowners.

    "It's win, win, win," said Brad Nimmo, president and CEO of Marion County Habitat for Humanity. The property is off the bank's books; a neighborhood eyesore is restored to respectability; and someone needing to get out of ramshackle housing gets a new home.

    Habitat has been around for many years. The local Habitat has converted nine donated homes since 2013, with three more in the works.

    Habitat continues to build houses from the ground up. In fact, proceeds from Saturday's second annual Strawberry Festival will help finish Habitat's first ground-up house in Belleview, and maybe build a second one there, too.

    But for now, there's a strong focus on the makeovers, donated by Bank of America, Chase and Wells Fargo, Nimmo said.

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    Renovated Habitat for Humanity focuses on refurbishing homes

    How the Grocery Landscape Has Changed - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Jennings: The outcome of the grocery wars is still uncertain.

    SAN DIEGOAlong with consolidations and specialty grocery stores, consumer expectations have changed dramatically in the last decade, Cushman & Wakefields John Jennings and Aaron Hill tell GlobeSt.com exclusively. We spoke with Hill, director of retail services, and Jennings, senior director of retail services, about some of the retail leasing trends they are noticing in the San Diego market.

    GlobeSt.com: What trends are you noticing among leasing transactions in San Diego with regard to size and location?

    Jennings: Were excited that mom-and-pop-shop leasing is coming back. Last year, we saw core centers come back to occupancy, and were seeing rent growth in core centers for the first time. The mom-and-pop recovery is allowing us to move the needle in B centers that have been sitting in the 7% to 8% vacancy zone. We expect those centers will move up to 4% or 5% vacancy by the end of the year.

    As for location, we have core A+ centers in every trade area. Tenants who are expanding are only willing to consider the best location in a marketplace.

    GlobeSt.com: What types of tenants are becoming more prevalent in the market?

    Hill: The bulk of activity in the market is consistent with the last couple of years. There are a tone of restaurantsneat concepts that are expanding into San Diegoand there has been a lot of activity in the restaurant category in the last couple of years. There was the burger craze, and how the pizza craze and healthy concept Farm to Fork and Urban Plates; Lemonade, which is from L.A.; and Native Foods Caf. There are also a lot of fitness tenants as wellboth boutique fitness and larger playersthat have absorbed a lot of space in shopping centers. Tenants like Orangetheory and CorePower Yoga have expanded aggressively in San Diego over the last couple of years.

    GlobeSt.com: How are retailers and retail property owners here dealing with e-commerce?

    Jennings: Its hard to put a needle on that. Brick-and-mortar retailers and Internet retailers are demonstrating that they can work together now. The Internet is not going to eliminate retail stores; rather, retailers are using the Internet to advertise their product and allow another avenue for retail sales. Its a supporting element to their business.

    A lot of people think that the Internet accounts for 30% to 40% of total retail sales, but that is inaccurate. Its actually in the 6% range, but people cant believe it because they think its so much more. Retailers today have a much more positive point of view about the Internet; they see that it allows them to increase their sales element. This may not work for electronics and bookseven Stapleswhen you have a product that can be bought at Costco and also on the Internet via Amazon. Certain categories will be eliminated, but from a macro perspective, the Internet will be helpful for retailers to reinvent themselves and meet the demands of the consumer, which are harder to meet every year.

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    How the Grocery Landscape Has Changed

    Agassiz chalet dismantled and burned - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION

    Posted: 03/4/2015 10:25 AM | Comments:

    WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Enlarge Image

    Workers set fire to building debris from the former ski chalet at a nearby landfill site. Photo Store

    The last remnants of the Agassiz Ski Hill, on the eastern slope of Riding Mountain, are being erased from the landscape.

    On Tuesday, workers set fire to building debris from the former ski chalet, after the debris was transported to a nearby landfill site. The ski hill is inside Riding Mountain National Park, near the town of McCreary.

    Chair lifts and T-bars are also being removed. The demolition is being conducted by Winnipeg Environmental Remediations Inc., based out of West St. Paul.

    Mount Agassiz was the only "mountain" ski hill between Thunder Bay and the Rockies, the other ski resorts being valleys. The Mount Agassiz ski hill operated from 1961 until 2000.

    The federal government recently rejected a $4.5-million plan to reopen the ski hill, put forward by the Agassiz Mountain Development Group, a coalition of residents and ski enthusiasts. Parks Canada plans to return the site to nature.

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    Agassiz chalet dismantled and burned

    Artist Duncan Shanks launches new book. - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    THERE'S not an inch of the Clyde Valley that artist Duncan Shanks doesn't know like the back of his hand.

    For decades Duncan, one of Scotland's finest landscape painters, has depicted the area's waterfalls and glens in a long series of brilliant paintings.

    But because he is publicity-shy, and wary of the social demands that come from being involved in the art world and all its trappings, his profile is not as high as it should be.

    All of that looks likely to change, however, with a new exhibition that opens in Glasgow on March 14. An authoritative new book is being published at the same time.

    His entire collection of 106 sketchbooks from the last 55 years, containing some 6,500 drawings and gifted to Glasgow University's Hunterian Art Gallery, will go on show there.

    The book, The Poetry of Place contains dozens of his sketches, their subjects ranging from Davingill burn in spate to 'Carmichael Road, Tinto, morning' is being published at the same time.

    The exhibition and the book both involve Anne Dulau Beveridge, curator of pre-1945 French and British Art at The Hunterian since 1997.

    She has come to know Duncan well since 2008, when contact was first made with him to discuss the possible gift of his sketchbooks.

    "What Duncan has said to me, again and again," says Beveridge, "is the fact that he works for himself. He was determined to find a new way of looking at landscape. He didn't want to do what had already been done by others.

    "He has great facility as a draughtsman and a very good eye. He is very good at quickly capturing what catches his eye. But he isn't interested in the commercial aspect of the art world."

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    Artist Duncan Shanks launches new book.

    EPA aerial footage of Boyle land clearing in Main Range National Park – Video - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder


    EPA aerial footage of Boyle land clearing in Main Range National Park
    EPA aerial footage of land clearing in Main Range National Park by Vincent Boyle.

    By: Tim Smith

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    EPA aerial footage of Boyle land clearing in Main Range National Park - Video

    Land Clearing Parland – Video - March 7, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Land Clearing Parland

    By: phils tree

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    Land Clearing Parland - Video

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