Categorys
Pages
Linkpartner


    Page 236«..1020..235236237238..250..»



    Western Palm Beach County residents go stir-crazy waiting for water to recede - August 30, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By Wednesday, Brenda Gleason had a bad case of cabin fever.

    Shes redone her closet, redone the kitchen, reorganized the countertops and put things in drawers, said Dan Gleason of his wife. Now shes going to work on my office.

    Thats what happens when youre trapped in your cul-de-sac for four days. The Gleasons, who own a fire-engine red 2005 Ford Thunderbird, the 50th anniversary edition, calculated that the water in their Wycliffe neighborhood would swamp the low-slung sports car and maybe even tear off parts of the undercarriage.

    Their home on a circle had what Dan Gleason called a moat by Monday, which was 14 inches deep at the worst and still around 10 inches deep Wednesday afternoon. Wycliffe Golf & Country Club is west of the intersection of U.S. 441 and Lake Worth Road.

    At least two of the Gleasons neighbors tried and failed to get out. A brand-new Hyundai Genesis and a black Mercedes both stalled and had to wait for tow trucks.

    So as the South Florida Water Management pumps chugged away Wednesday, Brenda Gleason, a judicial clerk at the 15th District Court, telecommuted to get her regular job done.

    Dan Gleason, a consultant who works at home, has a plan to get her to work on Thursday.

    Im going to drive on the golf cart path and get her out to the road. Shell be fine then, and Ill walk back to the house. Its not that far to walk, said Gleason.

    Further west in the Acreage, the flooding occurred swiftly late Sunday and early Monday.

    Boom, the water was just out of control, said Gary Tobias, who lives on 68th Street. Tobias can see Banyan, the nearest paved road, 300 feet from his house, but cant get to it.

    Visit link:
    Western Palm Beach County residents go stir-crazy waiting for water to recede

    Library Countertops In Store For Replacement - August 30, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Those cracked and leaky countertops in Des Plaines Public Library bathrooms will soon be replaced.

    The library board voted Tuesday to approve a $37,600 bid from L & M Builders in Des Plaines to spruce up the downtown library buildings eight public restrooms, according to Heather Imhoff, head of public information.

    Seven companies bid on the project to replace the countertops and back splashes. All also submitted an optional bid to replacing the existing stainless steel hand towel dispensers with hand dryers.

    The budget for the countertop replacement was $25,000 and only L & M submitted a bid below that amount. They were also the lowest bid for the overall project, including the optional hand dryers.

    Imhoff said the dryer installation will include patching walls, necessary wiring, and actually installing the dryers.

    The existing laminate countertops in the bathrooms have become nasty, Imhoff said. They will be replaced with a solid surface that should not leak. The library is saving some money by refusing the faucets and tubing already in the bathrooms.

    Work is expected to begin soon and should be done before the year is over.

    Read the rest here:
    Library Countertops In Store For Replacement

    Countertop division plans 65 new jobs - August 25, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Patrick Industries Inc. is investing up to $3 million and creating up to 65 new jobs as it expands operations in Kosciusko County.

    The manufacturers AIA Countertops division will broaden its product line to include new granite and quartz countertops.

    Patrick Industries is buying, renovating and equipping a 142,000-square-foot factory at 203 S. Huntington Ave., Syracuse, for additional production.

    Elkhart-based Patrick Industries makes and distributes building and component products for the recreational vehicle, manufactured housing and industrial markets.

    AIA Countertops now employs about 175 full time in Syracuse.

    The Indiana Economic Development Corp. on Thursday announced it has offered Patrick Industries up to $325,000 in tax credits, based on the companys job-creation plans. The employer wont get the full amount if it doesnt fulfill its hiring projection.

    The town of Syracuse approved additional property tax abatement.

    For more on this story, see Saturdays print edition of The Journal Gazette or return to http://www.journalgazette.net after 3 a.m. Saturday.

    sslater@jg.net

    The rest is here:
    Countertop division plans 65 new jobs

    Kitchen cleanliness could seal the deal - August 15, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Select a Publication: N E W S P A P E R S ---------------------------------------------- ---Alberta--- Airdrie - Airdrie Echo Banff - Banff Crag and Canyon Beaumont - Beaumont News Calgary - The Calgary Sun Camrose - Camrose Canadian Canmore - Canmore Leader Central Alberta - County Market Cochrane - Cochrane Times Cold Lake - Cold Lake Sun Crowsnest Pass - Crowsnest Pass Promoter Devon - Dispatch News Drayton - Drayton Valley Western Review Edmonton - Edmonton Examiner Edmonton - The Edmonton Sun Edson - Edson Leader Fairview - Fairview Post Fort McMurray - Fort McMurray Today Fort Saskatchewan - Fort Saskatchewan Record Grande Prairie - Daily Herald Tribune Hanna - Hanna Herald High River - High River Times Hinton - Hinton Parklander Lacombe - Lacombe Globe Leduc - Leduc Representative Lloydminster - Meridian Booster Mayerthorpe - Mayerthorpe Freelancer Nanton - Nanton News Peace Country - Peace Country Sun Peace River - Peace River Record Gazette Pincher Creek - Pincher Creek Echo Sherwood Park - Sherwood Park News Spruce Grove - Spruce Grove Examiner Stony Plain - Stony Plain Reporter Strathmore - Strathmore Standard Vermilion - Vermilion Standard Vulcan - Vulcan Advocate Wetaskiwin - Wetaskiwin Times Whitecourt - Whitecourt Star ---Manitoba--- Altona - Alton Red River Valley Echo Beausejour - Beausejour Review Carman - Carman Valley Leader Gimli - Interlake Spectator Lac Du Bonnet - Lac Du Bonnet Leader Morden - Morden Times Portage la Prairie - Portage Daily Graphic Selkirk - Selkirk Journal Stonewall - Stonewall Argus and Teulon Times Winkler - Winkler Times Winnipeg - The Winnipeg Sun ---Ontario--- Amherstburg - Amherstburg Echo Bancroft - Bancroft this Week Barrie - Barrie Examiner Barry's Bay - Barry's Bay this Week Belleville - Intelligencer Bradford - Bradford Times Brantford - Expositor Brockville - The Recorder & Times Chatham - Chatham Daily News Chatham - Chatham This Week Chatham - Today's Farmer Clinton - Clinton News-Record Cobourg - Northumberland Today Cochrane - Cochrane Times Post Collingwood - Enterprise Bulletin Cornwall - Standard Freeholder Delhi - Delhi News-Record Dresden - Leader Spirit Dunnville - Dunnville Chronicle Elliot Lake - Standard Espanola - Mid-North Monitor Fort Erie - Times Gananoque - Gananoque Reporter Goderich - Goderich Signal-Star Grand Bend - Lakeshore Advance Haliburton - Haliburton Echo Hanover - The Post Ingersoll - Ingersoll Times Innisfil - Innisfil Examiner Kapuskasing - Kapuskasing Northern Times Kenora - Kenora Daily Miner and News Kenora - Lake of the Woods Enterprise Kincardine - Kincardine News Kingston - Frontenac This Week Kingston - Kingston This Week Kingston - Kingston Whig Standard Kirkland Lake - Northern News Leamington - Leamington Post Lindsay - The Lindsay Post London - The London Free Press London - The Londoner Lucknow - Lucknow Sentinel Midland - Free Press Minden - Minden Times Mitchell - Mitchell Advocate Napanee - Napanee Guide Niagara-on-the-Lake - Niagara Advance Niagara Falls - Review Niagara Falls - Niagara Shopping News Niagara Falls - W. Niagara Community Newspapers North Bay - North Bay Nugget Northumberland - Northumberland Today Norwich - Norwich Gazette Orillia - Packet and Times Ottawa - The Ottawa Sun Owen Sound - Sun Times Oxford - Oxford Review Paris - Paris Star Online Pelham - Pelham News Pembroke - Daily Observer Peterborough - Peterborough Examiner Petrolia - Petrolia Topic Picton - County Weekly News Port Colborne - Inport News Port Hope - Northumberland Today Port Elgin - Shoreline Beacon Sarnia - Observer Sarnia - Sarnia This Week Sault Ste Marie - Sault Star Sault Ste Marie - Sault This Week Seaforth - Seaforth Huron Expositor Simcoe - Simcoe Reformer St. Catharines - St. Catharines Shopping News St. Catharines - Standard St. Thomas - St. Thomas Times-Journal Stirling - Community Press Stratford - The Beacon Herald Strathroy - Strathroy Age Dispatch Sudbury - Sudbury Star Thorold - Thorold News Tillsonburg - Tillsonburg News Timmins - Daily Press Timmins - Timmins Times Toronto - The Toronto Sun Trenton - Trentonian Wallaceburg - Wallaceburg Courier Press Welland - Tribune Welland - Welland News West Lorne - The Chronicle Wiarton - Wiarton Echo Woodstock - Sentinel Review ---Saskatchewan--- Meadow Lake - Meadow Lake Progress Melfort - Melfort Journal Nipawin - Nipawin Journal MAGAZINES & SPECIALTY PUBLICATIONS --------- Biz Magazine Business London Cottage Home and Property Showcase Food and Wine Show Hamilton Halton Weddings Hamilton Magazine InterVin International Wine Awards Kingston Life London Citylife Muskoka Magazine Muskoka Trails Niagara Food and Wine Expo Niagara Magazine Ontario Farmer Ontario Golf Sault Good Life Simcoe Life The Home Show Vines Magazine What's Up Muskoka

    Read more from the original source:
    Kitchen cleanliness could seal the deal

    GLASS RECYCLED Electrifies Designers With “That’s SUM-FALL” Promotion Featuring GlassSLAB Recycled Glass Kitchen … - August 10, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Dallas, TX (PRWEB) August 10, 2012

    GLASS RECYCLED sets the interior design community abuzz with their one-time only Thats SUM-FALL promotional event. By offering then entire sample gallery of GlassSLAB recycled glass countertops with special incentives that will not be repeated.

    Interior designers and homeowners alike have been flocking to the GLASS RECYCLED website (glassrecycled.com) to take advantage of this promotion. The Thats SUM-FALL event features GlassSLAB countertops in over 250 styles for $48 per sq. ft. when picked up at the GLASS RECYCLED warehouse or $58 per sq. ft. delivered to the continental USA. Orders may be placed over the phone toll-free by calling (888) 523-7894 or online via the GLASS RECYCLED website. A 50% deposit is required at the time of order with the balance due prior to delivery or pick up. The Thats SUM-FALL event ends December 20, 2012.

    GLASS RECYCLED representative Christopher Oliver says, If you have been contemplating how your kitchen, bathroom, or business could be transformed by our GlassSLAB recycled glass countertops you are in luck. If you have been on the fence then it is time to hop off. This is a special one-off promo and it is exactly what you have been waiting for..

    GLASS RECYCLED manufactures upcycled products such as recycled glass kitchen countertops, recycled glass flooring and upcycled glass tabletops. For more information visit their website at glassrecycled.com.

    Go here to read the rest:
    GLASS RECYCLED Electrifies Designers With “That’s SUM-FALL” Promotion Featuring GlassSLAB Recycled Glass Kitchen ...

    House being built for wounded soldier could be ready by October - August 10, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    POSEY COUNTY, IN (WFIE) -

    A new home for wounded Army veteran Sgt. Kenneth Harker could be ready by October.

    The outside walls are up and construction is underway inside for the Homes For Our Troopsdream home.

    Builder Mike Conti says it's an honor to be part of this project, soSgt. Harker and his family can move in, he thinks, in October.

    Nearly three weeks ago, more than100 volunteers began with a concrete foundation and began building from there.

    Thursday, plumbers were inside working on a bathroom.

    For those of you who haven't heard his story, Sgt. Harker was on his second deployment in June 2008 when he lost both of his legs in Iraq, and after surgeries and treatment, he returned to Indiana last year.

    Thursday night, Conti says he's expecting insulation to go in soon and drywall should go up next week.

    He says, building this type of home, has been a new challenge.

    "It's been a challenge because it's a new style home for me. It's allADA handicapped accessible. I'm not used to doing that so it's page by page, as we go."

    Original post:
    House being built for wounded soldier could be ready by October

    Kitchen tours popular at Virginia Highlands Festival - August 4, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By Debra McCown/Bristol Herald Courier - Ginny Barker (in pink) tells tour participants about the fine features in the kitchen of John and Mary Beth Poma during the Twilight Kitchen Tour on Thursday evening.

    One kitchen boasts granite countertops and decorative white cabinets; in another, wormy chestnut and sculpted metal form an entirely different look.

    It is a world of pop-up mixers and sliding spice cabinets, microwave drawers and hidden ice makers: Kitchen tours have become a popular and successful means to help fund the Virginia Highlands Festival.

    Abingdon is sort of given to tours of homes because there are so many historic places in Abingdon, explained Sue Clark, a member of the festivals board of directors and its home and garden committee, which oversees the kitchen tours. Any time we get to go into some of these old places, we jump at it.

    The tours feature a variety of houses, from the historic to the opulent to the typical.

    I think they enjoy seeing how other people decorate their homes, said Ginny Barker, a festival volunteer who was showing tour participants around one of the kitchens Thursday.

    Two tours are held each year, organizers said: one in the evening and one during the day. This year, the daytime tour sold all 80 tickets at a price of $15 each. The twilight tour sold nearly all of its 70 tickets at a price of $35 each.

    Clark said the proceeds pay for such things as tents and setup for the annual 16-day summer festival, which helps drive Abingdon tourism.

    Betty Cline and Louise King said they havent missed a single kitchen tour since they began in the early 1960s.

    I just love kitchens, Cline said, and I love the new renovations that they come out with every year.

    Go here to see the original:
    Kitchen tours popular at Virginia Highlands Festival

    What you can rent in San Francisco for $4,500 - August 4, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    461 Second St., Unit 126, San Francisco

    Beds: 1 Baths: 1 Square footage: 1,250 Price: $4,500/mo.

    This furnished brick and timber loft in the historic ClockTower has an open floor plan, exposed brick and timber beams and dark hardwood throughout its lower level. The bedroom features plantation shutter enclosures, a desk and chaise longue. Its full bath has custom fixtures and a shower-over-tub with granite surround. The kitchen has a breakfast bar, granite countertops, glass-tile backsplash and stainless steel appliances. The dining room converts into a guest bedroom with a queen-size Murphy bed. The unit has a washer and dryer, and a one-car garage parking space is included.

    Leasing agent: Leah Johnson, McGuire Real Estate, (415) 901-2781, ljohnson@mcguire.com.

    106 Lake Merced Hill, San Francisco

    Beds: 2 Baths: 2.5 Square footage: 2,000 Price: $4,500/mo.

    This three-level townhome is furnished in a gated and guarded community. Offering views of Lake Merced, it includes a home office along with a formal dining room, a sunken living room with a wood-burning fireplace, a deck and parking for two cars. The eat-in kitchen has a breakfast bar, new appliances, new tile countertops and cabinets. There is also a full laundry room. The condominium community holds a large central clubhouse, a heated swimming pool, a spa, two saunas and three tennis courts. There's also a golf course nearby.

    Leasing agent: Peter Chovanes, Vanguard Property Management, (415) 517-7667, pchovanes@gmail.com.

    The Chronicle and BlockShopper San Francisco scour the Bay Area to find what range of properties renters can get for their money. This week, What You Can Rent looks at homes for $4,500.

    Excerpt from:
    What you can rent in San Francisco for $4,500

    Accustomed to roughing-it renovation - July 28, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    I've grown accustomed to living a makeshift existence in our new home, so I still haven't gotten used to using the countertops and working sink we now have in our kitchen.

    For four months, we've been using cardboard boxes, end tables and whatever other flat surfaces we could find to prepare meals and set things on. It was such a novel thing when I set a bowl on the counter the other night that I actually had to point out to my fiancee, Holly, that I was finally using the countertops we anxiously waited for.

    Installing them was not an easy process, and I had a very small role in it. We had three great people lend a hand: my soon-to-be father-in-law, one of his longtime family friends and our contractor friend who has lent his expertise throughout our renovation process.

    Because our home was built in 1930 and the walls are not square, we opted for a loose backsplash so we could use it to cover up any gaps caused by changes in the wall face. We chose this option over furring out uneven sections of the wall, which I thought sounded like too much extra work. We also decided against paying hundreds of dollars more for a template, which admittedly would have been the ideal solution if we had the cash to burn.

    The loose backsplash actually worked great, but just barely. When we placed the order, I specifically noted we wanted the backsplash to be as wide as possible to help cover up gaps one inch, minimum. I was told one inch was standard, but the backsplash delivered to us was only three-quarters of an inch. That quarter inch makes a big difference, and almost didn't work for us. I was prepared to put up a fight with the local "big box" home store we ordered them from, but luckily, there was no need.

    Coincidentally, this was the second ordering error made by this big box store. They also ordered us a left-end piece for our cabinets when we needed a right-end piece. I'm slowly losing faith in these cookie-cutter stores.

    Our countertops span a corner and needed to be connected at the miter. Due to the walls being out of square, I cut into the drywall so one of the decks could slide into place, easily preventing a gap between the mitered ends. We placed the two pieces on the floor and connected them before carrying them over as one piece, dropping it into place and screwing it to the cabinets.

    I actually had to leave for my real job at this point, so I avoided the horror of watching my friends cut a sink hole into our new, pristine countertops. All I know is we now have a wonderfully working sink with antique-style faucets. Our kitchen is really coming together and I can't wait to actually start cooking again. All we need to do now is finally unpack all our cookware that's been gathering dust for the past four months.

    Joey Cresta is a staff writer for the Portsmouth Herald. He's always looking for tips on home renovations and can be reached at jcresta@seacoastonline.com or on Twitter at PHerald_JoeyC.

    Continue reading here:
    Accustomed to roughing-it renovation

    Ask The Plumber: A drop-in versus an under-mount sink - July 26, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Q: My wife and I can't decide on what type of kitchen sink to get for our new stone countertops. We're down to choosing an under-mount or a drop-in. The big advantage so far is that our contractor told us that a drop-in will cost less to install. But the under-mount looks cool. Other than price, are there advantages if we install a drop-in style sink instead of an under-mount? -- Bill, Illinois A: Let's start with some basic information about under-mounts. They are usually installed on solid-surface or stone countertops because the counter edges of the sink opening are exposed. On top of looking "cool," under-mount sinks have no raised sink edges, so crumbs can be wiped directly into the sink bowl. But a drop-in sink does have some advantages as well. As you mentioned, installation can cost less because it's a less complicated process. Usually, all you need is the correct size of hole cut into the countertop, and then you drop in the new sink. Also, because drop-ins are considered the standard type of sink, you may have more colors and styles to choose from. Finally, and this is a big one if you ever want to change your sink, a drop-in sink can usually be easily removed and a new one installed in its place without disturbing the countertop.

    The choice will be yours, but here's one more "under and over" bit of advice: Come in "under budget" and be "overjoyed" with your new kitchen sink! Master plumber Ed Del Grande is the author of "Ed Del Grande's House Call," the host of TV and Internet shows, and a LEED green associate. Visit eddelgrande.com or write eadelg@cs.com. Always consult local contractors and codes.

    Read the original post:
    Ask The Plumber: A drop-in versus an under-mount sink

    « old entrysnew entrys »



    Page 236«..1020..235236237238..250..»


    Recent Posts