Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Design Wollongong, Interior designer wollongong, Interior decorator wollongong
http://nestemporium.com.au/ Nest Emporium Interiors offer affordable design packages. Interior designer wollongong, interior decorator wollongong, rattan fur...
By: Nest Emporium Interiors Wollongong - Interior Decorator Interior Stylist Interior Design Wollongong
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Design Wollongong, Interior designer wollongong, Interior decorator wollongong - Video
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
A millionaire hotel magnate and his yoga-instructor wife say an interior designer-to-the-stars is holding their $2.1 million worth of custom furnishings hostage including a $37,000 couch.
Cendant Corporation executive Henry Silverman, 73, and his second wife Karen Hader, 43, hired designer Richard Mishaan in October 2013 to redecorate their homes in Manhattan, the Hamptons and the Bahamas.
But when Silverman discovered in September that Mishaan had allegedly taken $246,909 in payments on canceled items, he fired the decorator, according to a lawsuit filed in Manhattan Supreme Court Thursday.
Mishaan whos worked with socialites Gigi Mortimer and Allison Rockefeller promptly locked away 160 items in a New Jersey warehouse and stowed another 140 with a Staten Island furniture maker, the suit says.
The designer told Silverman he would only hand over the luxe furnishings including a $37,000 bespoke couch made by Capri Upholstery, a pair of $20,000 Holly Hunt roman ring pendant light fixtures and a $9,000 Ligne Roset armchair if Silverman promised not to sue him.
But the exec, whose company controls the Days Inn, Howard Johnson and Ramada hotel chains, scoffed at the deal and is suing Mishaan and Staten Island-based Capri to get his stuff.
A rep for Capri said he delivered the upholstered pieces to the designer weeks ago.
Mishaan told The Post, Theres nothing really wrong here. Its just a matter of bullying, adding that he only billed for legitimate work.
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Interior designer holding $2.1M of furniture hostage: motel mogul
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Lisa Armstrong looks to philanthropist and garden designer Bunny Mellon and interior designer Rose Uniacke to find out what it really means to have impeccable taste
BY Lisa Armstrong | 14 November 2014
The only flashy act Bunny Mellon ever committed was posthumously, four days ago, when part of her estate sold at Sotheby's in New York for $158. 7 million. Note I said part. The two Rothkos have gone, but the remaining lots, consisting of more jewellery, paintings and furniture, will auction on the November 20 and 21. Mrs Mellon, who died in March aged 103, owned rather a lot of "stuff" - some 5,000 items, according to Elaine Whitmore, vice chairman, head of single owner sales at Sotheby's New York, whose absorbing task it was last summer to catalogue them all.
It's not merely dazzling amounts of fancy "stuff" that entices discerning collectors out on a Monday night in November. Bunny, or Rachel Lowe Lambert as she was christened - she was the granddaughter of Jordan Lambert, the inventor of Listerine - "had an impeccable eye for everything", according to Whitmore. Her best friend was Hubert de Givenchy, a man not known for merciful judgments when it came to matters of style. Her protg was Jacqueline Kennedy, who once lamented to Bunny: "I love your house, but hate mine. Can you help me?"
READ: How to make your look modern
Bunny could and did. Jackie's redecoration of the White House (and overhaul of the Rose Garden there) was widely perceived to be a turning point for sceptical Americans, who had hitherto suspected the First Lady was little more than a particularly fine clothes horse.
The Bunny Mellons of this world - women who could oversee an exquisite garden with the same adroitness as they could assemble a wardrobe of flawless clothes - were of a generation that, as Whitmore says, valued "elegance and discretion".
Monumentally privileged, for valid social reasons, the grand hostesses of Mellon's time were superseded by other role models, some of whom have turned out to be disappointingly vacuous. "Muses" often professional or semi-professional models and mainly notable for their flare with "statement" clothes and willingness to turn up at shop openings, were, for a long time, the replacement to the grand hostess.
Mrs. Mellon's main residence at Oak Spring Farms, Upperville, Virginia
We rarely saw a muse's home, let alone her garden. Her taste in food? The implication often is that she probably had better things to do than eat. Their chief occupation was to promote the products of whichever designer hired them. No wonder so many muses prefer not to be described as such - their circumscribed role of wafting around looking good but seeming remote is not only increasingly at odds with the busy-ness to which we must all ascribe nowadays, but looks threadbare even compared with the achievements of the grand hostesses. Bunny for instance, in addition to running homes in Virginia, New York, Paris, Nantucket, Antigua was a serious horticulturist and fund-raiser. "This wasn't a woman who just sat around," says Whitmore. "She was very organised and an energetic philanthropist. If she'd been born 50 years later she'd be the CEO of a major company."
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Bunny Mellon: the woman Victoria Beckham wants to be
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
An architect's drawingshows a building planned in Southeastern University's latest expansion, which was approved Thursday.
LAKELAND | Southeastern University's board on Thursday unanimously approved plans for at least a $25 million expansion that will feature three new buildings, a track and field area, and a parking garage.
Executive Vice President Brian Carroll said the school has been growing exponentially, and it needs to build to accommodate that growth.
"We are just bursting at the seams," he said. "We have had to do all kinds of things to create space."
Student enrollment was about 2,500 in the fall of 2011, 3,400 last year and is now at 3,434. The school expects the student count to hit 4,200 next year, he said.
"This expansion is part of our master plan we have been working on for the last four years," Carroll said. "The first phase was the new stadium and the College of Natural and Health Sciences Building. This is phase two."
The $7.5 million SEU Fire football stadium is completed. The $6.5 million Natural and Health Sciences Building is well underway and is expected to be completed by spring.
The projected cost of the new plan ranges between $25 million and $50 million, depending on contributions and other factors.
The projects will be paid for partially with reserve funds, in part with loans and partly with contributions, Carroll said.
There will be expanded office space, new sports training areas and new dormitory rooms plus new sports teams.
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Southeastern University Announces Major Expansion
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
A new hotel was the cause for the single largest building permit in October.
Times-Herald photo by Lisa Goudy
city hall
Valued at $8.4 million, the hotel was one of nine commercial and industrial permits the City of Moose Jaw issued last month with a total value of $10.68 million.
In total, the city issued 37 permits in October valued at $18.24 million compared to 32 permits valued at $8.01 million in October 2013.
One of the other commercial and industrial permits was for a new workshop valued at $650,000. There were two permits for new low-hazard workshops as well, valued at a combined $900,000.
There were two permits for alterations, repairs and additions to stores valued at a total $421,000. One permit was for a new salesroom and was valued at $250,000.
Also, there was a permit valued at $50,000 for alterations, repairs and additions to a storage room. The other commercial and industrial permit was for alterations, repairs and additions to a restaurant with a value of $10,000.
On the residential side, there were 28 permits valued at $7.56 million. Ten of those were for new storage garages, including open-air parking garages, valued at $156,400. One permit was for an alteration, repair and addition to a storage garage, including open air parking garages.
There were 11 permits as well for new houses with a combined value of $3.20 million. There were three permits for alterations, repairs and additions to houses, with a total value of $38,000. In October 2013 there were nine new houses valued at $3.10 million.
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Hotels and houses major building permits in October
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Advanced Wood Flooring Installation Training | National Wood Flooring Association
http://www.nwfa.org/education.aspx This video highlights the National Wood Flooring Association (NWFA) Advanced Installation training course, recently held a...
By: National Wood Flooring Association
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Advanced Wood Flooring Installation Training | National Wood Flooring Association - Video
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
New Carpet Installation Cost
New Carpet Installation Cost for home owners ready to remodel their room or upgrade their flooring. If you tired or worn, torn, faded carpet and dated floors...
By: William Bell
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New Carpet Installation Cost - Video
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) Growing the Hotel Riverwalk took a year of planning, months of renovations and weekly trips from Ohio to Wilmington and back for Troy and Carla Reed. But with the eight-room hotels first month of business under their belts, the Reeds are starting to see all the time they put in pay off.
Troy, a lawyer, and Carla, whose background is in corporate retail, started looking seriously at the hospitality industry last year. The Ohio couple felt it was time for a change - in both profession and scenery.
They knew they wanted to be in a downtown setting, preferably somewhere warm. Though theyd never been to Wilmington, a property at 117 S. Second St. caught their attention while digging through online listings: the former site of the Clarendon Inn, which closed in 2012.
We came down and looked at it, and that was it, Carla said. You could see the potential. It just kind of checked off all the boxes that we had in our mind.
After closing on the property in February, the couple spent four months trading off between renovating the hotel in Wilmington and staying with their two sons in Ohio. Amid carpet installation and painting, they sent a son to college, put their house on the market and moved three states south with their younger son.
The result is a small boutique inn with eight rooms instead of Clarendons 11 - the Reeds live in a now-walled off part of the hotel. But they worked hard to make the rooms cozy and comfortable, bringing in new beds and flat-screen TVs, constructing a guest lounge and a grab-and-go breakfast area. Before it was the Clarendon, the circa-1950s building was a Catholic school, and the Reeds designed their space to balance its old-fashioned feel with modern amenities.
Were really trying to cater to folks that want to have a good experience in Wilmington, Troy said. Its a destination. We have everything that you would have at the Courtyard or different places; its just a different vibe.
Talk about hotel growth in Wilmington usually focuses on the six-story Courtyard Marriott that opened downtown this year, or the Embassy Suites planned for near the Convention Center. But smaller inns like Hotel Riverwalk account for a lot of business downtown.
According to numbers from the Wilmington and Beaches Convention & Visitors Bureau, small inns and bed and breakfasts add nearly 60 rooms to Wilmingtons unit total, mostly in the downtown Historic District. While the lions share of the nearly 4,600 hotel rooms in the city are in limited-service hotels and motels, boutique hotels meet a demand for upscale yet inexpensive spaces within walking distance of downtown.
In Hotel Riverwalks block are the Hotel Tarrymore, the Wilmingtonian and the Graystone Inn; Stemmermans Inn on Front Street is just a block away.
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Ohio couple fulfills plan, opens Wilmington hotel
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Residential Energy-Saving Tips: Indoor Lighting
Learn how to save energy and money on indoor lighting options for your home.
By: San Diego Gas Electric
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Residential Energy-Saving Tips: Indoor Lighting - Video
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November 14, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
November 13, 2014 // Paul Buckley
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., has introduced chip-on-board (COB) LED package products, the LC006B and LC008B, with six and eight watts of power respectively.
The new packages join five others in Samsungs LC series (LC013B, LC019B, LC026B, LC033B and LC040B), to complete the company's COB package line-up.
A chip-on-board LED package provides a single light source that combines multiple LED chips to achieve higher light intensity and uniformity, while simplifying luminaire design.
The LC006B and LC008B offer high-efficacy levels of 140 lm/W and 142 lm/W at 5000K CCT, respectively. The new packages will support a wide range of CCT (Correlated Color Temperature) specifications from 2700K to 5000K with a CRI (Color Rendering Index) over 80. The devices also feature a compact package size with an 8 mm LES (Light Emitting Surface) and a package structure that can be easily connected with holders or screw mounts for greater installation convenience.
Samsung COB LED lighting solutions now can be used in a wider range of applications, including downlight for home lighting, flood light for industrial lighting, and spotlight and downlight for commercial lighting.
http://www.samsung.com
Optoelectronics
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6-W and 8-W COB LED packages focus on indoor lighting
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