Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
SCOTTSBORO, AL (WAFF) -
The Jackson County Commission is looking to cut down the only remaining maple tree on the square that's nearly 150 years old.
Commission Chairman Matthew Hodges said a limb fell a couple of weeks ago, the tree is dying, and they see it as a safety issue to residents who come to the courthouse.
But some detractors said it's no more of a liability than the many mature pecan trees outside that are prone to shedding limbs.
The Jackson County Courthouse is known for its many mature trees on the square. At issue is the maple tree outside the main entrance that welcomes people to the courthouse.
Residents said at one time there were a total of three, but Mother Nature took its toll on two, and this is the last.
Hodges said they have the okay of the tree commission, but some said it doesn't even look as if the tree is dying. They said the county should have a comprehensive study done before resorting to destruction efforts. Mike Williamson, a concerned resident, said they could have a study done by experts from Auburn.
"I know they did everything in the world they could to try to save the trees that had been poisoned at Toomer's Corner," Williamson said. "There may be some things to be done to save this tree, to give us many more years of enjoyment."
Hodges said the tree is set for removal the weekend of Sept. 5.
Williamson said he plans to present a petition of names opposing the removal on Tuesday. If that doesn't work, Williamson said he's considering legal action.
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150-year-old Scottsboro courthouse tree at risk of being removed
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Washington, D.C. (PRWEB) August 28, 2014
The Francis L. Cardozo Education Campus received LEED Gold Certification for Schools this week from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), the Department of General Services (DGS) announced today.
The Department of General Services is honored to receive this prestigious certification from the U.S. Green Building Council, and I would like to congratulate our entire design, construction and project team for achieving this distinction, said Brian J. Hanlon, DGS Director. This certification showcases the agencys dedication to build high quality, sustainable schools here in the District of Columbia that can serve as national models of excellence.
According to the USGBC, LEED provides building owners and operators with a framework for identifying and implementing practical and measurable green building design, construction, operations and maintenance solutions. The LEED program provides third-party verification of green buildings. Building projects satisfy prerequisites and earn points to achieve different levels of certification. Prerequisites and credits differ for each rating system, and teams choose the best fit for the project.
The new Cardozo Education Campus, which was first designed a century ago, houses the Academy of Construction and Design, and the TransSTEM Academy. Both academies have expanded and enhanced classroom and laboratory spaces, including a two-story aviation lab, a two-story masonry construction lab and several computer lab spaces. The newly modernized and expanded historic campus in Ward 1 also features two specialized learning academies and a fully restored historic auditorium.
The modernization project marries both high tech advancements such as interactive whiteboards, classroom sound enhancement systems, and computer labs with major renovations to many of the celebrated period features of the original Cardozo, including stone carvings and decorative tile work, an historic lecture classroom, auditorium, and indoor pool.
Some of the design features of the Cardozo Education Campus which lead to the LEED certification include: Design Features:
The modernization of Cardozo also incorporates a number of energy-efficient elements including new mechanical, plumbing, and electrical systems designed to reduce the energy consumption of the building, along with a green roof to aid with stormwater management. The school was designed to achieve a minimum of LEED Silver for Schools rating.
LEED is a point based system where building projects earn LEED points for satisfying specific green building criteria. Within each of the LEED credit categories, projects must satisfy particular prerequisites and earn points.
The categories include: Sustainable Sites (SS), Water Efficiency (WE), Energy and Atmosphere (EA), Materials and Resources (MR) and Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ). An additional category, Innovation in Design (ID), addresses sustainable building expertise as well as design measures not covered under the five environmental categories. The number of points the project earns determines the level of LEED Certification the project receives. LEED certification is available in four progressive levels: Certified; Silver; Gold and Platinum.
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Cardozo Education Campus Receives LEED Gold Certification
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Ashburn Sunroom (888) 530-9046
Sunroom additions are a sought-after approach for homeowners to expand their living space with a bright and sunny new room. Your dreams of a beautiful sunroo...
By: Hanh Betz
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Ashburn Sunroom (888) 530-9046 - Video
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
An automatic fire sprinkler stopped a fire from spreading after it was started by a welder's torch early Thursday afternoon.
Damage was minimal and the incident was ruled accidental.
Fire dispatchers were notified at 1:25 p.m. by an alarm company the automatic fire sprinkler system at the Store N Lock at 3350 Sirius Avenue had been activated.
When firefighters arrived, smoke was showing from one unit of a one-story metal building. Firefighters forced open the locked unit and found some items stored in the unit were on fire but was put out by the fire sprinkler.
Damage was confined to the one unit and was estimated at $1000.
Fire investigators determined that a worker was using a welder's torch in the next unit which was vacant. The worker was using the torch to make repairs to the metal wall inside the vacant unit. The metal wall got hot and heated the items on the other side of the wall in the unit where the fire started.
If not for the fire sprinkler, crews said the fire could have quickly got out of control and caused extensive damage
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Automatic fire sprinkler stops fire in storage facility
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
TAMPA Construction workers renovating the Hillsborough County courthouse accidently activated the sprinkler system on Wednesday night, flooding the courthouse's ground floor with four inches of water.
Though staff worked through the night to clean up the mess, two courtrooms in the annex are closed today, soaked by the sudden downpour. They will remain out of commission for the rest of this week, said courthouse spokesman Jeff Stidham.
"Everything is fine," he said, "It looks pretty clean."
Video taken by County Court Judge Margaret Courtney, who was in the building around 9 p.m. when the sprinklers activated, shows construction workers and a Tampa Fire Rescue crew walking through inches of water in the annex's hallway. No other parts of the courthouse complex were affected.
Construction accident floods Hillsborough County courthouse 08/28/14 [Last modified: Thursday, August 28, 2014 11:42am]
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Construction accident floods Hillsborough County courthouse
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
The earliest people in the North American Arctic remained isolated from others in the region for millennia before vanishing around 700 years ago, a new genetic analysis shows. The study, published online Thursday, also reveals that today's Inuit and Native Americans of the Arctic are genetically distinct from the region's first settlers.
Inuit hunters in the Canadian Arctic have long told stories about a mysterious ancient people known as the Tunit, who once inhabited the far north. Tunit men, they recalled, possessed powerful magic and were strong enough to crush the neck of a walrus and singlehandedly haul the massive carcass home over the ice. Yet the stories described the Tunit as a reticent people who kept to themselves, avoiding contact with their neighbors.
Many researchers dismissed the tales as pure fiction, but a major new genetic study suggests that parts of these stories were based on actual events.
In a paper to be published Friday in Science, evolutionary geneticist Eske Willerslev and molecular biologist Maanasa Raghavan, both of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, and their colleagues reveal for the first time that the earliest inhabitants of the Canadian Arctica group that archaeologists call the Paleo-Eskimoslived in isolation from their neighbors for nearly 4,000 years, refraining from any mixture with Native Americans to the south or with the ancestors of the modern Inuit.
"Elsewhere, as soon as people meet each other, they have sex," says Willerslev. "Even potentially different species like Neanderthals [and modern humans] had sex, so this finding is extremely surprising."
The new study also proposes a previously unknown migration. Research by other scientists has shown that the first Americans entered the New World at least 15,500 years ago, and that two smaller migrations of hunter-gatherers from Asia followed. The new study indicates that the Paleo-Eskimos entered the Arctic some 5,000 years ago, in a separate migration.
Only One Woman?
Moreover, the team's analysis of the diversity in maternally inherited DNA in their samples suggests that these Paleo-Eskimo migrants included extremely few women. Indeed, it's possible there was just one adventurous female among the founding population. "I can't remember any other group having such low diversity," says Willerslev.
Geneticist and anthropologist Jennifer Raff, at the University of Texas, Austin, who was not a member of the team, thinks the new analysis is a major step forward in Arctic studies.
"This research has answered several important questions about North American Arctic prehistory," she says. The study now shows, for example, that the Paleo-Eskimos arrived separately from the ancestors of the Inuit, and remained genetically distinct.
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Ancient DNA Sheds New Light on Arctic's Earliest People
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
By RYAN J. FOLEY Associated Press
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - A University of Iowa professor who donned a robot costume to heckle Bill Clinton and Michele Bachmann has now set his sights on one of his school's famous quirks: the visiting team's pink locker room at Kinnick Stadium.
Kembrew McLeod is organizing what he jokingly calls a "Million Robot March" to coincide with an annual celebration Friday honoring legendary Iowa football coach Hayden Fry, who had the opposing team's locker room painted pink in 1979. McLeod wants the school to ditch the pink, which he says amounts to a school-sanctioned taunt that exudes homophobia and sexism.
Fry has said pink is a calming color meant to make Hawkeyes' opponents passive. But he also noted in his biography that it was the color of little girls' bedrooms and some considered it for sissies. The tactic has rattled some opposing coaches, with the late University of Michigan coach Bo Schembechler having student managers put white paper over the walls.
The paint became part of Hawkeye lore. A 2005 renovation added pink across brick walls and shower floors and installed pink metal lockers, carpeting, sinks, showers and urinals.
Many opposing players have shrugged off the color, with Michigan quarterback Devin Gardner recently calling it the best locker room in the conference because of its spaciousness.
Some feminists, lawyers, gay rights activists and editorial boards have criticized the gimmick over the past decade. But previous protests, including a longstanding threat of a discrimination lawsuit, haven't changed anything.
Fans have generally opposed the various efforts to get the color changed, saying it's a tradition that isn't meant to be a gender-based putdown.
McLeod, a communications studies professor, hopes his absurd approach will draw attention to the issue. He said people dressed as robots will meet on top of a hotel parking garage, and then march through FryFest, an annual event that draws up to 20,000 Hawkeye fans. They plan to hold signs and chant slogans such as, "Binary code yes! Gender binaries no!" and "Delete the pink locker rooms!"
McLeod, 43, was dubbed "Roboprofessor" after he heckled Clinton during a 2008 speech in costume. He followed that up in 2011 when Bachmann, then a Republican presidential candidate, visited an Iowa City diner. Video of McLeod dressed as a "gay robot" accusing Bachmann of being a "robophobe" and a "homophobe" - before getting booed and escorted out - quickly went viral.
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'Robot march' to protest Iowa's pink locker room
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
If you want a little variety on your restaurant construction menu, let Hencken and Gaines serve it up. Our smorgasbord of Baltimore-area projects includes a charming French bistro, an authentic Chesapeake Bay seafood restaurant, a pizzeria that could be found in any one of the five boroughs of New York, a hip music club, a chef-owned innovative fine dining establishment, and a neighborhood pub, just to name a few. We work with architects for tasty results whether the project is free standing, a tenant fit-out, adaptive reuse historic renovation or part of a mixed-use project. So go ahead, order anything you like.
CHAZZ RESTAURANT IN INNER HARBOR EAST
Client: The Vitale Family Architect: Rita St. Clair Associate, Inc.
TWO BOOTS RESTAURANT
Client: Two Boots Pizza Architect: Curry Architects
SALT
Client: SALT Restaurant Architect: Rohrer Studios
PETITE LOUIS FRENCH BISTRO
Client: Charleston Restaurant Group Architect: Rita St. Clair
CINGHIALE RESTAURANT
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Restaurant & Bar Construction Maryland | Hencken & Gaines
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
TOWN OF NIAGARA Residents near a Military Road retail and restaurant site learned Wednesday from representatives of Benderson Development Co. that construction of only the first phase of the project is in the works now.
Benderson officials also told them that other parts of the development, including a 60,000-square-foot big-box store, would remain on hold.
As a result, a large number of trees that stand in the footprint of the planned store and a parking area will remain there for the time being, Benderson told residents.
Removal of the trees has been a sore spot in the plans for Military Place as neighbors have stressed the need to keep some sort of barriers between the development and their backyards. Benderson owns a little more than 21 acres at the site.
Company representatives said a deed restriction would be placed on the use of the land so that the perimeters would always include a 50-foot buffer.
The first phase of the project is the construction of a Longhorn Steakhouse restaurant in an area near the road, across from the Fashion Outlets of Niagara Falls. Also adjacent is the converted Perkins Restaurant, which is to include a Five Guys Burgers and Fries, TCBY and Chipotle Mexican Grill. The conversion is well under way. Construction of the steakhouse has yet to begin.
Benderson told the Town Board and residents earlier this month that it lost the prospective tenant, so the big box store site would not be developed. The company has said consistently that no buildings would be constructed if tenants were not secured.
Ken Micon of Ziblut Court, who has been vocal about changes in the development, said he was pleased with the outcome of the meeting that had been called by Benderson.
We (the neighbors) met on our own at the end of the street two nights ago, he said. Our concern was not knowing about the trees.
In the original construction plan and schedule, the existing trees were to be cut down and replaced with a smaller variety. Many trees were removed by Benderson in the spring.
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Trees to stay, at least for now, at Military Road development in Town of Niagara
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August 29, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
TOWN OF NIAGARA Residents near a Military Road retail and restaurant site learned Wednesday from representatives of Benderson Development Co. that construction of only the first phase of the project is in the works now.
Benderson officials also told them that other parts of the development, including a 60,000-square-foot big-box store, would remain on hold.
As a result, a large number of trees that stand in the footprint of the planned store and a parking area will remain there for the time being, Benderson told residents.
Removal of the trees has been a sore spot in the plans for Military Place as neighbors have stressed the need to keep some sort of barriers between the development and their backyards. Benderson owns a little more than 21 acres at the site.
Company representatives said a deed restriction would be placed on the use of the land so that the perimeters would always include a 50-foot buffer.
The first phase of the project is the construction of a Longhorn Steakhouse restaurant in an area near the road, across from the Fashion Outlets of Niagara Falls. Also adjacent is the converted Perkins Restaurant, which is to include a Five Guys Burgers and Fries, TCBY and Chipotle Mexican Grill. The conversion is well under way. Construction of the steakhouse has yet to begin.
Benderson told the Town Board and residents earlier this month that it lost the prospective tenant, so the big box store site would not be developed. The company has said consistently that no buildings would be constructed if tenants were not secured.
Ken Micon of Ziblut Court, who has been vocal about changes in the development, said he was pleased with the outcome of the meeting that had been called by Benderson.
We (the neighbors) met on our own at the end of the street two nights ago, he said. Our concern was not knowing about the trees.
In the original construction plan and schedule, the existing trees were to be cut down and replaced with a smaller variety. Many trees were removed by Benderson in the spring.
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Trees to stay, at least for now, at Niagara development
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