Categorys
Pages
Linkpartner

    Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design



    Page 7,022«..1020..7,0217,0227,0237,024..7,0307,040..»



    Minecraft Snapshot 14w32d – COLORED FENCES, NEW DOOR DESIGNS & UPGRADED BEACONS! [HD] – Video

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Minecraft Snapshot 14w32d - COLORED FENCES, NEW DOOR DESIGNS UPGRADED BEACONS! [HD]
    Minecraft Snapshot 14w32d - COLORED FENCES, NEW DOOR DESIGNS UPGRADED BEACONS! [HD] 14w32d was released to fix a bug in 14w32c that crashed/kicked the client when joining dedicated servers....

    By: BULLZNAKAZ

    Read the original here:
    Minecraft Snapshot 14w32d - COLORED FENCES, NEW DOOR DESIGNS & UPGRADED BEACONS! [HD] - Video

    Undocumented Children: Unwanted, Say Manassas, Virginia, Officials

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    MANASSAS, VirginiaRebecca Apple's Latino students at Osbourn High School call her "Miss Manzana," the Spanish word for "apple." A floating teacher last year, Apple would pile her nine English-Spanish dictionaries and other supplies into a cart and travel down halls thronged with students.

    She's one of hundreds of public school teachers in Manassas, in Prince William County outside Washington, D.C., who've struggled to adjust to the arrival of scores of new Hispanic students; a fresh onslaught is expected when school opens in a few weeks' time. Last year, Apple's class size for her beginner English for Speakers of Other Languages course grew so quickly that she was receiving one or two new immigrant students every day for a month.

    Matilde Rosa Jimenez taught as many as 37 kids in her eighth-grade English class at Metz Middle School, from gifted students to kids struggling with basic reading comprehension to immigrants who spoke little or no English. Some of her students had trouble reading in their native language. And in one county public elementary school, 60 different languages are spoken.

    Educating immigrant children has tested the capacity of the county's schools in other ways as well. Hundreds of trailers have been turned into makeshift classrooms to handle the overflow.

    With 50,000 unaccompanied children flooding into the United States this summer, many towns and cities are expecting apprehended minors to be moved to their communities, at least temporarily. The national reaction has run the gamut from cautious willingness to open hostility. In the middle-class suburbs of Washington, D.C., where waves of immigrants have long been a source of cultural tension, the potential for a new influx has sparked angry debate and calls for immediate deportations.

    Manassas has a main street that is traditional Americana, with red brick buildings and hanging flower baskets. But Hispanic influence in the city is growing, and many services and businesses cater to Spanish speakers. According to predictions from the Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, a think tank at the University of Virginia, the county's Hispanic population will rise nearly 50 percent, from 81,460 in 2010 to 118,748 in 2020. (At the start of 2013, its total population was estimated at 431,000.)

    In Manassas, the Hispanic community has doubled within the last decade and now makes up a third of the population. The small city, with a population of around 28,000, has become a battleground just as surely as it was during the Civil War.

    Celia Maria Llanes gives bottles of milk to her daughters and the children she babysits in her Manassas home.

    Photograph by Sarah L. Voisin, The Washington Post/Getty

    Coming to America

    See more here:
    Undocumented Children: Unwanted, Say Manassas, Virginia, Officials

    #1 Monmouth & Ocean County NJ Paving Contractor

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    New Jerseys Trusted Name for Residential and Commercial Paving Since 1986

    When youre looking to hire a NJ paving contractor for your next residential or commercial project, its important that you work with a company that has the experience with the types of paving project youre looking to do. Godfrey Nichols has been paving since he was 17 years old. With over 30 years of experience as top paving contractor in New Jersey, Godfrey and the team have the expertise to ensure that your project is a success.

    When it comes to NJ residential paving, we tend to focus along the Jersey Shore area. If youre a homeowner or a landlord in Monmouth, Ocean, or Middlesex Counties, we will be happy to provide you with a free estimate with a cost breakdown on all of the components so you understand exactly what you are getting and all of the prices involved. So whether youre looking for a Monmouth County paving contractor or an Ocean County paving contractor, give us a call or contact us through our website for a free consultation and estimate.

    When it comes to driveway paving in NJ other than the Jersey Shore areas, we honestly find it difficult to be competitive with prices. As you can imagine, hauling our paving equipment all over the state can be expensive and is not an efficient use of our time or your money. Call the NJ Driveway Paving Experts Today!

    Re-paving your driveway or adding a new patio not only improves the look of your New Jersey home. It also increases the value of your property.Since 1986, G.Nichols Paving Contractor Inc., has been providing residential and commercial paving in New Jersey. Godfrey Nicholsand his crew of experienced, courteous and knowledgeable workers complete every job with the pride of quality workmanship.

    When it comes to larger projects such as the following, we are competitive throughout the state of New Jersey:

    Commercial parking lots in particular are usually subject to a lot of wear and tear. First, New Jersey is the most densely populated state in the country. Second, we can experience some relatively harsh weather, when it is extremely hot during the summer and freezing cold and icy during the winter months.

    These two factors combined mean that NJ commercial paving projects seem to be going on everywhere you look. Its difficult for parking lots to get a break with all that traffic.

    At G. Nichols Paving, we always recommend that property management companies and facilities managers get on a regular schedule when it comes to parking lot paving and commercial paving in New Jersey. Whether you have the financial resources to re-pave or re-seal your parking lot every few years, or whether a little touch up work and care on an annual basis is more appropriate, we will make sure that you get the longest life out of your asphalt paving.

    See more here:
    #1 Monmouth & Ocean County NJ Paving Contractor

    She paid for paving but Mississauga consumer cant track down company

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Freda DGuerra thought she found the right paving contractor for the job. The Mississauga woman and her husband were searching for someone to install interlocking stones at their home. After some research, the couple settled on Villas Paving, run by John Villano.

    The way he spoke, I thought he knew what he was saying what he was going to do, said DGuerra, who called Global News in frustration six weeks after retaining Villanos company. She added that Villano dressed well and seemed to act in a professional manner.

    DGuerra signed a contract for $8,500. She agreed to pay $3,500 in cash to Villas Paving, with the balance due on completion. DGuerra says she was assured the job would be done in two to three weeks.

    But six weeks later, all thats been done is the removal of the old driveway and walkway. DGuerra says she and her family members have called Villano umpteen times trying to find out when the work would be completed. She says her calls have not been answered or returned.

    I called you because I wanted some action, DGuerra told Global News, saying she didnt want another consumer to experience the same situation she did.

    Global News caught up with Villano outside a residence in Mississauga; but the contractor saw the news camera and drove away, leaving his girlfriend on the sidewalk. The woman, who called herself Melinda, ran from the camera and refused to answer questions, later saying she had nothing to do with the business.

    For about seven minutes, the news crew ran alongside the woman while Villano passed by several times, occasionally at high speed. Finally, he screeched to a stop to allow the woman in before backing up with tires squealing.

    Raw Video: Sean OShea chases suspecteddelinquentcontractor

    Later, in a text message to DGuerra, the contractor said: I had no intentions (sic) of not finishing the job at the house. He then threatened not to complete the work if Global News aired a story. If there is a story on TV tonight I will definitely not be finishing the job. And you can post this text message.

    DGuera says she has no interest at this point in having Villanos company do any additional work given the track record.

    See the article here:
    She paid for paving but Mississauga consumer cant track down company

    BO2 [PC]: Hardpoint and Demolition BACK | Weekend Double XP – Video

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    BO2 [PC]: Hardpoint and Demolition BACK | Weekend Double XP
    Abonne toi ici : http://www.youtube.com/user/GreyNapoleonBeast Merci de laisser un j #39;aime si tu apprci la vido! Twitter (trs important) https://twitter.com/Tra...

    By: GreyNapoleonBeast

    See original here:
    BO2 [PC]: Hardpoint and Demolition BACK | Weekend Double XP - Video

    As an alternative to demolition, Buffalo offers homes for a dollar

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The breeze carries the tinny jingle of the approaching ice cream truck, so Mike Puma leaves the railing he's painting on his two-family, electric-blue home to buy a milkshake.

    He pays more for the shake than he did his entire home.

    Of course, when he bought this home for $1 this year, it had a demolition notice on the door, walls the consistency of a Three Musketeers bar and mold coating the ceilings. But Puma, 24, feels that he got a bargain. Plus, he takes pleasure in knowing that this century-old house will not be torn down.

    "We're reintroducing new life into these properties," he said. "Not only are you taking a stand against demolition, but you're taking a stand on what happens in this city."

    Across the Rust Belt, cities are beginning to tear down tens of thousands of vacant homes. But Puma and a small group of other activists in Buffalo are battling the demolition process, trying to find residents to buy the fixer-uppers.

    Puma alone has saved two houses on his block by persuading friends to buy them though Buffalo's Urban Homestead program, which allows residents to buy homes for a dollar if they show they have the resources to make necessary repairs and promise to live in them for at least three years.

    Gary, Ind., launched its own version of the Dollar Home program last year with an initial six houses sold for $1 each. Other cities, including Philadelphia and Detroit, allow homeowners to acquire vacant lots next door for a small sum.

    Puma said Americans were too quick to destroy old homes, and he is fighting "the never-ending rumble of demolition equipment."

    Cities demolish salvageable buildings because there's political incentive to clear up blight, said David Torke, a neighborhood activist and blogger who works with Puma to save old homes.

    The money spent on demolition $15,000 a home could be spent to repair the houses and make them habitable, Torke said.

    Visit link:
    As an alternative to demolition, Buffalo offers homes for a dollar

    Demolition, recycling of former Sappi plant continues as do smokestack talks

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    MUSKEGON, MI -- The lack of an environmental agreement on the demolition of the former Sappi plantsmokestacks has not impeded progress to take down the former paper plant.

    Ken Callow, manager of the demolition project for property owner Melching Inc., said work to remove buildings and foundations on the property is more than halfway completed.

    The latest use for recyclable materials from the massive plant is crushed concrete, piles of which are visible on the Muskegon Lake-front site. A contractor recently requested 60,000 tons of the crushed concrete, much of it for the U.S. 31 bypass in northern Ottawa County, Callow said.

    "That drove us long hours -- weekends and holidays," he said.

    That's how the work goes on the huge, 120-acre site. When there's demand for the recyclable material being sorted and piled on site, the work takes off. It slows when other projects Melching is working have deadlines taking priority, Callow said.

    "Since we own the site, we can work on it when we want," Callow said.

    At this point, removal of buildings on site is about 75 percent complete, and removal of foundations is about 50 percent complete, Callow said.

    While work on the former industrial site continues at a steady pace, negotiations over the demolition of two 275-foot smokestacks are frustratingly slow, Callow said. Melching officials are working with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to find a solution to concerns over a glaze containing asbestos that covers the length of the smokestacks.

    In most cases, the EPA requires removal of asbestos prior to demolition by explosives. Exceptions include floor tiles and roofing materials with asbestos, Callow said. Melching officials are working to convince EPA officials that the glaze, which has asbestos fibers in it, should be placed in the same category as the allowed tiles and roofing material.

    Without such an exception, it would be "unbelievably expensive" to remove the glaze, Callow said. It also would be extremely expensive to dismantle the towers from the top down, he said. Other methods of knocking down the massive towers would be too dangerous, he said.

    Go here to read the rest:
    Demolition, recycling of former Sappi plant continues as do smokestack talks

    Architect – Career Information – About.com Career Planning

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Architects design buildings and other structures. In addition to considering the way these buildings and structures look, they also make sure they are functional, safe, economical and suit the needs of the people who use them.

    Employment Facts:

    There were approximately 113,700 architects employed in 2010, mostly in the architectural, engineering and related services industry. About a quarter were self employed. Most jobs were full-time positions, but if you're thinking 9 to 5, you're wrong. Many architects work over 50 hours a week and those hours include weekends and evenings. While they work in offices most of the time, they also have to visit construction sites to check up on the progress of the projects they have designed.

    Educational Requirements:

    To become an architect one must earn a professional degree in architecture after completing one of the following programs offered at many colleges and universities:

    Generally, the professional degree in architecture must be from a school of architecture accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). A few states don't have this requirement.

    Why Do You Need to Know About Educational Requirements?

    Other Requirements:

    In the United States those who want to provide architectural services must be licensed. To become a licensed architect one must earn a professional degree in architecture, complete a period of practical training or internship, and pass all divisions of the ARE (Architect Registration Examination). In most states, continuing education is required to maintain licensure. To find out what the requirements are in the state in which you want to work use the Licensed Occupations Tool from CareerOneStop

    One needs certain qualities to succeed in this occupation. If you want to be an architect you should be creative and have good visualization skills. Not only do you need to be able to create designs for buildings and other structures, you need to be able to see, in your mind's eye, what they will look like once they are built. Since architects have to describe their ideas to other people including clients and colleagues, you must have strong communication skills. The ability to think critically will help you solve problems that inevitably arise during most projects.

    Read this article:
    Architect - Career Information - About.com Career Planning

    Heat from fire damages 14 nearby homes, fire engine

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    MADISON, Wis. -

    The fire department said the "powerful" fire the took down a large apartment building last week on damaged more than a dozen nearby homes and melted parts of the fire engine.

    Madison Fire spokeswoman Bernadette Galvez said Thursday that crews responding to the fire last Friday night worked to wet down homes near the four-floor structure that was emitting heat hot enough to melt parts of a fire engine and cracking windows in adjacent buildings. The fire at a building under construction on the 500 block of Apollo Way was initially reported by drivers seeing smoke and flames from Interstate 90 at about 7:30 p.m., officials said last week.

    "The radiant heat from the fire was so intense that firefighter air packs were hot to the touch, fire gear started to melt and fire engine tires were smoking," Galvez said Thursday. "This powerful fire would burn any exposed skin if not covered."

    Galvez said crews arriving to the scene could feel heat from the blaze 100 feet away through the fire engine windshield. Parts of the engine can be seen melted and warped in photos provided by the Madison Fire Department.

    Images of nearby homes showed melted, rippled siding the department said was caused by radiant heat.

    The building complex that burned is a total loss estimated at $3.5 million to $5 million.

    The fire investigation continued Thursday, Galvez said.

    Published On:Aug 08 2014 08:24:58 PM CDT Updated On:Aug 14 2014 01:27:53 PM CDT

    A large fire broke out in an apartment building in the Grandview Commons subdivision on Madison's east side Aug. 8. Photos show the building burning and subsequent damage caused by heat from the big blaze.

    Read the original here:
    Heat from fire damages 14 nearby homes, fire engine

    New apartment community on the way at Frisco Square project

    - August 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    A Frisco development that stalled during the recession is reviving with new construction.

    A 275-unit urban-style apartment project will be built in Frisco Square by developer PegasusAblon and investor Behringer.

    Its the second major addition announced in the last few months for Friscos 14-year-old town center on the Dallas North Tollway.

    We are putting the same kind of amenity base in the project that people want in Uptown and Legacy, said developer Michael Ablon. Theres a large constituency that wants that in Frisco.

    The four-story Ablon at Frisco Square will be constructed south of Main Street and just across from Friscos City Hall.

    Ablon said the apartments, designed by BGO Architects, will open at the end of next year.

    The Frisco rental complex will be of the same quality that developers are building in Uptown and other popular central Dallas neighborhoods, he said.

    Everybody talks about the generation that wants the urban lifestyle in Uptown, Ablon said. But there is a large number of the same folks that want the same things but are more suburban.

    PegasusAblon has already built one successful Frisco apartment project.

    Go here to see the original:
    New apartment community on the way at Frisco Square project

    « old Postsnew Posts »ogtzuq

    Page 7,022«..1020..7,0217,0227,0237,024..7,0307,040..»


    Recent Posts