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    Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design



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    FORMS OF GARDENS – Jean Caneel-Claes & Erik Dhont – Video

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    FORMS OF GARDENS - Jean Caneel-Claes Erik Dhont
    In Belgium, the pedigree of landscape architecture has been established principally through the design of gardens, first private then urban. To illustrate th...

    By: Bozar Brussels

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    FORMS OF GARDENS - Jean Caneel-Claes & Erik Dhont - Video

    A playful pop-up at Spruce Street Harbor Park

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Last summer, landscape architect David Fierabend was tasked with turning a vacant lot on Broad Street into a peaceful pop-up garden for the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society. The best indication that his woodland garden - shaded by a copse of graceful honey locusts - had succeeded? How little visitors noticed his handiwork.

    "People would come in and say, 'David, you're really lucky these trees were here,' because they seemed like they belonged," said Avram Hornik of Four Corners Management, which worked on the pop-up. "And that's the skill. You can't train someone to do that. Either you have it or you don't have it - and David has it."

    Over the last few years, that skill has made Fierabend (pronounced FEER-ra-ben), principal at Groundswell Design Group based in Hopewell, N.J., the go-to design mind for turning ugly and underutilized corners of the city into inviting temporary and permanent "outdoor lifestyle spaces" - that is, pop-up parks, beer gardens, and restaurants.

    His latest extreme makeover, which opens to the public Friday, is the rebranded $700,000-plus Spruce Street Harbor Park, once an uninspired stretch of land along Columbus Boulevard. The temporary design, commissioned by the Delaware River Waterfront Corp. (DRWC) as a way to generate excitement and spur development along the river, transforms the park into a destination with boardwalks, swaying hammocks, and a floating restaurant.

    Gesturing out toward the barges, where shipping-container concession booths were already installed and workers in a rowboat were coaxing a series of floating garden beds into place, he added, "Look at the flags flapping in the breeze, the trees swaying, and the grasses: I want visitors to feel something that taps into childhood experience, or a really nice moment in their life."

    It's more than just landscaping: "We're now involved in this place-making business in Philadelphia," he said.

    He has at least eight such projects underway this summer from Wilmington to New York. Many are playful reimaginings of summer in the city.

    His work with the DRWC - begun in winter when he and Hornik helped reinvigorate the Blue Cross RiverRink by, as he puts it, "dropping a winter wonderland into a parking lot" - includes a beach-inspired update to Festival Pier.

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    A playful pop-up at Spruce Street Harbor Park

    Best on the Block: Enter and win!

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Do you spend long hours outside, making your landscape beautiful? Do you know someone who does? Now you can be rewarded for all that hard work. Enter The Southerns contest, Best on the Block.

    We will choose the Best on the Block from submitted photos, and each months winner will take home three prizes: $50 gift certificates from Plantscape in Herrin, Changing Seasons in Marion and Southside Lumber in Herrin. Winners will be featured the last Friday of July, August and September on the At Home page.

    One more thing: The yard work must be done by you, not a professional landscaper or gardener.

    Heres what to do:

    1. Take a digital photo of what makes your yard or your friends yard a contender. It can feature flowers, flowering shrubs, overall landscaping, vegetable gardens, rock gardens or whatever makes your yard the Best on the Block.

    2. Go to http://www.thesouthern.com/bestblock to enter your information and upload your photo.

    A winner will be chosen near the end of the month by a panel at The Southern and will be featured in a story in the At Home section the last Friday of the month.

    So, put the pruners down, grab your camera and enter today.

    Excerpt from:
    Best on the Block: Enter and win!

    Outstanding landscapes earn honors

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Thursday, June 26th, 2014 Issue 26, Volume 18.

    FALLBROOK The Fallbrook Beautification Alliance (FBA) has announced the winners of its seventh annual Outstanding Landscape awards.

    Each year, the FBA recognizes those who have taken an extra effort in keeping Fallbrook beautiful. Submissions are open to residential and commercial properties alike. An FBA-appointed committee reviews each submission for innovative, sustainable, or beautiful landscaping, architectural design, public art, preservation, conservation, and more.

    The winners for 2014, by category, include:

    Residential

    The home of Sharon and Bill Desatoff, located at 1624 McDonald Rd. was selected as the residential winner for 2014. The fact that the Desatoffs were in the floral design business for more than 15 years shows.

    This do-it-yourself project was completed section-by-section, taking six years. The landscape has no automatic irrigation and is all hand-watered.

    Taking lessons that she learned from the Fallbrook Garden Club, such as in mulching, Sharon has created a garden and butterfly paradise. The property has many large boulders, all donated by local construction companies looking to keep them out of their way.

    The yard originally contained fruit trees but is now home to rolling walkways, birdbaths and trellises, as well as many vibrant flowers and numerous native plants. Butterflies flutter around host plants, including the butterfly bush and flambego. Morning glories add lots of color, accented by purple, pink, and white delphiniums and cosmos.

    Drought-tolerant

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    Outstanding landscapes earn honors

    Sustainable, Low-Maintenance Outdoor Spaces Increasingly Popular, Profitable in Texas

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Austin, TX (PRWEB) June 26, 2014

    According to the Texas Association of Realtors 2014 Texas Remodel Valuation Report, creating a backyard oasis or a livable outdoor space is one of the most popular and profitable home renovation projects among Texas homeowners recouping almost 112% of the total project costs in added home values. Increasingly though, homeowners want more than just comfortable and attractive outdoor spaces, according to a 2014 study from the American Society of Landscape Architects, they want their outdoor spaces to be sustainable and low-maintenance. And, to this end, propane can offer a valuable solution.

    Sharp Propane a propane service provider in five markets across Texas realizes the potential for propane to power its customers outdoor spaces and they use their expertise to help motivate and assist with their customers outdoor renovation projects. In each of Sharps service areas Austin, Bastrop, College Station, Fort Worth and La Grange Sharp works with homeowners and their landscape contractors to safely and efficiently incorporate outdoor appliances into customers primary propane system. This includes every step of the propane installation process, from a review of your site plan to coordinating with the city on permitting and working with your contractor to ensure your project comes in on time and on budget.

    By hooking up these propane appliances to the homes primary propane tank or installing a new tank, homeowners can relax and entertain in their outdoor living spaces without any stress or concern, because the propane seamlessly moves from tank to appliance with no homeowner thought or effort. Propane also gives homeowners peace of mind in that they are using a safe, green alternative energy source for all their outdoor needs. If measured by carbon footprint, propane is one of the greenest forms of energy available its cleaner burning than other petroleum-based products and emits less than half as many greenhouse gases as electricity generated in coal-based power plants. Additionally, propane is low-maintenance, energy-efficient and versatile enough to accommodate many aspects of outdoor spaces from outdoor kitchens and lighting, to pool heating and more.

    Some of the benefits of using propane over other energy sources in outdoor spaces include efficiency and speed. By using propane to heat a pool for example, homeowners enjoy a swimming season that stretches throughout the whole year, and propane heaters that warm water two times faster than electricity. Additionally, outdoor kitchens and grill features that use propane heat up faster than charcoal, and release less carbon monoxide and soot in the process.

    A recent example of a backyard renovation project Sharp Propane helped complete is Patrick and Misty Watkins outside of Austin in Bee Caves.

    The Watkins Austin-based outdoor landscaping contractor, Mark Bichler of Pearson Landscaping, spent six months working on The Watkins backyard renovation. The Watkins project was a full-scale upgrade to their backyard essentially we built them a second outdoor house. Bichler said. What they told me was, when the kids are here, we dont want them in the house, so we built them an outdoor space that was virtually self-sufficient.

    The Watkins newly upgraded backyard features an outdoor bathroom that is plugged into the homes septic system; a complete outdoor kitchen with large burners, a grill, crawfish boiling pot and fireplace, all fueled by propane; a pool and spa, both heated by propane; as well as landscaping and a stone deck that integrates and pulls together each of the backyards disparate spaces.

    Because The Watkins project incorporated so much propane into the design, we coordinated and met with Sharp eight or nine times over the course of the project and every experience was right on point, Bichler said. Sharp even went above and beyond for the Watkins. When we ran propane lines through the trenches below the kitchen, Sharp ran an extra line of pipe under the slab just in case they might want a fire pit over to the side or some other propane-related product there in the future.

    The Watkins home project is just one recent example of the outdoor renovations Sharp has helped coordinate and make a reality for their customers. In Justin, Texas, just outside of Fort Worth, Jenn and Joe Washam worked with Sharp to help make their pool and outdoor kitchen project a reality. In our backyard we now have fire features thanks to propane, a fireplace run by propane, an outdoor kitchen run on propane with an outlet off the back for hooking up burners for crawfish boils and a pool and spa both heated with propane, Jenn Washam said. Our builder Klapprodt Pools did a time lapse video of the entire project too. Sharp coordinated with Klapprodt on the blueprints and the initial plans for our backyard, kept in contact throughout the process and came out whenever they were needed. Such a seamless process.

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    Sustainable, Low-Maintenance Outdoor Spaces Increasingly Popular, Profitable in Texas

    Reviving a blackened landscape

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Published on June 26, 2014

    It wont be long before the trees are taller than she is, but Molly Head, daughter of Gord and Allison Head, is eager to get started on tree planting. Check out the June 30 edition of The Aurora for more photos.

    Photos by Ty Dunham/The Aurora

    Published on June 26, 2014

    They may be small now, but Thomas Dawe, Darren Dawe and Sherry Dawe knows each tree makes a difference to the scorched land.

    Photo by Ty Dunham/The Aurora

    Off the Trans-Labrador Highway, about 15 minutes outside of Labrador West, is a long stretch of dirt road entering Blueberry Hill, which begins with bright green trees and gradually turns into black ground with the charred remains of last years devastating forest fire.

    A car that looks like it aged 1,000 years sits on a lot, the interior burnt and tires disintegrated. Rubble is all that is left of some cabin sites, while newly constructed dwellings stand out against the dark landscape.

    Standing in the forest, its easy to see far down where greenery used to block vision in just a few feet. Walking over soot and scraping across the branches leaves black marks against clothing.

    But the Labrador West Boy Scouts, Beavers, Girl Guides and Blueberry Hill cabin owners didnt seem to mind. Spreading out through the trees, their coloured jackets and shirts brightly contrasted against the landscape as they dug holes and filled them with infant black spruce trees.

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    Reviving a blackened landscape

    Land Clearing update number 5 – Video

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Land Clearing update number 5
    Then the rain came,,, Rains a good thing,, more to come,,,,, thanks for watching,,, SUBSCRIBE TO MY CHANNEL LEAVE A COMMENT.

    By: ligebellbuckletn

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    Land Clearing update number 5 - Video

    Land Clearing update number 6 Got me Some Help – Video

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Land Clearing update number 6 Got me Some Help
    Me With the help of the girls and Little Jason Done a little more on the clearing Leave comments,,,,, Subscribe to my Channel,,,,, Thanks for watching Lige.

    By: ligebellbuckletn

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    Land Clearing update number 6 Got me Some Help - Video

    Land trust intervenes in Kardon Park dispute

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    "We live in a rapidly changing society, but parks are that island of security," Loza, whose association is based in Harrisburg, said Thursday. "They're a source of stability."

    That could change, he said, if last year's decision by Chester County Court Judge Katherine Platt allowing part of the park to be sold stands. The decision is being appealed, the latest twist in a case both sides say could land in the state's highest court.

    The land trust, which represents 75 conservancies across the state, filed a brief against the development in March, the third time in 20 years it has weighed in on a court case.

    Downingtown has for decades considered developing Kardon Park, a stretch of ponds, fields, and forests with a paved walking path that many residents cherish for its tranquillity.

    Borough officials say the land is also flush with arsenic, iron, and mercury from when it was used it as a landfill in the 1960s.

    The contamination would be mitigated under a 2007 sale agreement with developers Jack Lowe and Sarah Peck, who would also maintain about 20 acres as parkland and improve trails, according to the borough. The pair plan to build 300 town houses and 20,000 square feet of retail, with apartments above those shops.

    Borough officials have said the project would bring in millions of dollars in tax revenue, plus residents who would enrich the business district just south of the park.

    The sale has been tied up in court since 2009, when a group of residents filed a lawsuit. In a November ruling, Platt focused on how the land was acquired - not how it is used - in deciding if it could be sold.

    The two sides, which are both appealing, read the judge's ruling differently but agree Platt cleared at least half the park for sale.

    That land was acquired through a state land conservation bill known as Project 70. At the request of the borough, the legislature in 2011 lifted the restriction that the land remain open, clearing the way for development, Platt ruled.

    Original post:
    Land trust intervenes in Kardon Park dispute

    Owner of land where mud-bogging event was planned fined $500

    - June 27, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    BROOKSVILLE The owner of property that had been promoted as the site of a mud-bogging event known as the Mud on the Barbee has agreed to pay a fine and meet other requirements after he was issued a stop-work order by county officials.

    Thomas H. Malouf faced four citations from Hernando County Development Services when the county discovered what was going on and issued the order. The citations included failure to obtain a conditional use permit for a mud-bogging site, failure to obtain a land-clearing permit, failure to obtain a floodplain permit before constructing a bridge and failure to obtain a permit for the construction of a stage.

    On Thursday, Malouf's attorney, Dean A. Kent, faced a special master and agreed to pay a $500 fine as part of a stipulated agreement.

    Malouf will have to revise the approval he received from the Southwest Florida Water Management District for a mud bog and agree to use the area for agricultural purposes, such as a cattle pond, said Chris Linsbeck, the county's zoning supervisor. He also will have to use the platform that was to have been a stage for the Mud on the Barbee as a pole barn or other agricultural use.

    If the structure is found to be too close to the road, Malouf will have to move it or get a variance, Linsbeck said.

    Mike Barbee had been promoting the site, on U.S. 98 just north of Brooksville, as the home of the Mud on the Barbee, a mud-bogging and music event and the backdrop for a reality television show. On the event's Facebook page, Barbee had posted pictures of the work and announced that it would be ready to go by July 4.

    His plans have since changed.

    Barbee now plans to hold a Fourth of July weekend event at the Hernando County Fairgrounds.

    The event, which is scheduled for July 4 and 5, promises mud-truck racing at the fairgrounds arena, live bands, overnight camping and a watermelon seed-spitting contest. A billboard at the fairgrounds pledges more than $12,000 in prize money.

    On the Mud on the Barbee Facebook site, Barbee says there will be competition runs inside the arena with film crews shooting footage for the reality TV show. He hopes thousands of spectators fill the stands. Participants will qualify on Friday for a chance to win money on Saturday.

    Link:
    Owner of land where mud-bogging event was planned fined $500

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