Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Even with a new location and fewer vendors, the annual event still gives back to community
By Brandon Stoneburg
bstoneburg@eveningsun.com @b_stoneburg on Twitter
Kevin Russo, left, and Nate Herr, right, prepare the display booth for Re-Bath bathroom remodeling on Tuesday morning at the North Hanover Mall. The 62nd annual Builders Home and Garden Show will be this weekend, Thursday through Saturday, at the North Hanover Mall during mall hours. (Shane Dunlap - The Evening Sun)
Roger Sears, of Hanover, and owner of Songbird Ponds landscaping, transports stone for his patio display in the North Hanover Mall for the 62nd annual Builders Home and Garden Show on Tuesday. (Shane Dunlap - The Evening Sun)
The 62nd annual Hanover Builders' Show kicked off Thursday at its new location The North Hanover Mall.
The recent venue switch has raised some vendor's eyebrows, but others see the change as a chance to share their trade with a more diverse group of local homeowners and to continue giving back to the community.
George Hubbard, event organizer from the Exchange Club, explained the new changes and how they could possibly present a few challenges.
The vendors can only set up before the mall opens, which doesn't allow for much time to set up elaborate displays.
Because of the new regulations, some had to buy new displays this year, including four-year vendor Holly Marshall, co-owner of The Beveled Ege Marble & Granite, Inc.
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Builders' Show continues through Saturday
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
THE FIRST Unitarian Church of Seattle was built in 1889, only two years after Samuel Eliot, the 25-year-old son of Charles Eliot, president of Harvard University and perhaps then the most famous educator in the Western Hemisphere, arrived in Seattle to help its Unitarians get organized and build this sanctuary.
Local architect Hermann Steinman presented the drawings as a gift to the new congregation. Soon after the construction commenced mid-May 1889, the churchs rising belfry was easily visible around the city. The construction, here on the east side of Seventh Avenue between Union and Pike streets, was not affected when most of Seattles business district was consumed by the Great Fire of June 6, 1889.
The photograph by Asahel Curtis was recorded about 20 years later most likely 1909, by which time the Unitarians had moved on and turned the building over to other users. In the Curtis photo, the church building is squeezed on the right (south) by the popular Dreamland, a large hall built as a roller rink in 1908, but then soon given to dancing and a great variety of assemblies, many of them labor-related and politically liberal. These politics also fit the activism of the AOUW (Ancient Order of United Workmen), which used the old church for its Columbia Lodge soon after the popular Unitarians had moved to Capitol Hill. The Columbia name is signed on the steeple.
The First Unitarians dedicated their new, larger church on Boylston Avenue in 1906. It had 800 seats, the better to stage the churchs productions, which included concerts of many sorts, adult Sunday schools led by University of Washington profs, classes in psychology and comparative religion, and plays by the Unitarian Dramatic Club.
Dramatic presentations continue on the original church site with ACT Theatre. Jean Sherrard used his recent benefit appearance on an ACT stage as an opportunity to pose the theaters support staff at its Seventh Avenue side entrance for this weeks Now. To quote Sherrard, I dont know if any are Unitarians or not, but they are surely united in their vision for a transcendent theatrical experience.
Check out Paul Dorpat and Jean Sherrards blog at http://www.pauldorpat.com.
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Built for show, sacred and otherwise
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
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PITTSBURGH (KDKA) A steam shovel reshapes the landscape by Route 28 on the North Side. Its just down the road from the site of the first Croatian Roman Catholic Church in the western hemisphere.
Citing structural problems, the diocese demolished Saint Nicholas Church a year ago.
Susan Petrick, of the Preserve Croatian Heritage Foundation, says construction of St. Nicholas Church shows the dedication and need for the Croatian people to build something that was their home away from home.
The Troy Hill activist recalls the glow of Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, and the hope of rebirth on Easter Sunday.
She says the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission has approved a historical marker on the site where St. Nicholas stood.
Were going to have a beautiful memorial wall, she says. And the last piece sandblasted into the wall will be Saint Nicholas Church. Next to it on the right will be a seating area.
Jack Schmitt, of Preservation Pittsburgh, says the memorial path will extend from the River Trail to the 31st Street Bridge.
Right now theyre doing the excavating, he explains. And theyre building the retaining walls. It should be done by November of this year, when there will be a ribbon cutting.
Excerpt from:
Historical Marker Going In At Site of Old St. Nicholas Church
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Etobicoke Guardian
Wesley Mimico United Church officials are cautiously optimistic, but hopeful that their final redevelopment proposal will be supported by city planners and councillors.
Revised plans reflect significant changes and is the result of many conversations with community residents, congregational members, city heritage and planning staff, and consultation with many community groups and leaders, the church states in its Feb. 19 application submission letter to Kathryn Thom, a senior city planner heading the file.
Wesley Mimico Place, as the redevelopment is being called, is intended to repurpose, renew and add to the original 1922 church.
It proposes to preserve heritage aspects of the building, add seniors ownership housing crucial to raising the necessary capital to preserve the property, church officials argue, and add 4,000 square feet of flexible community program space.
Changes in the new application include: reducing the seniors units from 40 to 30; an increase in community outreach space, and the provision of residents outdoor amenity space.
We think weve done a lot of work to respond seriously to neighbourhood concerns from a few people, Harry Oussoren, president of Wesley Mimico Place corporation, said in an interview this week.
We believe were riding a crest of support. Community people are saying, Its a no-brainer. Get on with it. It comes at no cost to the city. It provides housing and community space in the area. Its part of the revitalization of Mimico.
In February 2012, a group of Mimico residents formed to promote the importance and preservation of the 1922 church for its architectural significance, and as a prominent physical and contextual landmark on the main street of the old town of Mimico.
The group created http://www.savewesley.com
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Mimico church submits revised plans to city for new seniors housing
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
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Lammers Appliance Repair - Falls, MN - Video
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Maytag Repair, Highland Park, NJ, (732) 447-9674
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
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March 7, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Maytag Repair, Farmers Branch, TX, (972) 848-5048
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