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Add-as-you go houses accomodate changing needs

Provided by Networx.com

When you’re building a house from the ground up, you have a lot of important choices to make, and you get to make some key decisions that will affect life in the home for the rest of its existence. Most people don’t think about the fact that a home is likely to be remodeled at some point when they build, and that means they don’t think ahead when it comes to designing a home that easily accommodates remodeling. One architect, Robert Lesnett, created an innovative home in the 1950s that’s continuing to grow and expand, all on a minimal budget. His design ideas are worth taking note of for those preparing to build.

His reasoning was that while he was going to start small because of funds and his current needs, he’d probably want to grow his house over the years. So he deliberately designed it to be easy to remodel. The load of the structure is carried entirely on supports running along the outside walls, with no load-bearing walls inside the house. That makes it a cinch to move partitions around inside the house to reconfigure it, in a way similar to traditional Japanese home design (for more wild Japanese home design, take a look at these architectural gems).

Not just that, but the Y-shaped structure lends itself to knocking out end walls and extending the house to a desired length. More structural supports can be added along the new external wall, distributing the increased load without necessitating internal supports, and the process can continue for years, as it has for Lesnett and his family. As his family has grown, shrunk, and shifted, his house has moved seamlessly with it, making it into a home to raise children in and grow old in.

This draws upon the universal design ethos to create strong, beautiful homes that will last people a lifetime, even as their needs change. Unlike homes that aren’t built with remodeling in mind, his Los Angeles home is cheap and efficient to remodel. Changes don’t require major disruptions for the occupants or huge expenses to move load-bearing walls and reorganize the home; and making the task easier for Los Angeles building companies means they can focus on what’s important in the build.

His beautiful home has lots of natural, earthy decor and a blurred line between inside and outside. That’s thanks to elegant arrays of windows, seamless landscaping, and the use of lots of natural materials in the construction of the structure, like gorgeous tiling throughout. It blends naturally with the land, illustrating why he fell in love with the lot when he found it in the first place, and demonstrates that innovative architecture can have a variety of looks, feels, and styles. Nothing about Lesnett’s home feels modular, but he’s effectively built a modular home that can be endlessly reconfigured.

Innovative design like this cuts housing costs and reduces long term maintenance costs. It should also be appealing for home builders and buyers; a home that is easy to remodel is more valuable, both intrinsically for people who want to be able to grow within their homes and financially, in terms of what it will fetch on the open market. For those considering new construction, add-as-you-go should definitely be on the table, but make sure it’s designed for the local climate conditions!

Katie Marks writes for Network.com.

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Rooted in solid design

Rooted in solid design

Saturday, September 14, 2013

© The Cairns Post

 

The best gardens in the world have evolved over many years but they all started with the same thing: good design.

Planning a garden makeover isn’t about heading to the nursery, filling your car with plants and simply plonking them in the ground.

You need to start with a plan and the best way to do this is to get your thoughts on paper. 

Most houses have some sort of base plan to scale, and if you get this copied you can jot down all your ideas and work out if they will work in the space you have.

It’s important to work to a scale when you do this so you have a realistic idea if certain features will actually fit in your garden.

Get yourself a scale ruler and for large gardens go for 1:100 or 1:200 and for smaller spaces 1:50.

You then need to work out what you want to get out of the space, so trawl the internet and magazines for inspiration.

A good starting point is to think “what is the purpose of this garden?”.

Is it a garden for children, an entertainer’s paradise or simply to make it clean and tidy and ready for sale?

Drawing your areas of hard landscaping (paving, pergolas, paths, etc) and making use of the space is the easy part about landscape design but it starts to get a bit tricky when you come to picking plants.

There are two very important stages of research when it comes to plant selection: the first is the easiest and it involves spending a day in the garden and watching where the sun moves around the space; and the second, digging a hole and taking a look at what soil you have.

Once you are armed with this information you can research what plants are best suited to your aspect and soil type.

Again, the internet and magazines are a great place to look to work out what style of planting you want.

Once you have your spaces and plants sorted out, you need to get into the detail of the plan: what will your paving material be? How will the deck level and the grass meet up? What will the finish be on the water feature?

Spend some time talking to as many experts as you can to ensure your garden has a high-quality look and feel to it.

 

Think ahead: Planning makes a good garden flourish.



Make 2013 Lakeview East Festival of the Arts a family outing

The Lakeview East Chamber of Commerce is proud to host and produce the 2013 Lakeview East Festival of the Arts. The Festival, now in its ninth year, takes place Saturday, Sept. 14 and Sunday, Sept. 15 in Lakeview, from Belmont Ave. to Hawthorne Street. The Lakeview East Festival of the Arts requests a $5 donation upon entrance and those who donate may be entered to win round-trip tickets to any scheduled destination serviced by Southwest Airlines. The hours are Saturday, Sept. 14 from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. and Sunday, September 15 from 10 a.m.  – 5 p.m.

The 2013 Lakeview East Festival of the Arts showcases more than 175-juried artists featuring world-class original paintings, sculpture, photography, furniture, jewelry and more.  In addition to the artists’ booths, the Festival features live music and beer and wine gardens, live cooking demos by FlavorCity, the Inspiration Garden by Patch Landscaping, interactive children’s area featuring a puppet show, a mosaic mural making booth and much more.

New to the festival this year are live, interactive cooking demonstrations led by FlavorCity, a cooking video and fresh recipe website led by chef Bobby Parrish. He teams with guest chefs from Waffles, Revolution, Bar Pastoral and Hutch on the live cooking demonstrations from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday. All demos will be interactive and will take place outside in a tent located at 3344 N. Broadway.

The Lakeview East Chamber of Commerce also welcomes back Patch Landscaping with their Inspiration Garden.  Patch Landscaping will be creating an outdoor oasis filled with inspiration for the everyday gardener.  From bicycles and cinder blocks being used as planters to a user friendly outdoor fire pit, Patch’s outdoor garden will have great ideas to inspire the “DIY” gardener in all of us.  The garden will be located on Broadway from Roscoe to Hawthorne Streets.

SCHEDULE OF STAGE EVENTS AT LAKEVIEW EAST FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS

The Lakeview Festival of the Arts also presents live music during the festival. The performers and bands represent a wide variety of styles and influences for attendees to enjoy as they tour the numerous booths and vendors or relax while sampling the variety of food and drink.

Saturday, September 14

Main Stage

11 a.m.                           Ellen Miller and Liz Mandeville

11:45 a.m.                      Classical Blast

1:15 p.m.                        No Love For Linus

2:45 p.m.                        Las Guitarras de Espana

4:15 p.m.                        Jonas Friddle and the Majority

5:45 p.m.                        Band Called Catch

Garden Stage

11 a.m.                           J-Bomb

12:05 p.m.                      Claudettes

1:30 p.m.                        Shake ‘Em On Down

2:50 p.m.                        Safe Haven

4:30 p.m.                        Liza Day

Sunday, September 15

Main Stage

10:30 a.m.                      Urban Gateways Drum Circle and March

11:30 a.m.                      Conjunto

1 p.m.                             Vic and Gab

2:30 p.m.                        Grood

4 p.m.                             Panda Riot

Garden Stage  

11 a.m.                           Steve Hashimoto Pat Flemming

12:15 p.m.                      Las Guitarras Acoustic

1:30 p.m.                        Spare Parts

3  p.m.                            Good Ground

4:30 p.m.                        Cameron McGill

Festival hours are Saturday, Sept. 14 from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. and Sunday, September 15 from 10 a.m.  – 5 p.m. For Festival information visit http://www.lakevieweastfestivalofthearts.com/or call 773.348.8608.

Rhapsody Residences, a new choice for metro’s southerners

MANILA, Philippines – Prior to the condominium boom, most of Metro Manila’s families live in houses and lots and townhouses. The old subdivisions in the city’s south, like Muntinlupa, attest to this.

The Metro’s growing population has made land for such type of housing scarce. Vertical residences are now the norm. Recognizing that southerners still yearn for the familiar comforts of their traditional neighborhood, Triple A property developer DMCI Homes developed mid-rise residential condominiums in subdivision setting and packed with modern amenities to provide the same privacy, security, comfort and convenience for second and third generation families of the south.

Rhapsody Residences along the East Service Road near Sucat Exit in South Luzon Expressway, appeals exactly to southerners seeking the condo community that resembles their original home. Homeowners in four of the nine condo buildings already ready for occupancy (RFO) are enjoying family-oriented and resort-style living at the Rhapsody Residences. The first building completed, the Carillon, was RFO last December 2012. The Cello, Clarinet and Harmonica followed in February, April and June this year. The Lyre and Mandolin are scheduled for RFO on August October 2013 respectively whereas Marimba, Maraca, and the 10-storey Viola building will be RFO next year.

Whether it’s a start-up or a family with grown up children, one can choose from several size configurations of two-bedroom units, including ‘tandem-able’ options, ranging from 42 to 114 square meters which include also the balcony and the service area found at the roof deck placed with the individual metered water and electricity.

Like having your own backyard, which is a common feature in house and lots, ground floor units at Rhapsody Residences open to a garden atrium in each building. The semblance of privacy in a single-detached home is recreated through single-loaded corridor configuration allowing plenty of fresh air and natural light to come into the building interior. Each building has a scenic elevator and stairway.

Rhapsody Residences is giving southerners more opportunities for leisure, fitness and social activities. Its clubhouse features Wi-Fi-ready lounge area, an entertainment room and a game room. There is also a meeting room, function rooms and a gym.  On top of that, Rhapsody Residences prides itself with 1.7 hectares of outdoor amenities where residents and guests can have a wonderful recreational time are manicured landscaping, gardens, rows of trees, swimming pools for kids and adults, a pool deck, poolside cots and cabanas, a basketball court and a soccer field.

Southerners will feel more secure and comfortable at Rhapsody Residences. There are 24/7 roving security guards, perimeter fences, gated entrance, fire alarm and fire hose cabinets along building corridors, automatic fire sprinklers and fire suppression systems at hallways, fire exits, CCTV cameras at strategic locations, and backup power generator for common areas.

 Rhapsody Residences’ location makes it just minutes away from the Alabang business district via the East Service Road or the South Luzon Expressway (SLEX). A supermarket is at the nearby Sucat Interchange and the airport can be reached via SLEX and Sucat Road.

Garden created for Campus Pointe

Once just a cluster of buildings linked by concrete pathways, the definition of an “office park” has evolved over the last few years.

Today’s office park is focused not just on the mechanics of a busy work environment, but also on sustainability and the well-being of tenants and employees.

This approach is evidenced in one of Spurlock Poirier Landscape Architects‘ most recent projects: the Campus Pointe Office Park in the UTC area.

Offering a site-conditioned approach to planning and landscape architectural design, the 24-acre life-science laboratory campus sits at the rim of several native San Diego canyons within a Torrey Pine grove.

Working with client Alexandria Real Estate Equities Inc. (NYSE: ARE), the company’s focus has been to design and create a series of sustainable spaces.

To achieve this, the architects extended the canyons’ fingers into the park, creating an open, natural feel.

A core component of the landscaping at Campus Pointe is an organic garden — which sits on the canyon’s rim — planted with vegetables, fruits and herbs all used in the new Campus Point Bistro.

The garden, which was completed as the first phase of the project, encompasses two distinct areas: the public and the production zones.

Visitors enter via the public zone, passing through an ornamental garden to reach the lawn and shaded event patio. Site elements then guide pedestrians to the production zone, directing sightlines to views of the neighboring canyon.

The production area has flowers and fruit trees, as well as vegetable and herb gardens; there is also a small composting area.

A citrus orchard blankets the northern slope of the site, stabilizing against erosion.

In addition, fingers of native plants extend through a fence, blending the garden with the adjacent canyon vegetation.

Spurlock Poirier designed and is now building an entry boulevard flanked with Torrey Pines and native planting, which leads the way to parking lots lined with vegetated swales between the parking stalls as a way to collect and treat stormwater. Each building entry is adjacent to plaza-like spaces for gathering and the gardens.

Two additional gardens are also incorporated into the landscaping. One is terraced with amphitheater steps, stairs and groves of trees, as well as canyon and succulent plants, and lined with curved steel walls. Another is a succulent and grass garden.

Additional spaces include a basketball court, a multipurpose lawn, a fitness center, a 0.8-mile loop trail, chess tables and outlook areas.

The project is slated for completion in early 2014.

*****

Gertler is an associate principal at Spurlock Poirier.

Kate Frey on Gardening for Bees and Birds’

Looking for new garden ideas? Join local garden designer and consultant Kate Frey on Tuesday September 17, 2013, 7 p.m. at the Ukiah Civer Center for a presentation on creating pollination gardens.     

This talk will focus on what plants to include in your habitat garden, and will have many examples of colorful and unique garden styles to consider. Habitat gardens that attract and support bees and birds are flower filled gardens, making us happy and sustaining many organisms at the same time.  Flowers have nectar and pollen resources, that many insects and birds require at all times or specific times in their life cycles.  Over 90 percent of birds feed their young insects, so when there are insects there are often healthy bird populations.

Kate is a world class specialist in sustainable, biodiverse, ecological gardens and landscaping, She designed and managed the famous edible and biodiverse gardens at Campovida, formerly Fetzer Vineyards in Hopland, California for twenty years. In May 2003 her garden at the Chelsea Flower Show in London won a silver/gilt medal, and in 2005 and 2007 her gardens illustrating many elements of biodiversity and sustainability, won gold medals and were visited by the Queen. In addition to participating in global flower shows, Kate is the coordinator of the Sonoma State University Sustainable Dept. of Extended Education Landscape Program.  She currently works as a consultant, designer and a freelance writer, specializing in sustainable gardens that encourage a diverse array of flora and fauna. Kate earned a B.A. Summa Cum Laude with Distinction in English at Sonoma State University in 2006.

This Peregrine Audubon sponsored presentation is free to the public, though donations will be welcome. The Ukiah Civic Center is located at 300 Seminary Ave. To join Peregrine Audubon Society and receive a newsletter with regular announcements about programs and field trips, please send $20 to PAS, P.O. Box 311, Ukiah, CA 95482. For more information on a wide variety of topics related to birding in Mendocino County please got to www.peregrineaudubon.org.

Gardening Tips: Ways to clean up your garden in the fall, prepare for winter


Posted: Friday, September 13, 2013 11:04 am


Gardening Tips: Ways to clean up your garden in the fall, prepare for winter

By Matthew Stevens

The Daily Herald, Roanoke Rapids, NC

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Fall is typically when we start looking to clean up the garden and begin to prepare for winter. This is true even for those gardeners who have gardens with many plants still in bloom up until late fall or even in winter.

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on

Friday, September 13, 2013 11:04 am.

Urban Gardening Tips from Evan Hanczor

evan_hanczor.jpg

The executive chef of Parish Hall in Williamsburg, Even Hanczor is more than aware of where his produce comes from. That’s because restaurant owner George Weld has a 6-acre farm upstate, where Hanczor frequently goes to help harvest the squash, beets, beans and lettuces that will eventually constitute the evening’s meal.

Of course, in his own life, Hanczor has to make due with the constraints of city living, which means culling his dinner from a tiny community plot, instead of the lush, expansive pastures of Goatfell Farm. So whether you’re fortunate enough to have a backyard or patio, or are merely making do with a windowbox or fire escape, Hanczor has a few helpful tips for the at-home urban gardener.

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    Getting Started: You’d be surprised how similar urban gardening is from growing things traditionally, in raised beds. Either way, you have to plan well. And in extra small spaces, it’s particularly important to maximize productivity while minimizing waste, which means, only grow what you want to eat. Also, you’ll want to practice succession planting, which means putting down seeds or plants a couple of weeks apart, so you have things ripening continuously. If everything comes up all at once, it’s difficult to make sure that everything gets used.

    Basic Plant Care: Start with good quality, aerated soil, seeds and plants from reliable suppliers. Otherwise, you risk breeding diseases right into your produce. Make sure to be thoughtful about where to place your plants. Some require more sun and some less, so plan accordingly based on the sun exposure patterns of your windowsill or plot. Water each morning or evening, once the sun is low (wet leaves scorch, otherwise). Weed often…plants need all the precious space and nutrients they can get in windowboxes and pots.

    Seeds vs. Plants: We’ve had better success with herbs when using starters, but have been totally fine with vegetables from seed. Since the season can be kind of short here, it’s helpful to start things like tomatoes, peppers, chard, etc. indoors while it’s still a little too cool outside, and then move them out to your windowsill/pots/garden plot as soon as the weather allows!

    What to Grow Indoors: Plants that seem to do well are mainly herbs, like basil, mint, parsley, oregano, chervil or thyme, as long as you have them near a window that gets some sun.

    What to Grow Outdoors: Most vegetables do better outside, in a raised bed in a community garden, or a large pot on a stoop or patio, because they’ll have the space and nutrient availability to stretch out. Tomatoes, peppers, kale, chard, cucumber and peas all seem to work well in our garden. A great herb called lovage has taken solid root in our plot and produces like crazy! Skip zucchini, squashes or pumpkins, which need a lot of room to expand along the ground.

    Handling Herbs: Herbs are generally easy to grow in small places in the city (especially hardy herbs like sage, parsley, mint, chives), but be careful, or they can take over your plot! To harvest, either pick a couple leaves off for a small quantity, or snip off branches where there is other new growth, to allow the new growth to continue while you use the fully-grown portions of the plant.

    How to Harvest: The basic rule for harvesting is, if it looks ready (and is easy to pull off the plant), it is ready. Remember, we’re hardwired to notice ripe fruits and vegetables, so trust your instinct! Better to harvest a little too soon than let something get overripe and rot. Besides, I’ve learned from experience that there’s a good chance I won’t get to cooking or eating a vegetable I pick on the same day, so if something’s a little underripe when I pick it, a couple days in the fridge or on the counter may give it time to fully ripen. Of course, picking the “perfect” tomato is always ideal!

    Parish Hall: 109 N 3rd St.,(718) 782-2602

    Pick and prune – this week’s garden tips

    As well as picking the top of your crop, don’t forget about your roses. Make sure you deadhead them for a strong re-growth next season.

    – Leave tomatoes on the plants until the weather turns, to allow them optimum time to ripen.

    – Leave nets over brassicas to stop pigeons feasting on them.

    – Reduce the watering and feeding of greenhouse plants.

    – Continue to deadhead roses.

    – Trim hornbeam, beech, Leyland cypress and thuja hedges, if you haven’t already done so.

    – Take hardwood cuttings from roses, choosing healthy stems of the current season’s growth.

    – Root cuttings of lavender directly into gritty soil outside or in a cold frame.

    – Pick crops at their best including marrows, runner beans, ridge cucumbers, spinach, sweetcorn, beetroot and salads.

    – Sow hardy annuals like calendula, godetia, larkspur and candytuft outside where you would like them to flower.

    – Plant tubers of Anemone ‘De Caen’ and ‘Saint Brigid’ at intervals to extend their flowering next spring.

    – Sow poppies where you want them to flower next year.

    – Lift Lilium regale clumps and re-set, planting them about 15cm (6in) deep in well-drained soil improved with compost and grit.

    – Give autumn green crops a light dressing of general fertiliser hoed into the soil around them.

     

    Best of the Bunch – Japanese anemone

    Don’t confuse the low-growing, brightly flowered anemones you find in late spring with Japanese anemones, which bloom from late summer until the first frosts of October.

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    A. japonica (A. hybrida) stands 60-120cm (2-4ft) high, producing saucer-shaped flowers in white or pink with a central boss of golden stamens.

    Good varieties include  ‘Honorine Jobert’, a tough, late-flowering plant on strong stems carrying single white blooms, which flower for up to eight weeks and reach 100cm (3ft) in height, and ‘September charm’, a slightly smaller pink variety which reaches about 60cm (2ft) in height.

    Japanese anemones will grow in any well-drained garden soil in sun or semi-shade. They look great in the autumn border alongside asters and chrysanthemums or can be used in front of shrub roses and large shrubs. In a small garden they make reliable back-of-the-border plants behind summer bedding, which can be removed when the anemones are ready to bloom.

     

    Ruth’s Tips: Opuntia leucotricha — great dry-garden centerpiece – Enterprise

    Walnut Creek’s Ruth Bancroft is a national authority on drought-resistant gardening. Twice a month, she and her staff share their knowledge with readers.

    Q At the Ruth Bancroft Garden, I saw a prickly pear, which had grown large enough to have a woody trunk like a tree. What struck me was that the trunk was hairy. What is this?

    A Prickly pears belong to the genus Opuntia in the cactus family. The cactuses are native to the Americas, and Opuntia has the broadest range of any group in the whole family, from southern Canada all the way to Argentina. Few people are aware of how widespread these plants are in the U.S.; they occur in 45 states, the exceptions being Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, New Hampshire

    and Vermont.

    Some are diminutive creepers, which never reach more than a few inches tall; others have a shrubby growth habit or form thickets; and a few, such as the one you noticed, actually form a trunk and become treelike. The name of this last species is Opuntia leucotricha, which refers to the bristly, hairy appearance of the trunk. This unusual trait makes the species easy to identify.

    Opuntia leucotricha, which is native to central Mexico, can grow to a height of 12 feet or so. It has yellow flowers about 2 inches across in spring, and an abundance of small, pale yellow fruit in fall. The fruit is edible and one of the kinds featured on the autumn Ruth Bancroft Garden Fruit Tasting Tour. This Oct. 18 event affords an opportunity for visitors to taste several of the garden’s prickly pears and other fruits.

    Because they grow in such widely divergent habitats, the different species of Opuntia vary widely in cold tolerance. Some come from tropical places such as the Galápagos Islands and will not tolerate low temperatures, while others occur in places like North Dakota and can endure temperatures of well below zero. Opuntia leucotricha is somewhere in the middle, but it is frost-hardy enough to survive our Walnut Creek cold spells, which can sometimes dip into the mid- to low-20s.

    Opuntia leucotricha is easy to grow, and severed branches or individual pads root readily. This plant makes a dramatic focal point in a dry garden, but it should be situated in the middle, rather than at the edge. This allows room for the large size it eventually attains, and keeps it away from paths where its spines might prick the unwary. Like other prickly pears, it has tiny, easily dislodged spines, in addition to the larger, obvious ones. These tiny spines, called glochids, detach easily when anything comes into contact with them.

    Email questions on drought-resistant plants to info@ruthbancroftgarden.org.