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25-05-2012 08:04 Garland, NC residents, be aware of the fact that your home is open to Fire Damage thanks to Electricity and bad weather. If it happens, look into Fire Damage Restoration by contacting Water Damage Local to get the professionals to work on it.
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Garland, NC - Fire Damage Restoration - Water Damage Local - Video
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24-05-2012 10:27 As Illinois large loss experts with over 100 combined years of experience. Nationwide Adjusting Company Takes Care of You Every Step of the Way.We make available emergency services, furniture restoration/storage, demolition/debris removal,and winterization if needed.Our team will rebuild, restore, evaluate, negotiate, provide relocation if needed, and settle your claim. We service: Chicago, Midlothian, Harvey, Crestwood, Dolton,Country Club Hills, Maywood, Matteson, East Hazel Crest, Robbins, Frankfort, Ford heights, Homer Glen, Park Forest, Schiller Park, Kell, Joliet, Hickory Hills, Burbank,Cicero Oak Lawn... FROM Disaster to Dream Home Call toll free Nationwide Adjusting 888-685-6776 or
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FIRE RESTORATION by Nationwide Adjusting Co Official Site..... - Video
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Rodin Museum Restoration – Video -
May 25, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
24-05-2012 12:54 The Philadelphia Museum's Rodin Museum, undergoing a thorough interior restoration and reinstallation of outdoor sculpture. It was designed by Paul Cret, the architect for the Barnes Foundation's original Merion home, before it moved next door to the Rodin Museum. May 15, 2012. Related post:
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Rodin Museum Restoration - Video
24-05-2012 12:19 Mold Damage in Mansfield Ohio. Shambaugh.s Cleaning & Water Restoration restored this home back to new. This home had water damage from a broken gutter. Toxic Mold was found through out this basement. Shambaugh's was able to bring back the home to liveable After the house was gutted ,cleaned and sanitized it was Tested and approved! Untreated water damage can not only cause severe health problems but mold damsge is about 5 times more expensive to repair over water damage.
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Mold Damage Mansfield 419-529-6422 - Video
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24-05-2012 18:16 - DIY Video demonstrates how to change a rusted wheel house on a 1966 Ford Mustang with basic hand tools. This video is intended for the DIY home project. I have other videos demonstrating how to use power tools. For more tips and videos, visit http
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DIY Auto Restoration Tips - How To Change A Rusted Wheel House With Basic Hand Tools - Video
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Legal fight over Conan Doyle home -
May 25, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
23 May 2012 Last updated at 09:51 ET
A High Court battle over the former home of Sherlock Holmes creator Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has begun.
Campaigners are opposing plans to part-demolish Undershaw in Hindhead, Surrey, and turn it into housing.
The Undershaw Preservation Trust wants Waverley council's planning permission for the development to be overturned.
Campaign lawyers said there were more than 1,300 objections to the development. The council said it was confident its decision was correct.
Grade II listed Undershaw, built in 1897, was where Conan Doyle wrote the Hound of the Baskervilles and The Return of Sherlock Holmes.
The author designed and lived in the property with his wife and entertained many writers there, including JM Barrie, creator of Peter Pan, and Bram Stoker, creator of Dracula.
John Gibson, founder of the Undershaw Preservation Trust, said campaigners wanted the building to be restored and had "many dreams" for the property, including that it could become a museum or literary centre.
Andrew Lockley, head of public law at Irwin Mitchell, solicitors for the campaigners, said the council had ignored public opinion and made basic errors.
He said: "It has agreed to a plan which involves the partial demolition, alteration, conversion and extension of the building instead of a considered restoration."
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Legal fight over Conan Doyle home
When Dennis and Nanette Burke lost their home at the corner of Collins and St. John in Biloxi to Hurricane Katrina, they thought their replacement house in Woolmarket would become their "forever" home.
Their first love -- their old Biloxi home -- was gone, but sometimes love comes a second time around.
There was a house on Seal Avenue that had been vacant since 2004; even then, the Burkes had seen something intriguing about it, but it wasn't available. It survived the storm, with damage but no water; the water stopped two houses down, Dennis said. Still, it wasn't for sale.
The Burkes settled into life away from their beloved downtown. Then the unexpected happened: The Seal Avenue house was available.
"We bought it Nov. 1, 2009, and in January 2010, we started on the demolition, the leveling and the exterior," Dennis said. "June 7, 2010, is the day John Miller showed up. He made all this happen. He would let us go full circle with an idea before he would tell us if it would work or not."
Miller, a contractor, guided the Burkes through the restoration of the ca. 1905 cottage-style shotgun house. They did the demolition themselves, with the help of family and friends.
"I don't know how many we filled," Nannette said, referring to portable trash bins. "You wouldn't believe all the mess involved."
About a year later, the restoration was complete, and the Burkes were living on Seal Avenue -- back home.
The Mississippi Heritage Trust recently acknowledged the diligence involved in bringing the house back, awarding the Burkes a Heritage Award for Merit for Restoration/Rehabilitation. The framed award now sits on the living room mantel.
The demolition work was interior.
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Biloxi couple restore historic home as a labor of love
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The eighth annual Taste of the World fundraising event, hosted by Pearl S. Buck International May 18 at the home of Pulitzer- and Noble Prize-winning author and humanitarian Pearl S. Buck, highlighted the sites on-going restoration efforts.
Located in Hilltown, the Pearl S. Buck House is a National Historic Landmark honoring the life of its former inhabitant. In addition to her accomplishments as a writer, Buck also founded the Welcome House at the site as the first international, inter-racial adoption agency in the United States.
In fact, the current chairman of the board, David Yoder, was the first Welcome House child in 1948 and was in attendance at the event May 18.
Ive watched this annual event grow from just 50 attendees to over 300 people this year, Yoder said. Its incredible the attention the work of Pearl S. Buck, whom I considered a grandmother, is getting.
Attendees of the event, ranging from board members to interested community members, could take tours of the house to view the restoration progress.
The restoration of the Pearl S. Buck House began in 2006, when the structure was considered in disrepair, according to the curator, Donna Rhoads.
Phase one involved sprucing up the envelope of the home, she said. Phase two focused on the structural issues, while the third and final phase focuses on the finishing touches from restoring the outdoor patio to re-painting the walls the exact color they were when Buck lived in the home.
The restoration is expected to be completed next spring, and the Taste of the World event, the largest fundraiser of the year, helps the nonprofit get closer to its goal.
In addition to enjoying international hors doeuvers, entrees and beverages from local restaurants, attendees could participate in live and silent auctions, while enjoying live music by a quartet. Continued...
Before her death in 1973, Buck gave her 68-acre Bucks County estate, Green Hills Farm, to the organization that formed Pearl S. Buck International. Many of the same fixtures that were in the house when she lived there remain today.
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Pearl S. Buck House renovations near completion
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The USS Iowa sits docked in Richmond, Calif. in May 2012 while workers, both volunteer and paid, work to restore the battleship. It was saved from the scrap yard when the Navy gave it to the Pacific Battleship Center last year. It will be towed to Los Angeles Sunday and is scheduled to be dedicated July 4.(Mark Benischek/The Gazette)
From the moment the Navy approved a plan to turn the USS Iowa into an interactive museum, veterans from around the nation who served on the battleship have been flocking to California to help with the massive restoration project.
Iowans are interested in seeing the ship saved, and they should be, said John Wolfinbarger, 87, who served on the Iowa during WWII. This ship is named after that state.
The restoration, which carries a price tag of up to $12 million, got under way shortly after the ship was moved from the ghost fleet of Suisun Bay to Richmond, Calif., in October.
Wolfinbarger has spent more than a dozen weekends on the Iowa while it has been docked at the Port of Richmond, where the first leg of the project is nearing completion. During weekend tours, Wolfinbarger served as the ship historian.
One weekend more than 3,000 people came aboard, he said. People want to see it.
On Sunday, the ship will be towed to the Los Angeles area. It will officially open to the public in San Pedro Bay in early July.
When the ship is towed into San Pedro Bay, three flags will by flying from her mast: The American flag, the California state flag and the Iowa state flag.
While the Navy still owns the vessel, the Pacific Battleship Center (PBC) will run, possess and maintain the ship. The PBC is a nonprofit organization established in 2009.
Its exciting, its stressful, its pretty much perseverance, said Robert Kent, president of the PBC. We run into blocks pretty much on a weekly basis, but we just punch through them and keep going.
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Veterans excited to see USS Iowa in new home
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The eighth annual Taste of the World fundraising event, hosted by Pearl S. Buck International May 18 at the home of Pulitzer- and Noble Prize-winning author and humanitarian Pearl S. Buck, highlighted the sites on-going restoration efforts.
Located in Hilltown, the Pearl S. Buck House is a National Historic Landmark honoring the life of its former inhabitant. In addition to her accomplishments as a writer, Buck also founded the Welcome House at the site as the first international, inter-racial adoption agency in the United States.
In fact, the current chairman of the board, David Yoder, was the first Welcome House child in 1948 and was in attendance at the event May 18.
Ive watched this annual event grow from just 50 attendees to over 300 people this year, Yoder said. Its incredible the attention the work of Pearl S. Buck, whom I considered a grandmother, is getting.
Attendees of the event, ranging from board members to interested community members, could take tours of the house to view the restoration progress.
The restoration of the Pearl S. Buck House began in 2006, when the structure was considered in disrepair, according to the curator, Donna Rhoads.
Phase one involved sprucing up the envelope of the home, she said. Phase two focused on the structural issues, while the third and final phase focuses on the finishing touches from restoring the outdoor patio to re-painting the walls the exact color they were when Buck lived in the home.
The restoration is expected to be completed next spring, and the Taste of the World event, the largest fundraiser of the year, helps the nonprofit get closer to its goal.
In addition to enjoying international hors doeuvers, entrees and beverages from local restaurants, attendees could participate in live and silent auctions, while enjoying live music by a quartet. Continued...
Before her death in 1973, Buck gave her 68-acre Bucks County estate, Green Hills Farm, to the organization that formed Pearl S. Buck International. Many of the same fixtures that were in the house when she lived there remain today.
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VIDEO: Pearl S. Buck House renovations near completion
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