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    Bryson DeChambeau is now trolling all-time great golf architects because of his length off the tee – Golf Digest

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The Bryson DeChambeau Show heads to the Motor City for this weeks Rocket Mortgage Classic. Its a new event for the PGA Tour star, but its played on a golf course designed by one of the games old masters. Not that DeChambeau seems too worried.

    At his pre-tournament press conference at Detroit Golf Club, the bulked-up Bryson was asked about the Donald Ross track. Here was his response:

    I think theres a lot of bunkers that are around like 290, so hopefully Ill be able to clear those and take those out of play, DeChambeau said. So, sorry, Mr. Rossbut it is what it is.

    Hey, at least he called him Mr. Ross before obliterating his golf course. And its nothing personal. DeChambeau has been overpowering all PGA Tour venues since putting on some 40 pounds.

    DeChambeau currently leads the PGA Tour in driving distance and hes second in strokes gained/off-the-tee. And hes not just driving for show as evidenced by him being a combined 46 under par in the three events since the season re-started earlier this month.

    So again, its nothing personal, Mr. Ross, but hazards that are only 290 yards away arent even on Brysons radar anymore. And its a big reason why hes the overwhelming favorite to win this week.

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    Bryson DeChambeau is now trolling all-time great golf architects because of his length off the tee - Golf Digest

    Design Diary: Giving voice to Filipino architects in the Middle East – Gulf News

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Image Credit:

    This week, I give this platform to Christian Vasquez, the current President of UAP124, who writes about how its time for Filipino architects to come out of the shadows and claim their place in the regional design industry.

    Dubais population of design and construction professionals is massively organic and quite competitive.

    With the citys fast-paced development and the uniquely ambitious real estate market, being an architect in Dubai can be quite challenging; continuous investment in self-development is a necessity to keep up with this progressive notion.

    Consequently, belonging to a community that promotes professional growth is an additive to keep up with the current and future trends within the industry.

    The Global Filipino Architects community works to support the vast design talent that exists in the region and offer them a springboard from which to achieve greater success and career satisfaction.

    A recent survey of the design industry found that almost three quarters of designers are from the West. But the Filipino architects community here believes it doesnt have to be this way.

    Why does diversity matter? Aside from the ethical reasons too obvious to outline, inclusivity is also good for business. Diverse teams mean new approaches, new markets and wider perspective that allows for creative and out-of-the-box problem solving.

    With more than 2,000 members of the United Architects of the Philippines in the Middle East (Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE), this organisation continues to upskill its members with a series of programs focused on the progression of Filipino architects. UAP124 upholds the highest educational and professional standards and in doing so, not only does the organisation promote their home-grown talent, but also empowers the design community as a whole.

    As the current president of UAP 124, I always call each individual to action and move forward in seeking professional growth and global competitiveness.

    Platforms such as the UAP Awards were established to support our objectives. Last Year, the UAP Dubai Chapter hosted the UAP Dubai Awards at the Palazzo Versace. Across nine categories, the awards honoured Filipino designers, architects, projects and design-oriented companies employing Filipino architects. The winners were selected by a reputable international jury composed of top architects in the practice.

    To be honest, Filipinos architects undergo extremely rigorous training back home. After a five-year bachelors programme in architecture, they need an additional two years of diversified industry experience before they can take the state board examination that will ultimately award them the title of Architect or Ar. The course and the standards of education are at par with leading architecture schools around the world.

    Working in Dubai for almost a decade, I know Filipino designers contribution to the regional industry is monumental. They are recipient, adaptive and incredibly creative with the highest level of competency, reliability and dedication, but maybe a bit too humble. Here in Dubai, you need a voice to be heard. You need guts to get to the top.

    Its about time we Filipinos change the way we think in order to shape our future outside the Philippines not only on the design stage, but in any profession or walk of life.

    To become more valued and relevant in the Middle East, it is important that we elevate public awareness of our contribution to the industry, whilst protecting the profession and work towards sharing our knowledge, expertise and opinion with the wider community.

    The timing is perfect. As the world marches towards greater and universal acceptance, equality and empathy, we have a global movement to inspire Filipino architects to work shoulder to shoulder with peers and colleagues from around the world and build a better tomorrow for all people.

    Read more from the original source:
    Design Diary: Giving voice to Filipino architects in the Middle East - Gulf News

    The Architect’s Newspaper shifts to online programming with Facades+: Design a High-Performance Facade – The Architect’s Newspaper

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    On June 25, The Architects Newspaper officially launched Facades+ Online, the first digital version of our decades-old national conference series. The full-day event was split between a morning of keynotes and panels and concluded with a series of manufacturer-led workshops diving into the application possibilities and production complexities of sealants, glazing, and sintered stone.

    COOKFOX Architects partner Pam Campbell kicked off the conference with her keynote address Restorative Environmental Design: Facades and the Human-Nature Relationship. The presentation focused on the firms body of work incorporating greenscaping and other natural elements within their facade and structural systems. Two panels followed the keynote; the first Achieving COTE: Facade Design and Energy Modeling at the Amherst Science Center included Payette principal and building science director Andrea Love, Payette senior associate Jeffrey Abramson, and Integral Group managing principal Bungane Mehlomakulu. The second, Thermal Bridging: Detailing Problems and Their Solutions, brought together Studio NYL founding principal Chris OHara and facade design director Will Babbington, and Sasaki associate principal and director of technical resources Bradford J. Prestbo. Each panel, an hour in length, incorporated a comprehensive presentation on the subject matter, a moderated discussion, and a robust audience Q & A.

    Representatives from Tremco, Agnora, Cosentino, and Vitro Architectural Glass led hour-long workshops during the afternoon; ranging from Poking Holes in Your Air Barrier System, to Understanding Low-E Coatings.

    ANwill announce further themed online Facades+ conference as the summer progresses. Currently scheduled for July 30 is Facades+ Online: Enclosure Innovations in the Midwest, which is co-chaired by Populous and will feature speakers from BNIM, Dake | Wells Architecture, Gensler, Hufft, The Matter Factory, and Walter P Moore.

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    The Architect's Newspaper shifts to online programming with Facades+: Design a High-Performance Facade - The Architect's Newspaper

    Grove Park is a wood-lined house by O’Sullivan Skoufoglou Architects – Dezeen

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    O'Sullivan Skoufoglou Architects has created ash-lined living spaces with expansive windows inside a gardener's home in Lewisham, southeast London.

    Grove Park is an end-of-terrace house that was originally built back in the 1980s.

    The wood-lined rooms that O'Sullivan Skoufoglou Architects has created are on the home's ground floor, which was extended by incorporating a small garage that was on site.

    "The previous ground floor was in real need of repair, with both doors and windows, and the internal cellular, low-ceilinged, cramped and dark layout in bad shape," studio co-founder Amalia Skoufoglou told Dezeen.

    Inside, there's a kitchen, a dining area that faces the street and a lounge which has been orientated towards the garden and the wild woodland that lies beyond.

    This was done at the request of the client who, being a keen gardener, wanted living spaces to have a close visual connection with the outdoors.

    The ceiling is supported by a full-length ash flitch beam a type of beam typically used in the construction of timber structures, which comprises a central steel plate sandwiched between two wooden panels.

    Shorter ash struts extend perpendicularly from the central beam to form a series of rectangular openings.

    These have been filled with ash wood panels that were prefabricated off-site, along with the window frames and doors.

    "The interior spaces during the summer are surrounded by heavy foliaged trees and cast dark shadows on the interiors," explained Skoufoglou.

    "Both maple and ash were considered at the outset for their light appearance and veining. Ash won out in the end because the external timber panelling and doors were made in Lithuania and ash is more readily available."

    Ash-veneered plywood has then been used to craft the storage cabinetry in the kitchen and the central breakfast island.

    Countertops and the splashback running behind the stove are made from creamy Shivakashi granite. The flooring throughout Grove Park is polished concrete, which was cast in-situ.

    To reveal another perspective of the garden and bring in additional natural light, a huge picture window has been created in the wall opposite the kitchen.

    It has a deep-set frame where a comfy seating nook has been built in.

    Another picture window features in the ash-lined front wall of the lounge area, which is dressed with a tan-leather sofa and simple spherical pendant lights.

    Large panels of glazing have also been inset in the door.

    The project additionally saw the studio create a large master bedroom on the first floor of Grove Park house. It has its own en-suite, which has been finished with a freestanding tub and soft-beige tiling.

    A stepped terrace has also been built in the back garden, made from red bricks to match the facade of the house.

    O'Sullivan Skoufoglou Architects was founded in 2016 by Jody O'Sullivan and Amalia Skoufoglou.

    The studio often uses wood in its work. Three years ago it created an extension for a home in northwest London, which featured oak louvres protruding from its front window. In 2018, it also decked out a skincare store in the English town of Stamford with ash and cane wood.

    Photography is by Stle Eriksen.

    More:
    Grove Park is a wood-lined house by O'Sullivan Skoufoglou Architects - Dezeen

    Seven Santorini island retreats by Kapsimalis Architects – Dezeen

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    From converted caves to underground pools, here are seven hotels and houses on the Greek island of Santorinidesigned by local studio Kapsimalis Architects.

    Saint Hotel, Odi

    Stepping down towards the sea from the cliffs of the village of Odi, Saint Hotel features terraced patios with bright blue pools and white walls.

    In total the hotel contains 16 rooms that occupy converted barns and cellars or have been dug straight into the cliffside. The suites open out onto private terraces separated by bright white walls, which havepools and loungers with views out over one of Santorini's volcanic bays.

    Find out more about Saint Hotel

    Holiday House in Fira, Fira

    Kapsimalis Architects renovated this holiday home in Fira, adding two roof terraces that each have a plunge pool.

    A further sunken pool in the basement sits under a vaulted white ceiling, visible through an arched window behind one of the home's beds.

    Find out more about Holiday House in Fira

    House in Pyrgos, Pyrgos

    Informed by the machinery used to quarry pumice out of the volcanic soil of Santorini, House in Pyrgos rises like a fortress or a rocky outcrop from the landscape.

    "All pieces of the architectural history of the island are subtly combined and embedded in this monolithic structure," said Kapsimalis Architects.

    Find out more about House in Pyrgos

    Two Holiday Residences in Fira, Fira

    The underground caves of an old house in Fira were converted into a duo of holiday homes by the architecture studio.

    A walled courtyard and an old donkey barn form part of the complex, which now has a series of pools in the sun or under a shady arch carved into a staircase.

    Find out more about Two Holiday Residences in Fira

    Summer Residence, Imerovigli

    The studio turned an old cave house with an underground warehouse and bakehouse into a summer home with terraces that feature swimming pools in three different shapes.

    "The main idea was to maintain the existing traditional architectural forms of the exterior, and to show up the diversity and the values of their interior spaces," said the studio.

    Find out more about Summer Residence

    Summer House on the Mountain, Profitis Ilias

    The studio designed four holiday apartments in a two-storey building that nestle into the side of the Profitis Ilias mountain, close to the highest point of Santorini.

    The building's white volumes were chose to echo the island's traditional architecture, while rocks excavated from the site were used to build the block's retaining walls.

    Find out more about Summer House on the Mountain

    Summer House in Santorini, Messaria

    Sitting on a sloping plot outside the village, this house formed of stacked white cubes has views of the sea and a garden where the occupants to grow their own vegetables.

    "The form is a synthesis of cubistic white volumes, as a contemporary translation of the traditional cubistic architecture found in the villages of Santorini with a clear influence from Modernism," explained the architecture studio.

    Find out more about Summer House in Santorini

    Read this article:
    Seven Santorini island retreats by Kapsimalis Architects - Dezeen

    Impact of COVID-19 on Drywall and Insulation – The Shutdown of Non Essential Construction Left Many Construction Projects Unfinished -…

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    ResearchAndMarkets.com published a new article on the construction industry "Impact of COVID-19 on Drywall and Insulation"

    Housing completions fell by 7.3% between April 2020 and May 2020 and declined by 9.3% in May 2020 versus May 2019. The specialty trade contracting industry gained 325,300 jobs between April 2020 and May 2020 however industry employment was down 6.4% in May 2020 compared to May 2019. Demand for drywall is predicted to increase as the housing market recovers from COVID-19. Gypsum prices rose by 1.5% in May 2020 after a decline of 1.3% in April 2020. Prices are down 8.3% from the most recent peak in March 2018.

    The shutdown of non essential construction left many construction projects unfinished. Since drywall and insulation installations typically occur towards the end of the project, in many cases this work was not completed. This created the risk of material degradation as well as water damage for partially built structures. Some contractors are concerned that there could be a decline in construction spending once projects started earlier in the year are completed. This is because developers may be more cautious until the economy has fully recovered.

    To see the full article and a list of related reports on the market, visit "Impact of COVID-19 on Drywall and Insulation"

    About ResearchAndMarkets.com

    ResearchAndMarkets.com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

    Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

    View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200703005204/en/

    Contacts

    ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

    Read more:
    Impact of COVID-19 on Drywall and Insulation - The Shutdown of Non Essential Construction Left Many Construction Projects Unfinished -...

    Evin at Oconomowoc on track to finish by October – Greater Milwaukee Today

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    OCONOMOWOC The citys newest senior living facility, Evin at Oconomowoc, 1101 Silver Lake St., is on track to be completed by October after breaking ground last summer.

    The 80-room development being built by Matter Development in partnership with Koru Health is fully enclosed with the exterior shell being installed on the building, said Matter Development CEO Aaron Matter.

    Matter said things are going well at the project with the inside being defined and laid out, but not having the drywall installed as of yet.

    Ultimately the next step on the interior is ... theyre installing all the plumbing, electrical and mechanical systems including the HVAC systems in the building, Matter said.

    The HVAC system Evin at Oconomowoc is installing is a special system that helps keep the residents stay safe, Matter said. The system is hospital grade and is the same one being used at facilities around the country, Matter said.

    We recognize that there are big issues related to resident safety that were experiencing right now in the world, especially for seniors, Matter said. So the system we're installing in the building has been shown to be effective against removing the coronavirus from the air. Its something that I think will give people a lot of peace of mind for going above and beyond on that.

    In a press release, Matter said Evin at Oconomowocs innovation for keeping their residents safe extends to touchable surfaces as well, with installing keyless locks, a video-capable entrance system for visitors so residents can see who is visiting them and commercial laundry machines for higher levels of sanitation.

    The release states while Evin is prioritizing its residents through innovative practices, it is also thinking about the families and residents lifestyle.

    President of Koru Health Andy Lange said Evin is creating a personal safety visitor lounge with a separate exterior entrance, and special considerations that allow the most opportunities possible for safe visiting by families and friends if there is a future flare up.

    Here is the original post:
    Evin at Oconomowoc on track to finish by October - Greater Milwaukee Today

    Around the House: Cover up cracked patio with a new deck – Colorado Springs Gazette

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Dear Ken: I have an old patio, and I need to give it a facelift. Should I patch it? Repour or replace it? Pete

    Answer: Most of these attached concrete patios end up settling, cracking or both. Theyre ugly and in many cases let water drain toward the house. Its quite expensive to tear out and replace them since the old and the new concrete are heavy and difficult to get through the backyard around landscaping and fences. And so-called cosmetic coatings usually dont last as long as youd like (and theyre expensive, too!).

    A better idea is to cover up these old white elephants with a brand-new surface to wit: a new deck. Leave the old patio right where it is and use it, instead, as a huge footer to hold up the new surface. This is really one of the easiest framing jobs youll ever encounter, so lets get started.

    We simply build an underlying framework of treated lumber (the green stuff) to hold up the new deck boards. You can use say, treated 2-by-8s for your floor joists and space them 16 inches or 24 inches apart, depending on the span. The lumber yard can help you figure out size and spacing of the supports.

    But heres the slick part: After you set out the floor joists in rows, you simply install 2x4 legs of the same treated lumber every 3 feet or so, sticking right down to the old patio. Mark each leg in its place, and theyll cut off at whatever angle the patio surface has settled to. Attach it all together with the same screws youll use for the decking. Youll be amazed at how strong the whole thing will be with these vertical legs underneath.

    Now the decking. There are at least three choices here. Sorted by price, lowest to high: pressure-treated Southern yellow pine, redwood or plastic composite. The first two, of course, require periodic stripping and restaining while plastic is essentially maintenance-free.

    For the redwood or pine, the decking looks best-proportioned with 2x6 boards, screwed to the under frame with zinc-coated (gold or silver) 3-inch screws. Space them ever-so-slightly apart (the thickness of a nickel is OK), and, when theyre dry, theyll be just the right distance apart.

    Wait a month or so (longer during these monsoons) to finish the boards. Choose a linseed oil-based product, like Super Deck, Behr or Cabots. If you prefer water-based, Olympic Ultimate, six-year, works well.

    The plastic decking systems usually require special screws and some even come with hidden plastic clips that give a uniform appearance without the intrusion of fasteners.

    Dear Ken: I have an attic fan that which seems to run all the time. Whats going on? Alan

    Answer: If it never goes off even at night then it probably needs a service call. Ill assume that the thermostat on the fan is preset around 105 degrees. Im sure that your overnight attic temperature gets below that.

    So you probably need some more attic ventilation. Proper circulation up there relies on bottom-to-top movement of air. So, the most likely culprit is those little soffit vents, up behind the gutters. Shine a light into them and see if theyre covered over with insulation. If so, remove it.

    One way to keep track of this is to install a sensor for a remote-reading thermostat in the attic. That way you can correlate the temperature with the on-and-off operation of the fan.

    Dear Ken: One of my electric circuits always seems to be going out. What should I do? Ed

    Answer: It sounds like either an overload youre running too many things on the circuit or a weak circuit breaker. If youre comfortable around the breaker box, you can switch the offending one temporarily with another. If the new breaker stays on, then the original breaker is probably failing. They do age and sometimes just wear out. On the other hand, if the circuit keeps going out, it could be overloaded; remember that anything that produces heat draws lots of current.

    Dear Ken: My dishwasher doesnt fill up with enough water. Whats going on? Rachel

    Answer: Check the float its a dome-shaped device that sits in the bottom of the dishwasher tub and senses when the right amount of water has entered. If it doesnt move up and down freely, service it or replace. Also, the inlet pipe and/or valve may be clogged. Youll have to remove the front panel, disconnect the pipe and run water into a bucket to test it.

    While youre in there, clean the drain filter in the bottom of the dishwasher and unscrew the spray arm and clean out the holes.

    Dear Ken: I have a drywall crack in the living room ceiling of my 1963 house. How can I make it quit cracking and patch it? Dawn

    Answer: If theres more than one layer of roofing on your house, added load from snow may be overstressing the rafter system. Generally, straight cracks (along a drywall seam) are less worrisome than random ones. Otherwise, spackling and the spray-texture-in-a-can is the only solution.

    If it keeps coming back, one answer is to apply a decorative board to the ceiling to look like an intentional decorative or structural element.

    Dear Ken: Ive got a sump pump pit in the basement with no pump, but it has some water in it that smells. What should I do? Sam

    Answer: The smell can be ameliorated with a capful of Clorox in the water. If youre going on long vacations this summer, you might want to install a sump pump into the pit and run its pipe outdoors. But I must tell you that, if you only have some water in it after all this rain, youve lucked out!

    Ken Moon is a home inspector in the Pikes Peak region. His radio show airs at 4 pm Saturdays on KRDO, FM 105.5 and AM 1240. Visit http://www.aroundthehouse.com

    Excerpt from:
    Around the House: Cover up cracked patio with a new deck - Colorado Springs Gazette

    Building trade skills and a new home, Oakland Schools cuts ribbon on student house project – The Oakland Press

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Nineteen students from nine different high schools have built a new home that will be installed on a lot in Pontiac for a family in need.

    The house built by 19 Oakland Schools students in Pontiac.

    Its the second year for the educational construction project at Oakland Schools Technical Campus Northeast. Under the instruction of teachers and industry professionals, the students spent 7,300 hours building the 1,368 square-foot home.

    Oakland County and Oakland Schools representatives cut the ribbon.

    A ribbon cutting for the project was held on Wednesday, July 1. Shortly after, the 164,000-pound house was transported to Pontiac, where the Community Housing Network will match it with new homeowners.

    This program allows students to gain essential skills for working in the real world, Oakland Schools Superintendent Dr. Wanda Cook-Robinson said.

    Oakland Schools Superintendent Dr. Wanda Cook-Robinson speaks prior to the ribbon cutting of the second home to be built at the Oakland Schools Technical Campus Northeast Campus.

    From raising the framing to installing plumbing, electrical, windows, insulation and drywall, the students spend the school year bringing the house to completion. When class was let out early this March due to the coronavirus, the schools partners in the trades industry stepped in to finish the job, according to Paul Galbenski, dean at the technical campus.

    Students at the ribbon cutting for the home they built with Oakland Schools.

    These students have turned a pile of wood into a home that, when they pass by 10 or 25 years from now, they can still see what it is they accomplished here, Galbenski said.

    Construction technology students at Oakland Schools take one last look at the home they spent months building which will now make its way to Pontiac.

    Students from this years home building project come from: Pontiac High School, Pontiac Academy for Excellence, Auburn Hills Avondale High School, Rochester High School, Rochester Stoney Creek High School, Rochester Adams High School, Oxford High School, Lake Orion High School and the Michigan Great Lakes Virtual Academy.

    Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmers recommendation Tuesday that the MHSAA play football and other fall sports in the spring of 2021 to combat

    A 20-year-old Pontiac woman was saved Monday night by Oakland County Sheriff's deputies after she tried to kill herself by cutting her wrist a

    Most fireworks displays, ceremonies and festivities are canceled or postponed due to coronavirus concerns. However a few communities and lake

    Continued here:
    Building trade skills and a new home, Oakland Schools cuts ribbon on student house project - The Oakland Press

    Ace is the place with the Mean Mask Lady – The Bakersfield Californian

    - July 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    She's kind of a cross between your grandma and an Army drill sergeant.

    Shelia Garrett, the lead cashier at Ace Hardware on Rosedale Highway, is in her 16th year at the family-owned store. But this year she's starting to earn a reputation as "The Mean Mask Lady" for her straightforward,no-nonsense approach to customers who feel the need to challenge the store's requirement that masks must be worn inside.

    "Shelia's not really mean," said assistant manager Donald Johnson. "She's just the first one customers see when they come in."

    Indeed, Garrett is often working the cash register right inside the front door. And when someone comes in without a mask, she's no shrinking violet.

    "I will say something," she said.

    And word has been getting around. Garrett has become something of a local celebrity for her uncanny ability to make grown men feel like they're in trouble with their third-grade teacher.

    What's a macho, drywall-installing, red-blooded American male supposed to do when this grandmotherly type lays down the law?

    There's only one thing to do, unless he doesn't mind coming off like a real jerk.

    Garrett can laugh about it, but she says this has been her toughest year yet in retail.

    The big chalkboard outside is clear: "Masks are required," it says.

    But apparently it's not that simple.

    Every employee at the store wears a mask for eight or nine hours a day (apparently without suffering oxygen depravation), yet some customers act like wearing a mask for a few minutes in the store isa major inconvenience.

    And the employees have heard it all.

    "Its against my religion."

    "I have a medical condition."

    "I vowed I would never wear a mask, and Im not going to start now."

    "I might be mistaken for a robber."

    And being sworn at. Yes, it's a thing.

    It's even gotten physical, Johnson said.

    According to multiple news reports, a Target employee in Van Nuys was injured after helping to remove two customers who refused to wear masks.

    In Pennsylvania, a convenience store clerk was punched in the face after declining service to a man without a mask.

    And there's been much worse.

    "I've been here a long time," Garrett said. "Most customers are good about it."

    It only takes one or two to ruin your day.

    On Friday, Gilbert Beal was shopping at Ace with his 5-year-old son, Liam. Both father and son were wearing masks.

    "The way I understand it, wearing a mask doesn't protect us, it protects those around us," said the Marine veteran turned law enforcement officer.

    "It's gotten to the point some people are getting out of hand," he said. "Put a mask on. Be courteous to others."

    Whatever Garrett and her co-workers are doing seems to be working. Compliance for the mask requirement is virtually 100 percent at Ace.

    Down the street at the big-box Lowe's Home Improvement store, mask compliance was only about 40 percent on Thursday afternoon. Even some employees weren't wearing a mask.

    Customer Roslyn Atherly, however, was masked up as she exited the store.

    "I am concerned," she said as she stopped to talk.

    After seeing so many customers without masks, even as the county of Kern is seeing an increase in reported COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, Atherly said the community's behavior is worrisome.

    "You don't have to have symptoms to pass on the infection," she said.

    These are strange times. But Garrett seems to have a knack for enforcing a requirement that not everyone cares to abide by. And she does it with class.

    She's not afraid to give customers the business even as they're giving the store theirs.

    Steven Mayer can be reached at 661-395-7353. Follow him on Facebook and on Twitter: @semayerTBC.

    Link:
    Ace is the place with the Mean Mask Lady - The Bakersfield Californian

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