Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Author Beth Cunningham - December 7, 2020December 7, 2020Two Birmingham favorites in one place. Rendering via CMH Architects
If youve driven through Homewood lately, youve probably noticed an abundance of orange cones and construction going on. Dont worrythe traffic is a fair trade for all the exciting developments coming to 18th St. S. Heres the latest on whats coming (and when its going to get here).
Back in September, we shared the latest renderings of The Valley Hotel, the newest (and biggest) addition to Homewood.
The 129-room luxury hotel is a Curio by Hilton, and its currently under construction at the corner of 18th Street South and 28th Avenue South, right next toMaple Street Biscuit Co.
The Valley Hotel is officially set to open its doors in Januarybut well be bringing you a sneak peek before then. Be sure to stay tuned to Bham Now on social so you dont miss it!
Who doesnt love the fresh + vibrant flavors of this local favorite? Little Donkey isnt new to Homewood, but based on my personal experience of dining at their original location recently, filling even more space with customers will be a breeze.
Back in April, we shared that Little Donkey and Rodney Scotts BBQ had plans to open new locations in Homewood. That project is officially moving forward following a resurveying request granted by the Homewood Planning Commission on December 1, according to the Homewood Star.
With almost 17,000 square feet of total restaurant space in this new development, Little Donkey will only fill half. The other tenant will be award-winning Rodney Scotts BBQ.
Pssst: if you want to learn more about this local BBQ hotspot, check out the Emmy-nominated series Chefs Table: BBQ on Netflix. Theres a whole episode featuring Chef and Pitmaster Rodney Scott.
This combined restaurant space will be located right next to The Valley Hotel, both of which are set to open in 2021.
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Downtown Homewood continues to expandhere's the latest - Bham Now
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Sara Arnold| Item Correspondent
LANCASTER - Selectman Jason Allison is furious the gazebo is not yet ADA accessible and is prepared to have the gazebo removed if that is not rectified.
During Monday night's meeting, he said it is critical the town serves the 10 percent of the population that has ambulatory disabilities, adding we care more about where it is, than if its accessible.
Town Administrator Orlando Pacheco said there were plans in place to build after winter, creating a ramp, with an informal April or May deadline. The new ramp would be smaller and look more like the gazebo, with a stone dust pathway.
Im not OK with this, Allison said, adding that if the gazebo wasnt made accessible by March 1, he wanted it removed.
Selectmen Jay Moody and Walter Sendrowski were concerned, given the wintry weather that is likely between now and March.
Allison said he is very upset, and passionate about the 'who' not the 'where,'a problem which he is motivated to solve.
Moody suggested a compromise,havingfinal plans done by March 1.
Allison made a motion for formal final plans to be completed and approved by the Commission on Disability and the building commissioner by March 1; if not, the gazebo must be taken down.
Were not in a position to threaten anybody, Sendrowski said, recommending they wait until spring and get the plans in place. He called the threat of removal overkill.
Selectmen unanimously approved a motion to draw up plans, with the requirement that the gazebo be removed taken off the table.
Allison said he would make a motion at the March 1 selectmens meeting for the gazebo to be removed if the final plans werent completed.
There will be no more signs on the Town Green - kind of.
The Town Green Committee had previously unanimously recommended signs be banned.
Allison said he was torn, as signs like the banners found on the Town Green are important in moderation.
Sendrowski refused to weigh in on the issue at all.
Consider me a dissenter, he said, pointing out he was not in favor of the committee being brought into existence in the first place.
Although Thayer Memorial Library has historically placed banners there, such as for the annual book sale, Director Joe Mul said the Town Green is a revered space and he said he supports no allowing signs.
The signs of the Bulfinch church would be exempt, so banners for the annual strawberry festival and other events of the church would continue to be on the Town Green.
Pacheco said the bylaw referenced during discussion addresses only permanent signage, not the kind of temporary banners that have been placed on the Town Green. He said a change would impact five to 10 banners a year.
Banners are subject to the elements, fall overand look really bad, said Heather Lennon, a member of the Town Green Committee and chairman of the Historical Commission. The seat of town government needs to be pristine.
Banning signs passed 2-0, with Sendrowski abstaining.
Making the committee permanent, the committees other recommendation, was not taken up.
Special Town Meeting might still need to happen.
Although Minuteman Regional Vocational Technical High Schools School Committee planned this week to discuss Lancasters request for them to revote on athletic fields borrowing in spring, to allow Lancaster not to try to bring residents to a town meeting during the winter (see the story in the Dec. 4 Item), Pacheco believes the answer will be no.
He said he was told the low bid Minuteman is planning to accept is only valid until mid-January, and other member towns arent doing a town meeting to vote on the borrowing.
If Lancaster wants to stop the district from taking out the loan, the town will likely need to have a special town meeting within 60 days of the Minuteman vote.
Moody asked residents to write to the selectmen or Pacheco if they do or dont want a town meeting and the Minuteman borrowing, so selectmen can decide at the Dec. 21 meeting if they need to resurrect the special town meeting.
If they do have one, they can now do so on a Saturday, as that bylaw has been changed.
There will be a permanent committee for commercial and industrial economic development.
Phil Eugene, a member of the temporary committee, said a permanent committee will be tasked with reviewing development proposals to keep Lancasters character and rural charm and prevent overdevelopmentwhile encouraging development in North Lancaster, including infrastructure like water and sewer.
This is what the town needs, Allison said. This could be pivotal to take Lancaster where it needs to be.
Sedrowski said they need to have friendly, cooperative conversations with developers, not like what has happened in the past. He said they needed to concentrate on and emphasize getting development happening in North Lancaster, not keeping the town pure.
We need money, Sendrowski said. They all agreed.
The committee will consist of seven members, including members from the Planning Board, Conservation Commissionand the town planner. The three spots for residents will be immediately advertised.
Selectmen followed the Board of Assessors recommendation and set a single tax rate for both residential and commercial property.
Selectmen declined to renew Kalon Farms alcohol license for wine and beer. Kalon Farms has been cited for serious safety violations and code issues, with the state building department now involved as well as action from the state on pouring licensing issues and land use decisions, according to Pacheco.
Some operations will have to cease permanently and some will have to operate differently, he said.
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Gazebo access a sticking point with Lancaster selectman who would rather raze it than wait - Worcester Telegram
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
If you live in South Philly, its not your imagination: Franklin Delano Roosevelt Park is having a moment.
As COVID-19 restrictions pushed more residents outdoors, many urban parks saw attendance surge and city officials say FDR hit unprecedented levels of use. They estimate that park trash collection, one rough measure of usage, increased by 50% since last year in a park that already saw hundreds of thousands of annual visitors by some estimates. More than 900 on-site parking spaces are now regularly maxed out on weekends, and new park volunteers have arrived by the dozens.
But volunteer Carolina Torres Toledo, a volunteer park ambassador, said the surge is also the fruit of a battery of deliberate and often community-driven improvements aimed at making the park more user-friendly. Most visibly, park staff and volunteers transformed a defunct 146-acre golf course into an informal network of public trails, effectively doubling the publicly accessible grounds at FDR, reigniting interest in the park along the way.
In the last year theres been way more volunteers, Toledo said. Especially since some of the new trails have been openedIts appealing because many people have never been there before.
Changes at the park like this and numerous smaller improvements arent coincidental. They emerged from an experiment that could revolutionize how Philadelphia manages its showpiece parks. But they also come just as the citys looming fiscal crisis threatens those same improvements and economic strains from the pandemic stall philanthropic donations Philadelphia increasingly depends on for major public works projects.
An ambitious $250 million 10-year master plan for FDR that was unveiled last year as a joint project of Parks & Recreation, the nonprofit Fairmount Park Conservancy and the William Penn Foundation has already had its lengthy timeline upended.
Were always afraid, said Andy Toy, a board member at the Friends of FDR Park, a neighborhood-driven nonprofit support organization, of funding cuts. And I honestly dont know what [philanthropic groups] will support right now. The master plan might have to get broken into more, smaller pieces.
The sprawling tract near the confluence of the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers, was originally known as League Island Park and was pieced together in phases during the early to mid-20th century. Initially designed by the same Olmsted Brothers, whose fathers firm also planned Central Park, the green respite was envisioned by city leaders as a means of managing the collision between South Phillys cramped, unplanned rowhouse blocks and what was essentially estuarial bogland at the time. The solution was a landscaped park, which would be further developed during the citys ill-fated 1926 Sesquicentennial Exhibition with a planned golf course added later, reportedly at the urging of officers at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard.
At 348 acres, FDR is larger than both the Packer Park neighborhood it borders across Pattison Avenue to the north and the sprawling Sports Complex to the east that houses the citys pro teams. In addition to open space, the park is also home to institutions like the American Swedish Historical Museum, ancient structures like the colonial-era Samuel Preston House, Audubon Society-designated bird-watching areas, a skate park and numerous athletic areas.
This current master plan came after a lengthy community engagement process that identified assets and big challenges in the largest green space in South Philadelphia, a dense neighborhood that is changing as new immigrants and young families flock to affordable rowhouses. Many residents both praised the park and identified it as severely neglected.
People pointed to athletic areas that felt neglected. They noted the potholes and pockmarks on the central loop road the result of subsidence and deferred maintenance. More than half the park was still dedicated to the 1940s-era golf course, which closed in 2019 due to a lack of use and chronic flooding. Although the park is known for its Olmsted-designed boathouse and gazebo around a central lake, an entire secondary swimming pond known as Meadow Lake and two adjacent bathhouses sit largely disused and nearly invisible from some of the primary park trails due to overgrowth.
In neglect came some opportunities. Liminal space underneath Interstate 95 to the south has long been used as a DIY skatepark an internationally-recognized and ever-changing graffiti-covered course of concrete halfpipes, hips, and bowls that are largely maintained by the skaters that use it. South Phillys Southeast Asian and Latin American communities regularly transform other parts of the park into informal food markets on weekends.
But it was clear there had been little central guidance or support. As many opportunities as the park had captured, it had missed.
For example, Toledo, who aided in the community outreach process, said they also help coordinate games with a popular local Latin American soccer league but the park wasnt designed with a formal soccer area in mind. The growing league has, for years, squeezed into a patchy section of unused lawn adopted by hundreds of South Philly footballers who couldnt find better facilities.
Its crazy that just across the street are multi-million dollar stadiums, they said.
I think FDR was forgotten about. And whats happened is people themselves have had to make up for the lack of care from the city, Toledo said. Its a really multicultural place. But its also a place that a lot of people dont knowtheres a need to be more user friendly. It needs more bilingual support.
The month the pandemic struck in earnest, the city took one of its first steps toward reimagining the park, installing Justin DiBerardinis as a full-time executive director at FDR, a first-of-its-kind position that would oversee operations, programming and the eventual implementation of the master plan. This move brought FDR more in line with intensive park management strategies employed in places like Brooklyns Prospect Park, where a municipal park administrator is paired with dedicated staff and a robust friends group to help keep up with day-to-day needs at the park.
Prior to the launch of the master plan, FDR was unstaffed, mostly passive parkland, said Parks & Rec spokesperson Maita Soukup.
Soukup said the city had also made other real investments: Hiring two more support staffers in the interim and pouring money into tangible renovation projects. $750,000 went to repaving the pockmarked loop road and parking lots, striping a new bike lane in the process. The department poured a million dollars into a new roof for the historic FDR Park Welcome Center, a former stables for police mounted units. Eventually, the building is envisioned as an environmental center and offices for staffers.
A $250,000 state planning grant, that will be matched by the Fairmount Park Conservancy, will begin the process of designing a new playground area. New trails and remediation for 40 acres of mostly inaccessible wetland near the back nine of the golf course are slated to begin, with investment from the Philadelphia International Airport, possibly as soon as next fall.
Other investments have come from the parks growing community of superfans. In 2020, nearly a year after the golf course closed for good, park staff teamed up with volunteers to reopen the former grounds as a hiking and recreation meadow. Handpainted signs inform visitors the area is now dubbed The South Philly Meadows and the space has been key to handling the surge in visitors during the COVID era, Toy said.
I personally didnt even know about the golf course. Id never used it, he explained. I didnt realize how large it was.
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The pandemic helped make FDR Park better. Now it has to survive the aftermath - WHYY
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
By Michael DeWitt and Mae Frances Bing| Augusta Chronicle
A 4-year-old child and his dog were killed during a hit-and-run incident, and another person was injured, leaving family, police and the community searching for answers and justice.
Hampton County EMS, first responders and law enforcement responded to a report of a vehicle versus pedestrian accident around 5:46 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 5, at 348 Palmetto Avenue, Varnville, near the Varnville Gazebo.
Responders found that a four-year-old, JaKarie Breland, of 65 Middle Street, Varnville, was riding his bicycle with his dog and his uncle, Delante Chisolm, 44, when all three were struck by a vehicle that had reportedly left the scene after impact.
According to EMS and Varnville Police Department reports, Hampton County Emergency Management Division Director Susanne Peeples happened to be in the area with her grandchildren to enjoy the Christmas light display at the Varnville Gazebo and was the first on the scene. Peeples started CPR on Breland until EMS units arrived.
Breland was then transported to Hampton Regional Medical Center before being flown by helicopter to the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, where he died around 2 a.m. Sunday, said Hampton County Coroner Angela Topper.
Chisolm was transported to HRMC and treated for minor injuries. The boys dog, Sugar, died at the scene.
As of press time on Wednesday, no driver has come forward to take responsibility and no suspects have been charged. The hit and run incident remains under investigation by the Varnville Police Department, with assistance from other law enforcement agencies and the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED).
We want justice for JaKarie and his uncle, and we want his mother to have clarity and get some answers, said Varnville Police Chief Tyrone Smith.
Smith said that police are searching for a dark-in-color car, possibly a sedan, with possible damage down low or underneath the vehicle.
I believe the driver panicked, or maybe was intoxicated or driving under suspension, but that doesnt give them the right to not stop and render aid for this boy.
Smith thanks the Hampton Police Department and the Hampton County Sheriffs Office for their assistance in this ongoing investigation, and praised the response by EMD Director Peeples, who initially brought Breland back from an unresponsive state, according to reports.
I commend Mrs. Susanne for the great work she did to render CPR and aid to JaKarie and his family, said Smith. She did a great job, and I am so proud to say that I work with her. Im so grateful for her, and Hampton County should be proud to have her. But the focus isnt on us, its about finding justice for JaKarie, and thats what we are going to do.
The VPD and assisting agencies is out and about in the community conducting the investigation, and are speaking to area residents and local auto body shop businesses. Police are encouraging residents and businesses to report any type of damages that are found, and reports can be made anonymously by calling the VPD at 803-943-2979, or the Hampton County 911 Dispatch at 803-943-9261, or by calling any local police department or authority that you feel comfortable speaking with.
An angel taken too soon
The Hampton County Guardian correspondent Mae Frances Bing spoke with Brelands sister, Diamond Hamilton, to learn more about this young man whose life was taken too soon. Hamilton described Breland as a smart, very curious, caring and loving boy who loved pizza, pancakes and French fries.
He loved to go outside, play with his toys, watch things on his tablet, and he loved to learn, ride his bike and paint, said Hamilton. His favorite cartoons were Peppa Pig and he loved Super Ranger Mini Force. His favorite cartoon characters were Marshall and Chase from Paw Patrol.
Breland also loved his dog and enjoyed walking him often, with the help of his family members.
Breland is the son of Aketa Davis, of Varnville, and Dyshawn Breland. He also leaves behind a nephew, Cannon Risher, and a baby brother.
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Child killed in hit and run; suspect still at large - The Augusta Chronicle
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
For many towns and cities, the magic of pantomime won't be part of families' festive plans this Christmas. For the residents of Bilston and across areas of Wolverhampton, Bilston based charity Gazebo Theatre are taking their pantomime Dame and Fairy to the streets to spread joy to the community, visiting the homes of those who may be feeling lonely, isolated, overwhelmed, facing difficulties financially, or just in need of a pick me up - to know there are people there who care.
Dennis Ffrench, the UK's longest-serving black Pantomime Dame and Rebecca Shepherd will lead the team from Gazebo to deliver well-being packs throughout the week beginning 14th December.
The packs contain a range of items including handmade bath bombs, soap, crafty wellbeing activities, a keepsake keyring, toys and recipes as well as reusable bags and facemasks. Contents have been sourced and bought from local small businesses and artists, with the support of Simple Acts of Kindness, who have also taken donations of new toys; as well as from organisations; Wolverhampton Sewing Group, the Hope Centre, City of Sanctuary, and the Refugee and Migrant Centre, who have been raising funds through sales of their cookbooks. Gazebo have been supported by their team of HeadStart parent and carer volunteers to compile the packs, and help identify local families and individuals who would benefit from one of the packs.
The packs are part of Gazebo's Mindful Support project, which is funded until February 2021 by the Government's Emergency COVID-19 Fund, distributed through the National Lottery Community Fund. The project will also provide people in the local community with free telephone, video call and text counselling, advice and guidance throughout January and February as well as providing those who find themselves digitally excluded with tablets and up to 6 months of internet access. This is in addition to befriending services and support for families.
If you know someone who would benefit from support this Christmas, you should contact Gazebo's Mindful Support Team by calling 07393 018 271 or email mindfulsupport@gazebotheatre.com.
In 2019, Gazebo spread the festive cheer with a Christmas single, Christmas Is A Time of Cheer, written and produced by Gazebo Studios manager, Danny Hudson. It features staff and service users of Gazebo and has been re-released this year in the hope of spreading a little joy at the end of 2020.
Check out the video below!
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Pantomime Characters to Deliver Holiday Cheer to Homes in Bilston and Wolverhampton - Broadway World
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Published: 12/7/2020 4:29:35 PM
GILL While the pandemic didnt put a stop to the annual Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day ceremony by the French King Bridge, it did lead organizers to limit attendance on Monday.
Dec. 7 marked the 79th anniversary of the Japanese attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii, where 100 military ships were being held. The attack destroyed or damaged 16 ships, killed 2,403 people and injured another 1,178.
The day after the attack on Dec. 8, 1941 the United States declared war on Japan, formally entering World War II. The war was not declared over until Sept. 2, 1945.
Monday marked the 16th year that a memorial ceremony was held at the French King Bridge. It has been organized by Rolling Thunder, a national organization that advocates for prisoners of war, soldiers missing in action and all veterans. The local chapter of the organization is Vermont Chapter 1.
The ceremony was at noon, at the west end of the French King Bridge. Attendance was kept small, and everyone wore masks and kept their distance from one another. Many in the crowd wore symbols and patches from branches of the military.
Were gathered here to share a moment of history, and to remember our World War II veterans and the greatest generation that kept America strong during those years of war, said Jeff Neipp, president of Rolling Thunder Vermont Chapter 1.
A flag was displayed at the ceremony, and a wreath was hung on the gazebo at the end of the bridge. Keeping it short to reduce social contact, the ceremony was only a few minutes long.
The wreath was left at the gazebo for others to visit and pay their respects.
Reach Max Marcus at mmarcus@recorder.com or 413-930-4231.
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The Recorder - Pausing to remember Pearl Harbor - The Recorder
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
With the holiday season in full motion, everyones rushing to get their shopping done on time for whatever get-togethers are planned this year, albeit smaller and different from last year. Dont fret though, theres still plenty of places spreading holiday cheer in Jersey City this weekend, meeting everyones needs for a colorful and celebratory vibe.
Holiday photos at Hamilton Park
On Saturday, Dec. 12, Hamilton Park will have a free picture corner at the Gazebo for Jersey City families to create holiday memories. Even though its free, you must register, select the time slot, and be there at the time you select in the registration form. Everyone attending must wear a mask and maintain a distance of 6 feet from the closest person. Register at jcfamilies.com/event/holiday-picture-corner-at-hamilton-park-with-jcfamilies. Hamilton Park is located at 9th St and W Hamilton, Jersey City.
Womens Collaborative Holiday Bazaar
Xtinas Shop is teaming up with the Jersey City Womens Collaborative for the 2020 Holiday Bazaar at The Hive Goods and Deep Space Gallery on Saturday, Dec. 12, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The holiday event invites allows you to shop small and support local Jersey City female artists and makers.
The lower level of the warehouse will include art, vintage clothing, handmade items, vinyl records. Upper level and outdoor area will include a donation based gift wrapping station, Xtinas Swap Shop $3 bins, and 4th annual The Gigantic Miniature Art Show at Deep Space Gallery. The Hive Goods is located at 77 Cornelison Ave., 1st FL, Jersey City.
The Happy Holiday Market
The Happy Holiday Market returns to The Ashford rooftop and the Grove PATH Plaza this year on Dec. 12 and 13 from noon to 6 p.m. The Market will be going on simultaneously in both locations. The rooftop of The Ashford will be heated and decorated, and depending on circumstances, a live Santa or Instagram-able Santa Station will be located in the rear for photos. The Ashford will be serving drink specials all day and a giveaway for one lucky shopper.
Check out a virtual tour of the space which can be seen at theashfordjc.com/virtual-tour. The Market will also take place the following weekend on Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 19 and 20 from noon to 6 p.m. Grove St. PATH Plaza and The Ashford Rooftop is located at 145 Newark Ave., Jersey City.
MST to join nationwide play readings against gun violence
Mile Square Theatre is joining the fight to end gun violence with the Nationwide Reading of the seven winning plays of #ENOUGH: Plays to End Gun Violence, a short play competition for middle and high school students. On Dec. 14, the 8-year remembrance of the shootings at Sandy Hook, the winning titles will be performed at Mile Square Theatre in Hoboken.
The plays, all written by high school students, tackle gun violence through the lenses of the threat of and anxiety over school shootings, police shootings, community violence, race, and gun culture in American history.
The performances begin at 7 p.m. and can be seen at milesquaretheatre.org/shows-events/enough-plays.
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Holiday hot spots in Jersey City this weekend; Play readings against gun violence - nj.com
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Debbie LaPlaca| Correspondent
WORCESTER This custom contemporary at 44 Whisper Drive is a rare find amid the countless Colonial homes that populate New England.
The 5,164-square-foot home features a skylit two-story atrium, spacious rooms, a dream kitchenand a quiet yard situated just four miles from the center of town.
David Stead of RE/MAX Advantage 1 has it listed for $950,000.
I love the central atrium. Its just so bright, you walk in the front door and its like wow, Stead said. Plus, we dont see too many contemporary houses. We usually see the plain vanilla Colonials that are common in New England; this is much different.
That octagonal atrium is the central point of both stories of this nine-room house. Its marble floor leads to a curved, wrought-iron spoked stairway to the second floor.
The large living and dining rooms have warm oak hardwood flooring with walnut inlays.
A modernized, sun-splashed kitchen includes custom cherry cabinetry and granite countertops over a marble floor. An oversized subzero refrigerator/freezer, double wall ovensand a six-burner cooktop is a cooks dream for family meal preparations or entertaining. The center island also serves as a breakfast bar and the informal dining area has access to the deck.
Host a large post-COVID crowd in the family that features a floor-to-ceiling fireplace with a custom cherry cabinet surround.
The first floor also includes a guest bedroom with full bath and a laundry room.
Upstairsis a loft-type sitting area in the upper atrium. From there, the master bedroom suite offers a sitting area and a grand bath with stall shower and walkup jet soaking tub.
Three more bedrooms with connecting bathrooms complete the second floor.
Outdoors is what the homeowners daughter, Oli Hannah, said she most enjoys, especially the large deck and attached gazebo overlooking pristine grounds and gardens.
The deck is great for entertaining. Before COVID, it was great for family gatherings, she said.
While the property has a tranquil, country feel, it is located minutes from downtown Worcester, with its shopping, hospitals, parks, regional airportand train station.
Built: 1989
List price: $950,000
Living space:5,164 square feet
Total rooms: 9
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 4 full, 1 half
Climate: 6 zone hot water baseboard heat, 2 zone central air
Land: .54 acres (23,689 square feet)
Assessed value: $763,700
Taxes: $12,983 in 2020
Parking: 2-car attached garage
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House of the Week: Colonial in Worcester with two-story atrium and dream kitchen listing at $950K - Worcester Telegram
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
103 Church Street. The development is proposed for the back of the house. (Google Maps)Fredericton's Planning Advisory Committee has voted to amend the City Centre Institutional Zone to allow for a modern, two-unit addition to a home in the St. Anne's Point Heritage Preservation Area.
The CCI zone recognizes the unique historic areas within the downtown.
The house at 103 Church St., across from the Fredericton Cenotaph, contains a retail store, an apartment and accommodates three Airbnb units.
Owners Scott and Victoria Boer want to add two bachelor apartments, a garage and outdoor living space.
Scott Boer spoke at the PAC meeting Wednesday night.
"We designed an addition that would allow us to continue to have the store, but our living space outdoors would have to be on the second floor and that led to us having a void below that we could fill with either personal space or additional living space," said Boer.
Boer said he consulted the city about the design.
"One of the things that the Heritage Board was very firm on was that they want to make sure that we don't create caricatures of 100, 150 years ago and that our additions embrace what the city is now," he said.
Boer said the addition has "a very muted palette, very simple lines."
"We don't draw from the main house, which we've embraced and renovated," he said.
The design was approved by the preservation review board over the summer.
"It is always a cause for concern when there is an addition that takes place and it doesn't always look like it's integrated into ...the classical design features of the specific home," said Marcello Battilana, the city's manager of community planning, during the meeting.
"But when you're looking at heritage and you're looking at infill in terms of a heritage area, the goal is not to create or to mimic the heritage. It's to ensure that the addition is an addition of its own time."
The City of Fredericton's heritage bylaws say that new builds should be compatible with the existing heritage:
"The erecting or placing of a new building or structure within a preservation area shall be of such design and setting upon its lot as will be compatible with other buildings, streets and open spaces in the preservation area to which it is visually related. No Certificate shall be issued for such a development unless it conforms to the standards set out in section 7.02."
Susan Dunphy, who lives behind the Boers on King Street, is upset by the proposed addition.She and her husband bought their home in the heritage zone and restored it according to the heritage bylaws, she said during the meeting.
"We cannot begin to express how this is going to impact our home, our life, our neighbourhood and the seamless fabric" ofhistoric downtown Fredericton, Dunphy said. "As seniors and individuals who have invested in curating a fine downtown home...the proposed development is both unacceptable and troubling to us."
Dunphy said she has consulted other neighbours and a lawyer and is prepared to fight against the final approval of the addition.
"The corner of King and Church is one of the most beautiful in the province and contains provincial and national historic sites, including Christ Church Cathedral and the cenotaph The proposed new development is modern, garish and does not fit the Napoleon III style home on which it would be attached and would completely distract and ruin this part of the heritage preservation area."
The zoning amendment will go to council for approval.
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Proposed modern addition to heritage-zone home heads to council, but not without opposition - CBC.ca
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December 10, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
1949 was a mostly uneventful year for Chevrolets sidekick brand, GMC. It was the early peace period, few things needed to be changed, and business was booming. The carmaker fielded an army of 75 models and 224 body and chassis types, according to the GM Heritage Center. Among them, the pickup we have here.
The current form is relatively new, with the vehicle having gained this refreshed look no more than 146 miles (235 km) ago. Wrapped in blue and black over a burgundy interior, the GMC benefited from a complete restoration that gave it back its former shine without spoiling it with crazy and unnecessary additions.
The blue on the wheels might be a bit exaggerated and off, but that shortcoming is offset by the smooth and refreshed body. Its chrome elements have been remade, as have the GMC emblems. Also, new glass and rubber were fitted where they were due.
The interior has been caressed as well with restored heater components and seat frame as well as the addition of new upholstery, new door cards and re-chromed parts. The gauges too have been reworked and brought back to their original look.
The machine's most important hardware did not escape the restoration process. We are not being told what's powering the truck, but as far as we understand, its the original engine, boosted with new internals as well as rebuilt transmission and rear axle. Photos of the engine show it is rated at just 76 hp.
The truck is selling for what seems to be the right price for a build of this caliber, $51,900.
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1949 GMC Pickup Sticks With the Original Look, Nearly Nails It - autoevolution
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