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    Turf Grass Market 2020: Potential growth, attractive valuation make it is a long-term investment | Top Players: Turf & Garden,Turf Star,Integrated…

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Impact of Covid 19 on the Turf Grass market in 2020 in depth research on prices , stocks , volume and growth , latest news and results , expansion plan , current business strategy , key company , sales , revenue and competition , production and consumption , supply and demand , industry and business studies , impact of Covid 19 buyers and sellers and forecast for 2020 2025

    In terms of its concept, segmentation, market opportunities, influential developments and the challenges faced by the market, the main purpose of this study is to help the client understand the market. During the preparation of the document, an extensive study and review was carried out.

    To understand the competition in depth, readers will find this report very useful. Business data and information is collected from trusted databases such as blogs, organization annual reports, publications, and others, and has been reviewed and verified by industry analysts.

    Covid-19 Scenario:

    What is the Impact of Covid-19 Outbreak on the Turf Grass Industry?

    Get A PDF Sample of Turf Grass Industry Report: https://www.precisionmarketreports.com/download-sample/29416

    Segments Analysis:

    Business segment analysis breaks down the financial reports of a corporation into business branches , subsidiaries , or other types of business segments. Business division analysis provides an accurate description of the results of a public corporation to its owners in an annual report .

    Based on the type of product, the global Turf Grass market segmented intoCold SeasonWarm Season

    Based on the end-use, the global Turf Grass market classified intoLandscapersContractorsSportsOthers

    Top Key players:

    Turf & GardenTurf StarIntegrated Turf SolutionsTurf ProductsSuperior Lawns AustraliaSports Turf SolutionsSierra Pacific Turf SupplyTurf SolutionsJiboomba Turf GroupExmark ManufacturingPBI Gordon CorporationEasy TurfWesco TurfProfessional Turf ProductsRoyal Sod FarmsNihon Turf MaintenanceHG TurfPremier Tech Home & GardenOz Tuff TurfHume Turf & Machinery

    Get PDF Sample Copy of the Report to understand the structure of the complete report: (Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, and Chart) @ https://www.precisionmarketreports.com/download-sample/29416

    Top Players & Competitive Landscape and Turf Grass Market Share Analysis:

    A competitor review is a strategy in which the main competitors are established and their merchandise , prices and marketing strategies are analyzed . You will create effective business strategies by doing this , which will reinforce those of your rival .A competitive review helps you consider the ins and outs of how the business works. It also helps you find what they are doing well and the ways in which you can easily overcome them using a strategy they have not taken advantage of . Any brand will benefit from regular competitor analysis After conducting a competitor analysis finding gaps in the market , you will be able to

    Chapter 1. Methodology and Scope:

    Chapter 2. What is the Impact of Covid-19 Outbreak on the Market?

    Chapter 3. Quarterly Competitive Assessment 2020:

    Chapter 4. Competition Landscape:

    Chapter 5. Market Variables, Trends & Scope:

    Chapter 6. Executive Summary:

    Chapter 7. Research Methodology:

    Customization Available: Turf Grass Market:

    Important Points Covered by Report:

    Primary Research:

    Secondary Research:

    Secondary research , on the other hand , provides an in depth analysis of the public domain , as well as sources payable through available secondary sources .The growing research review is based on more than 500 hours of secondary research followed by primary research . Information obtained through secondary sources is verified against different data sources by cross checking.

    Typically, Secondary data sources include:

    COVID-19 Impact Analysis:

    During COVID 19 pandemics, we make continuous efforts to help your business survive and expand .We will provide you with an overview of the effects of coronavirus outbreaks across the markets, based on our knowledge and insights, to help you plan for the future.

    Main findings of the Turf Grass Market Report:

    Key Takeaway:

    Any query? Enquire Here for Discount (COVID-19 Impact Analysis Updated Sample): https://www.precisionmarketreports.com/download-sample/29416

    Reasons to Read this Report:

    About Us:

    Our committed efforts are aimed at expanding the traditional market research approach to a results driven market expansion strategy .We remain determined to take into account the interests of our clients in order to reach the target market .To do so, we make sense of downsides, opportunities, circumstances, and valuations by leveraging our well-grounded methodologies and skills to enable our clients to experience creative ideas and results.

    Contact Person:Mr.Brian(Business Project Head)169, Elisenthal, North Rhine- Westphalia,Rhehin- Sieg- Kreis,Windeck, Hohnrath, Germany, DE- 51570.Phone:+1 (845) 377-0269Website:www.precisionmarketreports.comEmail:[emailprotected]/[emailprotected]

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    Turf Grass Market 2020: Potential growth, attractive valuation make it is a long-term investment | Top Players: Turf & Garden,Turf Star,Integrated...

    16 Dreamy Ski Cabins We Wish We Were Holed Up In This Winter – Dwell

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    With travel plans disrupted by COVID-19 and usually bustling resorts refining safety protocols for a pandemic-adapted ski season, a snowy holiday at the slopes may be tricky to navigate this yearbut that wont keep us from dreaming of fresh powder. For now, well make do by taking a mental vacation to the wintry retreats below.

    At Alex Strohl and Andrea Dabenes Nooq House in the Rocky Mountains of northwest Montana, highlights include a suspended fireplace, cathedral ceilings, and expansive windows. "The windows are my favorite feature. I've loved seeing the colors change in the fall, snow in the winter, and bears in the spring," says Andrea.

    Home to Whitefish Mountain Resort and neighboring Glacier National Park, the town of Whitefish, Montana, is where French photographers and outdoor enthusiasts Alex Strohl and Andrea Dabene have built their dream house with the help of Montana Creative architecture + design. Formed by two gable sections on either side of a central living area, its available to rent while the couple tackle another nearby project. Look out for a soaking tub, light fixtures from Schoolhouse Electric, and ceramic tiles in colors that mirror the surrounding foliage.

    Oliver and Sara Fritschs Mount Hood getawaynot far from Mount Hood Meadows, one of the largest ski resorts in Oregonis tall and skinny, reminiscent of the canal houses in Amsterdam, where the Fritsch family lived for three years. Also notable is the facade, painted in a custom shade of soft black. Inside, the house is arranged in a reverse layout, with the open living space located at the top.

    As president of Portland, Oregonbased Schoolhouse Electric, the custom lighting manufacturer and lifestyle goods purveyor, Sara Fritsch has an innate sense of style. For her familys chaletthe handiwork of Keystone Architecture Planning & Project Management, Ethan Beck Homes, and Caseworkmirroring the Dutch social philosophy of gezellig was key. "We wanted to capture the cozy," says Fritsch. "Gezellig is something that attracts people, encourages them to gather and stay a while." The black brick fireplace, accompanied by fur throws, floor cushions, and a bespoke floral sectional inspired by one of Dutch artist Jan Davidszoon de Heems still life paintings, heightens that welcoming aura.

    In the cobblestoned center of Andermatt, Switzerland, renowned for its skiing, locals Al and Francesca Breach scooped up a cottage dating from 1620 that they hoped to transform into an office with a ground-floor wine bar and guest accommodations. Although it was reimagined for contemporary living, it is graced with inviting old touches, like an original stone oven that still provides heat.

    Nossenhaus, a 17th-century stone-and-timber structure, desperately needed a revival, and Jonathan Tuckey of Jonathan Tuckey Design, in collaboration with architect Ruedi Kreienbhl, came to the rescue. First, newer additions like exterior shingles and gable dormers were stripped away. Now, its spruced up with an energy-efficient roof covered in wood tiles and larch planks wherever original timber couldnt be salvaged. "We said, Lets put in something thats unashamedly of its time, and it will develop the patina of age just as the original materials have done,'" explains Tuckey.

    Ten minutes from British Columbias prized Whistler and Blackcomb ski areas, this house is located on a small lot atop a hill. Embracing a vertical layout, the upper level is where the open living area, complete with sectional, wood-burning stove, marble island, and spacious dining table, is found. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the forest views are especially heady.

    Situated on a steep site, the Gilbert House, by Evoke International Design, is clad in concrete and matte black cedar. By contrast, the interiors are brighter, with floors, walls, and ceilings planked with pale oak. The spare layout and edited material palette are intentional, according to Evoke founding partner David Nicolay: "Using only one type of material on the inside pares back distraction. We are almost creating a kind of tunnel with the materials, so that the eye focuses on the view." Another stand-out element is the cantilevered upper floor, which allows for a terrace.

    Nick Dignard and Marie-Catherine P. mond built this 256-square-foot cabin, an A-Frame structure enveloped by two extended wings, to celebrate a love of outdoor sports. Located in Qubecs Lac-Beauport, the living, dining, and kitchen areas are filled with natural light so that the cabin feels as if its actually outside.

    "We chose this spot because it was the most exposed to the sunset," says Nick Dignard. "We get really great sunsets here." Available for rental, the low-key La Cabin Ride & Sleep, situated on high Mont Tourbillon in the vacation community of Le Maelstrm, is a project passion for Dignard, a photo and video producerand avid cyclistand his wife Marie-Catherine P. mond of M4 Architecture. While mond designed the 16-by-16-foot dwelling, showcasing window openings on the roof, Nick took on much of the construction himself, crafting the dining table, stump chairs, loft ladder, kitchen cabinets, and suspended wood plank ceiling lights.

    Beyond the facade of rough-cut logs laid out in a diagonal pattern, Casper and Lexie Mork-Ulnes rural Norwegian home is defined by a material palette of pine, brightened by the natural light and wood and meadow views that pour through the floor-to-ceiling windows.

    Forty-five minutes from Lillehammer, Norway, a ski base made famous by the 1994 Winter Olympics, Casper and Lexie Mork-Ulnes, the couple behind Mork Ulnes Architects, have crafted Skigard Hytte, an unconventional log cabin. Raised on columns and featuring a roof swathed in sod and grass as a nod to Scandinavian tradition, the structure is clad in skigard, a split-rail construction method typically reserved for farm fences. "We liked the idea of this meticulous craft," says Casper. "Its rough but its tidy." An oculus skylight and antique Norwegian farm table and chairs extend the rustic atmosphere indoors.

    On a steep, forested, nearly 30-degree slope adjacent to a ski run and lodge north of Lake Tahoe, Greg Faulkner, founder of Faulkner Architects, spent multiple years working on this contemporary family cabin. The roof "tilts up to the mountains and down to the valley like a visor, while the main home mirrors the ski run to the east side of the property, so the home has a central axis that runs up through it," he says. During the winter, one can ski directly into the living room, with its inset fireplace and 17-foot-high ceilings.

    Full-height sliding glass doors connect the surrounding mountains to The Lookout House, which is topped with a fire-resistant steel plate roof and anchored by large, 20-foot-long insulated concrete walls. Although the abode favors a cool, crisp aesthetic over a traditional ski cabin vernacular, warmth is found in the radiant-heated basalt floors and a central red-tinted glass column that pairs with mustard yellow and light blue, evoking the American Southwest. In the kitchen, modular shelving and a monolithic, sandblasted stainless-steel island reinforce the homes forward-thinking design.

    In British Columbias Soo Valley, only some 20 minutes from Whistler skiing, this off-grid residence designed by Perkins & Will is a pilot for Delta Land Developments future alpine settlement. Principally powered by the sun, its built to Passive House standards, collecting its own water and treating its own waste. Heated by a GeoExchange geothermal pump, it also embraces natural ventilation with cleverly placed windows.

    The first of numerous Passive House-designed structures in Delta Land Developments forthcoming eco-friendly enclave in British Columbia features a number of thoughtful measures from Perkins & Wills, like a steel roof to withstand heavy snowfall, solar panels, and wool insulated walls. Locally harvested Douglas fir clads the interior, mixing with hickory flooring, alternatives to carbon-heavy steel, glass, and concrete. Prefabricated and assembled on site, the layout of the Passive House structure also stars a commodious outdoor deck. Ultimately, its a home that "involves being more considerate of energy efficiency, health and wellness, and minimizing your carbon footprint," says Delta Land Development president Bruce Langereis.

    When staying in one of the prefabricated chalets at Whitepod Eco-Luxury Hotel in Monthey, Switzerland, ski trips are prefaced by breakfasts that are delivered daily via a 100% electric Land Rover Defender food truck. Drawing power from a hydroelectric turbine, the zinc-roofed structures are energy self-sufficient.

    At Whitepod Eco-Luxury Hotel, guests love to sleep in the propertys geodesic dome-shaped tents dubbed "pods." But now Montalba Architects has added another type of freestanding accommodation to the mix: low-impact, prefabricated larch-clad chalets. Currently there are threethere are plans for 21 in totaland all are pared down, with polished concrete flooring and space divided into active day and peaceful night zones. When all the chalets are complete, says the firms founding principal David Montalba, it "will give the image of a mountain village that blends seamlessly into the sloping landscape while mirroring the traditional chalet villages found nearby."

    Close to Sugarbushs Mount Ellen and the Mad River Glen ski area, Fayston, Vermont, is the prime setting for Little Black House. Giving the retreat its name, Elizabeth Herrmann Architecture + Design only had 1,120 square feet to work with. Sitting just below the top of a hill, the black-stained cabin flaunts a classic gable structure with a stripped-down interior melding white walls and pale wood floors.

    To maximize the compact space, architect and designer Elizabeth Herrmann opted for materials like locally harvested and milled ash wood throughout. She also focused on the experiential aspects, incorporating open shelving, a wood-fired stove, and large windows that capture different shifts in the landscape. "It can sometimes be very like the textures and colors of its surroundingsthe siding mimics tree bark and shadows, and sometimes blends into the woods. At other times, especially winter, the house really contrasts with the landscapes snowy ground," Herrmann says. Bonus: The cabin is energy-efficient, outfitted with R5 windows and a wall-hung heat pump.

    Lake Poisson Blanc, some three hours from Montral and 90 minutes from the Mont Ste. Marie ski resort, is the remote backdrop for Naturehumaine Architects compact and monochrome cabin embedded on a slope, a meditation on white.

    According to Naturehumaines principal architect Stphane Rasselet, this forest cabin is a "pure and somewhat abstract white volume characterized by a series of vertical slits for windows and doors all blending harmoniously within an immaculate winter blanket of snow. The house magically blends into the trees and becomes whole with the site." Walls and ceilings are painted white to match the exterior and the seasonal natural environment. Contrasting with the neutral canvas are Shalwin tilt and turn aluminum windows as well as integrated storage units and cabinetry fashioned from maple veneer, raw concrete, and ceramic tiles.

    Remarkable for its walls of triple-glazed glass, Snorre Stinessen Architectures Ejford Cabin straddles two stone ridges on northern Norways Hallvardy Island. Perched on a concrete slab, it intentionally capitalizes upon passive solar conditions and features thick insulation to minimize energy output.

    "The shape of the building is both a dialogue with the close natural formations, but also with the larger landscape. Its functional aspects create privacy and indoor/outdoor connections to different zones around the building," says Snore Stinessen of this dynamic glass cabin on Norway's Hallvardy Island. Overlooking the fjord and mountains, the year-round home, for a couple with deep ties to the secluded area, comprises two volumes. In the smaller of them is the open-plan living area wrapped in birch veneer and the den, which features a sculptural riser staircase. Bedrooms and the sauna, lined in hygroscopic aspen slats, are found in the larger one.

    Silvano Zam, third-generation winemaker at Le Vigne di Zam winery, and his wife Brigitte tasked architecture firm GEZA with a holiday home on a hilltop location in the tiny northern Italian village of Camporosso, not far from the ski resort Monte Lussari.

    To navigate such a steep rocky site in northern Italy, GEZA forged two interconnected gable volumes that step down the existing slope. They are clad in concrete and wrapped in a wood screen that conjures the alpine vernacular. "From the outside, the house seems to slip on the groundthe ground is inclined and fluid, and the house is light and does not impose terraces or other violent works on the landscape. From the inside, the volume of the living area is defined by an impressive exposed concrete roof, which follows the slanting of the two volumes with different heights. It seems to enter the mountain," explain the architects. Serizzo white granite and dark gray-painted European oak juxtaposed with Swiss pine add further visual interest to the interior.

    A run-down 1960s cabin in the Swiss Jura Mountains, a gateway to skiing, has been given a smart, playful overhaul by the architecture studio Frundgallina. Carved into four distinct sections, its a spiral playground that mingles different heights and thresholds.

    Simple materials are at the heart of this 100% energy-efficient cabin, which is assembled from vertically laid fir planks and capped in a mere sheet of folded stainless steel. Still, it stands out. A large pitched-top door and a small pitched-top window are cut out from each of the four sides of the exterior walls. "Only the ridge of the two-sided roof directs the house. Otherwise, the chalet does not have a specific address or entrance; or rather, it benefits from four different ones," explains Frundgallina co-founder Antonio Gallina. "Accordingly, one enters and exits most of the rooms from and to the outdoors, integrating the pastures as a spatial sequence."

    Eager to flee the city at a moments notice, a couple who run a creative studio in Bratislava decided it was time for a weekend home. On a forested plot overlooking a lake in nearby Vojkanad Dunajom, architect Peter Jurkovi of JRKVC created a calming cabin that frames views of the countryside.

    Slovakias mountainous terrain lends itself well to skiing. This yurt-style cabin is an hour from the Pezinsk Baba resort outside the capital, Bratislava. Clad in black plastic film and surrounded in a lattice frame when the owners are away, its rectangular shape belies the circular floor plan indoors. Sparsely furnished, its a soothing space warmed by a dome skylight and features built-in alcove seating, a wood-fired stove, and a bedroom tucked away by a curtain. To further maintain the uncluttered living space, wooden doors can conceal the kitchen, and bunk beds can easily hide in a louvered closet.

    Fittingly, there are numerous whimsical elements inside Lake Cottage, a reinterpreted tree house in Ontario. There is the wood-burning fireplace with the house-shaped surround, for example, the scalloped shingles, and the staircase made from a huge maple log scraped of its bark that leads to the loft. "This abstract nature of the interior spaces allows imagination to flow, and those spaces that could be identified as a domestic interior can suddenly become play spaces," say the architects.

    Set in a forest near Ontarios Kawartha Lakes, well known for the Devils Elbow ski area, this steeply pitched, two-story structure designed by UUFIE is wrapped in cedar siding charred by the shou sugi ban technique and crowned in a 23-foot-tall black steel roof. The most striking part of the design is that the cabin is partially sheathed in camouflaging one-way mirror glass. When it gets too cold on the terrace covered in log-end flooring, the living area, with its 14 recessed windowshalf of them magnifying the landscape, half offering sightlines to peripheral roomsprovides serenity.

    Related Reading: 35 Magical Tiny Cabins to Pin to Your Mood Board Immediately

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    16 Dreamy Ski Cabins We Wish We Were Holed Up In This Winter - Dwell

    Maine Gardener: Invite wildlife in with a ‘lawn conversion’ – pressherald.com

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The goal of all homeowners and the landscape gardeners they hire should be to increase the propertys biodiversity.

    They key word is increase. By their very existence, homes and the people who live in them, take away some of the native plants and the animals that depend on them.

    The damage can and should be limited, Justin Nichols said in an online talk earlier this month sponsored by the Maine Landscape and Nursery Association and Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens.

    Nichols is a self-employed horticulturist working mostly from Harpswell to Portland. For nine years before starting his own business he worked as a horticulturist at the botanical gardens. Most of the projects he described in his talk were aimed at revising existing landscapes that featured a lot of lawn and non-native plants.

    The work often begins with the soil. One site, for instance, featured some apple trees that were not doing well. He began digging around the roots to see what was wrong.

    When I got done, I had removed 10 wheelbarrows full of mulch that had been sitting on top of landscape fabric, Nichols said.

    He found no insects, beneficial or not, in the mulch, and while there was evidence that fertilizer had been spread on top of the mulch, he wasnt sure any of it had ever reached the roots.

    At another home, the owner wanted Nichols to create a New England meadow, but below the lawn which had been regularly fertilized and treated with pesticides was construction fill, which would not support anything but desert plants. He added a lot of compost and good topsoil in that area, noting that microbiotics in the soil are also part of plant diversity. Unhealthy soil will not support healthy plants.

    Another client complained that she had seen only one butterfly all year. That job was really low-hanging fruit, Nichols said. He simply created a landscape that didnt depend on pesticides made out of synthetic chemicals. Some crabgrass crept into the lawn, but the owner was willing to make the trade in order to get the butterflies.

    Nicholss landscape philosophy tends toward native plants and organic gardens, but he makes some exceptions. Many non-native plants are a great benefit for pollinators, he said.

    In creating gardens, he often has to negotiate with the clients. One client was perfectly happy with native plants, but she wanted some catmint, which isnt native. That was fine.

    Another wanted to keep some Korean lilacs, blue hydrangeas and a dappled willow but approved planting blueberry sod on a slope next to the woods, which not only limited erosion but provided food for several kinds of wildlife, including birds and native bees. He added other natives such as buttonbush (Cephalanthus) and winterberry, along with coralberry (Symphoricarpos orbiculatus), which is native to New York but not Maine.

    Nichols enjoys doing these lawn conversions, as he calls them. You might think youd have to dig up or till in the lawn to get rid of it before replanting the area with meadow plants. Nichols uses a different method: He steps onto the lawn and places flags where he thinks he will want meadow plants. He then goes back to the viewing point at the house to see how the arrangement looks, returning to the lawn to move the flags around for best effect.

    Then he plants seedlings of native perennials, like Joe Pye weed, goldenrod, rudbeckia, echinacea, asters, milkweeds and such. In one conversion, he used 50 different species of plants. European lawn grasses look OK growing around the plants, he said, and in time the natives will overtake the grasses, creating the meadow.

    Note: I was absolutely thrilled to find this online class. Like many others, I have kept busy during the pandemic by gardening, taking walks and enjoying outdoor activities. I held the hope that by the time the cold weather hit, the pandemic would be fading. Current statistics have quashed that hope.

    These online classes will be a great escape until spring. The Coastal Maine Botanical Garden is offering several programs. The states annual Agricultural Trades Show will be virtual from Jan. 19 to 23.

    After attending Nichols program, I signed up for another talk jointly sponsored by the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association and the Harpswell Garden Club. Check out these groups websites and sign up for something. It will be better than bingeing on soap operas and Netflix.

    Tom Atwell is a freelance writer gardening in Cape Elizabeth. He can be contacted at: [emailprotected]

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    Maine Gardener: Invite wildlife in with a 'lawn conversion' - pressherald.com

    How to Hang Drywall: Installing Drywall Easily and …

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Installing drywall has a well-deserved reputation for being a lot of work. However, with patience and the right drywalling tools, you can get a professional-looking wallboard installation every time.

    Mark Stud Locations

    Mark locations of all studs by making a pencil or a chalk line, corresponding to the stud locations, on the ceiling and the floor. Make marks large and noticeable enough so they won't get totally covered by the new drywall sheet.

    Make a Ledge

    If you're hanging your sheets horizontally, measure 48" down from the ceiling and place a mark on two studs. Insert one drywall screw deep enough into each stud to hold your piece of wallboard. You're essentially making a ledge on which to rest a large piece of wallboard.

    Take Measurements

    Measure where your wallboard needs to be trimmed. A standard piece of wallboard is 4x8. In the installation pictured, the wall is only 6' x 2.5" wide, so we need to cut some off the end.

    Cut the Drywall

    Mark the location of your cut and use a T-square or other straight edge to score the front side of the wallboard using a sharp utility knife. Make your score fairly deep, at least 1/8" (Image 1). Apply pressure to the drywall to snap it along the score line (Image 2). You may find it helpful to place a piece of wood behind the drywall to brace against. Be careful that you don't rip the paper backing on the back side of the wallboard. Move to the back side of the wallboard and run your utility knife up the seam, cutting the paper backing to finish the cut (Image 3).

    Apply Adhesive

    Once you've trimmed your board to size and are ready to install, run a bead of adhesive down each stud. This will reduce the number of screws needed, provide additional sound deadening, and result in a stronger, flatter wall.

    Press Into Place

    Lift your wallboard and rest the bottom edge on your ledge screws and press it into place.

    Secure Positioning

    Using your ceiling and floor marks as references, drive three screws through the wallboard and into the studs to secure the wallboard in position.

    Feel the Edges

    Drywall screws should be properly "dimpled" into the wallboard so that they will not be visible. Using a screw gun for larger jobs will save time and produce a cleaner result. For smaller jobs we recommend a drywall screw-setter that will properly dimple your screwheads using a standard drill. The objective is to ensure that no screwheads are sticking out above the surface. You should be able to run your hands over the wallboard and not be able to feel the edges of the screwheads.

    Three Screws Per Stud

    Place three courses of evenly spaced screws in your newly installed wallboard one course across the top and bottom edges and one course through the center. Use your ceiling marks as guides to ensure that every screw hits a stud. You should end up with three screws in every stud per piece of wallboard (top, middle and bottom).

    Cut Holes for Outlet & Switch Locations

    If working around outlet boxes, you'll need to cut holes before hanging the drywall so the wallboard fits snugly over all of your outlets and switches.

    Always make sure the power is turned off to all electrical outlets and switches and any unsecured wires are safely capped and pushed into the back of the box. If cutting for outlets on a bottom sheet of wallboard, measure from the top of the outlet box to the bottom edge of the wallboard above. Write your measurement on the wall directly above the outlet box (Image 1). Then, mark the width of the outlet box using lines on the left and the right sides of the outlet box. Transfer your measurements to the new bottom piece of wallboard so you will know where to cut around the outlet box (Image 2). Make sure to accurately define where the top edge of the outlet box should begin on your new piece of wallboard. Use a drywall router with a drywall bit installed or a keyhole saw to neatly cut the hole for the outlet box (Image 3). The drywall router is handy for larger jobs where there are numerous outlet holes, windows and doors to cut. Keyhole saws are great for smaller projects and hard to reach areas where there isn't much material cut out.

    Fasten Your Wallboards Together

    Fasten your lower piece in place using the same techniques as before, making sure that your outlet and switch boxes are all cut out and seated properly. Note that you may need to use shims to elevate the lower drywall for a tight fit.

    Form a Sharp Edge

    Make sure that when two pieces of wallboard meet at a corner, they overlap to form a sharp edge. This is essential for the reinforcing corner bead that you'll need to install along the entire length of the corner joint.

    Use a Drywall Router (Optional)

    Any large openings for doors, entryways or windows can be trimmed out using a drywall router.

    Prepare Joint Compound for Finishing

    For filling joints, a bucket of pre-mixed, all-purpose drywall compound (also known as drywall mud) is recommended. Stir the bucket to a smooth consistency and fill a mud pan with enough joint compound to make one full coat over the joint you'll be working on. The technique for finishing horizontal and vertical seams is identical. It's usually best to start with the horizontal seams.

    Fill Drywall Seam

    Using your 4" putty knife, fill the entire length of the drywall seam from one end to the other. Make sure your final product is level with neatly feathered edges. When using drywall compound, the key is to work in thin, level coats. The objective is to fill the cracks and make them as level as possible with the wallboard on both sides of the seams.

    Lay Joint Tape

    Lay your joint tape into the wet drywall compound and smoothly lay it into your freshly mudded joint. Slightly wetting the tape will keep it from binding and ease the application process. Use one piece of tape per seam. Leave 1/8" where two pieces of tape meet in any areas.

    Add Joint Compound

    With your tape in place, take your 6" drywall knife and add a layer of joint compound over the tape and surrounding area. Make sure to completely cover the tape and make sure that you continue the process of laying smooth, thin coats that are level with the wall. The objective is to bed the tape into the first layer of joint compound while covering it with the second.

    Add Corner Beads

    For outside corners, you'll use a pre-fabricated corner bead instead of tape. These can be made from fiberboard or metal. The corner in our example is in a low-traffic area so we're using a fiberboard corner bead. Press it into your first coat securely (Image 1) and then lay your second coat over it just like you did for the tape (Image 2).

    Fill Screw Dimples

    Allow the taped seams to dry for the recommended time per the instructions on the joint compound. While the large joints are drying, fill all of the screw dimples and any other imperfections in the wallboard. You need one smooth even coat. Drive or gently hammer down any screw heads that are protruding from the wall and then cover those as well.

    Ready for the Next Coat

    Wait a full 12 hours for all of the joints to dry. You'll be able to see that all of the drywall compound has turned totally white. At this stage, you're ready for your next coat.

    Apply the Finishing Coat

    Using an 8" putty knife, apply a thin finishing coat to every seam and every corner. This is also a good opportunity to put a second coat on every screw dimple.

    Fill Any Low Spots

    Make sure that all of your joints are level with your wallboard. You should be able to place the edge of a putty knife over any joints without seeing any light gaps underneath. Fill any low spots with another layer of drywall compound.

    Sand the Joints

    Wait another 12 hours for your finishing coat to dry completely. Once that's done, you're ready to sand your joints. Use a circular sanding pad for larger jobs, or a smaller hand-held sanding block for small areas. Sand gently until you cannot feel any joints, screws or imperfections with your hands.

    Ready for Primer and Paint

    Once you've finished sanding and touching up, your wallboards are ready for primer and paint.

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    How to Hang Drywall: Installing Drywall Easily and ...

    Three New Project Kits from Crescent APEX Provide the Tools You Need to Get Common Tasks Done Right – Herald-Mail Media

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    SPARKS, Md., Dec. 1, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Certain projects require specific tools that aren't necessarily staples in every toolbox. And when those projects come up, you usually have to pay more for individual tools or for an expensive set that you don't need. To help tool users out, Crescent APEX developed three unique project kits with the tools you need to make quick work and move on to the next one.

    The Crescent APEX eSHOK-GUARD Ceiling Fan and Light Installation Kit (CAEBH2CK-4) puts the must-have tools for safe installation of a ceiling fan or light fixture in one place. The 11-piece kit comes with a Crescent APEX e-SHOK-GUARD -inch Bit Holder that's designed with an isolation zone to withstand up to 1,000 volts, keeping you safe when working around electricity.

    Its impact-rated design withstands heavy use with an impact driver, increasingly becoming the preferred method for pros and DIYers alike. The kit also comes with four bits, three strips of wire (black, white, and green) and three wire caps.

    Similarly, the 22-piece u-GUARD Drywall Anchor Kit (CAUGB3BPH2K) makes installing drywall anchors easy. The set features a 3.5" Phillips u-GUARD Covered Impact Power Bit with its non-marring, free-spinning sleeve for a scratch-free finish. Lastly, the 5-piece u-GUARD Quick Release Bit Holder and Vortex Bits (CAUGBQ2DR-4) is ideal for installing doorknobs, hinges, and other surfaces you don't want scratched.

    All three sets are available exclusively at Lowe's. For more information, visit http://www.crescenttool.com.

    About Crescent APEXCrescent is a premier brand from Apex Tool Group, one of the largest hand tool manufacturers in the world. The product line includes Crescent adjustable wrenches, mechanics hand tools and sets, Crescent Wiss snips, scissors, shears, knives and trade tools, Crescent Lufkin measuring tapes, rules, wheels and chalk reels, Crescent Nicholson files and saws, Crescent H.K. Porter heavyduty cutting products, Crescent JOBOX on-site, flammable liquid and truck storage products and Crescent APEX industrial fasteners. Visit http://www.crescenttool.com.

    About Apex Tool GroupApex Tool Group, LLC is one of the largest worldwide producers of industrial hand and power tools, tool storage, drill chucks, chain, and electronic soldering products. Apex serves a multitude of global markets, including automotive, aerospace, electronics, energy, hardware, industrial, and consumer retail. For more information, visit http://www.apextoolgroup.com.

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    Three New Project Kits from Crescent APEX Provide the Tools You Need to Get Common Tasks Done Right - Herald-Mail Media

    A conduit for flood relief: Calvary Baptist Church has distributed almost $250K – Midland Daily News

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Calvary Baptist Church has distributed almost $250,000in donations

    By Dan Chalk, Midland Daily News

    Calvary Baptist Church members have volunteered many hours in the flood relief effort since May, and the church has generated and distributed $250,000 in donations for flood survivors. (Photo provided/David Warren)

    Calvary Baptist Church members have volunteered many hours in the flood relief effort since May, and the church has generated and distributed $250,000 in donations for flood survivors. (Photo provided/David

    Calvary Baptist Church members have volunteered many hours in the flood relief effort since May, and the church has generated and distributed $250,000 in donations for flood survivors. (Photo provided/David Warren)

    Calvary Baptist Church members have volunteered many hours in the flood relief effort since May, and the church has generated and distributed $250,000 in donations for flood survivors. (Photo provided/David

    A conduit for flood relief: Calvary Baptist Church has distributed almost $250K

    The devastating flooding after the mid-Michigan dam failures in May literally came to the doorstep of Calvary Baptist Church, which has since mobilized volunteers and generated a quarter of a million dollars in donations for flood survivors in the surrounding area.

    "The water came up to our doorstep," said Pastor David Warren, who is also the secondary principal at Calvary Baptist Academy.

    The church members instinctively reached out to help the 25 or so families in their own congregation whose homes had been flooded, and then began to address the overwhelming needs of the community at large.

    "When the flood first happened, our church got involved very quickly in our community," Warren explained. "We organized (work) teams to go and help people clean out their homes.

    "Our parking lot was used as a staging area," he continued. "We had multiple teams that would go into a home, disinfect it, and deliver fans and dehumidifiers. It was an overwhelming task more work than we could ever do (as one church). Many other churches were doing the same thing."

    That's where groups like Samaritan's Purse became invaluable. The Christian humanitarian aid organization sent volunteers and resources to Midland County for a six-week period in the summer, and they operated out of the Calvary Baptist Church parking lot.

    With the help of Midland Chemical Company, which is owned by Warren's father, Samaritan's Purse worked on close to 400 Midland County homes to eliminate any mold buildup as a result of the flooding.

    "The volunteers with Samaritan's Purse saved (homeowners) thousands of dollars," said Pastor Mark Dickerson, another Calvary Baptist member who has been active in flood relief efforts. "On average, they saved people probably $8,000 per home, and some homes much more than that. Their goal, when they walked out of a house, was that it was contractor-ready."

    One of the next steps was the installation of new drywall, and Dickerson said the group Disaster Relief at Work (DRAW) partnered with seven churches in Midland to deliver thousands of sheets of drywall to Midland and Gladwin counties.

    "That was a huge blessing," Dickerson said.

    Calvary Baptist Church was able to get discounts on some building supplies for flooded homes.

    "God provided a lot of support coming into our church, so we tried to just turn around and pour it right back into the community," Dickerson said.

    Meanwhile, churches, businesses and individuals throughout the country were seeking to help flood survivors monetarily, and Calvary Baptist Church established a fund to channel that generosity to where it was needed.

    "We posted it through our church Facebook page. never expecting (the fund) to grow to 250,000 dollars," Warren said. "It's been a huge blessing to see people from literally all over the country organizations and churches that wanted to be part of the giving."

    Almost all of the $250,000 has been distributed to between 400 and 500 flood survivors who applied to the church for help, Warren said, and what remains continues to be distributed.

    The fund, which has no overhead costs, is still accepting donations. It is at cbcmidland.org under the "giving" link.

    Collecting refreshments for health care workers

    Calvary Baptist Church is also currently collecting nonperishable, prepackaged snack foods and bottled water to be delivered to front-line health care workers to encourage them during the difficulty of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Donations of such items can be dropped off at the church office at 6100 Perrine Road through early next week.

    "This can be a reminder that we're out here supporting (the health care workers) even if we can't be there (at the hospital) in person," Warren said.

    "Being a hospital, they prefer healthier snacks, but I'm sure that whatever is brought, they'll appreciate it," he said lightheartedly.

    "The message is, 'We're behind you, we support you, we haven't forgotten you, we're praying for you," Warren added. "This is a small gesture to a (health care) community that's working extra hard right now on our behalf."

    Continued here:
    A conduit for flood relief: Calvary Baptist Church has distributed almost $250K - Midland Daily News

    Patrick Industries, Inc. Completes Acquisition of Taco Metals, LLC – The Elkhart Truth

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    ELKHART, Ind., Nov. 30, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Patrick Industries, Inc. (NASDAQ: PATK) ("Patrick" or the "Company") announced today that it has completed the acquisition of Taco Metals, LLC ("Taco"), aleading manufacturer of boating products including rub rail systems, canvas and tower components, sport fishing and outrigger systems, helm chairs and pedestals, and specialty hardware for leading OEMs in the recreational boating industry and the related aftermarket. Taco is headquartered in Miami, Florida, with manufacturing facilities in Tennessee and Florida, and distribution centers in Tennessee, Florida, South Carolina and Massachusetts. The Company projects Taco's full-year 2020 revenues to be approximately $40 million and expects the acquisition to be immediately accretive to net income per share.

    "Taco is an innovative, single source solutions provider offering a comprehensive suite of products and accessories with tremendous brand value, a customer first approach, and compelling aftermarket product lines," said Andy Nemeth, President and Chief Executive Officer of Patrick. "In addition, Taco is a recognized industry leader with a long-standing and diversified customer base, andpossesses a full design and engineering support team, global supply chain, and broad manufacturing capabilities. We are excited to partner with Jon, Bill, and Mike Kushner and the entire Taco team in expanding our marine brand and aftermarket platform. Consistent with previous acquisitions, we will support Taco with a financial and operational foundation that will allow it to continue to capitalize on its core competencies while preserving the entrepreneurial spirit and brand that have been so important to its success."

    Jon Kushner, President of Taco, said, "After more than 60 years as a family-owned business, my brothers and I are pleased to join the Patrick family to continue the legacy of the Taco brand and broaden our reach and product offerings in the markets we serve. Patrick's strategic resources and marine industry presence will be an added value toward our ongoing commitment to deliver innovative, engineered products that reflect evolving customer preferences for integration, safety, comfort, convenience and technology."

    The acquisition of Taco includes the acquisition of working capital and other assets and was funded under the Company's credit facility. Patrick will continue to operate Tacoon a stand-alone basis under its brand name in its existing facilities.

    About Patrick Industries, Inc. Patrick Industries, Inc. is a major manufacturer and distributor of component products and building products serving the recreational vehicle, marine, manufactured housing, residential housing, high-rise, hospitality, kitchen cabinet, office and household furniture, fixtures and commercial furnishings, and other industrial markets and operates coast-to-coast in various locations throughout the United States and in Canada, China and the Netherlands. Patrick's major manufactured products include decorative vinyl and paper laminated panels, countertops, fabricated aluminum products, wrapped profile mouldings, slide-out trim and fascia, cabinet doors and components, hardwood furniture, fiberglass bath fixtures and tile systems, thermoformed shower surrounds, specialty bath and closet building products, fiberglass and plastic helm systems and component products, wiring and wire harnesses, boat covers, towers, tops and frames, electrical systems components including instrument and dash panels, softwoods lumber, interior passage doors, air handling products, RV painting, slotwall panels and components, aluminum fuel tanks, and CNC molds and composite parts and other products. The Company also distributes drywall and drywall finishing products, electronics and audio systems components, wiring, electrical and plumbing products, appliances, cement siding, raw and processed lumber, FRP products, interior passage doors, roofing products, tile, laminate and ceramic flooring, shower doors, furniture, fireplaces and surrounds, interior and exterior lighting products, and other miscellaneous products, in addition to providing transportation and logistics services.

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking StatementsThis press release contains certain statements related to future results, our intentions, beliefs and expectations or predictions for the future, which are forward-looking statements as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any projections of financial performance or statements concerning expectations as to future developments should not be construed in any manner as a guarantee that such results or developments will, in fact, occur. There can be no assurance that any forward-looking statement will be realized or that actual results will not be significantly different from that set forth in such forward-looking statement. Information about certain risks that could affect our business and cause actual results to differ from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements are contained in the section entitled "Risk Factors" in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2019, and in the Company's Forms 10-Q for subsequent quarterly periods, which are filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") and are available on the SEC's website at http://www.sec.gov. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of this press release, and we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances occurring after the date on which it is made.

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    Patrick Industries, Inc. Completes Acquisition of Taco Metals, LLC - The Elkhart Truth

    Global Building Finishing Contractors Market Expected to reach highest CAGR in forecast period :APi, Performance Contracting, Cleveland Construction,…

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    This high-end research report exhibits a detailed assessment of core market developments with substantial emphasis on a range of growth influencers such as stakeholder considerations and approaches that play crucial role in leveraging growth progressive business decisions. The worldwide growth outlook of Building Finishing Contractors market is professed to ring in a healthy growth output in the forecast span, offering a healthy CAGR percentage. Considering the growth progression trends of the past years, research analysts are hopeful of witnessing optimistic growth progression in the coming years.

    In-depth research delving into past developments and growth trends, besides significant analysis of current events and developments, suggest that holistic growth in global Building Finishing Contractors market is touted to reach over xx million USD by the end of 2026, with CAGR amplification of xx% through the forecast span, 2020-26.

    As optimum market relevant information is crucial to ensure revenue stability and incessant growth, this particular research documentation featuring real time market information is an indispensable ready-to-refer investment guide.

    Vendor Landscape and Profiling::

    APiPerformance ContractingCleveland ConstructionIrex Corp Of Lancaster_LIST

    We Have Recent Updates of Building Finishing Contractors Market in Sample [emailprotected] https://www.orbismarketreports.com/sample-request/135126?utm_source=PujaM

    Leading players are increasingly diversifying investments towards incorporation of post COVID-19 strategies to suit post pandemic era. As ideal business practices to fit into the framework of pandemic management, market players profiled in the report are aggressively reimagining reformative measures and business models to subside current crisis and its implications.

    Market Segmentation: Global Building Finishing Contractors Market

    The report unfurls with unravelling crucial data on prominent segmentation, with elaborate references of growth likelihood and potential of each of these segments in steering massive growth outflow. By segmentation global Building Finishing Contractors market is categorized into the following:

    Product-based Segmentation: This section of the report renders a crucial analytical reference point of vital product and service types that invigorate massive growth despite mounting competition, regulatory compliances and catastrophic alterations

    Drywall And Insulation ContractorsPainting And Wall Covering ContractorsFlooring ContractorsTile And Terrazzo ContractorsFinish Carpentry ContractorsOthers_LIST

    Application-based Segmentation: This part of the report also ropes in crucial data pertaining to diverse application areas that have gained massive prominence over the historical years and also stand the opportunity to fortify applicability through the forecast years..

    UtilitiesCommercialResidential_LIST

    Additionally, this intensive research report has also been deployed to adequately answer the queries of inquisitive report readers and market participants pertaining to COVID-19 pandemic analysis and corresponding recovery.

    Browse Full Report with Facts and Figures of Building Finishing Contractors Market Report at @ https://www.orbismarketreports.com/global-building-finishing-contractors-market-analysis-by-growth-and-forecast-2025?utm_source=PujaM

    One of the most relevant research inputs in global Building Finishing Contractors market is COVID-19 impact analysis. The pre and post analytical developments in global Building Finishing Contractors market have also been thoroughly included in the report to ensure reader understanding and subsequent investment discretion. Assessment of the market dynamics across both the timelines is integral to ensure accurate forecast analysis and growth projections.

    Regional Segmentation: The report in its subsequent sections also highlights vital details on regional and country specific milestones that have been playing decisive roles in encouraging specific vendor and manufacturer activities. Additional details on end-user response have also been tagged in the report based on which prominent players across regions can well implement growth appropriate business decisions, eying market fortification in global Building Finishing Contractors market.

    The following is a complete run-down of geography-based analysis of Building Finishing Contractors market:

    North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico) Europe (U.K., France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Central & Eastern Europe, CIS) Asia Pacific (China, Japan, South Korea, ASEAN, India, Rest of Asia Pacific) Latin America (Brazil, Rest of L.A.) Middle East and Africa (Turkey, GCC, Rest of Middle East)

    Do You Have Any Query or Specific Requirement? Ask Our Industry [emailprotected] https://www.orbismarketreports.com/enquiry-before-buying/135126?utm_source=PujaM

    The report focuses extensively in revealing detailed regional overview and therefore outlines specific geographical hotspots that serve as ideal growth beds in global Building Finishing Contractors market. Canada and the US remain most favorable growth beds.

    Why to Invest in the Reportteam of expert research professionals are committed to offer high end industry-specific critical reports inclusive of high accuracy insights for future-ready business discretion.

    About Us : With unfailing market gauging skills, has been excelling in curating tailored business intelligence data across industry verticals. Constantly thriving to expand our skill development, our strength lies in dedicated intellectuals with dynamic problem solving intent, ever willing to mold boundaries to scale heights in market interpretation.

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    Global Building Finishing Contractors Market Expected to reach highest CAGR in forecast period :APi, Performance Contracting, Cleveland Construction,...

    Police Addition Costs to Increase – The Jefferson Chronicle

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The addition to the police station was the main topic of discussion at the Jefferson Township council meeting on Wednesday.

    The project has a current cost of $2,382,000, which includes construction, lockers, floors, and furniture for the upgrade. Of that cost, $1,952,000 is for construction. The council currently has $750,000 bonded for the project from 2018.

    The cost of the addition came in higher than anticipated, said township administrator Deb Millikin. We will have a bond coming in for approval in January for the remainder of the costs.

    Millikin said that the price of wood and sheetrock has gone up because of Covid.

    In addition, Police Chief Paul Castimore has met with Department of Corrections regarding the townships jail cells. The current cells have bars, which are no longer acceptable; however, the township has received exemptions for the cells, which is set to expire in 2021.

    The cells cant have bars any longer, because there cant be anything available that a prisoner could tie something to in order to take their own life, he said.

    The new cells will have sliding doors with small holes in them. There will also be one cell that is compliant with The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

    We will have to do the jail cells as a capital project to get the new doors, Castimore said.

    The new doors should cost between $200,000 and $300,000. The project will need to be completed by August 2022.

    Castimore further noted that porcelain fixtures were removed from the cells and new light bulbs were installed to make the cells brighter.

    In other news, Mayor Eric Wilsusen announced that the election results had been certified. He congratulated current council members Bob Birmingham and Jay Dunham on their reelection and welcomed H. Ronald Smith back to the council. The three will be sworn in at Januarys reorganization meeting.

    Wilsusen also said that COVID numbers are going up in town, with nearly 550 cases as of December 3.

    The second phase is definitely here, Wilsusen said. I urge all residents to do their due diligence.

    Finally, the recycling department will be sending out fliers to all residents regarding new recycling schedule for when the township returns to separate stream recycling after the new year.

    Link:
    Police Addition Costs to Increase - The Jefferson Chronicle

    Modular architectural design that brings a healthy mix of Scandinavian design and sustainability to your home! – Yanko Design

    - December 4, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Plant Prefab, a California-based architecture firm that prefabricates sustainable homes, recently collaborated with Koto, a UK-based studio that designs modular homes, to build two residences called LivingHomes. Devised to meet both LEED Platinum and net-zero standards, the homes were also designed and built on some Scandinavian design principles: minimalism and biophilia. Biophilia is the hypothetical human tendency to interact with nature. Biophilic design, which could be inherently minimalist, interprets that human tendency for both interior and exterior spaces, producing a design concept used to increase the connectivity between a buildings residents and the natural world. In order to meet sustainability standards that match Plant Prefabs mission statement, Koto looked toward Scandinavian design standards. Together they created two LivingHomes, constructed with recycled building materials with respect to the natural world, equipped with ultra-efficient heating and cooling systems, smart energy monitoring, LED lighting, recycled insulation and drywall, and low-flow water fixtures.

    The first home, Yksi, is a cantilevered, two-bedroom residence that employs biophilic design principles through ample deck space and large windows with unobstructed views of natural surroundings. On the first floor of Yksi, which means first in Finnish, there are two bedrooms, a bathroom, an office space, and a utility closet. The bedrooms are located on opposite ends of Yksis first floor, giving the feel of separate wings for the homes residents, which enhances the design teams devotion to Scandinavian design, conveying a sense of quiet luxury. Each bedroom comes with windows that practically take up an entire facade of the two-floor structure. Moving up to the second floor, Yksi is equipped with an open-plan kitchen for excellent cross-ventilation, a dining area, and two separate, outdoor deck areas for easy access to the open air.

    The second home, which is named after the Finnish word for courtyard, Piha offers four bedrooms and three bedrooms, two courtyards and a deck, and a vast open living space that forms the heart of the home. On the first floor, the open living space incorporates clever use of walls to delineate distinct rooms such as the kitchen and snug, a hideaway just off the main living area. Punctuating the open living area are two courtyards that offer sweeping views of nature and a deck that can be accessed through double-glass sliding doors. Residents can also find two of the four bedrooms on the first floor, once again on opposite ends for prime privacy and quiet, that are separated by a staircase. Following the staircase up to the second floor, residents will find two more bedrooms, one being the master bedroom, complete with an en-suite bath, marked with massive windows for endless views.

    Designers: Plant Prefab x Koto

    More:
    Modular architectural design that brings a healthy mix of Scandinavian design and sustainability to your home! - Yanko Design

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