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Pet Friendly Design: Making Room for the Dog Dish

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Posted by admin November 03rd, 2014 at 09:19am under Awards

Efficient Ways to Cool a House

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Posted by karrenleas July 15th, 2013 at 09:24am under Awards

You have a variety of ways to keep your house cool when temperatures outside soar. Air conditioning, fans and even keeping the lights turned off all can help your home stay cool and comfortable. Even if you rely solely on air conditioning for comfort, using a few extra methods can help you make cooling your home more efficient and effective.

Proper Insulation

The right insulation throughout a house can help cool the home down by preventing hot air from the outside to permeate into the home. The insulation also helps keep air conditioned homes at a steady temperature as the chilled air is not seeping out. The main areas that need to be insulated include attached garages, attics and second floors. It is imperative when insulating for the purpose of keeping a house cool that all top floor and exposed areas receive the bulk of the insulation, as heat rises and top areas tend to generate heat which can flow down and through the rest of the house.

Energy Efficient Windows

The right windows can go a long way to ensure the cool air inside of your home does not escape through leaky windows. In addition, energy efficient windows also have a tighter seal and thus keep hot air out. This twofold impact of better windows helps to cool your home down and keep it at a temperature that is comfortable.

Window Coverings

Window coverings can be effective in helping to cool down a house. Closing blinds and curtains to help keep the strong and warm sunshine out of the home will go a long way in keeping temperatures down. This works best when you have your home closed up so that central air conditioning or window units can work better.

Air Movement

Keeping in mind that heat rises is one of the ways you can easily and efficiently cool down your house. One way is to use the naturally cooler air in basements and ground floor areas and move that air throughout the rest of the home. Making sure ceiling fans have their blades spinning counterclockwise will help ensure the cooler air from below is pushed upwards to areas that tend to be warmer. You can also, if you have a basement, place fans at the bottom of the stairs in the basement and blow the cool basement air up the stairs to cool down the rest of the house.

 

by Jennifer Hench, Demand Media

 www.homeguides.sfgate.com/efficient-ways-cool-house-47627.html

 

 


 

SHOPPING BY THE SEA: J. CONN SCOTT

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Posted by karrenleas July 15th, 2013 at 09:22am under Awards

The sophisticated mix at J. Conn Scott includes a green geometric-pattern sofa by Barclay Butera with Ankasa pillows.

 The sophisticated mix at J. Conn Scott includes a green geometric-pattern sofa by Barclay Butera with Ankasa pillows. 

The smaller venue for this third-generation family business is a vintage beach house with an enviable locale: one block from the ocean. (The main store is a 35,000-square-foot showroom about 25 miles south in Selbyville, Del.) This high-end home furnishings boutique carries collections from such big-name designer lines as Ralph Lauren, Baker, Henredon and Hickory Chair. You'll find items from upholstery, tables, desks and chests to lighting, artwork, accessories and gifts.

The look is a sophisticated mix of traditional, comfortable and coastal, with an occasional antique to add a little patina. I found a set of cocktail napkins embroidered with turtles ($25 for a set of six), a pair of soft pink wicker dining chairs with off-white upholstered cushions ($227 each) and an antique distressed-pine wine-tasting table from Belgium ($1,500).

Every Tuesday three rooms of the Rehoboth Beach shop are rearranged and refurnished with pieces from the main store, says in-house designer Lisa Fulton. That way, she says, "when people visit the beach for the weekend, there's always something new and different."

27 Baltimore Ave., Rehoboth Beach, Del. 302-227-3780. http://www.jconnscott.com.

 

www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/20/AR2009052000999.html

 





 

Summer vacation is over, now it’s time to think about your house.

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Posted by markleas October 11th, 2012 at 07:23am

 If you are thinking of remodeling your home, there has never been a better time! Trade contractor pricing is as low as we have seen it, but the costs of materials are starting to inch up from their historic low prices. A report from The Associated General Contractors of America indicates that the prices for gypsum products (drywall) are up almost 18% from the previous year, while some other raw material costs are slightly down. We have watched as real estate prices have stabilized while the costs of lots and starter homes has actually increased. We believe that all of this points to a recovering market for homes on the Washington Metropolitan area.

 

Real estate professionals will tell you that the homes, which have been appropriately maintained and updated, will sell quicker and will bring the best prices to the sellers. There is no good economic argument to support not putting money into your home. Just as you can’t expect your car to hold value and continue to perform if you don’t spend the money to maintain it your home won’t either. There is no free lunch.

 

Many financial experts have advised correctly that people should not blindly put money into their homes treating it like a 401k. Although this is sound advice, not spending any money on your home is financially foolish. Family members wear houses down just by living in them. Appliances, plumbing fixtures and heating/ cooling systems all age and become obsolete. The weather takes a constant toll on your home’s exterior. A new paint job every 3-5 years is far less expensive that a carpentry crew replacing rotten and deteriorating wood, which will then need to be painted.

 

If you are going to re-paint, what ever you do, don’t cheap out on the paint! Buy the best grade of latex paint from a reputable manufacturer. Don’t forget, latex topcoat over an oil-based primer. In our area it is imperative that the paint has a good mildewcide.

 

The fall weather is beautiful, so take an hour and look your house over carefully for wear and tear that needs to be addressed. If you need to prioritize your list, our staff is happy to talk to you about what is critical and what can be put off until next year.

 

BethesdaBuilders.com

THE TOWN OF GLEN ECHO MARYLAND

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Posted by karrenleas December 31st, 2011 at 07:47am under Awards

 

Highslide JS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The town of Glen Echo, Maryland was chartered in 1904, but its development predates the charter by more than a decade. In late 1887, Edward Baltzley began buying up land in Montgomery County on the bluffs and hills overlooking the Potomac River Valley. By late 1888 he had acquired over 500 acres from the Cabin John Creek and extending past Naylor's Branch (near present day Walhonding Road). The acreage included Fairway Hills, Mohician Hills, Glen Echo Heights, all of what is now the town of Glen Echo, and much of what is  now Bannockburn.

Edward and his twin brother Edwin were intent on developing a luxurious, sub-urban, community of platial homes on the Potomac palisades. They opened a fantastic cedar log restaruant in July 1890 to bring visitors to the property, convinced that visitors simply seeing the land would sell it. The Pa-tow-o-meck cafe was an initial success, but caught fire and burned to the ground in 2-hours, less that 6 months after it opened.

Highslide JSEven during the bustle of opening a cafe, the brothers were planning for more attractions. Edwin's wife, Edith, was a member of the Washington DC banch of the Chautauqua Literary & Scientific Circle. Edith suggested that a summer Chautauqua at Glen Echo might bring even more visitors (and thereby sell more lots). The brothers agreed and began plans for a grand, and permanent, Chautauqua at Glen Echo. The Chautauqua was a great success for one season, but never reopened due to complex economic circumstances.

 

 

Highslide JS

 Part of the Chautauqua plans included an assortment of small lots adjacent to the Chautauqua campus. The lots were primarily intended as camp sites for use during the Chautauqua season (June through August) and were under the jurisdiction of the Chautauqua organization. The lots were appropriately sized for cunstruction of a tent platform, to keep out of the summer mud, and perhaps an outhouse (though early plans were underway for a complete sewage system). Many lots sold that first season, with some people buying multiple adjacent lots with plans to build summer cottages. After the Chautauqua failed, lot sales ground to a halt, those lots that did sell sold at bargain prices. The Baltzleys completed the sewage system, hopeful of renewed interest in land sales.

 

 Over the following years, from 1892 until 1903, a number of families built cottages and moved in year-round, creating a growing community. Many of the residents worked at the fledgeling amusement park which was growing among the buildings of the Chautauqua campus. The Chautauqua had a Post Office for the 1891 season, but there are no records of one for the period from 1892 until 1897, when a Post Office was opened in one of the old Chautauqua buildings. Transportation was an impediment to growth, so the Baltzleys along with other Washington business men chartered the West Washington & Great Falls Electric Railroad Company and built a trolley line to Glen Echo along the Potomac River from Georgetown in DC. Taking advantage of the trolley line, Clara Barton, the founder of the Amerian Cross, moved to Glen Echo in 1897 where she lived until her death in 1912. Barton enthuastically endorsed Glen Echo as a healthy place to live, trying to dispel false rumors of rampant malaria.

 

Highslide JS

 By 1904 residents had decided it was time to incorporate and the town of Glen Echo was chartered. Within a few years the town and the amusement park were locking horns, despite the fact that many town residents gained their livelyhood from the amusement park. Conflicts arose over water rights due to several years of severe droughts, and over Sunday activities at the park. The town filed complaints with the county about the park being open and offering amusements on Sunday in violation of local blue-laws. On one Sunday 110 people were arrested at the park including over 70 town residents.

 

The conflicts escalated until 1911 when the mayor of Glen Echo and several town councilmen got into a fistfight at which a gun was pulled over water use at the park. Ultimately the mayor resigned and moved to the nearby town of Kensington.

 

 Between 1900 and 1907 Clara Barton and her assistant Dr. Julian Hubble, purchased dozens of town lots from the Baltzleys, often staving off bankrupcy for the brothers. In 1903 the Baltzleys lost control of the amusement park property which was bought by the Washington Railway & Electric Company who had been managing the amusement park for several years by then. Trying to remain solvent in their other companies, the brothers continued to sell town lots, primarily to Barton and Hubble. Hubble inherited Barton's lots after her death in December of 1912, at that point he owned close to half of the town.

 

(c) Richard Cook - www.glenecho-cabinjohn.com

 


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Pet Friendly Design: Making Room for the Dog Dish
November 3rd
Efficient Ways to Cool a House
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You have a variety of ways to keep your house cool when temperatures outside soar. Air conditioning, fans and even keeping the lights turned off all can help your home stay cool and comfortable. Even if you rely solely on air conditioning for comfort, u…

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