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>>Company name- GS Bath Remodel
>>Office Address- 4901 Morena Boulevard, San Diego, CA 92117, USA
>>Number of Employee- 4
>>Payment- Personal Checks, Paypal
>>Office Hours- Mon, 7am-8pm; Tue, 7am-8pm; Wed, 7am-8pm; Thu, 7am-8pm; Fri, 7am-8pm; Sat, 9am-10pm; Sun, .Closed
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>>Website- www.gsbathremodel.com
>>Office Phone No- 858-815-5332
TD-1689-CV Trinity Division - Central Valley Project - Trinity River Bridge: General view showing cement placement on bridge deck . Spec No. 4751.
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Contractors in Danville, Virginia, make last-minute preparations for aerial application of mating disruption treatment to slow the spread of the gypsy moth. USDA Forest Service photo by Tom Coleman.
From the Forest Service builds on 20 years of success with Slow the Spread article. Aug. 7, 2020
Eclat Roofing
6211 West Northwest Highway, # 1901, Dallas, Texas 75225
(214) 373-1500
Headquartered in Dallas, Texas Eclat Roofing proudly services Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana. Eclat Roofing is very proud of its reputation. We count thousands of happy roofing customers in the Dallas, Fort Worth. and surrounding areas, including Louisiana, and we boast no adverse complaints. We have a great working relationship with our suppliers, employees, and laborers. Our #1 goal is customer satisfaction.
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www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztikBDnbTb0
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This custom swimming pool in Aubrey, TX includes a luxury in water limestone sphere fountain and three complementary classic fountains.
several nest contractors out today gathering materials while there is an abundance available during the annual plaza spring winds sale.
(Yes, only ONE BIRD..two different shots of him.)
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Bath remodel, marble shower pan in a windmill pattern, retro feel. Installed by Charlotte tile contractor, Cupan Custom Tile.
A American Electrical Services quickly earned a reputation as a reliable, affordable electrical contractors in Tucson AZ for electrical repair all over the metro area. That is why most of our business came from repeat and referral customers were happy with the level of service they received, and they told their friends and family about it.
Address : 827 S. Santa Rita Ave. Tucson, AZ 85719, USA
Phone : 520-751-9247
Official Website : http://www.aamericanelectricalservices.com/
Phoenix Roofing Master
2942 N. 24th St - Suite 114-631
Phoenix, Arizona 85016
United States
416-939-0000
ramsey.emara@gmail.com
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Luminox Tactical Timepieces
Luminox Watches are Requested by and Supplied to:
U.S. Navy SEALs
U.S. Air Force (USAF Stealth Jet Pilots)
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Secret Service
U.S. Coast Guard
U.S. Special Forces
Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
U.S. Army Rangers
Canada Special Forces
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Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD)
New York Fire Department (NYFD)
Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD)
…and various other law enforcement groups, police, and fire departments around the world.
IQ Quarry Garden and designer Paul Hervey-Brookes
The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) has awarded 34 Gold Medals at the first ever RHS Chatsworth Flower Show, partnered by Wedgewood.
A total of 79 medals were awarded to the gardens and floral exhibitors across two Floral Marquees, which included 26 Silver-Gilt Medals, 15 Silver Medals and four Bronze Medal.
The IQ Quarry Garden, by multi award-winning designer Paul Hervey-Brookes, was awarded a Gold Medal and the coveted title of ‘Best Show Garden’. Inspired by the life cycle of a quarry, this contemporary garden is divided into sections to contrast the bountiful floral and naturalistic planting with other more severe and uncompromising features.
On his award, Paul Hervey-Brookes said: "I am absolutely thrilled. This was the last project I worked on with my partner before he passed away and I wanted to make sure it was something he was proud of."
Shows Judging Manager, Joanna Shirley, said: “it is an exceptional garden, fantastically innovative and hugely atmospheric, with many special moments to linger and enjoy. The beautiful sculptural wall is unique and very effective in framing the garden against this beautiful landscape here at the show.”
Butter Wakefield’s Belmond Enchanted Garden also received a Gold Medal, along with The Wedgewood Garden – a Classic Re-imagined, which was designed by RHS Young Designer 2014 winner Sam Ovens. In addition, two Silver-Gilts, one Sliver and two Bronze Medals were awarded across the eight Show Gardens.
The award for Best Exhibit in the Floral Marquees was given to Pheasant Acre Plants, while Roualeyn Fuchsias scooped the new Design Award, and the title of RHS Master Grower went to Hoyland Plant Centre. Within the two Floral Marquees 71 medals were awarded in total, including 31 Gold, 24 Silver-Gilt, 14 Silver and 2 Bronze Medals.
For a full list of medal-winners visit: press.rhs.org.uk
-Ends-
Notes to editors
For more information, please contact the RHS Press Office on 020 7821 3364 or pressoffice@rhs.org.uk
Images of the RHS Chatsworth Flower Show are available to download at www.photoshelter.com. Please email the RHS Press Office at showspr@rhs.org.uk for instructions on how to create an account.
Full details of all exhibitors are available on the RHS Media Centre. Please visit press.rhs.org.uk/
To apply for media accreditation to the RHS Chatsworth Flower Show, please visit press.rhs.org.uk/
RHS Chatsworth Flower Show (7-11 June 2017)
6 June Press Day
7 June RHS members only
9 – 11 June RHS members and non-members
7 – 10 June 10am - 6.30pm
11 June 10am – 5pm
Venue: Chatsworth, Bakewell, Derbyshire, DE45 1PP
To book tickets 0844 995 9664* or www.rhs.org.uk/chatsworth
* Calls cost 7p per minute plus your phone company’s access charge.
Ticket prices range from £21.50 to £39. Tickets are on sale now.
About the RHS
The Royal Horticultural Society was founded in 1804 by Sir Joseph Banks and John Wedgwood to inspire passion and excellence in the science, art and practice of horticulture. Our Vision is to enrich everyone’s life through plants, and make the UK a greener and more beautiful place. We believe everyone in every village, town and city should benefit from growing plants to enhance lives, build stronger, healthier, happier communities and create better places to live.
We held our first flower shows in 1820, were granted a Royal Charter in 1861 and acquired RHS Garden Wisley, our flagship garden, in 1903. From our first meetings in a small room off London’s Piccadilly, we have grown to become the world’s largest gardening charity. At our gardens and shows and through our scientific research, publications, libraries and our education and community programmes we inspire a passion for gardening and growing plants, promote the value of gardens, demonstrate how gardening is good for us and explain the vital roles that plants undertake.
The RHS is committed to bring the joy of gardening to millions more people, inspire the next generation of gardeners and invest in the future to safeguard a £13 billion industry employing more than 300,000 people. We are entirely funded by our members, visitors and supporters. RHS membership is for anyone with an interest in gardening. Support the RHS and help us secure a healthy future for gardening. For more information call 020 3176 5820, or visit rhs.org.uk/join
RHS Registered Charity No. 222879/SC038262
Latest press releases
Artist Helps Viewers See the Beauty of the Wind, Aided by Dichroic Film from 3M
1940s Gardeners Feed The School of Artisan Food at RHS Chatsworth
Medals announced at the inaugural RHS Chatsworth Flower Show
Preparations in full swing for RHS Chatsworth Flower Show 2017
The Moveable Feast Garden - Roll With It Baby!
About the RHS
The RHS believes that gardening improves the quality of life and that everyone should have access to great garden experiences. As a charity we help to bring gardening into people's lives and support gardeners of all levels and abilities; whether they are expert horticulturists or children who are planting seeds for the very first time.
RHS membership is for anyone with an interest in gardening. Support the RHS and secure a healthy future for gardening. For more information call: 0845 130 4646, or visit www.rhs.org.uk
RHS Registered Charity No. 222879/SC038262
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Preparations in full swing for RHS Chatsworth Flower Show 2017
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RHS Shows > RHS Chatsworth Flower Show > Preparations in full swing for RHS Chatsworth Flower Show 2017
Friday 2 June 2017
• Every day sold out except Sunday • Joseph Paxton’s Great Conservatory pinnacle of the showground • Gardens and FreeForms take shape in third week of installation
The Royal Horticultural Society Chelsea Flower Show may be over after another successful year, but there is no rest ahead - teams across the world’s biggest gardening charity are busy working with hundreds of exhibitors and contractors to bring the next major show to fruition. The first RHS Chatsworth Flower Show, held in the grounds of the Chatsworth Estate, opens next Wednesday and runs until Sunday 11 June. Nearly 90,000 tickets have already been sold, and the show is now sold out on all days except Sunday.
Celebrity florist Jonathan Moseley is currently working to decorate The Palladian Bridge with a giant willow serpent that rises up from the depths of the river Derwent and entwines around the bridge. Visitors can take a beautiful hidden walk through to the other side of the bank.
The Great Conservatory, a re-imagining of the one created by Joseph Paxton in 1841, has been erected at the heart of the showground. The 14-metre high inflatable dome was installed over five days using a 130-ton crane. An interior installation, ‘Heart of Glass’ by Cityscapes, focused around a central rotating glitter ball, will be installed on Friday.
The Show Gardens and FreeForm installations – a new category for RHS Flower Shows – are fast taking shape on the showground. A giant pair of hands made of hay, measuring over 2m high, have been brought from Italy by Barbara Negretti & Elisa Tomat for their show garden Behind the Scenes, which celebrates the hard work and dedication of those who do all the practical work and hard graft building professional gardens.
The floral marquees are a hive of activity as 76 nurseries populate the floral marquees with plants including curious, collectible and intriguing plants, cut flowers and edibles. Several are exhibiting for the first time at an RHS show including The English Iris Company, who will be selling award winning British Tall Bearded Irises raised in a Nottinghamshire garden.
Anna Skibniewski-Ball, Assistant Show Manager, said: ‘We are in the final stages of build-up and with only a few days until the show opens to the public, the show site is a hive of activity. We have now welcomed most of the show features and tradestands and are seeing the beginnings of the floral exhibitors populate the floral marquees. The Show Garden and FreeForm meanwhile are continuing their third week of creating their masterpieces.
‘Our over-arching theme of Design Revolutionaries is prevalent throughout the show, from our re-imagining of Joseph Paxton’s Great Conservatory with fantastic tropical planting, to our Palladian Style Bridge spanning the river Derwent. We are really hoping the good weather will see us into next week so that everyone can enjoy what we hope will be a truly wonderful and inspiring horticultural event.”
Over the weekend the site will be brimming with yet more floral exhibitors and the lifestyle exhibitors, selling wares from cushions to candles, arriving to set up their stands. By Monday, apart from the final installation of some show features such as the well dressing displays, most of the show should be complete and ready to welcome visitors on Wednesday.
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My latest truck MOC, but first to be photographed for Flickr: A contractors' truck, seen all over the UK in building sites carrying scaffolding, building supplies or other miscellaneous junk
Our Respected clients pay us less than our standard rates, by taking advantage of our new programme and gets discounts.This type of Contractor accounting services makes us stand unique in UK. To know more visit us at www.no-worries.co.uk
Berkeley Remodeling contractor provides kitchen remodeling photos. Brought to you by Home Remodeling Contractor, Jensen Remodeling. Visit them online at www.jensenremodeling.com
July 2011: A further incident of tipping/leaving of contractor waste on the moor - several piles of wood chippings, together with small felled trees left against the outside of the reservoir wall, following the 'tidying up'.
2016 Update: this set charts the demolition of the Baildon Moor Reservoirs which began in 2012. Most of the set is from the first stage of demolition, with a further period of activity in late 2013 when the stone linings were removed. In 14-15 a little wildness returned to the site as represented by nesting Oystercatchers. As of early 2016 what remained of the reservoirs is being infilled as the site is prepared for some sort of development. As this is mostly a legacy set I suggest you consult local media for more recent news, for example Bradford T&A has covered the story.
2013 update: work resumed (October 2013) on the significant demolition activity on the historic Baildon Moor reservoir site. All of the reservoirs have essentially been demolished, with the lining stone being stripped out for reuse. Further clearing of vegetation took place, including the attractive patch of heather and bilberry which covered the bank of the bottom reservoir. Given that there is Green Hairstreak butterfly colony a few tens of yards from the reservoir wall, who knows what flora and fauna have been lost. We are left with three large muddy pits, little in the way of vegetation and an increasingly damaged perimeter wall which the owners seem to have given up on. The site is available to let, but one wonders what sort of use might be deemed "suitable" in this moorland environment.
We have made enquiries to the Parish Council and to Friends of Baildon Moor as to what this most recent development activity might be leading towards, as we have been unable to find any development proposals in the public domain. Nobody seems very sure, but the development of fishing lakes has been suggested as one possibility. I have nothing to verify that though.
To me the best two solutions would be either to 1) complete the demolition, remove the boundary wall and return the area to common land with the aid of some ecological restoration, or 2) develop the site as a nature reserve, in a similar way to other post-industrial sites like opencast workings. This latter option could involve development of a wetland (given that the largest areas of open water on the moor have now been lost), perhaps with the sponsorship of some organisation like the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust. I expect the land owner has more economically lucrative aspirations though.
The images in this set do get frequently viewed, and there seems to be no-one else recording the activity, so I'll continue to do so. This is personal activity motivated by my concern for the visual effect on the surrounding moorland environment, damage to the heritage of the area and inappropriate development in a special place. Hopefully the hundreds of other of my images and journal entries that I've made available on Flickr and Blipfoto, of the moor, its wildlife and local heritage stand as some testimony to my long-standing affection for this place.
Background:
In July 2011 contractors moved onto the site of the Baildon Moor Reservoirs and began clearing it of vegetation and knocking through the two lower reservoirs. This came as a surprise to members of the local community and led to widespread concern. It emerged that the actions related to the proposed development of some sort of water-based recreational centre. No planning application had been submitted for the work.
After listening to public concern about the development and the manner in which it was being conducted, Baildon Parish Council issued a statement about the developments which can be viewed here: baildonparishcouncil.gov.uk/website/index.php/doc-remos/M...
After the major ground work had been completed the site went quiet over the winter of 2011/12. The lower two reservoirs refilled, but to such a height that new concerns were expressed, and according to the Friends of Baildon Moor (see minutes of the Feb 2012 Committee Meeting here: baildonmoor.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Feb-... ) the reservoirs were drained, and a civil engineer from Bradford Council has ordered that no further work be done until a full survey had been conducted, and appropriate plans submitted for approval, this justifying some of the initial concerns of residents.
Although this set focuses on the initial stage of clearance, I will update it periodically with any further visible evidence of developments on site.
Movers and contractors must enter the building through the basement only. Col. Univ. Mgmt. 514 W. 114th St., New York City.
On the left is a Contractor who specializes in building Pole Barns, and is building the barn in the following shot. On the right is the Farmer who is rebuilding his barns after they were destroyed by fire a year ago. These barns are for his Shorthorn Beef herd, and the sheep in the following photos are his flock also. In Lambton Shores, along the East Shore of Lake Huron, in Ontario.