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The bathroom remodeling project is complete and the results are amazing! A special thanks to Rick at ProSource Construction for all of the work on this month-long project!
Here's what we did:
- Ripped all walls down to studs
- Replaced outside wall and studs due to water damage
- All new green board on all walls
- New synthetic backer board on the shower
- New sink/vanity
- New toilet
- New medicine cabinet and mirror
- New light fixture
- New floor
- New tub
- All new wall tile and shower shelves and soap dish
- New sink and tub facuets
- New trim and basebaords throughout room
- New window trim
- New towel bars (3), door hook, TP holder and shower rod
- New paint
- All new plumbing for shower and sink
We've finally come to the end of our basement remodel project. This is our new set of stairs that lead down from the kitchen.
Small bath makeover completed by Sitka Projects, a Portland OR remodeling company. www.sitkaprojects.com/
Bathroom remodeling is very important in home improvement makedreamhome.com/searching-professional-skilled-mason-ba...
Complete remodel of a Long Island vacation cottage. This photo was taken from the opposite angle as the "before" photo, and the kitchen is on the upper floor with the wrap-around sunroom. There is a photo of the interior from the kitchen also. The double sliding doors will lead to a deck that has yet to be added. You can also see that four of the windows on the sunroom (top floor) are opening to allow for ventilation. Learn about Lindal Sunrooms and plan your remodel at www.lindal.com/sunrooms/.
Kitchen remodeling Clifton Va.
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This is looking towards the open living and dining area in this remodel, and shows how the wall of glass reaches overhead - a view that could not be captured from my vantage points outdoors. The builders remarked that even during the hottest days, the insulated glass kept the room cool - completely unexpected! Learn about Lindal Sunrooms and plan your remodel at www.lindal.com/sunrooms/.
Basement remodeling in Alpharetta can be a daunting task, but it doesn't have to be! This video offers tips for basement remodeling that will make the process run smoothly and help you achieve the results you're looking for.
Click on the link to know more: rsbasements.com/ rsbasements.com/basement-finishing-alpharetta/
we pushed the wall back 2ft into the dining room. Flipped the plumbing from the right to the left, added a deep soaker tub.
Gloucester Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of St Peter and the Holy and Indivisible Trinity, in Gloucester, England, stands in the north of the city near the River Severn. It originated in 678 or 679 with the foundation of an abbey dedicated to Saint Peter.
At the time of the Norman Conquest in 1066, the monastery was not thriving and in 1072 King William I appointed Serlo, a monk from Mont St Michel in Normandy to be its Abbot. An energetic, charismatic and devout man, Serlo built up the wealth of the monastery to the point where in 1089 he was able to start building the magnificent abbey church which so impresses the visitor today.
A wealthy and powerful institution with extensive landholdings in Gloucestershire and South Wales, the Abbey of St Peter (as it was known) had significant royal associations.
In 1216, Henry III, who had succeeded to the throne at the age of only nine, was crowned here. Major building works in the 13th century included a first Lady Chapel and new Tower and refectory.
Most importantly for the subsequent history of this place, in 1327, King Edward II who had died in Berkeley Castle (in suspicious and, traditionally, gruesome circumstances) was buried here. A shrine-like monument was erected over the tomb of the dead king. Royal patronage and popular devotion led to funds flowing into the abbey, and these enabled the magnificent remodelling of the east end to be carried out in the very latest “Perpendicular” style.
In the 15th century further building work included the remodelling of the west end, the building of the south porch and of the present tower and finally, towards the end of the century, the present Lady Chapel.
Henry VIII ordered the monasteries to be dissolved and Gloucester Abbey surrendered in January 1540. The abbey buildings became Gloucester Cathedral, the seat of the Bishop of Gloucester in 1541. No longer a community of monks, it was to be led by a Dean and a chapter of canons.
The ideological and doctrinal struggles of the 16th and 17th centuries made their mark in Gloucester: Bishop Hooper was burned at the stake here in 1555 on the orders of the Catholic Queen Mary; in the 1620’s Bishop Miles Smith and his Dean, William Laud held profoundly different views on what the nature and style of Church of England should be.
Then under Oliver Cromwell there was a move to demolish the cathedral building altogether (it was saved by the intervention of the mayor and burgesses of the City of Gloucester).
With the restoration of the monarchy (after the civil wars and Commonwealth period) in 1660, the Dean and Chapter resumed the running of the Cathedral and that is how it is managed today.
Throughout the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries they have carried out repairs and conservation work rather than rebuilding or remodelling the building.
More importantly, Gloucester Cathedral has endured through the centuries as a place of Christian witness where God is worshipped and the gospel of Jesus Christ is proclaimed every day.
www.gloucestercathedral.org.uk/history-heritage/cathedral...
I spent about 5 full days remodeling the kids room. Morgan and I (Matt) found several fun websites with some space-related themes. We got Disney's "Buzz Lightyear" Behr Paint from Home Depot. All said, it cost almost $800 to complete the room but that included paint, wood trim, all new lighting, new Vinyl Dual-pane windows, and stucco finish on the outside. Obviously, we did the work ourselves...
Basement Remodel by architech Chad Cornette using creative designs and many green building materials. Chads website is www.cantilever.us/projects.php
Be sure to check out the newly remodeled first floor of the library complete with new computer workstations and study tables.
This is a remodeling project under construction by Brock Builders. We are general contractors in Asheville.
Kitchen-Remodel-21 Wallpaper, You can see and find a picture of Kitchen-Remodel-21 with the best image quality at “homedecorwallpapers.com – Home Design Decoration Ideas” Find out more about Kitchen-Remodel-21 which can make a reference in designing the house, room, interior,...
Finally!! The studio remodel is complete - Yay! Now more room to work, more storage space, bright lights and my own friggin' desk with enough room for my puter. Thanks to IKEA for all the shelving and storage caddies. I'm cheap, so I got the desk from Craigslist for free! It's in perfect condition, just needed a little Murphy's Oil Soap and a black marker to hide a few minor dings that happened when we tried to move that sucker, and she's as good as new. Thing must weigh close to 200 pounds. It's decent quality wood, not the typical Walmart self assembly kind. And for free too!! Setup my color Laser Printer that I got from Amazon. If you're looking for an inexpensive laser printer, I would recommend the Samsung CLP-415NW (www.amazon.com/gp/product/B008HSIW20/ref=cm_cr_ryp_prd_tt...) It's inexpensive and prints out beautiful color images.
Kitchen Remodeling and Expansions in Northern VA and Suburban Maryland: www.summitdesignremodeling.com
Wow! Check out the raised ceiling! Bedroom makeover completed by Sitka Projects, a Portland OR remodeling company. www.sitkaprojects.com/
Finally!! The studio remodel is complete - Yay! Now more room to work, more storage space, bright lights and my own friggin' desk with enough room for my puter. Thanks to IKEA for all the shelving and storage caddies. I'm cheap, so I got the desk from Craigslist for free! It's in perfect condition, just needed a little Murphy's Oil Soap and a black marker to hide a few minor dings that happened when we tried to move that sucker, and she's as good as new. Thing must weigh close to 200 pounds. It's decent quality wood, not the typical Walmart self assembly kind. And for free too!! Setup my color Laser Printer that I got from Amazon. If you're looking for an inexpensive laser printer, I would recommend the Samsung CLP-415NW (www.amazon.com/gp/product/B008HSIW20/ref=cm_cr_ryp_prd_tt...) It's inexpensive and prints out beautiful color images.
Feel free to use this image for your page or blog post as long as you include an image credit with a clickable (hyperlinked) and followed link to Christian Bros Cabinets
During 1916 the British born Australian architect Walter Richmond Butler (1864 – 1949) designed a new Anglican Mission to Seamen to be built on an oddly shaped triangular block of land at 717 Flinders Street on the outskirts of the Melbourne central city grid, to replace smaller premises located in adjoining Siddeley Street, which had been resumed by the Harbour Trust during wharf extensions.
The Missions to Seamen buildings, built on reinforced concrete footings, are in rendered brick with tiled roofs. Walter Butler designed the complex using an eclectic mixture of styles, one of which was the Spanish Mission Revival which had become a prevalent style on the west coast of America, especially in California and New Mexico during the 1890s. The style revived the architectural legacy of Spanish colonialism of the Eighteenth Century and the associated Franciscan missions. The revival of the style is explicit in the Mission’s small, yet charming chapel with its rough-hewn timber trusses, in the bell tower with its pinnacles and turret surmounted by a rustic cross and in the monastic-like courtyard, which today still provides a peaceful retreat from the noisy world just beyond the Missions to Seamen’s doorstep. The chapel also features many gifts donated by members of the Harbour Trust and Ladies’ Harbour Lights Guild, including an appropriately themed pulpit in the shape of a ship's prow and two sanctuary chairs decorated with carved Australian floral motifs. Some of the stained glass windows in the chapel depict stories and scenes associated with the sea intermixed with those Biblical scenes more commonly found in such places of worship.
The adjoining Mission to Seamen’s administration, residential and recreational building shows the influence of English domestic Arts and Crafts architecture, with its projecting gable, pepper pot chimneys and three adjoining oriel windows. The lobby, with its appropriately nautically inspired stained glass windows, features a large mariner's compass inlaid in the terrazzo floor. Built-in timber cupboards, wardrobes, paneling and studded doors throughout the buildings evoke a ship's cabin.
Walter Butler, architect to the Anglican Diocese in Melbourne, had come to Australia with an intimate knowledge and experience of the Arts and Crafts movement and continued to use the style in his residential designs of the 1920s. The main hall has a reinforced concrete vaulted ceiling. Lady Stanley, wife of the Mission's patron, Governor Sir Arthur Lyulph Stanley, laid the foundation stone of the complex in November 1916. The buildings were financed partly by a compensation payment from the Harbour Trust of £8,500.00 and £3,000.00 from local merchants and shipping firms. The Ladies' Harbour Lights Guild raised over £800.00 for the chapel. Most of the complex was completed by late 1917 whilst the Pantheon-like gymnasium with oculus was finished soon afterwards. The substantially intact interiors, including extensive use of wall paneling in Tasmanian hardwood, form an integral part of the overall design.
The Missions to Seamen buildings are architecturally significant as a milestone in the early introduction of the Spanish Mission style to Melbourne. The style was to later find widespread popularity in the suburbs of Melbourne. The choice of Spanish Mission directly refers to the Christian purpose of the complex. The Missions to Seamen buildings are unusual for combining two distinct architectural styles, for they also reflect the imitation of English domestic architecture, the Arts and Crafts movement. Walter Butler was one of the most prominent and progressive architects of the period and the complex is one of his most unusual and distinctive works.
The Missions to Seamen buildings have historical and social significance as tangible evidence of prevailing concerns for the religious, moral, and social welfare of seafarers throughout most of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. The complex has a long association with the Missions to Seamen, an organisation formed to look after the welfare of seafarers, both officers and sailors, men "of all nationalities". It had its origins in Bristol, England when a Seamen's Mission was formed in 1837. The first Australian branch was started in 1856 by the Reverend Kerr Johnston, a Church of England clergyman, and operated from a hulk moored in Hobsons Bay; later the Mission occupied buildings in Williamstown and Port Melbourne. In 1905 the Reverend Alfred Gurney Goldsmith arrived at the behest of the London Seamen's Mission to establish a city mission for sailors working on the river wharves and docks. The building reflects the diverse role played by the Mission with its chapel, hall and stage, billiards room, reading room, dining room, officers' and men’s quarters, chaplain's residence, and gymnasium. It is still in use to this day under the jurisdiction of a small, but passionate group of workers, providing a welcome place of refuge to seamen visiting the Port of Melbourne.
Walter Butler was considered an architect of great talent, and many of his clients were wealthy pastoralists and businessmen. His country-house designs are numerous and include “Blackwood” (1891) near Penshurst, for R. B. Ritchie, “Wangarella” (1894) near Deniliquin, New South Wales, for Thomas Millear, and “Newminster Park” (1901) near Camperdown, for A. S. Chirnside. Equally distinguished large houses were designed for the newly established Melbourne suburbs: “Warrawee” (1906) in Toorak, for A. Rutter Clark; “Thanes” (1907) in Kooyong, for F. Wallach; “Kamillaroi” (1907) for Baron Clive Baillieu, and extensions to “Edzell” (1917) for George Russell, both in St Georges Road, Toorak. These are all fine examples of picturesque gabled houses in the domestic Queen Anne Revival genre. Walter Butler was also involved with domestic designs using a modified classical vocabulary, as in his remodelling of “Billilla” (1905) in Brighton, for W. Weatherley, which incorporates panels of flat-leafed foliage. Walter Butler also regarded himself as a garden architect.
As architect to the diocese of Melbourne from 1895, he designed the extensions to “Bishopscourt” (1902) in East Melbourne. His other church work includes St Albans (1899) in Armadale, the Wangaratta Cathedral (1907), and the colourful porch and tower to Christ Church (c.1910) in Benalla. For the Union Bank of Australia he designed many branch banks and was also associated with several tall city buildings in the heart of Melbourne’s central business district such as Collins House (1910) and the exceptionally fine Queensland Insurance Building (1911). For Dame Nellie Melba Butler designed the Italianate lodge and gatehouse at “Coombe Cottage” (1925) at Coldstream.
Home Remodeling Tips: Check out home remodeling design to suit your lifestyle here moneypit.com/article/remodel-design-suit-your-lifestyle
My Kitchen/Dining Central Perk Renovation Inspiration! Enlarge and roll over photo to see some of my ideas.
Bright and white cabinets are featured in this remodeled kitchen in home in Trenton Township, with cherry hardwood floors, marble backsplashes, Moen plumbing fixtures and brass hardware.
large kitchen remodeling project from kitchen and bath factory in arlington, va
phone: 703-522-7337
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