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Choose your bathroom paint colors

Friday, August 20th, 2010

 Some general house painting techniques you can use for your bathroom: 

A) Bright red and orange are freshness to you and it will feel like increase your physical strength, especially if these are used it at the shower area. These can be diluted with bathroom mirror if you like, you just completed a routine bathroom mirror in the bathroom with a perfect combination.

B) Cool colors like white and blue light in the bathroom ideally for most house painting, because these colors in the bathroom will be easily spotting dirty spots. Act quickly when spotted dirty - wash to clean out the bathroom easily.

C) In contrast to the internal use of painting in the bathroom like the rest of the house with its shape and location, a darker color can be used to increase space feeling. For darker contrasting effects in a small area is always good to increase space. However, for bathroom is not recommending to have darker color and advice to use light colors. 

D) Black, the color used to fade in the bathroom is easy because they absorb more moisture rich in any bathroom; it’s always a need to draw again. On the other hand, light color did not have a strong water absorption feeling, so they last a while longer. Lighter color, so is the best bathroom choice, in any case those who make the space seem larger and more detailed. 

Finally, if you feel that your bathroom is boring, what you can do is to hand some wonderful photos or pictures to bright the space feeling up. You will feel like a pleasant day after you visited a well painted bathroom.

( via - freebie-articles.com )

world’s most sustainable building ever

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

 Winner of an international design competition for the Wuhan New Energy Center in Wuhan, China, the “Wuhan Energy Flower” by Grontmij and Soeters Van Eldonk Architects is essentially a research institute in the field of new energy sources and sustainability. Inspired by the Calla lily, the zero energy building is gonna be the first to receive the BREEM outstanding accreditation in the world. Powered by solar and wind energy, the flower-shaped building is 140m tall and is surrounded by a number of laboratories resembling the leaves.

Harnessing natural resources, the sustainable building collects rainwater in the bowl to fulfill its water requirements, and the solar panels enclosing the roof produces renewable electricity to fulfill the energy needs of the structure. Featuring pistil made in vertical axis wind turbines to collect renewable energy, the building integrates a solar chimney in the middle to maximize natural ventilation, while the rim of the bowl works as sunroof to heat and cool the building. 

( via - worthgem.blogspot.com )

WORLD Space Creators Awards 2009: Interior Design Awards

Friday, July 31st, 2009

 

Japanese designer Yusuke Hara of [Designkit], a design firm in Tokyo, has recently been awarded the Grand Prize in the Interior Design Category at the 2009 World Space Creators Awards for his project ‘Scramble Perspective’.

Hara’s design concept:

‘This is a proposal for creating a store space where multiple brands can mix harmoniously while each at the same time retains its own brand identity.
It uses the laws of perspective to decide the size of the display fixtures, such that when the visitor stands at the focal point of the display, they are surrounded by a single brand.

Although the fixtures at first appear to be scattered at random, this arrangement broadens the possibility for different combinations, with the ultimate goal of regaining a sense of unity and coherence for each brand within a certain area of space and time.

As the visitor traces the paths between different fixtures, they are able to encounter clothes that they had never considered before. My hope is that this approach will create brand intersections that give rise to new fashion coordination ideas.’

Other Grand Prize recipients were Shuji Funabiki (Professional Competition – Visual Design Category) and Megumi Mitsuhashi (Student Competition). The jury was chaired by acclaimed Japanese product designer Naoto Fukasawa.

( via - archicentral )

World’s best building - Lubetkin shortlist revealed

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Foster and Partners’ Beijing Capital International Airport Terminal is one of six schemes shortlisted for the RIBA’s prestigious Lubetkin Prize, supported by The Architectural Review

The other projects vying for the prize - for the best international building by an RIBA member - include the National Stadium in Beijing by Herzog & de Meuron, the Sean O’Casey Community Centre, in Dublin by O’Donnell and Tuomey Architects, the British High Commission in Colombo by Richard Murphy Architects, Museum Brandhorst in Munich by Sauerbuch Hutton and the Watercube, National Swimming Centre in Beijing by PTW Architects.

A winner will be announced on Tuesday 14 June 2009 at a reception held at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London.

Sunand Prasad, president of RIBA said: ‘The RIBA Lubetkin prize…includes some of the biggest projects in the world – and how good it is to be able to mark the British interest in such schemes – but also some lower-key, beautifully crafted and lower cost schemes.’

The six shortlisted buildings have been visited by Prasad, Paul Monaghan, chair of RIBA Awards Group and Tony Chapman, RIBA Head of Awards. They will report to the full jury which includes architect Farshid Moussavi and Tom Dyckhoff of The Times.

The Lubetkin Prize is awarded for practices based outside the UK, building anywhere outside the UK, or for British-based practices working outside the EU.

( via - architectsjournal )

Safety in Architecture & Interiors

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

Safety is a prime concern for any home or office. A lot of accidents occur everyday in lack of safety. Proper safety measures should have been taken to avoid these fatal accidents. Here are some home safety tips that you can use to make your home safe.

 Safety Tips for Kitchen

1. Keep papers, plastic bags, curtains and dishtowels at least three feet away from range top.
2. Put matchbox and lighters in locked cabinet
3. Clean chimneys, fireplaces and central ovens periodically.
4. Store harmful cleaning products in locked cabinets and keep them away from children’s reach.
5. Always put cooking utensil in the center of stove while cooking.
6. Clean stove, oven or any cooking objects before starting cooking. Keep kitchen utensils clean as well.
7. Always keep fire extinguisher in kitchen.

Safety Tips for Bathroom

1. Keep shampoos, lotions and soap dish away from the Children’s reach.
2. Keep electrical appliances wrapped.
3. Make use of lights in the night in bathroom.
4. Place non-skid bathroom mats to avoid injury.
5. Keep heaters, electrical products away from bathtubs, shower place and sinks.
6. Set up water heaters at a degree of 120.

Safety Tips for Bedroom

1. Never smoke in bedroom.
2. Keep clothes, curtains, bed sheets at least three feet away from room heater. Especially fire occurs in winter season because of much use of heating appliances and lighting.
3. Use safe light bulb wattage for each fixture.
4. Use mattress with open flame resistant protection in bedroom for the safety because these mattresses have 30 minutes ignition power to control fire.
5. Never put extension cords under carpet or rugs as it causes short- circuit.

Safety Tips for Living Room

1. Use Safety-proof plugs to cover electrical outlet in your home. Keep living room clutter free to avoid falls.
2. Place furniture of round edges instead of sharp edges.
3. Cover fireplace with metal fire frame.
4. Never place lighting fixtures near curtains,clothes etc.
5. Switch off light when not in use.
6. Make proper arrangement for ventilation.
7. Don’t place furniture near window in kid’s room.
8. Never use halogen lamps in kid’s room for study as it creates danger of fire.
9. Keep curtains, clothes, paper stuff three feet away from light to avoid fire
10. Never place sharp edges furniture as it can be harmful to kids. Always place round edges furniture.

Safety Tips for Stairs

1. Keep stairs clean and should not be wet.
2. Make proper arrangement of lights on or around stairs to avoid fall.
3. Use hand rails to move up and down the stairs. It is better to have railing on both the sides of stairs.
4. Install gate at the top or bottom of the stairs.

(  Via realestatetimes )

Empire State Building: New energy role model

Friday, April 10th, 2009

The iconic skyscraper is undertaking $20 million in conservation measures. Promoters hope to duplicate the effort worldwide.

The Empire State Building kicked off a major energy-saving retrofit Monday, and promoters hope one of the world’s most iconic skyscrapers can become an efficiency model for buildings worldwide.

From the cloud-shrouded observation deck on the building’s 80th floor, former President Bill Clinton, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and others detailed $20 million in cutting-edge conservation measures they hope will cut energy use by 38% for the 1930’s-era behemoth.

They stressed the retrofits weren’t green altruism or part of a government program. Instead, they say they’re being done simply to save the building’s owners a lot of money.

"I can’t tell you how important this day is," said Clinton, who founded the Clinton Climate Initiative where the retrofit plan was hatched. "In order for the world to meet [the greenhouse gas reductions] most scientists say we should, we have to prove it’s good economics."

The retrofits are expected to save building owners $4.4 million in annual energy costs. They are part of an overall $500-plus million rehab plan for the building, which is estimated by its owners to be worth $2.2 billion.

Buildings, including offices and homes, use some 40% of all energy consumed worldwide, according to the Alliance to Save Energy. The typical house produces twice as much carbon dioxide as the typical car.

The conservation measures at the Empire State building include:

  • Filling the existing windows with an energy saving gas and adding an additional plastic pane.
  • Upgrading the building’s cooling system.
  • Using computerized "smart" energy management technology that can adjust temperatures floor by floor.
  • Provide tenants with detailed energy use in their space.
  • Shut off lights in unused areas.

Much of the interior lighting is also being replaced with more efficient fluorescent bulbs. The famous spire lights, which change color throughout the year in accordance with different holidays and events, are not getting an upgrade. But engineers on the project said the spire may get ultra-efficient LED lighting when the price for that technology drops enough, perhaps by 2013.

 ( Via CNN Money )

Grow your own home with ecoarchitecture

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

 
"Ecoarchitecture" may sound like a Buck Rogers vision of an ecologically-sustainable future, but that future is now thanks to the guidance of Tel Aviv University Professors Yoav Waisel and Amram Eshel. The concept of shaping living trees into useful objects — known as tree shaping, arborsculpture, living art or pooktre –– isn’t new. But scientists are now ready to use this concept as the foundation of a new company that will roll out these structures worldwide.

Pilot projects now underway in the United States, Australia and Israel include park benches for hospitals, playground structures, streetlamps and gates. "The approach is a new application of the well-known botanical phenomenon of aerial root development," says Prof. Eshel. "Instead of using plant branches, this patented approach takes malleable roots and shapes them into useful objects for indoors and out."

A Scientific and Commercial Partnership

The original "root-breaking" research was conducted at the Sarah Racine Root Research Laboratory at TelAvivUniversity, the first and largest aeroponics lab in the world. Founded by Prof. Waisel 20 years ago, the lab enables scientists to conduct future-forward and creative research that benefits mankind and the environment.

Commercial applications of the research are being developed by Plantware, a company founded in 2002. TAU and Plantware researchers working together found that certain species of trees grown aeroponically (in air instead of soil and water) do not harden. This developed into a new method for growing "soft roots," which could easily turn living trees into useful structures.

Completing the informal collaboration between Plantware founders and the university, the company’s director of operations, Yaniv Naftaly, holds a degree in life sciences from TAU.

An Eco-Positive Abode

It’s even possible that, in the near future, entire homes will be constructed with the eco-friendly technology. An engineer by trade, Plantware’s CEO Gordon Glazer hopes the first home prototype will be ready in about a decade. While the method of "growing your own home" can take years, the result is long lasting and desirable especially in the emerging field of green architecture.

Prof. Eshel’s team is also working on a number of other projects to save the planet’s resources. They are currently investigating a latex-producing shrub, Euphoria tirucalii, which can be grown easily in the desert, as a source for biofuel; they are also genetically engineering plant roots to ensure "more crop per drop," an innovative approach to irrigation.

Source: TelAvivUniversity

(via physorg.com)
 

The deepest step well in the world

Sunday, March 15th, 2009










Chand Baori is a famous stepwell situated in the village Abhaneri near Jaipur in Indian state of Rajasthan. This step well is located opposite Harshat Mata Temple and is one of the deepest and largest step wells in India. It was built in 9th century and has 3500 narrow steps and 13 stories and is 100 feet deep. It is a fine example of the architectural excellence prevalent in the past.

 

 

What are the tax benefits of home loans?

Friday, April 11th, 2008

Tax benefits can be claimed on both the principal and interest components of the home loan as per the Income Tax Act, 1961. These deductions are available to assessees, who have taken a loan to either buy or build a house, under Section 24(b).

(A) Interest on borrowed capital is deductible as follows:

1. If the following conditions are satisfied, interest on borrowed capital is deductible up to Rs 150,000.

  • Capital is borrowed on or after April 1, 1999 for acquiring or constructing a property.
  • The acquisition/construction should be completed within 3 years from the end of the financial year in which capital was borrowed.
  • The person, extending the loan, certifies that such interest is payable in respect of the amount advanced for acquisition or construction of the house or as refinance of the principle amount outstanding under an earlier loan taken for such acquisition or construction.

2. If the conditions stated above are not satisfied, then the interest on borrowed capital is deductible up to Rs 30,000. However, the following conditions have to be fulfilled:

  • Capital is borrowed before April 1, 1999 for purchase, construction, reconstruction repairs or renewal of a house property.
  • Capital should be borrowed on or after April 1, 1999 for reconstruction, repairs or renewals of a house property.
  • If the capital is borrowed on or after April 1, 1999, but construction is not completed within 3 years from the end of the year, in which capital is borrowed

  • Read more

    Is there a correction in Pune real esate?

    Friday, April 4th, 2008


    Ostensibly, all seems hunky-dory and that’s exactly what the city builders keep saying. But scratch the surface, follow the trail to its origin, piece together seemingly not-so-related issues and the big picture begins to emerge, one that tells a different story.

    To go back to where it all began, the US sub-prime home loan rates issue has already negatively impacted most exporters, especially the IT companies. Just as the realty boom, to a large extent, was powered by the IT sector, a slowdown there, it can be logically concluded, will also have a negative effect on the domestic real estate. In fact it already has.

    To make matters worse, for IT sector where luxuries such as bench strength are a distant dream, the private banks are no longer lending at rates as low as 7.75 per cent but at around 12 per cent. In effect, while the salaries of IT companies have taken a down turn, the EMI liability for the borrower has gone up by nearly Rs 5000 per Rs 10 lakh loan.

    For the banks these loan accounts, when the default period crosses 90 days, translates into non performing assets (NPA), which in turn will negatively impact the bank’s profitability, pushing the banks or even the borrowers to liquidate the property. This will give rise to a situation not unlike what hit the US real estate market about a year ago.

    The Indian Express asked a cross-section of stakeholders as to what’s in store for the city’s real estate sector in the next six months. Excerpts:

    Maj (retd) Mathew Oommen, property consultant, Ambience, a property management company
    Recently, a buyer wanted property in Kalyani Nagar. The seller was quoting Rs nine crore for the bunglow. The buyer, himself a businessman, said, ‘In Pune, there are two prices - fancy prices and realistic prices. Rs nine crore is a fancy price”.

    Currently, in the city, fancy prices are a far cry from the realistic price. Of course there will be a price correction. It should happen within six months. The big builders have holding power, the smaller ones that will face the brunt of the collapse.

    Col (retd) AK Ahuja, property consultant and member of managing committee Estate Agents Association of Pune
    It’s a little premature to predict right now if there will be a correction in the Pune market because February and March are slow months as it is and also the property scene has been hit by the exodus of workers. So the picture will be clear only in the next 15-20 days. But the rates are completely stagnant in the city.

    Rohit Gera, executive director, Gera Developers
    No, I don’t think a correction is in the offing. Fundamentally there is an existing demand for housing in the city and even at the current prices Pune offers great value for money. What kind of a reduction are we talking about? If it’s three to five per cent, then it’s inconsequential. Even a Rs 100-150 up and down doesn’t affect the market so much. It must be at least 20 to 30 per cent and I don’t see that kind of thing happening in Pune.

    Sanjay Lunkad, director, Rohan Builders
    Whatever goes up has to come down and there are pockets in Pune where the rates have been corrected. Even if one person drops his rates the others are tremendously affected by it. There was a correction last year in Bangalore so I guess here too there will be stabilisation, I wouldn’t want to call it correction.

    Kunal Gangakhedkar, manager, IBM and a potential buyer
    I think the correction is already happening. In areas like Kalyani Nagar I have been tracking the same ads for a long time which means there hasn’t been great response to the high rates. In Bangalore the prices did come down by 15 to 20 per cent and I expect at least the same rate correction here too.

    Sugandh Vighne, architect, potential buyer
    I have decided not to buy a house now because I know it is not within my reach. The price hike is as high as Mumbai but there are no matching specifications. Being an architect I can categorically say that it isn’t a fair deal here. So there is no doubt that the prices need to be corrected.

    Asha Misra, potential NRI investor
    Two years ago when we were looking for a place to invest in, in Pune we saw these lovely flats in Kalyani Nagar for about Rs 60 lakh and some nice houses for Rs 70-80 lakh, but didn’t go in for it. This year when we came back, we thought we should make the investment but were shocked to find that the same places are now for Rs 1.4 to 1.5 crore. It’s crazy. There is no question of us investing at these rates.

    Deepak Shikarpur, president, Computer society of India
    Four years ago the Maharashtra government had announced an IT policy that entailed the setting up of IT parks with special concessions given to them. But as soon as the property market started to boom, they withdrew all the concessions. These need to be given back for starters as the companies will start looking elsewhere. Already Infosys has a new facility coming up in Kolhapur and TCS and Satyam have bought land in Goa. I have had IT company CEOs asking me to suggest a location 50-60 kilometers away from Pune where land is more affordable. Builders will not admit to a price reduction but when you start talking to them across the table they’re all willing to negotiate. My view is that in the next six months prices will come down by 30 per cent.

    Sonal Modi, general manager, Maharashtra HDFC
    We expect the Property prices to correct as such high prices are not sustainable. The investors are completely out of the market. The developers have been able to artificially manage the high prices that prevail today but these prices have to correct at some point in time.

    (via Indian Express.)



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