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Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Custom Controls: Review Of The Samujana Villa Estate


With its sandy beaches and stunning coral reefs, Koh Samui is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Thailand. Located off the east coast of the Kra Isthmus, Thailand, Koh Samui is only about a 100-minute flight from Singapore, making it the perfect destination for a quick getaway.

On the north-eastern coast of Koh Samui, in a prestigious hilltop location, is one of the island’s most exclusive and discrete luxury villa estates: Samujana. A few minutes’ drive from the airport, the property is within walking distance of the stunning beaches of Choeng Mon and Chaweng.

The boutique luxury estate offers a selection of villas of different sizes, ranging from three to eight bedrooms, each boasting uninterrupted sea views. The newly launched Villa 30 — where I had the good fortune to stay — is certainly one of the best.

Situated at the very top of the estate, Villa 30 is known as the jewel in the crown of Samujana as it offers a spectacular 360-degree sea view. It features five spacious en suite bedrooms each with its own view of the sea. Other facilities include a cinema and a private gym.

Thanks to the floor-to-ceiling windows and glass panels, there is sufficient natural light in every room. It is the sort of view that would inspire one to get up at the crack of dawn just to catch the beautiful sunrise, followed by a refreshing swim in the infinity-edge pool.

Food and refreshment-wise, the villa doesn’t disappoint. A full service bar is on-hand and the villa is equipped with two kitchens and a rooftop barbeque deck. Guests can choose between meals prepared by the estate’s private chefs or choose to cook the meals themselves (the villa’s team can take care of the shopping list or take you to the local market to source ingredients for yourself).

As an added bonus, the estate can also arrange for top chefs from other resorts or restaurants on the island to provide a truly unique dining experience. It even has its own catamaran available for charter and smaller speedboats to facilitate water sports or picnics on secret beaches.

And therein lies the beauty of Samujana. When it comes to personal customisation, the estate is at the top of its game. From facilitating top chefs and private dinners, to private Muay Thai classes and yoga sessions by the beach or simply a pampering spa therapy, the team at Samujana is able to work its magic.

The estate is available for hire or for purchase, making it the perfect weekend getaway for people from the region, but one thing’s for sure: getting there is easy, the challenge is in leaving that good life all behind.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

SOLID INVESTMENT


Canny Irish investors have long been au fait with Pierre & Vacances. Established over 40 years ago and listed on the French Stock Exchange, P&V has something to suit everyone.

With P&V leaseback, punters are exempt from VAT, while enjoying hefty rental yields. And in addition to offering guaranteed rent, the company also maintains property free of charge throughout the leaseback period. So: win win, all the way.

Now P&V has a one-off investment opportunity in one of Europe's largest business districts, Paris La Defense. The freehold, fully furnished apartments currently up for grabs are in Business District Central, and offer endless capital growth potential.


From here you're just seven minutes from Les Champs Elysee and the Arc de Triomphe by subway, and half an hour from the Gare de Lyon.

The development comprises 92 apartment units, all with kitchenette, air-conditioning, satellite TV and WiFi access. Other attractions include a bar, restaurant and meeting room facilities. There are 95-100pc mortgages available from a Dublin-based mortgage provider. Furthermore, the scheme also features an attractive nine-year leaseback agreement.

Then there's the business of no maintenance or management fees, no insurance, and VAT financed by P&V. Nice one.

Friday, September 11, 2015

Breman: A German fairy tale


One of Bremen's most famous sons is Ludwig Roselius, a local merchant who made his fortune as the inventor of decaffeinated coffee. At the start of the 20th century he began to buy up all the houses in a dilapidated street which connected the market square and the Weser River called Böttcherstrasse. He then had it completely rebuilt, resulting in one of the most complete and remarkable examples of German expressionist architecture.
Breman: A German fairy tale

I must confess that this did not initially fill me with hope as to what I might find there. But I needn't have worried; there is certainly much more to Bremen than heavy industry, ships, cargo and freight. For over a thousand years it has embraced not only a wealth of goods but a wide range of cultural influences.

I was staying at the Maritim Hotel which is located within easy walking distance of the Old Town. It was late evening as I entered the Market Square and I was immediately struck by the soaring Gothic spires of the majestic Saint Peter's Cathedral. For much of Bremen's history the Church vied for power and dominance with the guilds and merchants. This tussle can be seen in the architecture, on either side of the square competing for supremacy are the Schütting or guild house and the stunning City Hall. For some 600 years there has also been an armed medieval knight called Roland directly facing the cathedral - a monumental stone reminder to the Church to keep its ambitions in check.

Famished and slightly overwhelmed by the sheer scale and orgy of decoration on the buildings, I headed to the Ratskeller - the city's ancient wine cellar. The hall dates back to 1405 and on the left hand side there are huge vividly decorated wine casks. If you're planning an intimate meal, you can book a private room at the edge of the restaurant. These are designed like compartments in an old-fashioned train, but, beware, you are only allowed to close the door if there are more than two people.

Legend has it that this custom was introduced in the Middle Ages to prevent conspirators using them to scheme and hatch plots. I sense the reality has rather more to do with excessive consumption of wine and public decency. Although Bremen is famed as the home of Becks beer, the Ratskeller houses some 650 different German wines, including the oldest in Germany - a wine from Rüdesheim which is dated 1653. While that was slightly outside of my budget, I enjoyed a crisp Riesling which perfectly complemented my meal - a regional speciality of white asparagus, pork schnitzel served with a tantalising hollandaise sauce. Fully sated I stumbled back to the comfort of my hotel.


Roselius is not free from controversy: at the entrance there is a gold relief called the Lichtbringer ('Bringer of Light'); it was intended to glorify the "victory of our Führer over the powers of darkness." Ironically, despite Roselius' Nazi sympathies, in 1937 the street was listed as an example of degenerate art. It was largely destroyed during the war, but I was taken aback by the manner in which it has been painstakingly reconstructed. It houses a number of small but significant museums.

I was particularly enamoured with the Ludwig Roselius Museum, which contains a valuable collection of Northern European fine and decorative art, including paintings by Ludger Tom Ring and Lucas Cranach the Elder. There are two very striking, if unsurprisingly stern, portraits of Martin Luther and his wife.

Another architectural gem is the town hall. Constructed over many centuries to fit in with prevailing fashions, it is a dizzying mixture of Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque styles. It is difficult to fathom how a building so beautiful and delicate managed to survive the war when all around it was destroyed. It is a testimony to the tireless work of some of the locals, who dutifully extinguished countless incendiary bombs, that it is here today.

Inside, there are four six-foot-long replica warships made in the 16th and 17th centuries which hang from the richly decorated rafters. Their miniature cannons can even be fired if the occasion demands. There are huge paintings of whales and naval battles, enormous chandeliers and intricately carved wooden gargoyles. There is also the magnificent Guldenkammer or Golden Chamber, which is an exquisite examples of German art nouveau. Its wall are lined with gilt wallpaper; even its door handle is in the shape of an ornate peacock.

In need of some retail therapy, I headed to Bremen's oldest district, the charming Schnoor quarter. It is a warren of rambling lanes lined with achingly quaint and colourful 15th and 16th century houses and cottages where fishermen, artisans and sailors once lived. They are now home to boutiques, bakeries, restaurants, chocolate shops and scores of small cosy pubs, the perfect places to relax and enjoy a Becks or two.

A few hours north of Bremen is the small picturesque town of Itzehoe. This is where the Czech Expressionist painter Wenzel August Hablik lived with his wife for much of his life. A museum in his honour located in an old townhouse was opened in 1995. I had only seen a few isolated examples of Hablik's work before so it was a real delight to be able to see such an extensive collection. His painted work is characterised by intense geometric lines and vibrant colours, but he also produced a vast array of designs for furniture, textiles, tapestries, jewellery, cutlery, and wallpapers.

Bremen is the setting of one of the Grimm brothers' most enduring fairy tales, The Bremen Town Musicians. In the story, a donkey, a dog, a cat, and a rooster who are all past their prime decide to go to Bremen, to live without owners and become musicians there. On their way, they outwit some thieves and take possession of a vacant house. They stay there and ultimately never make it to Bremen. I would advise that you do not repeat their mistake.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

No ghosts here: Sydney hipster house creeps out UK media

Sydney's property market may leave some scratching their heads at the prices, but British media was confused for an entirely different reason.

A home at 187 Brougham Street, Woolloomooloo, on the market for more than A$1.25 million (NZ$1.3m), has the British media creeped out – with some claiming it's haunted.

London's The Mirror suggested the advertisement for the  "haunted house" had "some of the worst ghost pictures ever".

And the Daily Mail said the three-bedroom house had "historic charm, amazing city views ... and one hipster ghost".


Sydney real estate aficionados will, however, recognise the photography style as BresicWhitney's​ signature touch to the photographs – adding people and, sometimes, pets to their listings.

For this terrace, ripe for a significant renovation, the images emphasise stained glass, period details, a sunroom and a rear balcony.

BresicWhitney head of marketing Brendan Fearn said the creative approach they take is to depict the "true character" of the property and bring it to life through imagery.

"You'll often see a human element to our work, which we find helps to develop the visual narrative for the property,"  earn said.

"With 187 Brougham Street, our photographers had a lot of fun bringing to life the raw interior."


Inquiry for theInterest in the home has been consistent since it was listed earlier this week, said selling agent Nic Krasnostein​, with interest "streaming consistently".

And the "ghost"? In this case there's nothing supernatural at all... it's a BresicWhitney's team member.

"The bearded hipster ghost can be revealed to be none other than our chief copywriter extraordinaire, Pete Wood," Fearn said.

Wood is actually a regular feature in the agencies listing photographs.

He has been spotted in several other listings too, including 2A Foley Place, Darlinghurst and 773 Bourke Street, Redfern.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Richard Seifert, The Famous Architect Who Built A Pirate Castle


The architect Richard Seifert has arguably done more to define the skyline of London than any other single architect, having built more London buildings than Sir Christopher Wren. One of his buildings was even graced with a TARDIS. Throughout the 60s and 70s he conceived a plethora of gleaming, futuristic icons such as Natwest Tower (now renamed Tower 42 despite being a 50 storey embodiment of the bank’s logo), Space House just off Kingsway, and Tolworth Tower on the Kingston bypass, while his most famous (or infamous) building is Centre Point atop Tottenham Court Road station.

Thoroughly nonsense-free and professional — a colonel lieutenant of the army no less, who insisted on retaining the moniker in practice — his architecture is the embodiment of the sleek modernism synonymous with his Swiss background. It came backed with a reputation for the ruthless mastery of high-rise building through his ingenuity in the adaptation of construction principles and planning loopholes.

For all this tight-buttoned rationalism then, it’s a bit of a shock to discover it was Seifert who was responsible for what appears to be an architectural joke on the Grand Union Canal in Camden. Nestled in among the industrial warehouses next to Camden Lock, the Pirate Castle of 1977 looks like some kind of folly, a hangover from a party long since over, not least because its medieval castellations and Jolly Roger flag are supplemented by a huge sign branding it PIRATE CASTLE. Just in case you weren’t sure.

Unfortunately, of course, it isn’t one really, but a centre for children’s watersports, yet the story of its background is just as odd. It was founded in the 1960s by the unfeasibly named Jestyn Reginald Austine Plantagenet Phillips, otherwise known as Viscount St Davids, son of Baroness Strange of Knokin, Hungerford and De Moleys, and who later adopted the nickname Peg-Leg after fracturing his leg in a fall between the club’s original narrowboat home and the pontoon.

Originally based on a decrepit narrow boat, the first pirates lived up to their club’s name, raising funds for its current home by in effect mugging the other users of the waterways. Their “rattling tin raids” on passing canal boats were subsequently supplemented upon opening by holding the Lord Mayor of London for ransom in the club’s dungeon. There’s nothing like taking a theme and running with it, is there?

An extension to the centre in 2008 by AAB Architects thankfully preserved the castellated theme, and provided additional and updated facilities to grant greater access to those with physical disabilities — too late for Peg-Leg unfortunately, who died in 1991, though his legacy lives on.
This is one of London’s real icons, emblematic of a cultural history standing proud against its surroundings. And it’s pure Seifert too, once you look closely — imaginative, innovative, ceaselessly battling convention. After all, his disdain for anything box-like, bland and rectilinear even extended to his V-shaped desk. This just takes things one step further. While you may think you know the London skyline, it’s the anomalies where you see its true character.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Halifax Central Library on short list for World Building of the Year


The Halifax Central Library has been short-listed to win the World Building of the Year title from the World Architecture Festival.

The library is one of 13 finalists in the Civic and Community section. If it wins, it will compete against winners from 27 other categories for World Building of the Year honours.

The library is one of six nominees from Canada. The Edison Residence and City Fields are representing Montreal. There are also two nominees from Vancouver: the Vancouver House and Nelson on the Park. The Grotto Sauna is representing Toronto.

In January 2014, the Halifax Central Library was named to CNN’s list of “10 eye-popping new buildings that you’ll see in 2014,” the only North American building on the list.

All finalists will be invited to present their project live at the festival in November at the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore.

The committee received more than 700 entries from 47 countries, according to a news release.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Housebuilding Tips - Getting The Best Tool For The Job


At the point when considering Micro Digger contract, fledgling housebuilders are regularly unpracticed with working such a machine and thus may be uncertain of which Micro Digger is ideal for the occupation close by. The best tip from those in the business is that size truly matters.

In spite of what the name would propose, the term 'Small scale Digger contract' covers an extensive variety of models - running in size from six tons at the bigger end to simply under a ton at the "miniaturized scale" end of the scale. That is an enormous contrast and which digger you settle on will have a huge bearing on what occupations you can do with the machine, to what extent it will take, the expense and so on.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Approach A Reputed Property Agency To Buy Your Ideal Home


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It is simple to approach a believed property agency to understand the price of home building. Professionals of the organization will care for your requirements and serves you having a prior quotation for that houses that you are wanting to construct for the family. This should help you to obtain the houses built by professional constructors. In by doing this, additionally, you will be familiar with the believed budget for your house construction.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

UK housebuilding plans fall down on lack of bricks and bricklayers


Federation of Master Builders puts dearth of supplies and tradespeople down to kilns being mothballed and workers laid off during recent recession. An FMB survey found bricklayers were hardest to recruit but it was also difficult to find carpenters and joiners, supervisors and plumbers.

Increasing shortages of bricklayers and bricks threaten to undermine ambitious housebuilding plans laid out by politicians ahead of the election, a leading construction industry group has warned.

Monday, April 6, 2015

Brookings men to serve fours years for stealing construction equipment

BROOKINGS, S.D. A father and his future son-in-law in eastern South Dakota will serve four years in prison for stealing and then selling construction equipment.
The Brookings Register reports that a circuit judge gave 25-year-old Daniel Roberts and his future father-in-law, 43-year-old Larry Paxton, eight-year prison terms with half of the time suspended. The men earlier pleaded guilty to one count of grand theft.
Authorities say the men stole two trailers from businessmen in Brookings in December and two spools of wire belonging to Brookings Municipal Utilities. The Brookings County men admitted to cutting one of the trailers and selling the aluminum pieces for scrap. The wire was sold for scrap, too.
A father and his future son-in-law in eastern South Dakota will serve four years in prison for stealing and then selling construction equipment.
The men were ordered to pay over $4,000 in restitution.
Other charges were dismissed as part of a plea deal.
(Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

Monday, March 9, 2015

Radical Cities: Across Latin America in Search of a New Architecture by Justin McGuirk – review

"Considering ideal conditions is a waste of time," Alfredo Brillembourg and Hubert Klumpner write in their 2005 book, Informal City. "The point is to avoid catastrophe." The two architects, partners in the international practice Urban-Think Tank, are known for the cable car system they designed for Caracas, connecting barrios in the hills with the city in the valley. Part of the allure of these cable cars, and U-TT's work in general, is the way they make a virtue of leftover spaces. A shelter for a football field becomes a "vertical gymnasium". A shelter for street children, built under an overpass, gets another football pitch on its roof. As design critic Justin McGuirk writes in Radical Cities, his survey of urban experiments in Latin America, in "engaging with the informal city, U-TT developed a methodology of maximising the amount of social activity that a tiny plot of land could deliver". They went small – "strategic" and "urban acupuncture" are the terms du jour – looking at what the city had become, and what individual neighbourhoods needed, rather than masterplanning a cycle of demolition and straight lines.
Urban-Think Tank's remark seems the obverse of another, more famous planner's words: "Make no little plans, they have no magic to stir men's blood." That is Daniel Burnham, whose 1909 plan of Chicago depicted a set of grand boulevards radiating from a proposed lakeshore civic centre, with ring roads and parks at the city boundary. McGuirk reverses Burnham's emphasis, focusing on the in-between spaces in that dream of 20th-century city organisation. He chronicles the history of post-modernist development in cities across Latin America, setting up, again and again, a contrast between the planned and the made, top-down versus bottom-up, high versus low and, most important, centre versus periphery. The strongest argument he makes, backed by examples in Bogotá, Caracas and Rio, is the importance of access to transportation. If modernist Latin American architects, often following in the footsteps of Le Corbusier's concrete blocks, saw housing as the way to democratise the city, 21st-century politicians and planners should be thinking about motion, with cable cars and bus rapid transit giving people in the slums more time and more opportunities.
La Torre de David Caracas
McGuirk's mission statement, somewhat buried in a first chapter that begins in Mexico City, travels to Lima and namechecks both the "Bilbao effect" and Henri Lefebvre's "right to the city", is this: "Accepting the informal city as an unavoidable feature of the urban condition, and not as a city-in-waiting, is the key lesson that this generation of Latin American architecture can offer the world." Looking only at the big picture and bringing solutions from outside has failed to keep up with economic crisis and population growth. How can the old institutions, governments, banks, utilities and planners learn from conditions on the ground and prevent the violence, riots and mudslides that would count as catastrophe? A parallel project is under way in landscape architecture, where theorists such as Pierre Bélanger suggest that solutions for climate change will come from countries that have done less to their coastlines rather than more.
Many of the projects McGuirk describes will be familiar to readers of architecture magazines, frequenters of design biennales, and even visitors to New York's Museum of Modern Art, which featured a number of these projects in its 2010 exhibition Small Scale, Big Change. Chilean architect Alejandro Aravena's Quinta Monroy, a rare example of a successful housing project in the book, has proved to be catnip to the design press. The scheme is brilliantly simple: $7,500, the government housing subsidy, was not enough to both acquire land and build a family a house. So Aravena designed a set of half-houses, cinder block with basic services installed. Each house was set adjacent to a vacant site of equal footprint. As families saved more money they could expand horizontally. McGuirk visited the first of these houses, built in 2003, and experienced "the mild taste of disappointment that comes from travelling thousands of miles to see something that is simply what it is – a handful of cheap houses, not the Pyramids".
Radical Cities is at its best when it offers a journalist's view of facts on the ground: real people, real observation, as opposed to the aestheticised drive-by of magazines and exhibitions. In these cases McGuirk is doing the work of the old-fashioned urban critic, describing and not relying on photography. I was particularly touched by a couple of living-room scenes, in very different settings. The first was in a house designed by Danish architect Knud Svenssons in Lima in the mid-1970s, as part of Previ, a rare example of a successful modernist housing development. Under a white, waffle-concrete ceiling, the homeowner has installed a baroque mirror, lace antimacassars and bilious green wallpaper.
McGuirk writes: "The house has three patios – three! – each looking on to a walled courtyard, making it bright and yet private. She feels privileged to live here, she says." Previ also boasts houses by James Stirling, Aldo van Eyck and Fumihiko Maki, making it a laboratory of late-modernist ideas about housing, privacy and replicability. Previ succeeds, McGuirk writes, because the houses were conceived as frameworks for expansion. The courtyards could be roofed over to make more bedrooms. No one told the homeowner she couldn't have a brutalist ceiling and a chandelier.
The second example is from La Torre de David, an abandoned skyscraper in the centre of Caracas that has slowly been inhabited by a highly organised set of squatters; it featured in the TV series Homeland. McGuirk and U-TT organised an award-winning exhibition about the tower, with photographs by Iwan Baan, for the 2012 Venice Architecture Biennale. I always had doubts about its presentation there: it seems obvious that living on the 28th floor of a building without elevators and without walls is closer to catastrophe than utopia. Indeed, Venezuelan architects criticised it as such in 2012. McGuirk discusses their critique of the Tower of David by arguing for it as a "paradigm of human ingenuity, adaptability and resourcefulness – of citizens exercising their right to the city". Even with the emphasis on the social over the architectural (a fine distinction in the context of an architecture biennial), I did not find McGuirk's admiration entirely convincing. Here's his description of life on the tower's top occupied floor, the 28th. Once you get up there, you don't go down that often. "With kids in tow, it wouldn't be a surprise if his family had simply given up the street altogether. A sort of Swiss Family Robinson, castaways in mid-air, the children only discovering the street when they come of age." This is a different, but no less utopian, vision.
Even after reading Radical Cities, I had similar questions about those cable cars to the slums: we see that they bring new civitas and new opportunity, but we don't hear much about the living conditions around them. McGuirk's city-hopping doesn't always give him, or the reader, the means to evaluate these interventions. Just as every modernist housing block is not Pruitt-Igoe in St Louis, Missouri – demolished after years of neglect in 1972 – some urban acupuncture fails, or merely looks good in an exhibition. More counterexamples would have created a better set of criteria for evaluation. In addition, many reforms seem to be just as connected to compelling personalities, whether in politics or design, as they were in the last century. (And where are the women? Milagro Sala, founder of the revolutionary Argentinian group Tupac Amaru, is the only woman interviewed at length.)
Yet patterns do persist. Perhaps you can see the radical city as a set of waves, infiltrating, rather than washing over or cutting through, a la Burnham, what exists today. The first wave is transportation, then public space and public buildings, and, finally, housing. McGuirk does a service by collecting and connecting these ideas, making a movement out of pieces, and showing an alternative way to shape the city.