Archive for August 2011

Some tips of perfect Property & buy NJ home

Article by Buy Nj Homes

Enjoy your garden

Don’t sit inside on sunny days, gazing out at your beautiful garden and admiring it from afar. Get out there and enjoy it! You should be holding parties, barbecues, high teas…or simply be relaxing it, alone or with a friend/partner. All you need is a glass of wine, a bowl of pasta and a good book.

However if you want to go a bit bigger and have a full-on gathering, then you may have to spruce the place up a bit – especially if it’s been sitting dormant since winter.

So, first think about scrubbing your garden chairs so they look like new. If no amount of scrubbing is going to restore them to their former glory, then invest in some new chairs and a table. Have you got any form of coverage, should the sun become too bright or hot? If not, get a gazebo or umbrella to erect in the garden.

Next, have you got a good barbie to throw some steaks and prawns on during a hot summer day? Didn’t think so. Go on, get out there and make your next garden investment a really great, gas barbecue. It’ll be a good, long-term investment and once you start smoking that mesquite, your friends will be flocking for a bite.

Another thing to consider is whether or not you’ll be inviting kiddies to the party. If yes, you’ll need to think of something to entertain them. Ask their folks to bring their favourite toys and you in return could provide them with a little surprise – a paddling pool! These always go down a treat with children and are a great way for the adults to enjoy their time without worrying.

Once you’re out there having fun, drink good wine with good friends, you’ll wonder why you didn’t get out into the garden sooner.

 

How to make your venue suitable for weddings

Weddings are momentous occasions in any family. With the bride and groom keen to ensure they and their friends have a great day, as well as the families doing all they can to make it a celebration that the happy couple will fondly remember, people will often pull out all the stops when it comes to booking a wedding venue.

So, to ensure you get the bookings – and the great deal of money that often comes with it – you need to make sure the furnishing in your venue is perfect and nothing gets left to chance.

When dining at the reception, the guests will of course need somewhere to eat and drink. Tables can be easily covered with cloths, making them easy to maintain and keep any unsightly stains out of sight of the guests in attendance. Chairs, on the other hand, are a little more exposed and getting the best ones will give the whole place a feel that many other objects struggle to match.

Quality banqueting chairs will serve a multitude of purposes. They look attractive when put around a table, are comfortable for the guests to sit on and are easily stackable when it comes to clearing space for dancing.

The top table will also need to stand out from the rest and easily discernible. This is often done by having the guests sat at round tables but the couple and their immediate family on a straight table. This not only separates the tables but also allows those giving speeches to face their audience without having to shuffle around the table.

The chairs at top table do not need to be different from those on the others, but it’s worth having a few different ones in reserve just in case. Some couples may want something a little different in colour or design for top table; others will rather keep it consistent. Either way, having a small selection of others will mean you have the capability to allow either, depending on the circumstances.

So whilst the scenery, views and architecture play an important part of the decision-making process whilst booking a wedding venue, the furniture should most certainly not be overlooked.

 

 

 

Solar Homes

Solar Homes Can Save You Money

Solar homes, solar businesses, solar cars, solar factories, etc, this is the future, this is where our country needs to head, it widely known and well excepted that solar energy is clean, efficient and very cost effective. We just need to step up the implementation of making our every day life dependent on solar power and not fossil fuels, we have solar panels, electric cars, companies, factories but we still need to do more, we need to increase the number of these facilities and modes of travel, where this is the majority and not the minority.

What the smart ones are doing

Property owners are taking advantage of generous tax credits by adding energy efficient components to their homes and nearby structures. Some homeowners add solar arrays to their roofs, while others add them to their garages. It doesn’t matter if the building is newly constructed homes or decades old because skilled installers can retrofit solar panels and arrays to accommodate any home with southern exposure. Here are a few examples of how the arrays might look on your home.

What about two story homes?

The Northern California Solar Energy Association, in its glossary, defines natural convection as “A method of heat transfer where a fluid (liquid, gas or molten metal) picks up heat from one object and carries it to another by currents that result from the rising of lighter, warm fluid and the sinking of heavier, cool fluid. The two objects exchanging energy don’t have to physically touch. Convection is the source of the ‘wind chill factor’ and the ‘cooling breeze’ we experience outdoors and the ‘draft’ we feel often feel while indoors.” In a two-story passive solar house with open spaces, warm air will rise to the top. The house can be designed to take advantage of this form of natural convection in order to cool the house using passive methods.

Frederick Bernard, the owner of Acorn Builders, a custom home designer, builder, and remodeler, says, “In a lot of these types of homes, you see what’s called a heat chimney. It’s like a cupola with vents in it. It can be made with operable windows so that you can open them at night and the heat will leave the house and draw in the cooler outdoor air. That’s a passive way to cool a house.”

The green-rated.org website, a project of Portland’s Office of Sustainable Development, says, “When warm air rises and leaks out at the top of a building, cooler air is drawn in at the bottom. Openings and spaces, such as atriums, can be designed to encourage this type of flow. A heat chimney is a device that uses the sun to heat air to create convection. An example of such a device is a cupola on top of a house.”

The Office of Sustainable Development cites the People’s Food Co-op in Portland as an example of a building that successfully uses a heat chimney. The Co-op “installed a chimney stack to help cool their building using natural ventilation. The stack was installed as one component of an well-integrated heating and cooling system that eliminated the need for mechanical cooling.” Another Portland example is Ode to Roses, where the designer constructed the building “to take advantage of heat rising and consequently avoided the need to mechanically cool the building. The owner strategically installed a multi-purpose clerestory (or monitor) on the second floor that drastically increases daylight penetration and serves as a hot air outlet when perimeter outlets are opened.”

You can also use active methods, such as traditional air-conditioning, to help equalize the temperature differences between the first and second stories of a two-story passive solar house. Bernard says, “It’s all in the design of the system. You can design your two-story house with an air-conditioning system so that it distributes more cool air to the upper floors or draws the heat from the top floors and cools it, then distributes it back to the lower floors or draws heat from your upper floors and sends it back into your lower floors so that your upper floors aren’t hotter than your lower floors. These are ways to make sure your top floors aren’t always hotter than your bottom floors. You need to rely on your heating and cooling contractor for that.”

Bernard adds, “Some cities, like Austin, have rebate programs for sealing and insulating your home to hold a more constant temperature and make it more energy efficient.”