Board Approves Plan For New Kohl’s Store

The revitalization of Alameda Towne Centre took another step Monday as the approved the makeover of the building that currently houses Mervyn’s .

The renovation will set the stage for a Kohl’s store to open at the site in March, said Mike Corbitt of Realty, which owns and manages the shopping mall.

The new store comes as Borders . is about to open as an anchor store at the mall — earlier this month the bookstore hosted a job fair for the site.

While the idea of a Kohl’s opening has raised a few eyebrows among bloggers and others who say they’d like a more , a sampling of shoppers at the mall on Thursday found most people pleased with it.

“With the economy the way it is, I think it’s a good thing when you have a new business opening,” said 58-year-old Glenn Hendrickson, a retired electrician. “How can people have problems with that? It would be a lot worse if places were closing.”

The design that the board approved Monday does not call for the of the building to undergo a . But a portion of the store floor area — along the east and south sides of the building — will be converted into five smaller shops, eliminating the unbroken wall that currently exists on those sides.

Other changes include expanding the loading dock so that there will be two instead of one, with the entrances to Kohl’s being located on

the north side near the AC Transit bus stop and on the south side facing the interior.

New landscaping, benches and are planned, plus additional .

“I haven’t really shopped at Kohl’s before,” said Alameda resident Dorothy Kirschner, 32, as she was leaving Trader Joe’s. “There just hasn’t been one near where I live. But having one here is a good thing. Landscaping Idea It will give us more choice.”

The changes at the shopping mall have been in the works since at least August 2002, when Realty submitted an to the city that included everything from installing palm trees and the construction of a 7,000-square foot Safeway to securing Trader Joe’s.

It also included the removal of a Chevron service station and the construction of a Walgreens at the same site.

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Friday, May 9th, 2008

Gardening steps to help the Earth

WASHINGTON %26mdash; New Year’s resolutions are opportunities to do something you have always wanted to do, often for self-improvement. In the spirit of the season, here are some that will help you improve the environment, too.

Resolve to:

Recycle. A mature tree will produce just 14 newspapers. The energy saved by recycling one aluminum container will run a television for three hours. Recycling one glass bottle will save enough energy to light a 100-watt bulb for four hours.

Cut air-conditioning use by planting trees around your house. One estimate is that three mature trees around a house can cut air-conditioning needs by 10 to 50 percent. If 100 million trees were planted around homes and businesses, the nonprofit conservation group American Forests estimates, $4 billion would be saved in .

Planting trees anywhere will also help remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, helping to offset the damage from burning fossil fuels.

Help trees establish a balance with their growing medium. Drastic changes to the root system of a tree will severely stunt its growth or kill it. Don’t change the grade over roots of trees, not even by an inch, and don’t drive over roots with tractors or trucks.

Just one time can crush enough absorption roots to hinder a tree’s ability to renew.

Save mature trees. They remove particulate pollution and, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, increase property value. Trees can boost a property’s value 10 to 20 percent, depending on the siting and variety, the government says. The U.S. Forest Service estimates that in 50 years, one tree generates $30,000 in oxygen, recycles $35,000 in water and removes $60,000 worth of air pollution.

Consider the soil’s needs before planting. One of the most difficult ingredients to retain in is organic material. In a natural world, trees drop leaves. Smaller plants, and wildflowers die, providing stems and leaves that decay and leave a rich layer of humus. Most depend on humus or compost-rich for air, moisture and nutrients.

your landscape debris.Replenish the mantle of topsoil with . Disappearing original prairie and woodland topsoil is at a premium. It takes about 1,000 years for nature to make just an inch with the precisely right mix of minerals and organic materials. But we can make that in a day.

Test your pH and correct as needed for more acid or alkaline conditions. Amend earth with 3 to 4 inches of on the surface, and more dug into the top 10 to 12 inches of . Lay 2 inches of over trees’ root systems, and let gravity do the rest.

Consider every plant’s longevity. Install trees far enough apart that they can mature into specimens in 12 to 15 years. Design perennials to enhance areas and encourage healthy biodiversity.

Use less pesticide. Start with safe alternatives, and use the more toxic material only if absolutely necessary.

Design native into gardens. Indigenous wildlife depends on them for food and shelter.

Ensure that plant roots get oxygen, from air space in earth that has been deeply dug and amended with , facilitating drainage and air circulation. Install in moist, well-drained .

Drough-tolerant , such as catmint, lamb’s ears, dianthus and some evergreen hybrids of holly and boxwood, must have well- drained, moist but not soggy conditions. will suffocate in perpetually wet .

Conserve natural resources. Use drip irrigation for trees, shrubs and flowers. For lawns, a low spray in early morning on a day without wind is best. Collect rain and the water from your dehumidifier for indoor and outdoor . Irrigate with bath and dishwashing water as long as there are no phosphates in it.

Joel M. Lerner is president of Environmental Design in Capitol View Park, Md. E-mail or contact him through his website, gardenlerner.com.

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Saturday, January 5th, 2008

SCRU set to announce further large loss

The South Canterbury Rugby Union is set to announce another large loss while the future of Alpine Energy Stadium remains up in the air.

The union has cut back spending in several areas but will likely make a loss of between $35,000 to $40,000 for the year ending October 31, according to chairman Stephen McFarlane.

While they will not be the only rugby union facing a cash crisis, the one thing that appears certain the union cannot continue to bleed at the the same level.

The SCRU recorded a loss of $54,000 last year and $142,000 in 2004.

In 2005 the union announced a $106,000 profit, but that was achieved courtesy of a $100,000 grant from the New Zealand Rugby Union and a $58,000 payout from the Crusaders.

Since 1998 the SCRU have had close to $900,000 by way of NZRU grants and payouts from the Crusaders, which up to last year had poured $787,184 into South Canterbury rugby.

This year’s loss will likely be covered by a dwindling reserves account which stood at $97,000 in last year’s annual accounts.

While the union have made positive noises about a sustainable financial basis for several years, this appears unlikely to be achieved without some in thinking or direction.

McFarlane admitted the union struggled to break even.

“Our goal is to be financially sustainable without reliance on the Crusaders and we are currently reviewing all aspects of the union’s operation to establish how that might be achieved.

“We can only cut expenditure so far, therefore a greater emphasis must be on how we might grow our income and make that income more reliable.”

The chairman said he was not in a position to comment on what had happened to the Crusaders money before he joined the board but was adamant about turning around the losses.

McFarlane said they were looking at comparison information from other unions.

“We perform better on some measures and worse on others %26#150; that doesn’t make our current administrative structure wrong.

“We want a focused, efficient union operation across the board.”

The question of the future of Alpine Energy Stadium is still one the union has to decide, he said.

One of the SCRU’s financial strategies was a review of Alpine Energy Stadium, which is a cost of around $60,000 to $65,000 to run annually.

The date for completion of the review was November but it has since been pushed out to the middle of 2008.

McFarlane said the selling the stadium was not a decision that had been made or one they were even close to and they were not going to rush the decision.

“We have committed to our stakeholders (Fraser Park Trust and rugby clubs) that we will review Alpine Energy ownership as part of our annual planning.

“That is not being done with a sale focus %26#150; it is being done to better understand our options for for more efficient utilisation of the ground if we stay, where we would go if we sold and the general landscape of sporting facilities and wider needs in South Canterbury.”

McFarlane reiterated the union’s focus was on financial sustainability, not quick-fix answers, “to ensure, if we can, that we don’t ever get in a position where we are forced to sell Alpine Energy Stadium to fund ourselves”.

“Should the review lead to a decision to sell we want that to be made for positive rugby reasons and more importantly because we have a financial choice.”

While selling the “silverware” may seem unpalatable in some quarters, it may simply become a reality and with grounds at Temuka and Waimate capable of hosting Heartland fixtures, the idea needs serious thought.

The sorts of numbers turning up to watch representative games could easily be accommodated at the alternate venues with Heartland ticket revenue only $7857.

The SCRU own the ground together with the Timaru District Council through the Fraser Park Trust so the proceeds of any sale would be shared on a approximately three-quarters, quarter basis in favour of the rugby union.

McFarlane noted it was not a simple exercise as the sale of the ground would effect some income streams, including advertising signage and sponsorship.

The chairman believed the ground would be worth more than $1 million but one real estate agent, who did not wish to be named, said the ground could be worth in excess of $2m, giving the union a substantial windfall.

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Thursday, December 27th, 2007

No run-of-the-mill house

LOS ANGELES — Roses. Chandeliers. Whimsy. Country. This is not a decorating mantra that Bart Simpson would chant. Well, not without his trademark smirk. But for Nancy Cartwright, the Emmy Award-winning voice actress who puts the sarcasm into the cartoon rascal’s mouth, those four girly-girl are not open for discussion.

“These are my themes,” the pink-clad mom declares.

On a recent visit to her home in the San Fernando Valley community of Northridge, the roses are freshly clipped blooms from her garden, set in a vase in the wildly wallpapered dining room. “Chandeliers,” she announces, standing underneath a gilt and jade-colored glass confection in the kitchen. Cartwright points out a tiny figurine of Tinker Bell suspended on a beaded swag strung between the arms. “Whimsy,” she says.

As for country? That river runs deep, from the whitewashed scalloped trim and shuttered windows outside the 1947 Connecticut-style farmhouse to the beamed ceilings inside. A gambrel-roofed red barn serves as her garage. On the front lawn, Cartwright has placed an appropriate sentinel: a life-size fiberglass cow she named Milk Dud.

The 1-acre spread also contains the property’s original pine-paneled guest apartment, now done up with Western cabin furnishings found at flea markets, as well as cottages housing a studio and offices for managing Cartwright’s speaking engagements, charitable activities, books-on-tape recordings and bulging roster of animation voice gigs.

In addition to portraying Bart and four other “Simpsons” scamps, Cartwright does voices for “The Replacements” and “Betsy’s Kindergarten Adventures,” produces a Web-based cartoon called “The Kellys” and frequently is called upon to play yet one more role: hostess. At home, she presides over civic functions as the honorary mayor of Northridge, holds get-togethers for the Church of Scientology and her own philanthropic group called Happy House, and throws fundraisers for a proposed youth recreation center nearby.

“I live in a very nice home with great neighbors, but you go a quarter of a mile down the road and there’s one of the highest concentrations of gangs in L.A. County,” she says. “I’m not scared living here, but it’s a little bit of an island in the middle of insanity.”

Recently she and children Lucy, 17, and Jack, 15, jumped in a golf cart and delivered more than 600 invitations for a neighborhood “mingle,” she says.

“I wanted them to know that I am accessible and to get them to volunteer at the youth center,” she says.

Hosting large groups required a re-evaluation of the house beginning in 2002, around the time when Cartwright and her husband, Warren Murphy, divorced. Three years later, with her ideas fully formed, the actress sought out interior designer and landscape artist Melinda Brownstone to renovate the house for her role as a single mom and event planner.

“She probably had 50 magazines dog-eared and marked with Post-it notes,” Brownstone says. “For the most part, it was her own creative concept.”

At the front of the house, they built a spacious sunroom with French doors crowned by a half-moon window. Filled with bookcases, a folk-art game table and pink- and green-plaid chairs, the addition spills into the formal living room, which has several seating areas.

“We’ve crammed 70 people in the living room,” Cartwright says proudly. “And although there’s a TV, it’s hidden. I did not want that to be the .”

That honor goes to the stone fireplace and the antlered creature above it, a Semi-Normal Green-Lidded Fawn designed by Theodor Geisel, aka Dr. Seuss.

Guests pass a bar built underneath a staircase to reach the grand kitchen, which was blown open to accommodate a computer station and laundry area. Doors lead out to a covered dining area and a series of created for entertaining.

The most was the reconfiguration of the . An unused tennis court was dismantled and the original pool filled in, allowing for a lawn with Adirondack chairs and additional parking. A new lagoon-style swimming hole was placed at the back edge of the lot, adjacent to an outdoor living room centered on a fireplace made from Arizona flagstone. All-weather wicker chairs in English hunting green and Old World-style outdoor carpets give the spaces an old-time down-homeyness.

If the ground floor was designed for guests, the second-floor suite is decidedly Cartwright’s haven. Though she admits to splurges, such as a hand-painted secretary that she says cost in the $10,000 range, Cartwright also hunted for bargains at the Rose Bowl Flea Market . The floor plan was redesigned to give the actress an elaborate walk-in dressing room to accommodate her vintage clothing and furniture.

Brownstone designed a master bath with sitting room that, Cartwright jokes, “is bigger than some New York apartments.”

“I spoiled myself with it, but it’s every girl’s dream to have a big tub with a chandelier above it,” she says.

Cartwright’s taste is evident all over the property. Guests who smoke will find a straight out of “The Music Man,” painted in vivid teal, and the walls of her recording studio are padded with soft Mercurochrome-pink fabric.

It is in the main house, however, where Cartwright turned her rosy, whimsical, chandelier-lighted take on country living into a resoundingly personal statement. The living room didn’t have particularly high ceilings, yet Cartwright wanted to incorporate a huge original poster for the Fellini film “La Strada,” as well as an ornate upright piano and a massive coffee table made from a door that, she jokes, “probably came from a dungeon.”

Finding a balance between large pieces of furniture, bold patterns and vibrant colors without creating claustrophobia required a complementary sense of scale and a lot of custom-sized sofas, chairs and bookcases, Brownstone says. Wherever possible, the designer used white and black pieces to provide visual structure in the boldly colored rooms. In the kitchen, that meant a black soapstone countertop with a rich vein of green that coordinated with a 1940s Wedgewood stove.

“It is a fun house, not a funhouse, ” Brownstone says. “It’s casual, but everything is stepped up to a custom level.”

The overstuffed furniture in floral prints with ruffles and fringe, as well as the embroidered polka dots on the coral curtains, may look like a page out of Martha Stewart’s handbook, but the fabrics are sumptuous silks, not country chintz. The floors are covered in antique Persian and Aubusson carpets.

“When you walk in the door, it looks like something out of a fairy tale,” friend Lorraine New says. “Everywhere you turn, there’s some interesting detail, like her sea-horse aquarium in the kitchen, and a multitude of colors.”

“My last house in Glassell Park was totally outrageous,” Cartwright says. “It was a ’60s hillside stucco with 65 steps from the street to the front door, and we painted it Bart Simpson yellow.”

By the time Jack had turned 5, Cartwright craved a neighborhood with where the kids could ride their bikes. The search led to the Northridge farmhouse, set on what had been 20 acres of alfalfa and eucalyptus before the property was subdivided with conventional suburban homes.

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Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Energy Efficient Landscaping Design

The word “energy efficient landscapingLandscaping Design need not scare you. It’s all about planning a around your home that will cut down your energy biils by at least 15% to as high as 50%. Design It’s easily possible using a properly thought and well planned project.

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Sunday, November 25th, 2007