Waterfall Landscapes Ideas

<a href=Waterfall Ideas” width=”150″ height=”200″ /> landscapes add a touch of peace and serenity to almost any lawn and garden area. The sound of can be extremely soothing. You’ll also be providing the creatures that visit your lawn a valuable water source, but you will not have the problem of mosquitoes laying eggs in the water because it is a water source that is in constant motion.

Without a doubt a for your new, existing, or intended pond will be the most prominent , and therefor, most important factor of your . Let southern California’s leading team of designers and installers help you create the perfect pond for your .

The benefits of building for ponds continue to grow. Aside from the obvious pleasant sound of a welcoming you and your guests into your own tropical paradise, there are many other practical benefits you may not know about. (more…)

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Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Urbandale Garden Part Of Tour

An resident’s interest in creating in landed his yard among the featured stops on the eighth annual Extraordinary Gardens by tour set for Saturday.

The event includes gardens in , West , and Clive. Each site was designed by a .

“My backyard has been in constant transformation since we moved here in 1979. I add things, move plants if they aren’t doing well and play with the landscaping. One of the main features of my yard is the I added,” said King.

The two dispel the belief that good fences make good neighbors. Friends since Borchardt moved to the neighborhood in the 1980s, the two share and ideas, and they collaborate on to be sure it complements the other’.

Krogulski’ boasts a garden filled with nearly 125 . Adding to the beauty is a rock- and a bed that creates a between the two gardens.

For Borchardt, who volunteers for the , the thrill of gardening comes from its maintenance.

“I hope people take away from our two gardens that gardening is enjoyable, that it should be an addition to your life and not a chore. For me, it is my little bit of ; it’s a to go out and pull weeds,” Borchardt said.

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

June Landscaping Tips Butterflies And Gardens Special To The Online Edition

Celebrate summer by welcoming butterflies into your garden. are different from many other “theme” gardens. To be successful, the garden not only needs to have a that works with the surrounding home and landscape, but it needs to perform a very specific task. Attracting butterflies may seem fairly straightforward, but you cannot assume all butterflies are attracted to all flowers.

Butterflies are beautiful, somewhat ethereal creatures whose and graceful add a sense of wonder to any garden planting

Butterflies have plant preferences: There are literally thousands of , and each species tends to have a of plants as source. When selecting for a , it is also important to remember that a butterfly goes through four life cycles, with one set of for the larval stage and another type of food once the butterfly emerges from the chrysalis.

The for butterflies include , perennials, wildflowers, , shrubs and trees. and tender known to attract many include zinnias, white alyssum, marigolds, lantana, cosmos, nicotiana, petunias, ageratum, fuchsia, snapdragons and sunflowers. Herbs and wildflowers that attract butterflies include chives and other alliums, , spearmint, Anaphalis, , Verbena, dandelions, clover, Queen Anne’s Lace, , goldenrod and thistle.

for include daisies, Phlox, Aster, Liatris, Rudbeckia, Echinacea, Eupatorium, Achillea, Aubretia, , Echinops, Limonium, Sedum, Phystostegia, Scabiosa, Coreopsis, Hemerocallis, Heuchera, Lilium, Lythrum, Lavandula, Myosotis and Penstemon. Shrubs, vines and trees for include Abelia, Aesculus, Aruncus, , Clethra, Crataegus, , Lonicera, Malus, Prunus, Ribes, Salix, Spirea, Syringa, Vaccinium and Wisteria.

Design help: If a is to be created as part of an older, established , look for a site that offers shelter—an overgrown fence, a clump of trees, the base of a sloping lot, or a rocky outcropping with a flat, grassy spot nearby. and several hours of sun would complete the picture—minus only the butterfly-attracting .

Call it serendipity, but the preferred style of planting for design purposes—starting with low edging and gradually working up, level by level, to the tallest —is also one of the best arrangements for a . This is not only because it makes it easier for the butterflies to identify their favorite nectar-producing when they are clearly visible, but the taller offer shelter from both wind and predators.

The popular concept of a mixed border, combining , , , roses, , vines and ornamental trees, all underplanted with bulbs, will provide a long bloom season as well as a variety of food sources and forms of shelter that will attract a large assortment of butterflies over a long period.

Other design guidelines: Although some theme gardens need meticulous care and a neat, sometimes formal appearance to create the intended ambience, butterflies like their to be a little messy. Rocky paths muddied by a sprinkler or parts of the garden where water pools on flat rocks will attract many like a luxury spa attracts movie stars. Research indicates that minerals released through the water’s evaporation process, primarily sodium, may play a vital part in the mating habits of butterflies. For this reason, some experts recommend putting small salt licks in a .

Areas in or around the garden where grass is allowed to grow long can act as a shelter and, for some species, a place to lay their eggs. If you can live with a section of your garden that is somewhat overgrown with , wildflowers, trees and , you will probably find more butterflies in this little wilderness than among carefully tended flower beds

Like , there are woodland butterfly species and those that prefer a sunny spot. Even sun-loving butterflies will appreciate the presence of a shaded shelter.

Butterflies have a powerful sense of smell. Much like dogs, the scents that they find attractive aren’t always scents the human population likes to encourage. Rotting fruits and vegetables are gourmet treats for some butterflies, while others are drawn to the more pleasant aromas of clover or wild violets.

Pesticides and herbicides should be avoided, whenever possible, because in almost every stage of life butterflies are extremely vulnerable to such toxins.

Some butterflies stay around for winter: Not many butterflies overwinter in the extreme climates of the Midwest, but those that do ( sometimes called “hibernators” ) will also benefit from winter shelter—mounds of ivy growing over old tree stumps, piles of logs or large, dead tree branches, a stack of old bricks or chunks of concrete.

Some butterflies will hibernate in old trees, while others will welcome the presence of specially designed “butterfly houses” as winter shelter. Winter or summer, butterflies need protection from the wind and a place where the sun will be reflected, somewhere safe from predators—including the trampling feet of children.

Types of butterflies: Monarch butterflies are usually a common sight in Illinois. Other likely candidates include Cabbage White butterflies, Clouded Sulphur, Orange Sulphur, Eastern-Tailed Blue, Meadow Fritillary, Pearl Crescent, Viceroy, Great Spangled Fritillary, Summer Azure, Question Mark, Least Skipper, European Skipper, and the Dion Skipper.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Ann Arbor Residents Share Creative Landscaping In Annual Tour

landscaping.jpg”>Homeowners’ artistic expressions are the focus of next Saturday’s Ann Arbor Garden Walk.

From a display titled “A Country French Garden” (at 435 Stein Road) to one dubbed “Geometry in Bloom” (at 2230 Platt Road), the outdoor spaces on the 18th annual tour offer visitors a peek at some glorious landscapes.

“We feel that this year’s gardens offer an exceptional taste of the arts - not only music, but sculptures, artisan fountains, hand-done glass and mosaics, and distinctive plantings,” says Kathy Clark, chairwoman of the walk.
If you go

A perfect example is the garden of Lucie and Larry Nisson (1227 Lutz), called “Falling Waters.”

“I’m an artist,” says Larry Nisson, “and I create art with rocks and wood and some glass.”

He says his challenge is to create art “with dynamic tension, so it looks like it’s almost ready to fall over, but not.” He says he hopes people will view the art in his garden and “experience that tension.”

The water feature in the center is almost as lovely as the homeowner’s collection of orchids - about 120 in all, though not all of them will be on display.

At 809 Brooks St., Middy Potter has created “A Place to Dream” for visitors of all ages. It includes a stone tower that Potter built, 300 varieties of hosta and a vast collection of dwarf conifers. This garden also includes some wonderful sculptures.
Lisa Allmendinger | The Ann Arbor NewsMiddy Potter’s garden on Brooks Street in Ann Arbor, titled “A Place to Dream,” includes a stone tower, a vast collection of conifers and 300 varieties of hosta.
“The gardens on this year’s garden walk demonstrate the homeowners’ vision in creating an artistic expression of their lives and their work,” says Clark.

Tickets are $12, and proceeds will benefit the new education center at Growing Hope. There are plans to build a greenhouse and demonstration garden, which will provide hands-on training and education for low-income families and at-risk students, says Claudia Scioly, a member of the garden walk committee.

New to the tour this year will be entertainment at several of the gardens, Clark says.
The Stout Hearted String Band will play at the first garden (435 Stein Road) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Nora Karsch, who plays the hammered dulcimer, is a member of Women’s Farm and Garden Association, which sponsors the annual garden walk.

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Monday, June 9th, 2008

Its Hot Again This Year Eco Chic Gardening

the average household spent more than $400 for garden-related items. Landscaping grew by 19 percent, water gardening by 49 percent, planting by 26 percent and by 1 percent. Experts watch sales and several other areas to distinguish trends.

Why are they important? Garden and landscape trends shape for the next year and years to come.

I mentioned last year after returning from the International Conference in Little Rock that green gardening was the undertone of many of the speakers. For 2008, the Garden Media Group identified going green as the No. 1 , professional trend-watchers for the gardening industry.

“Environmentally savvy homeowners know that it’s not just good enough to live an environmentally friendly lifestyle; you’ve got to be environmentally responsible ” said Garden Media’s Susan McCoy.

Gardeners want to find , use locally produced or recycled materials and use environmentally responsible .

Eco-chic is the for gardens designed and maintained in an ecology friendly manner. Gardeners are recycling plastic pots, composting and using to catch rainwater. To restore balance in nature, they are creating feeding spots for birds and so that bees, ladybugs and have fruit and nectar to eat.

Water gardening is still trendy. However, it is not necessary to have a huge . In fact, is out. New smaller scale fountains and ponds are . They use less water, require less maintenance and can be more interesting in a home . Pondless waterfalls are an option as are tabletop and recirculating fountains.

Many gardeners are opting for less grass in smart and easy . They are adding stamped concrete patios, walks and driveways. Turfless are showing up as gardeners install rocks, , trees and ground covers rather than traditional . More expensive initially, it will save time, money and energy in maintenance, especially if combined with a drip irrigation system. Natives show up frequently in gardens as well as ornamental grasses.

Half of this country’s consumers say that a lack of time is a bigger issue than a lack of . The service industry is exploding as homeowners who have purchased homes with large landscaped lawns just cannot find time to maintain the outdoor aspects. Full-grown plants and trees are hot sellers for homeowners too impatient to wait for smaller ones to naturally mature in the .

Outdoor rooms take center stage in gardening trends. For the past five years, outdoor living and decorating were cited as the top two mega trends. In 2007, $6.2 billion was spent on outdoor furniture, accessories and grills. More than a million outdoor kitchens were constructed, and upscale homeowners opted for construction of gazebos near their outdoor pools. Stylish table lamps, special submersible lighting for fountains and dramatic illumination options are now on the market as a result of interest in outdoor living projects.

Simplicity is in with a new twist on the monochromatic slant. One basic color theme dominates a bed or pot with foliage and succulents, many of them variegated, used as accents. Services A ratio of 60 percent of a primary color, 30 percent of a secondary color and 10 percent of accent color is attractive for a pot or bed. Big is beautiful these days. Big in big containers with big bold color are being used to create stylish pot scapes.

The “slo” food movement is growing, according to and Garden Consultant Adele Kleine.

“This philosophy reduces dependence on convenience and processed fast food. One of the purposes of gardening is to encourage adults and children to feel better emotionally and to inspire them to take more control over what they consume. That’s what slo food does,” Kleine said.

Farmers markets and organic food stands are part of this movement, as well as home . Garden sales via the Internet are increasing dramatically. This year, sales are expected to equal or exceed catalog sales, growing from $7 million in 2007 to more than $10 million.

Consumers jump on the bandwagon for products that are new and hot, so growers will continue to introduce hundreds of new each year to meet consumer demands. Organic pesticides, fertilizers, eco-friendly products and drought tolerant and/or pest-resistant , many of which are container suitable - plus more native options - are expected to be big sellers this year.

Hopefully, these eco-friendly trends are not merely fads that will fade with time Landscaping Services. We all can be responsible caretakers of the environment, but need readily accessible products to help us do so.

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Monday, May 26th, 2008

Todays Pools Are A Sophisticated Blend Natural Beauty And Outdoor Living

A pool is one of the most calming and soothing you can add to your home. A provides pleasure, a fun setting for children to play and splash, and an opportunity to entertain and share a beautiful setting with friends and family. The is always inviting and today’s pools ensure there will be a – a fountain, a waterfall – in almost every new .

While there are still many traditional in this area, particularly in older, established homes, the newest trend is to mimic the landscape and create pools in all sizes and curving shapes that present a softer look, surrounded by , patios, gazebos, even temple-like structures that serve as a sheltered area for relaxing, dining and entertaining.

Many of the pools being built today are more than just a . They are an extension of the back of the home, featuring , entertaining and dining areas and lush landscaping, appropriate to the region where the family lives with their .

These settings are an elaborate and to one’s back lawn. People are creating, with the help of builders, and landscapers, their own island of nature’s paradise.

Creating a regal look

Beto Garcia moved to from San Antonio ago to join , which was established in 1954. As general manager of the company, he has designed and built more pools than he can remember. Today, he is very attuned to the changing trends in pools and the , the and living areas and special , which people want today in and around their pools.

“People are now wanting natural looking pools or ponds – something that can give you that outdoorsy feeling like a spa or a retreat,” Garcia says.

He cites a new look in different in pools and a new technology. “In the old days, we put colored into the final interior finish,” he says.

Now, Blue Haven and other companies are achieving a spectacular effect that involves miniscule glass beads or glass tiles that come in a range of nature’s water colors,” Garcia says, “These beads or are not affected by the water chemistry or the sunlight, which often gives an iridescent glow when the sun hits them,” he says.

“Whatever color you have chosen to dress your will give you either absorbing (black) or refracting (white) light.

This magnificent color lets homeowners imagine they are in the Caribbean, the South Pacific or Mexico,” Garcia says,

A year-round

Caleb McCaleb is president of McCaleb Homes, a second generation company founded by his father, Neal. Caleb’s home, which backs up to Lake Arcadia, has one of the most spectacular pools in the area.

“We wanted to create a graceful flow of water and designed a at the top that flows into the , which has a free-flowing shape. The back of the has an infinity edge that flows into a lower area, which also has an infinity edge, which is one of the latest trends in pools. When McCaleb Homes hosted its Dream Home Tour last year, he said nine of the homes featured had an infinity-edge .

The McCalebs also added a creek so it looks like the water is coming through the creek into the . They also added a salt water filtration system – another trend – in place of the traditional chlorine. “It’s soft, like a comfortable bath and doesn’t burn your skin or eyes like chlorine,” McCaleb says.

Today’s pools are using more natural materials, especially a lot of flagstone around the edge of the , where people like to sit. His beach-entry also features a tiny rock from Australia – pebbletech – that is mixed in the plaster. It’s not a loose sand material, but rather a plaster for finishing the . A lot of stamped or stained concrete is also being used around today’s pools, he says.

Two years ago, the McCalebs added a fire pit on the back side near the and also added more evergreens and a lot of cypress trees. “We wanted a northwest style of to complement the , he says.

McCaleb never closes his , “I think pools are eyesores in the lawn when they are closed down and tarped over. I use my all year long. The is the of the back lawn, along with the and comfortable seating and I like a year-round look around the .”.

Antonio Aparicio, owner of Aquascape Pools, designed the McCalebs’ . Aparicio’s forte is designing pools that are unusual and he always complements the setting nature has provided. He likes to give each custom “its own special touch.”

New cleaning devices

Guy Shipley of Cardinal Architect Pools has been building custom pools since 1959, so he’s seen many changes in design and construction. He likes the look of the new free-form pools, the popular and the endless look of the infinity or vanishing edge.

Creating unusual looks for pools is one of the favorite things he likes about the business. “Every we build also has an automatic-style cleaner. A lot of the people who have automatic cleaners wouldn’t even know how to vacuum. The old sweeps have definitely gone by the wayside,” Shipley says.

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Monday, May 12th, 2008

Mproving The Landscaping Can Add Value To Your House

A few years ago, when Alicia Morgan-Cooper and her husband Fred decided they needed more space for their growing family, several items on their house-hunting list were non-negotiable.

“We wanted plenty of trees and , a large backyard for the kids, and it had to have a garden,” says Morgan-Cooper, a pediatrician and mother of two, with a baby on the way. “I’m an avid gardener, and my garden is my sanctuary.”

Landscaping Services In spring 2005, the couple moved into their dream home, a six-bedroom colonial situated on half an acre in the city’s Guilford neighborhood. Soon after, they launched a series of home improvements, starting with the .

“We totally revamped the ,” says Morgan-Cooper, who worked with a professional landscape architect, Plant Genie in Towson, as well as a landscaping contractor.

They planted nine flowering pear, crabapple and other trees, had two flagstone patios built off the kitchen and sunroom, complete with a walkway, and filled the flower beds with colorful azaleas, daylilies, rosebushes and much more.

“At first, there was a lot of mud,” says Morgan-Cooper, who said the overhaul was motivated in part by property damage due to past flooding. “But now we love it Landscaping Services. I’m not ever leaving.”

All said, the project cost about $90,000 — money the couple says was well spent. After purchasing their home for $750,000, they say it’s now valued at more than $1 million.

While professional was once viewed as a luxury, more homeowners are beginning to recognize that planting a perennial garden, installing a pond or building an arbor, may have more than only aesthetic value. Many experts say — which runs the gamut from so-called softscaping (such as turf maintenance and planting) to hardscape installation of patios and — can increase the value of one’s home, and in a tight housing market, help attract potential buyers.

“Studies have shown that can increase the value of your home by 15 percent,” says Vanessa Finney, executive director of the Maryland Nursery and Association Inc., an industry trade group whose members include nurseries, garden centers, landscapers, arborists and suppliers.

“It’s about ,” says Brent Flickinger, a Realtor with City Life Realty in Baltimore, referring to that intangible factor that makes a prospective buyer want to look beyond the “For Sale” sign. “Years ago, people were fighting over houses. Now, houses are sitting longer, and the longer they sit, the less desirable they seem to people,” he adds. “ helps your house stand out. It can help the real estate agent get showings, get people inside the house. If they don’t get in the door, it doesn’t matter.”

James McWilliams, a co-owner of Maxalea Inc., a contractor in North Baltimore, says he often fields calls from homeowners desiring to spruce up their houses before putting them on the market. “They may need to clear plants that are overgrown near the house, or edge and delineate the flower beds. Sometimes we are checking for insects or diseased trees. We address all sorts of things.”

Three generations of his family have worked in the horticultural business since the 1920s, and today, Maxalea employs some 80 horticulturalists, architects, designers, groundskeepers, nurserymen and others.

McWilliams says their clients typically spend between $5,000 to $50,000, but it’s not unheard of, he adds, for higher-end clients to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars their mansions and estates.

“When you spend that much on a home, you don’t want 20 random ,” he says. “You need a plan, Landscaping Services and a professional who can help you design a layout that will be beautiful.”

To that end, his team members will schedule consultations with homeowners to discuss everything from “form and function” to , materials, color schemes and whatever signature look the homeowner is seeking. They then sketch out a plan and draw up a budget.

McWilliams, who says he favors a “clean” style with crisp edges, minimal mulch and repetitious grouping of , also keeps pace with the latest trends. For instance, he’s noticing a move away from wooden , toward more fieldstone and Formstone patios. Another hot trend is the and living area. “People are entertaining and extending it outside,” he says.

Indeed, when Lauren Quattro and partner Marichi Capino want to entertain at the home they share in the Mayfield community near Lake Montebello, they simply walk out back to a yard that’s been transformed by .

“This is the house that I grew up in,” says Quattro, a nurse who returned to her childhood home in the early 1990s after her mother died. “I’m pretty sure my parents would not recognize it now,” she says with a chuckle.

Indeed, the once-modest brick rowhouse has been gutted and renovated inside and out, fashioned into a loft-style space, complete with a renovated kitchen. The backyard has been professionally landscaped, and boasts a pond with koi, a deck and a hot tub. Capino, a native of the Philippines who was a physician in her homeland, has planted a container garden with pansies, tulips and other colorful flowers, and looks forward to the wisteria expected to bloom later this season. “It relaxes me,” she says.

While many properties in this section of Northeast Baltimore are listed in the high $200s, Quattro says she would not sell it for less than $400,000. “It’s a great house in a great neighborhood, and worth every penny,” she says.

According to a survey performed by the USDA-Maryland Agricultural Statistics Service and underwritten by MNLA, installation and maintenance pumped $234.7 million into the state’s economy in 2003, the most recent year for which figures are available.

While professional is clearly big business, Jim McElroy, president of Green Fields Nursery &; Co. in North Baltimore, emphasizes that it doesn’t have to cost a bundle. “I want people to know is not just for the rich,” says McElroy. For every person who comes in wanting, say, lighting, a stone or , just as many simply want terra cotta pots with nice .

“You can take $500 or even $50 and do basic things … mulching the beds and adding pretty flowers that will catch people’s eye,” says McElroy, who also gives advice on a weekly radio show. “The key is that the home should look well-maintained. A picture is worth a thousand words.”

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Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

The AlzheimerS Garden

One speciality of St Equipment Landscaping. Anthony Park resident Erik Jorgensen, whose business is called Wandering Designs, is creating Alzheimer’s gardens, which often include a structure such as a .

Unless you know someone with Alzheimer’s disease, you may never have heard of an Alzheimer’s garden. The concept is popular on both coasts but isn’t well-known in Minnesota.

That’s changing, however, through the efforts of St. Anthony Park resident Erik Jorgensen and his business, Wandering Designs, which specializes in therapeutic gardens.

An Alzheimer’s garden is usually constructed as part of a nursing home or retirement home in an area protected from the elements. There must be a solid fence at least eight feet high — so residents don’t try to leave or become distressed by what happens outside the garden — and a locked gate. Pathways should be easy to follow.

The garden should be calm and peaceful but have many sources of stimulation: brightly colored flowers with pleasant scents, plants and pathways with varied textures  Equipment Landscaping. Often Jorgensen includes or wind chimes, as well as feeders that attract birds and other wildlife.

At the farthest point of the garden is a major —Equipment a table with a brightly colored umbrella, wishing well, , porch — to coax people along the paths, and there are frequent rest stops with benches that have backs and arm rests. Benches are angled rather than facing each other because most Alzheimer’s patients don’t like to look at other people straight on.

Jorgensen tries to evoke childhood memories by using old-fashioned such as hollyhocks, clotheslines, picket fences, wishing wells and arbors. He adds an open area for activities: having a barbecue, or vegetables, meeting with therapy animals.

“The garden must be an active rather than a passive place,” he says.

Jorgensen grew up in Como Park and attended North Dakota State University and the University of Minnesota, where he got a bachelor’s degree in environmental design. He worked for Bachman’s in Eden Prairie, where he ran the garden center, and later joined McCarron Designs, where he did interior landscape design. He did “The Mighty Axe” at the Mall of America and the landscaping design for the Episcopal Home on University Avenue.

In 1999 the American Society of Landscape Architects began “One Hundred Years, One Hundred Gardens,” a pro bono project on the occasion of its 100th anniversary. McCarron Designs worked with other artists to plan the Tabitha Garden, specifically for Alzheimer’s patients, at the Regina Medical Center in Hastings.

Jorgensen looked for others with more experience to help him but wasn’t able to find anyone. So he began educating himself about Alzheimer’s patients and the general principles guiding their care.

The project was a success and Jorgensen became the resident expert on Alzheimer’s gardens at McCarron Designs. After being laid off there, he received a commission to plan a therapy garden in the courtyard at the HealthEast Marion Center in St. Paul. That lead to other jobs, and he started his own company, Wandering Designs, in 2003, with Alzheimer’s gardens as his specialty. About 85 percent of his business is therapy gardens.

“This feels so much better to me than doing corporate ,” Jorgensen says. “That is often just to feed someone’s ego by constructing a fabulous interior space. This is an ‘egoless’ endeavor — to design a place that feels more like home than an institution for people who are at the end of their lives. It feels right.”

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Monday, April 7th, 2008

The Green Builder Vision House highlights views of Lake Apopka

Roberto and Cyndi Carrion designed their Montverde home to be a journey of sights and sounds: shimmering lake views, rough cypress ceilings, soothing and meditative silence.

They built it to be strong and practical, with energy-efficient features, eco-friendly materials, hurricane-resistant construction and water-conservation ideas. They focused on details that would enhance the home’s aesthetics and function.

Now that it’s complete, the Carrions are eager to move into the three-level, 5,400-square-foot home on Lake Apopka. But first, we get to see what they have accomplished.

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Sunday, February 17th, 2008

Building with a vision

Roberto and Cyndi Carrion designed their Montverde home to be a journey of sights and sounds: shimmering lake views, rough cypress ceilings, soothing and meditative silence. They built it to be strong and practical, with energy-efficient features, eco-friendly materials, hurricane-resistant construction and water-conservation ideas. They focused on details that would enhance the home’s aesthetics and function. Now that it’s complete, the Carrions are eager to move into the three-level, 5,400-square-foot home on Lake Apopka. But first, we get to see what they have accomplished.

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Sunday, February 17th, 2008