Saturday, September 30, 2017

Production of a Lifetime: Whitney Houston and Clive Davis

The singer and the hit maker were entangled for three decades. He wanted chart-topping songs. But what did she want?

from Well http://ift.tt/2xFAPfe

Friday, September 29, 2017

After Weiner’s Sentencing, Abedin Opts for ‘Divorce Jeans’

During a dark period, the brightly flowered dungarees by Alice & Olivia say: “Let the sunshine in!” And such perky post-breakup makeovers are common.

from Well http://ift.tt/2kbdTPm

The Weekly Health Quiz: Herpes, Flu Shots and Self-Control

Test your knowledge of this week’s health news.

from Well http://ift.tt/2fx861h

An Unorthodox Sunday Tradition

After discussing for years whether to take us kids to church or temple, my parents made the great outdoors our place of worship.

from Well http://ift.tt/2wZYUO7

Best Font Deals of The WeekLooking for a fresh take on...


Best Font Deals of The Week


Best Font Deals of The Week


Best Font Deals of The Week


Best Font Deals of The Week


Best Font Deals of The Week

Best Font Deals of The Week

Looking for a fresh take on typefaces? Then you owe it to yourself to cast your eyes on these amazing and affordable Font Deals:

For more amazing font deals, visit the Mighty Deals website!



from The Design Blog http://ift.tt/2k8R3aT

Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other“Identity,...


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other


Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other

Brand Identity for The Darling by One & Other

“Identity, print design and website design for The Darling, restaurant that pays careful attention to local ingredients and sustainability.”

One & Other is a design studio in Charleston, SC, led by Will Allport and Ky Coffman. They work across a range of industries to produce conceptually rich, aesthetically timeless designs. With backgrounds in architecture and the fine arts, they bring a deep skill set and holistic approach to work realized on paper, through digital experience and in the built environment. Their work strives to find balance at the intersection of function and beauty, masculine and feminine, old and new.

T D B:  instagram  •  twitter  •  facebook  •  newsletter  •   pinterest



from The Design Blog http://ift.tt/2ybrOLh

Thursday, September 28, 2017

7 Habits for a Healthy Heart

It pumps your blood throughout your body, but how much do you know about your heart? Here we will cover the most important steps you can take to keep it beating strong.

from Well http://ift.tt/2yw3JLv

Glitz – Availability, Prices, Plans

iFortune Homes' Glitz, designed by GBL Architects.

At a Glance

  • located across from Richmond City Hall
  • 9-storey mixed use: residential, commercial, retail
  • 77 condos from 1-3 bedrooms
  • Richmond Centre shopping
  • close to Canada Line rapid transit
  • countless dining options nearby
  • walking distance to Minoru Park

iFortune Homes' Glitz as seen from Anderson Road in Richmond Centre.

Live Brilliantly
iFortune presents Glitz, a mixed use project across the street from Richmond City Hall that includes 77 condominiums, 100,000 sq ft of office space, and 12,000 sq ft of retail space. Home owners will enjoy the convenience of finding their daily necessities nearby at Richmond Centre or shopping at the McArthurGlen Designer Outlet just ten minutes away. A world of dining choices lay at your footstep, as does a variety of recreational activities at Minoru Park. At Glitz, live, work, and play in the heart of Richmond!

Be A Presale Condo VIP!

Find Out About New Presales & Get Access to VIP Openings & Special Promotions!

Are you a realtor? Click here

  • Reload
  • Should be Empty:

Pricing for Glitz
Final pricing for Glitz has not yet been made public. To ensure timely updates for this attractive purchase opportunity, sign up to our VIP list above.

Floor Plans for Glitz
Contact me today to discuss availability and plans.

The courtyard of iFortune Homes' Glitz in Richmond's Brighouse Village.

Amenities at Glitz
Residents will enjoy use of a 1,453 sq ft shared amenity space, a 12,000 sq ft outdoor common area, and a 2,422 sq ft childrens play area.

Parking and Storage
Glitz will provide off-street parking for 237 vehicles, consisting of 155 commercial, 82 residential, 15 visitor, and five handicapped spaces. Resident bicycle parking will be available in 94 Class 1 and 15 Class 2 stalls. There will also be two large and three medium loading bays.

Maintenance Fees at Glitz
To be included with finalized pricing information.

Developer Team for Glitz
iFortune is a developer, builder, general contractor, and project manager for a variety of types of projects of all sizes and complexity. The principals have over 100 years of combined local experience and a proven track record in the development and construction industry. iFortune Homes has significant development experience throughout the Metro Vancouver region. They are involved in every step of the development process, from sourcing the right team to acquisition of lands, arranging financing, obtaining approvals, designing solutions, managing construction, to marketing and sales.

GBL Architects is a progressive Vancouver-based firm of 38 architects, project managers and technicians with a 25-year reputation of providing a full range of architectural services to the private and public sector. GBL design with the belief that form plays a vital role in defining experience through an ever-changing dynamic between sculptural artistry and social responsibility. To that end, they regularly practice green design through the LEED Canada Program.

Expected Completion for Glitz
Sales start Fall 2017.

Are you interested in learning more about other homes in Richmond, South Vancouver, or the Cambie Corridor?

Check out these great Richmond Presales!

The post Glitz – Availability, Prices, Plans appeared first on Mike Stewart.



from Blog – Mike Stewart http://ift.tt/2k6ZUdg

Older Siblings a Risk Factor for Serious Flu Infections in Infants

Having older brothers and sisters puts young children at higher risk for being hospitalized with the flu.

from Well http://ift.tt/2fAhvJ0

Hey Kids! How Young Is Too Young to Get Married?

And: brawling toddlers, too-small parking spaces, and is it O.K. to try and meet women in the supermarket?

from Well http://ift.tt/2xEJsnC

LPGA International’s Jones Course Completes Greens Renovation Project

Former Host of LPGA Season-Ending Championship Installed New TifEagle Putting Surfaces

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — LPGA International’s acclaimed Jones Course reopened on schedule Wednesday, September 27 following a summer greens renovation project, welcoming golfers back with pristine conditions and smooth, fast putting surfaces.

After extensive research, LPGA International installed TifEagle Bermuda, one of the newer strains of ultradwarf grass that will ensure golfers enjoy a premium putting surface throughout the year. The greens were also restored to their original size.

“The renovation went perfectly, and we can’t wait to welcome golfers back this fall,” said Michael Glenn, LPGA International’s general manager. “Players will find the greens are smooth and fast, and the course, from tee to green, is in superb condition.”

The Jones Course hosted the LPGA’s Sprint Titleholders Championship from 1996 through 1998, and World Golf Hall of Fame member Karrie Webb was one of the winners. The layout will host the final stage of the LPGA Tour Qualifying Tournament Nov. 27 – Dec. 3, and the Symetra Tour Championship Oct. 5-8.

A links style design, the Jones Course has five sets of tees that stretch from 5,131 yards to 7,088 yards, providing the appropriate level of challenge for players of all skill levels. Strategic mounding, expansive bunkers, natural marsh areas and lakes provide unforgettable visuals and have helped make the course one of Florida’s best.

LPGA International is also home to the highly touted Hills Course, and helps anchor the Daytona Beach golf scene. Daytona Beach is home to more than 20 courses and is an easy drive from multiple PGA Tour stops, making it an ideal destination for golfers in search of good times on and off the course.

With multiple package options, which allow groups the opportunity to bundle golf and accommodations, and the lure of the World’s Most Famous Beach, Daytona Beach is a fast-emerging golf destination.

For more information, go to http://ift.tt/2xAJtLG.



from Golf News Wire http://ift.tt/2xMQ6uc

Today's archidose #980

Here are some photos of the Mirador del RĂ­o (1974) in Lanzarote, Canary Islands, Spain, by CĂ©sar Manrique. (Photos: Ximo Michavila)

Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #5
Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #7
Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #14
Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #4
Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #15
Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #1
Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #6
Cesar Manrique. Mirador del rio #12

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:
:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool
To contribute your Instagram images for consideration, just:
:: Tag your photos #archidose


from A Daily Dose of Architecture http://ift.tt/2xInVMA

Students Look to Vending Machines for Better Access to Morning-After Pill

Stanford is the latest university to install a vending machine that sells emergency contraception after students spoke of difficulty obtaining the pill.

from Well http://ift.tt/2ya9fr7

‘Flesh-Eating Bacteria’ From Harvey’s Floodwaters Kill a Woman

Necrotizing fasciitis, a deadly infection that destroys tissue, can be caused by a wide range of bacteria, many of which were present after Hurricane Harvey.

from Well http://ift.tt/2wXY1pt

Learning to Breathe

My baby had an extra branch stemming from his heart, constricting his trachea. The surgery that saved him brought another crisis.

from Well http://ift.tt/2xDvhzh

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Modern Love Podcast: Ali Fazal Reads ‘When Your Greatest Romance Is a Friendship’

On this week’s podcast, the “Victoria and Abdul” actor reads an essay about a relationship that transcends age.

from Well http://ift.tt/2fRVCC2

High Blood Pressure During Pregnancy Tied to Obesity in Children

Even maternal blood pressure levels not generally considered dangerous can raise the obesity risk in offspring.

from Well http://ift.tt/2wlvTYE

Kids Make the Darndest Viral Videos

There’s a new class of social-media celebrities, and they’re not old enough for kindergarten. Welcome to the weird, lucrative world of viral toddler videos.

from Well http://ift.tt/2k61PPs

How to Be Mindful When Making Art

You don’t need any previous training to meditate through art, just a willingness to draw like a child, with freedom and a sense of curiosity.

from Well http://ift.tt/2y9yud5

Book Review: The Structure of Design

The Structure of Design: An Engineer's Extraordinary Life in Architecture by Leslie Earl Robertson
The Monacelli Press, 2017
Hardcover, 336 pages



Earlier this month structural engineer Leslie E. Robertson spoke to a packed house at the Skyscraper Museum (a video of the talk is embedded at the bottom of this post). The talk focused on his recently published book, The Structure of Design, which is made up primarily of highlights from his long career and structured as collaborations with architects. Among them are Minoru Yamasaki, Gunnar Birkerts, Philip Johnson, I.M. Pei, and KPF; these are the architects Robertson spoke about during the talk, on such projects as the World Trade Center in New York, the Federal Reserve Bank in Minneapolis, Puerta de Europa in Madrid, the Bank of China Tower in Hong Kong, and the Shanghai World Financial Center. It goes without saying, from this short list alone, that Robertson has been involved in many of the most innovative and high-profile tall buildings in the last 50 years.



But as the cover of The Structure of Design attests, Robertson is not all about skyscrapers. The photo depicts Miho Bridge, one component of a cultural project by I.M. Pei for Shinji Shumeikai in Japan. Primarily serving pedestrians but structured to carry automobiles, the bridge links up to a tunnel carried out by another designer and engineer. In the talk, as in the book, Robertson recounts how this was done, revealing how a combination of logic and creativity drive the engineer and enable some fairly unconventional designs to be carried out. The Miho Bridge is in this sense an important project for Robertson – but also one that deserves its location on the cover, because it is his design, credited to Robertson with Pei as consultant, an inverse of the norm.



One aspect of the book that was only hinted at in the Q&A section of the Skyscraper Museum talk is Robertson's passionate activism. In the talk he advises young people to get out from behind their computer screens and, "if you don't like Trump, get out there and work to change it ... don't just talk about it." In The Structure of Design, Robertson spends a few pages recounting his activism all the way from the Vietnam War until today, though it's clear from the rest of the book that his positions are consistent across his life, be it work, activism, or some other aspect. In terms of writing, the honesty and conversational tone in that chapter pervades the whole book, making The Structure of Design enjoyable as well as illuminating.





from A Daily Dose of Architecture http://ift.tt/2xLwxCp

Maye Musk, 69, Is Now a CoverGirl

Ms. Musk has modeled for five decades, holds master’s degrees in dietetics and nutritional sciences and has no intention of retiring. Ever.

from Well http://ift.tt/2k2wc9k

How Exercise Might Increase Your Self-Control

A jogging regimen altered how well people could control their impulses, a new study suggests.

from Well http://ift.tt/2xzGOQd

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Drawings Any Architect Should Love

It's not often that architects put working drawings on their website – for good reason, since they are only legible to other architects, engineers, contractors, and others trained in deciphering the notes and symbols layered over the basic plans, sections, and elevations. Therefore I was plenty surprised to find some on Edwin Chan's website; these are for the Mullholand Drive Residence in Los Angeles.


[All images of the Mulholland Drive Residence nabbed from EDWINCHAN.US]

Chan explains in the Design Journal section of his website: "The general Public tends to associate architecture in terms of its formal and sculptural attributes. ... EC3 prioritizes documenting the interaction between clients, the design team, and the public. The resulting design journals provide a glimpse of the process of how ideas are transformed into formal solutions."



The architect reveals the process for the Mulholland Drive Residence in two parts: the first with site photos and models, and the second with more models and a few working drawings, the plans shown here. Chan's captions explain the images and how they illustrate the evolution of the project. In terms of the drawing below, for instance, he explains how "EC3 collaborates with structural engineer Gordon Pollon to develop the framing concept for the sculptural massing by using conventional wood-frame system."



In case you couldn't grasp the form of the house from these few plans, here's a part-2 model view:



Per Chan, "With the client’s blessing, the Mulholland Residence project is currently in construction document phase. Construction is expected to break ground in the Spring, 2017." See more drawings and model photos of the project on Edwin Chan's website.

from A Daily Dose of Architecture http://ift.tt/2k0CwOv

The Overmonitored Nursery

As a new mom, it finally dawned on me that all this technology meant to calm agitated parents actually agitates us more.

from Well http://ift.tt/2y57LOS

Monday, September 25, 2017

Bringing My Own Kind of ‘Madness’ to the Office

I’ve been fired more times than I care to admit. Work and paranoid schizophrenia aren’t exactly a recipe for success.

from Well http://ift.tt/2hvhLpG

An Upbeat Mood May Boost Your Flu Shot’s Effectiveness

Older people who are in a good mood when they get a flu shot have a better immune response.

from Well http://ift.tt/2ypegb1

Chicago Architecture Biennial

Check out my article at World-Architects, "Making New History in Chicago," on the 2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial, curated by Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee under the theme Make New History.

2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial

from A Daily Dose of Architecture http://ift.tt/2xADw0u

Vision and Hearing Loss Are Tied to Cognitive Decline

When the brain struggles to make sense of the world it may be less able to perform other important tasks.

from Well http://ift.tt/2wMrQc9

A Plague and a Blessing in My Empty Nest

By the time I dropped my daughter off at college, we were both bejeweled with the raised itchy bumps of flea bites.

from Well http://ift.tt/2wO3KOi

Sunday, September 24, 2017

When Athletes Share Infections

The close contact and casual sharing that are components of team bonding can also be a breeding ground for infectious disease.

from Well http://ift.tt/2wNPipL

Wright at Columbia

This year, the 150th anniversary of Frank Lloyd Wright's birth, has yielded plenty of publications, exhibitions, and other events about the world's most famous modern architect. A few of them -- a book, an exhibition and a related symposium -- are centered at Columbia University, whose Avery Library co-owns the Wright archive with MoMA, which is exhibiting (until October 1) the must-see Frank Lloyd Wright at 150: Unpacking the Archive.


BOOK

Wright's Writings: Reflections on Culture and Politics 1894-1959 by Kenneth Frampton
Columbia Books on Architecture and the City, 2017
Paperback, 144 pages



When MoMA curator and Columbia professor Barry Bergdoll gave comments during the opening of Frank Lloyd Wright at 150 when it opened back in June, one statement that stuck in my memory is that Wright is one of the few architects as well known outside academia as within. One side effect of this fact is that Wright has not been as large an influence in architectural education as Mies, Corbusier, Kahn, and other "modern masters." One scholar, though, who has not shied away from incorporating Wright into architectural history alongside these and other figures is Columbia professor Kenneth Frampton. Although to my knowledge he hasn't written a book exclusively about Wright, Frampton has included Wright in his own books and has contributed to books about the architect. One of the latter is the five-volume Frank Lloyd Wright Collected Writings put out by Rizzoli in the early 1990s.



Columbia's Wright's Writings collects Frampton's five introductions to those books into a slim but very handsome book alongside illustrations culled from the extensive Avery/MoMA archive of Wright's drawings, manuscripts and other artifacts. Frampton's insights into the five periods of Wright's career and output in the form of writings work remarkably well together here even though they have been separated from the writings they initially introduced. Frampton's texts are one reason to buy the book, the other being the archival illustrations that accompany and are referenced in the text. These images -- marked-up manuscripts, handwritten pages, drawings for covers, etc. -- hint at the voluminous archive as well as the possibilities for scholarship in the years ahead.




EXHIBITION

Living in America: Frank Lloyd Wright, Harlem & Modern Housing
September 9 - December 17
Wallach Art Gallery, Lenfest Center for the Arts, 615 West 129th Street



In addition to being the 150th anniversary of Frank Lloyd Wright's birth, 2017 is also the year when Columbia University opened the first two buildings in its large, ongoing Manhattanville Campus: the Jerome L. Greene Science Center and the Lenfest Center for the Arts, both designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop. This timing makes the Living in America exhibition particularly fitting, even though it's not just about Wright. Since it's curated by Columbia GSAPP's Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, rather than Barry Bergoll, for instance, the exhibition is about housing too. Under Reinhold Martin, the Buell Center's recent output has included House Housing, a multi-year research and exhibition program on architecture and housing, and the petit but loaded book, The Art of Inequality: Architecture, Housing, and Real Estate. Therefore Living in America is wrapped into the Buell Center's multi-pronged focus on housing and real estate.



The exhibition presents a selection of Wright's post-Broadacre City residential designs from the Avery/MoMA archive alongside contemporaneous designs by other architects for large public and subsidized housing projects in urban areas. With so much Wright being exhibited and written about this year, I found myself drawn more to the other housing projects -- enough that I need to go back to take in more than an opening-night visit allowed. In the exhibition design by Project Projects and Leong Leong, the two "interwoven plotlines" are mounted on perimeter walls and two intersecting walls in the form of an "X" that split the rectangular Wallach Art Gallery into four triangular spaces, two obtuse and two acute. In the middle -- and clearly the focus of our attention from each gallery -- is Wright's huge and hugely famous Broadacre City model, what can be seen as another means of unpacking Wright's archive. In my visit to the exhibition during its opening, people gravitated toward the model; like me, they'd probably never seen the whole model in the flesh or in such an inviting manner (luckily I arrived early enough to get a couple cellphone photographs of the model not swamped by visitors).




SYMPOSIUM

Living in America Symposium
September 29, 10am-5:30pm
The Lantern, Lenfest Center for the Arts, 615 West 129th Street

Description per the symposium website:
The question of how to live in America preoccupied many architects and planners — from Frank Lloyd Wright to the consortium behind Harlem’s first public housing proposals — in the mid-twentieth century. This symposium gathers scholars of housing for a conversation that bridges what might otherwise seem like disparate realms of inquiry in order to reassess received histories and to provoke new questions about how we live in America, together, today.

Symposium speakers are Shiben Banerji, School of the Art Institute of Chicago; Jana Cephas, University of Michigan; Brian Goldstein, Swarthmore College; Jennifer Gray, The Museum of Modern Art; Jennifer Hock, Maryland Institute College of Art; Catherine Maumi, the Grenoble School of Architecture; Kevin McGruder, Antioch College; and Joseph Watson, University of British Columbia.
Register for this free event via the Wallach Art Gallery.

from A Daily Dose of Architecture http://ift.tt/2wQgpeV

Saturday, September 23, 2017

Storefront Books

Earlier today I went to Cooper Union for the Storefront for Art and Architecture's five-hour-long event, Architecture Books / Yet to be Written / 1982-2017-2052. Participants were asked to "present an architecture book published in the last thirty five years that they consider to be fundamental to the understanding of contemporary architecture culture, as well as a 'book yet to be written'." Below is a selection of some of those choices, in order of the short presentations.


[Storefront's Eva Franch i Gilabert kicking off the event and launching the forthcoming New York Architecture Book Fair.]

Anthony Vidler
Past: Against Architecture: The Writings of Georges Bataille by Denis Hollier (1990)
Future: Mannerism Is (Not) a Joke: Architectural Wit in the Age of Anxiety

Sanford Kwinter
Past: Realms of the Human Unconscious: Observations from LSD Research by Stanislav Grof (1979)
Future: Something along the lines of Bruce Wexler’s Brain and Culture: Neurobiology, Ideology, and Social Change (2008) but oriented toward design and space

Beatriz Colomina
Past: 24/7: Late Capitalism and the Ends of Sleep by Jonathan Crary (2013)
Future: The City of Social Media

Henry Cobb
Past: Atlas of Novel Tectonics by Reiser + Umemoto (2006)
Future: Combined Works: Architecture in Conversation

Eyal Weizman
Past: The Case for Auschwitz: Evidence from the Irving Trial by Robert Jan van Pelt (2002)
Future: The Split-Second, on the repercussions of split-second decisions and the like

Stan Allen
Past: The Projective Cast: Architecture and Its Three Geometries by Robin Evans (1995)
Future: Whatever Robin Evans’s next book would have been if he had not died in 1993 at the age of only 48

James Wines
Past: A Dictionary of the Avant-Gardes by Richard Kostelanetz (1991-1st edition, 2000-2nd edition)
Future: A 3rd version of Kostelanetz's dictionary, done as a shortlist aimed at saving the earth

Joan Ockman
Past: The Sphere and the Labyrinth: Avant-Gardes and Architecture from Piranesi to the 1970s by Manfredo Tafuri (1987)
Future: The Rise of a Global-Digital Architecture: From postmodern polemics to postcolonial practices to the search for new forms of architectural production



Reinier de Graaf
Past: The End of History and the Last Man by Francis Fukuyama (1992)
Future: Four Walls and a Roof on the reuse of social modernist housing estates

Peggy Deamer
Past: From Craft to Profession: The Practice of Architecture in Nineteenth-Century America by Mary N. Woods (1999)
Future: From Profession to Precarity: The Practice of Architecture in 21st-Century America

Amale Andraos
Past: Architecture from the Arab World, 1914-2014 by Bernard Khoury (2014)
Future: Intersection of S,M,L,XL by Rem Koolhaas & Bruce Mau and New York 2140 by Kim Stanley Robinson

Daniel Libeskind
Past: Mask of Medusa by John Hejduk (1989)
Future: Future Flowers, a graphic book on architecture

Ana Miljacki
Past: Utopia's Ghost: Architecture and Postmodernism, Again by Reinhold Martin (2010)
Future: Dirty Modernity: Previously excised and often radically disconcerting chapters on architecture and modernity

Marion Weiss
Past: Winter’s Tale by Mark Helprin (1983)
Future: Drifting Symmetries, a fiction, a travel guide to a city we don't recognize

Mark Wigley
Past: Cedric Price: Works II aka "The Square Book" (1984)
Future: Short Architects

Elizabeth Diller
Past: Stanley Kubrick's Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Never Made (2009)
Future: Unfinished Business, on ghosts



from A Daily Dose of Architecture http://ift.tt/2wJZ7VA

How to Survive the Apocalypse

Amid natural disasters, terrorist attacks and going nuclear over North Korea, it is not just camouflage-clad cave dwellers who are prepping for doomsday.

from Well http://ift.tt/2wNxpT7

Friday, September 22, 2017

42 Minutes, £2,600 Lost: The U.K.’s Growing Gambling Problem

The number of problem gamblers has risen by 50 percent in recent years, and campaigners blame a machine that is unique to British betting shops.

from Well http://ift.tt/2xYOpe2

Oak Flats – Plans, Prices, Availability

Artist rendering of southwest elevation for Oak Flats.

At a Glance

  • convenient South Vancouver location
  • 6-storey, woodframe residential building
  • 38 family-oriented condominiums
  • close to services, shopping, restaurants
  • near community centre, parks, top-ranked schools
  • easy access to Richmond, YVR airport, Highway 99
  • goal of LEED Gold standard

Aerial view of Oak Flats by Bold Properties.

Redefining Westside Living
This signature collection of exclusive residences capture the elegance of modern luxury, coupled with unparalleled design and finishes. Located in the heart of South Oak, Oak Flats sets a new standard for contemporary comfort in a neighbourhood you can easily call home.

Be A Presale Condo VIP!

Find Out About New Presales & Get Access to VIP Openings & Special Promotions!

Are you a realtor? Click here

  • Reload
  • Should be Empty:

Oak Flats is ideally suited for families wanting to enjoy the convenience of urban living within the relaxed environment of a residential neighbourhood. David Lloyd George Elementary and Sir Winston Churchill Secondary, an International Baccalaureate School, are within walking distance, as is Oak Park with its community centre, daycare, grass playing fields, tennis courts, baseball diamond, and walking trails. A wide variety of shopping and leisure options is close at hand at Oakridge, Marine Gateway, Marpole Village, McArthurGlen Designer Outlet, or Richmond.

Pricing for Oak Flats
Pricing has not yet been made publicly available, however, we recommend you sign up to our VIP list above for priority updates.

Floor Plans for Oak Flats
Plans have yet to be finalized. The current development proposal is for 30 2-bedroom condos from 865 – 1,223 sq ft and four 3-bedroom residences on each of the top to floors from 1,327 – 1,342 sq ft. Contact me today to consider available options, prices, and plans.

Amenities at Oak Flats
On the main floor is a shared 616 sq ft amenity room with refrigerator, microwave, sink, dishwasher, and washroom. Directly outside is a 406 sq ft shared patio with childrens play area. Each ground floor home will have its own private patio ranging in size from 246 – 588 sq ft. On the roof are four landscaped decks, each with a fireplace.

Parking and Storage
Oak Flats will have 52 vehicle parking spaces contained in two levels of underground, of which five are for visitors and two are handicapped. There are also 48 Class A horizontal bicycle stalls underground and six Class B spaces at grade, near the main lobby entrance. Over 1,800 sq ft of additional storage, divided into 41 lockers, have been allocated on P2.

Maintenance Fees at Oak Flats
To be included with final purchase offer.

Developer Team for Oak Flats
Bold Properties is a real estate developer fueled by innovation, creativity, and the needs of their customers. They meticulously design their developments in order to construct, nurture, and foster new communities across the Greater Vancouver area. Bold challenges the notion of typical in an effort to bring you the newest and greatest in real estate without compromising on tradition or quality.

Gateway Architecture is a progressive, award-winning team with vast expertise in all aspects of residential and commercial architecture, and interior design. Projects include custom single-family homes, multi-family developments, retail centres, offices, restaurants, and sports facilities. Attention to detail and innovative design are evident in all their projects. Services include complete architectural services, full interior design services, space planning, display suites, sales centres, and furniture design.

Expected Completion for Oak Flats
To be announced.

Are you interested in learning more about other homes in the Cambie Corridor, Kerrisdale, or Kitsilano?

Check out these great Cambie Corridor Presales!

The post Oak Flats – Plans, Prices, Availability appeared first on Mike Stewart.



from Blog – Mike Stewart http://ift.tt/2xnxjU9