THE REDEKOPS

The #1 Name in Fraser Heights

  • Office: (604) 583-2000
  • Fax: (604) 583-7099
  • Toll Free: (888) 296-8060
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Dale and Mitch
Office:(604) 583-2000
Fax:(604) 583-7099
Toll Free:(888) 296-8060
RE/MAX 2000 Realty
#103 - 15127 100 Ave.
Surrey, BC
V3R 0B9 Canada
Vancouver Sun - West Coast Homes
Tuesday, March 9, 2010 1:31:17 AM CST
Home and Garden, from the Rockies to the St . Lawrence
OTTAWA, TORONTO, CALGARY: New homes, and new or renewed forms of homes, are a year-round attachment of Canadian home-and-garden journalism. Generating newspaper attention recently was the growing appreciation for the townhouse in Ottawa, top; the showhome of a highrise-development in the Toronto suburb of Brampton, above left; and a showhome for a tract-housing development in north Calgary. You can learn a lot about your town when you read the out-of-town newspapers. Consider this, from the Ottawa Citizen townhouse story: "To a large extent, their proliferation comes from the maturing of Ottawa as an urban centre and the municipality's professed commitment to housing intensification to combat urban sprawl." Every life-long Ottawa resident who thinks a townhouse an exemplar of intense residency owes himself or herself a trip to Vancouver or, perhaps, a moment's reflection on those television skyshots broadcast between Winter Games coverage.
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News In Brief
'Upcycling' is one of those reminders of the elasticity of the English language. The word 'upcycle' has only appeared in this newspaper twice in the last 10 years. It means, according to one of the 342,000 Internet sites in which the word appears, the "repurposing of a material into a product of higher quality. An example would be a purse made out of woven candy wrappers." It must have considerable currency in Calgary, if this introduction to a Herald story on used-items stores is a guide: 'Don't have just the right upcycle elements hanging around your baserment.? Check out local flea markets, second-hand shops . . . ."
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Builder scales apartments to appeal to downsizers
CASCADE -- Project location: Westwood Plateau, Coquitlam
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Ginger delivers promised spice to Main Street
GINGER -- Project location: Strathcona, Vancouver
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Annual seminar a promise of useful tips for new buyers
PETER SIMPSON -- peter
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Inventor shares his vision with home-show visitors
It may look like a spaceship, but it's not from Mars -- it's from Montreal. The model of a futuristic single-family home called 'Homerizon' was created by Jean-Pierre Desmarais and on display at the Cottage and Country Homes show held last weekend in the Quebec city. Most visitors to the show had never seen anything like it: rising high above the trees, a mushroom-shaped building with an elevator in its steel-framed composite "stem" and a two-storey, glass-fronted "cap." If built, the home would stand 24 metres high, with four wind turbines integrated into its frame and an aerodynamic shape to capture the breezes. Because of these and a host of other design elements, the house will be completely off the grid, says Desmarais. The home is designed to integrate a host of renewable and environmental systems, including solar photovoltaic panels, hot water and radiant floor heating by thermal solar panels, passive solar design, rainwater, autonomous drinking water supply system, waste water treatment and recycling. To build, Desmarais reports, would cost from $3.5 to $5 million. 'That's the architectural evaluation,' said Desmarais, who has spent the last two years developing the idea but has yet to see a Homerizon home built. The idea for the home came to him several decades ago, but it was during a work stint as special-effects technician on the film Mummy III that Desmarais met an illustrator who put his ideas on paper. To integrate the renewable energy systems, he then went to an architect and designer. 'For many people who see it, it totally makes sense,' his wife, Kathy Gildart, reports. 'The renewal energy technologies are available, and we should be able to integrate them into the structure of our homes.' Many of the people who have viewed the concept with interest have large pieces of land in secluded areas, she says. 'They're off the grid and they want to stay that way.'
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Olympic experiment tested our city's urbanism
Vancouver's Olympic experience was a huge experiment on a number of fronts, not the least of which involved putting the city's urbanism under a microscope.
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$6.128 million buys Point Grey estate
Vancouver -- 4818 Fannin
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