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Award Winning kitchen featured in House & Home Magazine

Posted by Dave Haines on Sun, Jul 11, 2010 @ 07:45 AM
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This month we are featured in "House & Home Magazine" for our kitchen remodeling project we won a Meritorious Award for in the Bucks mont NARI Contractor of the Year Award competition. Click on the below photo to be taken to a pdf file of the article.

Kitchen remodeling article

If you'd like to see more of this kitchen renovation, check out this web page featuring the kitchen remodel.http://www.hainescontracting.com/remodeling-showcase/-award-winning-kitchen-addition/award-winning-kitchens/  What do you think? What would you change in your kitchen to make it more functional for you?

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Haines Contracting Inc passes Lead safe remodeling testing

Posted by Dave Haines on Thu, Oct 22, 2009 @ 06:05 PM
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    lead safe remodelingMany of you may not be aware there are new regulations going into effect in April 2010 that will impact any contractor working on a house built prior to 1978.  If you are working on such a building and disturb the paint, you will need to have a certified renovator on the job site. 
    On October 15, 2009, Dave Haines C.R. , of Haines Contracting Inc. attended a Bucks-Mont NARI sponsored class in training for and testing to become a Certified Lead Safe Renovator according to the new upcoming EPA Standards. The class covered instruction and hands on demonstrations on the proper ways to complete a renovation project in a lead safe manner. A test was given after the course in which Dave scored 100%.
    lead safe seminarThe new ruling by the EPA covers any house built prior to 1978 in which over 6 SF of area is being disturbed, it should be done in a way to minimize the chances of lead exposure to the occupant. The contractor is also required to notify the owner & tenants with a booklet written by EPA called "Renovate Right". This booklets contains a lot of facts of the dangers of lead poisoning through exposure to lead dust. Lead was used in more than 38 million homes before it was banned from residential use in 1978.
    For more information on this visit www.epa.gov/lead
 

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Universal Remodeling: For all ages

Posted by Dave Haines on Fri, Oct 16, 2009 @ 02:47 PM
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By Jessica Tobacman
 
 
As Baby Boomers age, large numbers of them are interested in staying in their homes, so this movement isn’t just a trend, but an important part of the future.
 
Done right, Universal Remodeling makes the home a safer and more accessible place for all ages. It is both preferable for those who wish to age in their homes and also for the disabled or the injured, who may be in wheelchairs or using walkers or crutches. The goal is to help your clients to become more independent, to make them comfortable in their homes again, and keep the home comfortable through changing circumstances.
 
Vita Burdi, of DJ’s Home Improvements Inc., in Franklin Square, N.Y., is using Universal Remodeling to build her reputation. Although Burdi says that her company has always remodeled with Universal Remodeling principles, they’ve recently started to use this in a new marketing strategy.
 
“We used it to spark interest in our company, marketing to different people and getting more business. It’s our niche in the market, and it was a great idea.” Burdi first mentioned it in her company newsletter in November 2008. Since then, she has left flyers in doctors’ offices and with customers. She is also beginning to advertise in a store where the elderly purchase electric scooters, a popular product for those concerned with how they can stay mobile. In addition, Burdi advertises in newsletters for Kiwanis and the Sons of Italy, which include a variety of age groups. “We try to make the homeowner feel more comfortable. Even though they need all this stuff, it’ll look beautiful when they’re done,” she says. It is still too early to say how much Universal Remodeling business Burdi has gained, but her goal is that it will become 25 percent of the company’s total income by the end of the year.
 
Although having Universal Remodeling in the home is a huge advantage, individuals still want safe, practical and beautiful design.
 
“This presents a real design challenge to us,” Burdi says. Still, Burdi finds success with many items. She adds grab bars for support, includes an entry ramp to at least one entrance of the home, installs handrails to ease entering or exiting the residence and levers to substitute for doorknobs, places a fold-down seat in the shower and a hand-held device to direct the water, waterproofs the shower floor, widens doorways and removes the standard curb around the shower to make them wheelchair- and walker-accessible and puts a subtle, hardly noticeable, pitch in the shower floor, to help water from the shower flow down a drain in the center. Everyone from an older person with arthritis to a young mom with a baby would benefit from having levers, instead of doorknobs that are difficult to turn, Burdi says.
 
A major hazard in the bathroom is the potential for tripping. Homeowners often have to contend with an edge surrounding the shower, a slippery floor or a bathtub with edges high off the ground. It can be challenging for those who find it difficult to lift their feet far enough into the air and over the sides of the tub. This is particularly true for those who have gone through hip, abdominal or knee surgeries, Burdi notes. Although they cannot enter a tub easily, a barrier-free shower with a seat lets use a wheelchair or a walker. Although she generally leaves one bathtub in the home, Burdi is likely to remove a second one. “It’s a great idea to make one of the baths totally accessible.”
 
The bathrooms tend to be relatively small and old in the 1930s homes Burdi often remodels. “We help them make do with what they have and make it totally accessible for them,” she says. In addition, the hand-held shower provides the flexibility so that residents can use it while resting on a newly added seat, if they choose. “We try to make it comfortable for them,” Burdi says. Another way that she aims for comfort is by making the toilet the right height, so that homeowners can extend their knees or hips at a comfortable distance.
 
The kitchen also tends to be an area that it is difficult to use if in a wheelchair. Universal Remodeling advocates using pullout or rollout shelves to make them accessible and altering the heights of countertops so residents can roll under them.
 
Burdi not only likes this type of design, but also recommends that other home improvement contractors seriously consider it. This is partially because of its growing popularity. “People are really taking to it,” she says. “It’s for different people with different needs. Universal Remodeling makes them feel more comfortable in their homes.”
 
When called into a home, Burdi focuses on specific areas to minimize any disruptions to the homeowners, reducing any stress from the remodeling. [A Universal Remodeling project] can be done rather quickly, within eight days. It’s not a major remodel.” As you age, you no longer want tremendous change, Burdi says. “You want familiar surroundings that are comfortable to you. This is really what this gives them.”
 
In this economy, many homeowners can no longer afford to move into nursing homes.
“[People] are so much happier when they go home,” Burdi says. “It’s nice to be able to help them stay [in their houses]. We get such a great feeling from it. I’m happy we can do this for them—it’s a way we can give that [self-reliance] back to them.”
 
 

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Haines Contracting wins NARI Contractor of the Year Award!

Posted by Dave Haines on Sun, Jan 25, 2009 @ 02:12 PM
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     Haines Contracting Inc. was presented the coveted COTY (Contractor of the Year) Award in the catagory of "Residential Kitchens over $100,000" by the Bucks Mont NARI (National Association of the Remodeling Industry.

    According to Dave Haines, President of Haines Contracting Inc., "the project consisted of a 2 year old house in Warrington, PA where the owners just didn't have enough space to entertain their family & friends. The back wall of the kitchen & dining room where bumped out 8' & the partition between the dining room and kitchen were removed. This gave us a whole lot more space to create a better functioning kitchen for our client."

    "Since the house was only 2 years old we were able to reuse 80% of the cabinets and counter tops in the new design. This way nothing went to waste" said Haines.To see more of the award winning project, visit www.hainescontracting.com on the web.

    before & after kitchen

All projects submitted for judging were an improvement or an addition to an existing structure. New construction projects were not eligible. In addition, competing projects were completed between July 1, 2007 and November 30, 2008 (a 17-month time period) and were not submitted in prior NARI local, regional or national contests. An impartial panel of judges who are experts within the industry and associated fields, selected winners based on each entrant's "before and after" photography and project description, problem solving, functionality, aesthetics, craftsmanship, innovation, degree of difficulty and entry presentation.

 

http://flickr.com/photos/homedr/sets/72157612981490522/show/


Trophies were awarded at the 2009 Bucks-Mont NARI  COTY Awards Event  in Sellersville, PA at the Sellersville Theater on January 23, 2009.

The COTY Awards Banquet is widely considered to be the premier event of the year in the remodeling industry. The event was attended by more than 150 of the industry's elite.


To be considered for a CotY Award, a company must be a NARI member in good standing. NARI members represent an elite group from the approximately 800,000 companies and individuals in the U.S. identifying themselves as remodelers. The remodeling market, a $291 billion industry in the U.S. in 2006, is expected to continue to experience significant growth. It is estimated that more than a million homes per year undergo major renovation or remodeling.
 For more info Email Dave Haines at  Dave@hainescontracting.com or call 215-348-9953.

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The End of Time

Posted by Dave Haines on Wed, Dec 03, 2008 @ 07:43 AM
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  (This is a story written by a fellow I met at the Mockingbird Caffe, a local town restaurant in Waveland )

THE END OF A TIME

Paul Estronza La Violette

(laviolette@datasync.com or www.annabellepublishing.com)

 

Stella has left her key ring on the table where I'm working. She's outside hanging cloths on a makeshift clothesline; I'm making notes on the chores I had to do for the day.

It's a long list. I had to call and get an internet service connected to the old farmhouse so I could access e-mail with my laptop, find out where I could another cell phone for Stella to replace the one we had left at the house, cancel our old phone service, see about cable service for the borrowed TV ... 

The list is too long. I pick up Stella's keys. Any divergence is be welcome.

Unlike my own keys, which are on two separate rings, truck keys on one, car keys on another, Stella's keys are all on one ring. In total, they made quite a handful, a bulge in her purse that I had kidded her about.

She had lost her keys once. That had been an experience. We had to replace remotes and ignition keys for both of the vehicles, the post office box key and the house key. It had been both time consuming and because of the remotes, rather expensive. But today, as I looked at the keys on the ring she had left on the table, I realized that if she lost them now, the expense would be small.

I began pulling off keys from her ring that were no longer useable.

The first was my truck key and its remote opener. There was no longer a white Ford Ranger for me to drive around. The Ranger had been a wonderfully pleasant truck that I enjoyed driving. I had owned it for less than a year, actually just eight months, but it had been a very pleasant experience. My too often told jokes about it being white and thus invisible among the other white pickup trucks on the road was no longer germane.

It was no longer invisible; it was gone.

The next key on Stella's ring was the post office box key. For various reasons, we don't keep a mailbox in front of the house. I usually dive once a day to Coleman Avenue and collect my mail from the Waveland post office. I suppose it's possible that the small building may be still standing. I doubt it. The building stood at a comparatively low elevation and, despite being brick, had probably been washed away in the 35' foot storm surge that all of Waveland experienced.

In any case, it would be awhile before the post office would be operating again. I took the key off and put it aside, sort of something that will come back in use in the indistinct future. In doing so, I began to think about Terry, the Postmistress and a close friend. Had she left in time? This started a bad line of thinking that I quickly squashed. There were too many unknowns, too many friends that we hadn't heard from.

I looked at the keys remaining on Stella's key ring. The last key that I was looking at would be the hardest to remove. It was our house key.

Stella and I had lived in that house for thirty years. We had designed and built much of its sprawling redwood structure ourselves. Each year we had expanded it with the help of a close friend. Working in the heat, arguing about what we were doing, modifying, extending the structure until in the end, it had fitted Stella and I like a glove.

In the last week, I had been working aboard a 36' trawler owned by Ned, a friend who lived in Pass Christian. He, I and three other close friends had spent the week sailing the eastern end of the Mississippi Sound mapping the debris field of an 1812 naval battle. I had written a book on the battle and we were looking for small relics of the nearly 200 year old naval action.

At noon on Friday, the last day of the survey Ned received a call on his cell phone. He listened for a moment and then announced, "Katrina's coming right at us. It's up to a category three and will be here late Sunday, early Monday." We quickly broke off mapping and headed the trawler back to Bay St Louis and the Casino Magic Marina. We worked securing the boat from the storm. Then, calling the various wives to come and get us, we all went to my house where Stella was waiting with a farewell supper.

 It was a glorious, wonderful evening that fitted well the ambience of the old house. We sat in the dinning room told stories, laughed, spoke about next year until late in the evening and then broke up and said our goodbyes.

Stella and I spent Saturday cleaning up, lowering storm shutters and clearing things about the grounds. It was work, but it was a drill we were used to doing. The coming hurricane, while promising to be bad, didn't worry us overly much.

The house had been built extra strong (one inch plywood, 2by6 studs at 2by4 spacing), the roll down shutters were heavy plastic reinforced with steel strips, and the house elevation at seventeen feet, was fairly high for our area.

We felt secure in that we could take 130-knot winds and the ten to fifteen foot storm surge that usually accompanies a category 3 storm. We had done so in Hurricane Elaina, a rather bad category 3 storm.

That night, Stella and I went to bed tired, debating wearily whether in the morning we should stay in the house or leave and seek shelter. We realized that no matter what we finally decided, the next week would be extremely uncomfortable, but we were not overly worried.

We went to sleep. 

The next morning, I got up at 6:30 and turned on the cable TV weather station. Katrina was now a category 4 and would increase to a category 5 by noon. Waveland would get gale winds by noon, hurricane winds by 6 PM and the eye or just east of the eye, would hit our area dead on sometime Monday morning.

Eye or no eye, we were in the worst possible quadrant of the storm, the northeast. The winds would be terrible, but the tremendous surge both n height and force would be catastrophic. I woke Stella and told her we had just a few hours to leave before the roads became clogged with evacuees. We gathered our important papers together, downloading the two computers to a laptop, packed a few clothes, put Holly in his carrier and, driving Stella's car, left by 10:30.

My white truck stayed in the garage. Maybe... Monday, we sat in a hotel room in Tallahassee, Florida and watched the radar show the storm's eye make the hurricane's third landfall, this time directly on the Mississippi coast. All indications pointed to the coast experiencing a terrible calamity. We slept that night knowing that the chances of our escaping a personal tragedy were very small.

Aerial pictures over the next few days showed that the tragedy was much more than personal. They indicated that the coastal Mississippi coast towns, especially Waveland, Bay St Louis and Pass Christian, had been washed over by a storm surge 35 to 40 feet high that had gone a mile inland. Not only was our house gone, but our town was gone as well.

We are in Pennsylvania now staying in an old farmhouse, sleeping in the same room that Stella had been born many years ago.

Things in Waveland and the Bay are different now. They had been significantly changing the last two years and now, Katrina's drastic changes overshadow all of these. I believe much of the wonderful easy way of small town coastal life that I have so carefully tried to document in my writings and books is gone.

So, as to the keys, it hurt, but I began removing the house key from the ring.

 

 

 

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15 Home improvement winterization tips

Posted by Dave Haines on Wed, Oct 22, 2008 @ 10:45 AM
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1. How about putting up you Christmas lights early. Just don't turn them on yet. It sure beats going outside in the cold and freezing while getting the lights hung around your roof.

2. Make sure your furnace is in good working order. If it has a filter, check that the filter is clean and replace it if it's not clean. Ensure that the thermostat and pilot light are working properly and that the pipe bringing fuel to your furnace isn't leaking or loose

3. Consider installing a programmable thermostat for your heater. It can save you up to 15% by not having heat on when you don't need it while you're under your warm blankets or away during the day. Then it can be programmed to come back on before you wake up in the morning or return home from work.

4. Have your heating ducts cleaned. It's recommended that the ducts be vacuumed every five years. Check your fireplace and have your chimney cleaned out by a chimney sweep. Fires can start in a chimney from years of creosote built up in a dirty chimney.

5. Remove your hoses from your outside faucets and drain the water from the hoses. If you have a frost proof hose bib, they can still freeze and burst if a hose is left connected to it. The way a frost free faucet works is it shuts the water source off inside the home with a long shut off stem inside the basement. However, if a garden hose is still connected to the faucet, water will be trapped beyond the shut off and will freeze and break. Always disconnect your hoses.

6. Get to know your plumbing. Learn how to shut the main water off in your home and know where your pipes are located. If your pipes do freeze, time is of the essence. The quicker you can shut off the water, or direct your plumber to the problem, the better chance you have to prevent water damage.

7. Trim trees and remove dead branches. Ice, snow, and wind could cause weak trees or branches to break, damaging your home or car, or injuring someone walking on your property.

8.  Clean those gutters. Once the leaves fall, remove them and other debris from your home's gutters - you can do this by hand or use a 2-1/2" wide spackle knife or use a long attachment hose to a leaf blower. Blocked gutters & downspouts can form ice dams, in which water backs up, freezes and causes water to seep into the house. As you're hosing out your gutters, look for leaks and misaligned pipes. Also, make sure the downspouts aren't blocked at the bottom where they exit.

9. After a snow storm, make sure snow piles are not blocking your downspouts or sump pump discharge outlets. Remove piles of snow from around doorways, sliding glass doors, basement window wells, or low to the ground windows. As the snow melts, water can seep in around these areas and also damage the seals on insulated glass.

10.  Seal your home from drafts. Go around your home and inspect for air drafts around windows, doors, and fireplaces. Seal any leaks with weather stripping or caulk.

11. Better yet, consider window replacement with a newer energy efficient insulated glass window, with a vinyl or aluminum clad maintenance free exterior.

12. If new windows aren't in the budget, consider adding storm windows and storm doors. These also add the benefit of the screens in the warmer months for letting the fresh air in.

13. Check your attic for proper insulation. You should have 10-12" of blown in insulation or at least an R-30 in batt insulation. If you go and put plywood down in your attic and compress all that insulation, you're defeating the insulation value. Always build up the ceiling joists height above the insulation if you are going to lay down plywood for storage. Be careful not to overload the space, ceiling joist by design are meant to support the ceiling hanging from it and not a whole storage area of all your treasures. I wouldn't be concerned about a few boxes with Christmas decorations or out of season cloths.

14. When it snow and freezes on your sidewalk, don't use salt on the concrete. Salt can deteriorate the concrete over time. It's best to use kitty litter or sand.

15. Change the batteries on your smoke or carbon monoxide detectors. Test them to make sure they are in working order.

Do you have any I missed? Please post your comments .

 

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