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Push to speed up recovery efforts after California wildfires

Push to speed up recovery efforts after California wildfires

Yahoo31-03-2025

Some Los Angeles-area residents find themselves trapped in limbo three months after the wildfires, as recovery efforts are slow moving. Andrew Gutierrez has more.

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Freedom Boat Club expands in Thunderbolt
Freedom Boat Club expands in Thunderbolt

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Freedom Boat Club expands in Thunderbolt

SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) — Freedom Boat Club is holding a ribbon cutting ceremony on Thursday to celebrate its third Savannah-area location in Thunderbolt, Georgia, a spokesperson said. The ceremony will be at 4 p.m. at the Freedom Boat Club of Savannah in Thunderbolt. The event is open to the public and light refreshments and free boat rides will be offered for the community. Freedom Boat Club was founded in 1989, offering a hassle-free boating experience at more than 400 locations across 35 states, its mission says. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Mid-century modern-style home designed by noted architect Paul Schweikher to be listed for $1.3M
Mid-century modern-style home designed by noted architect Paul Schweikher to be listed for $1.3M

Chicago Tribune

time14 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Mid-century modern-style home designed by noted architect Paul Schweikher to be listed for $1.3M

A four-bedroom, 4,068-square-foot mid-century modern-style house in west suburban Wayne that was designed by noted architect Paul Schweikher will be listed today for $1.299 million. Built in the 1950s and known as the Frazel House after its first owners, the redwood brick and glass house is located in the Kane County portion of Wayne and sits on a 3.76-acre lot that bisects Norton Creek. Its architect, Schweikher, designed a host of Chicago-area homes and other buildings. Among his designs are the Third Unitarian Church in Chicago, the Unitarian Church of Evanston, the Graeme Stewart house in Wheaton and the Berg house in Glen Ellyn. Schweikher also designed his own home and studio in Schaumburg, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The house in Wayne has 3-1/2 bathrooms, high ceilings, expansive glass, a recently renovated kitchen, a three-season room and two interior garden areas. Outside are a pool and a pergola. 'This home is not just a residence — it's a rare architectural heirloom,' listing agent Tina Aronson of @properties told Elite Street. '(It's) an inspired marriage of nature, design and timeless artistry by Paul Schweikher.' Architectural Record magazine in November 1955 wrote that the enclosed garden areas eliminate 'the sensation of being shut in.' The magazine added that the house has a contrast between solid brick walls and large expanses of glass because of Schweikher's belief that 'alternate floor-to-ceiling openings and completely closed walls are more dramatic and livable, given appropriate surroundings, than the continuous glazed wall, either from ceiling to the floor or over a spandrel.' In an oral history that Schweikher gave to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he noted in response to a question that while he saw a lot of the famed architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe in the 1950s — mostly at the Arts Club of Chicago, any Miesian aspects of the Frazel house would have been 'an accident in the constant search for simplicity.' 'I can't remember at all trying to follow Mies in any way other than that I was working with rectangles,' Schweikher told interviewer Betty Blum. 'My principle (sic) concentration was in trying to increase the importance of an indoor-outdoor relationship in which we introduced outdoor spaces in the interior of the plan.' Schweikher also noted the softening effect of the home's latticework, as it 'made the sun sparkle.' He also recalled van der Rohe's visit to the Frazel house. 'It was his suggestion that we go there,' Schweikher said. 'Having done that I think he felt that he had expressed his pleasure, if not in the house, at least in a kind of endorsement I suppose of some of the things that I was doing. At least I always took it that way. He was very sparing about compliments. His presence usually indicated a kind of endorsement and I took it to mean that.' Schweikher expert Dan Fitzpatrick, who is the managing director and historian at The Schweikher House in Schaumburg, told Elite Street that the Frazel house is 'an outstanding example of his elegant home designs.' 'The Frazel house is one of the last residential designs by Paul Schweikher in Chicagoland before moving east to chair the architecture school at Yale University,' Fitzpatrick said. 'Designed in 1952, the Frazel house highlights Schweikher's impeccable sense of scale, texture and blending of the indoors and outdoors. The tall ceilings and windows are just right, allowing for beautiful views of nature in each space. The private lot enhances this harmony so well.' The current owners paid $715,000 for the home in 2013. The house had a $17,017 property tax bill in the 2024 tax year.

Our kids stay in our family home, and my ex and I alternate staying there and in an apartment. 'Nesting' works for us.
Our kids stay in our family home, and my ex and I alternate staying there and in an apartment. 'Nesting' works for us.

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Our kids stay in our family home, and my ex and I alternate staying there and in an apartment. 'Nesting' works for us.

When my ex and I divorced, we decided to try "nesting." Our kids stay in the family home, and we alternate parenting them there and staying in an apartment. It helps us coparent better, keeps things stable for the kids, and is financially responsible. When my marriage ended after more than two decades, I wasn't ready to uproot everything all at once. We had two kids, a shared house, and years of routines. So instead of rushing to sell or move out, we decided to try something I'd only heard about in passing: "nesting." Nesting means keeping the family home as the primary base for our kids while my ex and I alternate living there and staying elsewhere. We change places halfway through the week, and the kids never have to pack a bag. Of the options we discussed, nesting not only sounded good for the kids but was also the most financially responsible option. We live in Los Angeles, where rents are sky high, and having two homes large enough to support the kids isn't really a possibility right now. After alternating on friends' couches for a while, we rented a studio apartment as our second place. My ex and I alternate spending half the week parenting in the family home and the other half in a sleek, modern studio with building amenities like a gym and a hot tub. The apartment is clean, quiet, and honestly, kind of incredible. There are no toys on the floor, no dog hair, and no scooters in the hallway. Sometimes I just sit quietly on the couch to hear myself think. Nesting can feel surreal. The house stays the same, but we rotate in and out like actors in a long-running play. One night, I'll be folding laundry and helping with homework, and the next, I'll be alone in the studio apartment eating cereal for dinner. There is some whiplash, as my environment changes every couple of days. The hardest part of nesting isn't emotional. It's logistical. There is a lot of sharing and coordinating. We lay out a schedule in a combined calendar. We share grocery lists and update each other on the house and kid status when we switch places. We agreed not to leave either house messy, to let each other know our comings and goings, and to change the sheets — especially if someone brings a date home, which is a whole other world to navigate. We have moments when communication breaks down, when we snap at each other, or when resentment starts creeping in. Sometimes, the towels are in a new place. Sometimes, my ex forgets to take the trash out. Sometimes, I leave my socks on the floor. This arrangement takes a level of cooperation that many divorced couples might not be willing to do. We're not just co-parenting; we're cohabiting without coexisting. My ex is my roommate. In two homes. Nesting isn't a permanent solution, and we both know that. The kids will get older and our lives will evolve, so we're figuring out how long this arrangement can last. In the short term, it gives us space to keep stability in the kids' lives. They don't have to switch houses or bounce between bedrooms. Their lives stay constant, even as ours shift. They roll with the alternating parents and try to keep up with the ever-changing schedule of who's home. I think they appreciate having access to both of us and treasure having their own space. There are moments I miss having my own uninterrupted home, and get sick of packing a bag every few days. But when I think of my kids having to move back and forth after their parents split up, I know I'd rather do it for them. Read the original article on Business Insider

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