Happy Chinese New Year

February 10th marks the Chinese New Year.   The “Year of the Water Snake” will usher out the old “Year of the Dragon”.

The Year of the Dragon was an intense year for all of us.  It was either intensely good or intensely bad, there was no in between.  However, the Year of the Water Snake brings good fortune to all of the animal signs.  This only happens once in 9 years, so that is an awesome start for all of us.

This is the year to make your strategy big for your personal and professional areas of your life.  Saving money and being thrifty should be your priorities.  Delusion and deception are common in the Year of the Water Snake, so stay alert.

There is lots of good news this year, with 2013 having all of the five elements present; water, fire, earth, wood, metal and fire.  You will have the chance to make things happen quicker and easier.

We are very fortunate this year with the energies bringing forth more of a sense of calmness, not like the Dragon energy of 2012.  You can now refocus your goals and intentions easier and with more success.

Feng Shui Grandmaster Lillian Too says, “The year’s outlook will be balanced, bringing harmony and fewer problems and obstacles”.  She also explains the elements and their meaning this year.

  • The Wood element is representative of the Wealth Luck.   This means that new wealth will come this year.    (May that will help us all with real estate sales this year!)
  • Earth is the element that represents Resource Luck which means support for your projects and goals.
  • The element of Metal indicates good fortune to all of the animal signs.
  • The element of Fire will benefit the Baby Boomers and provide this wise generation with strengthening their previous way of life to fit in successfully with the younger generation and provide renewed energy.
  • For all of the young people, the element of Water comes with an Intelligence Luck in 2013. The best ideas and creativity will come from this generation to move forward in creating a different world.

Chinese New Year may be a time for friends, family and fun, but is also a time for foreboding as the festival is riddled with superstitions.   Check out some of the most common superstitions below.

  • Make sure all doors and windows are opened at midnight to allow the old year passage.
  • If you wear red clothes, you will be lucky.
  • Make sure all debts are paid back by New Year’s Day.
  • Hearing the crow between the hours of three and seven means gifts are on their way.
  • Ensure your home is prosperous by keeping a flowering plant in bloom, especially on New Year’s Day.
  • Ensure good luck remains by making sure that dirty floors are swept inwardly and dirt is stored in the corners, where it will not be trampled and where it will remain until the New Year has passed.

 

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PORTICO DESIGNERS VISIT THE HYTEC PLANT IN ARMSTRONG BC

Portico Designer’s Marion Nordin and Brenda Chiu were invited (amongst others) to the Hytec plant tour in Armstrong, BC. Brenda gave us a nice summary of their trip and shared some photos. Looks like the ladies had a GREAT time!

“Our trip started on Tuesday afternoon with a treat to the Sparkling Hills Kur Spa courtesy of Hytec. The moment you walk into the Sparkling Hills Hotel you can smell the aroma of different essentials oils coming from the spa just a few steps away from the sparkly lobby. Marion had a classic pedicure and I had a Fresh Glow facial. Marion’s treatment was in a bright room with floor to ceiling windows having spectacular views of the surrounding hills. I was in a nicely dimmed room with a heated treatment bed. I was refreshed after 16 luxurious facial products and 60 minutes of pampering. After our treatments, we visited the different steam rooms, saunas, sipped tea in their tea room then lounged at their outdoor infinity pool. The views from each room were just breath taking!

Dinner was at the Sparkling Hills Peak Fine Restaurant. Really, everywhere you go you see large impressive Swarovski crystal pendants. Even the dining chairs have crystals on them!
The dinner was enjoyed by our host Rosemarie from Hytec, Juanita and Julie from The Ensuite Bath & Kitchen Showroom, Christine, The Friendly Decorator and Alana, Designer.

We spent Tuesday night at the Predator Ridge Resort clubhouse and had an early start Wednesday with breakfast at 7:30am and the Hytec plant tour at 9:00am.

We met the plant manager Richard and he took us on an informative tour of their acrylic and gelcoat manufacturing process. We were not allowed to take any photos, possibly risking giving away their advance manufacturing process secrets (Shhhhh!). We were shown how an acrylic tub starts off with a sheet of white acrylic (or other color of your choice) that gets heated to a specific temperature, then gets stretched over the tub template made of metal. The template has air holes all over and air is sucked out making the acrylic mold to the template. This was a really cool process to see!
Then the tub goes through fiberglass reinforcement, trimmed, holes drilled, inspected, and then packaged. Sounds simple but most of these steps are done by hand (except the stretching of the sheet, which is done by a large machine). The workers there didn’t stop to chat or say “Hi”. They have a goal to reach and high quality to uphold, so nothing distracted them. Most tubs can be made in 7-10 days. Now we know why Hytec tubs cost more than others. It’s the design and high quality that goes into it.

We were surprised to learn that you can design your own tub if you have a minimum 250 tub order. For example, The Sparkling Hills have designed their own Hytec tubs, which they have a patent on, so no one else can use it.

The highlight of the trip was definitely the plant tour with a bonus at the Sparkling Hills Kur Spa. Thank you Hytec for sharing that experience with us! “ – Brenda Chiu

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EXPERIENCED INTERIOR-DESIGN FIRM SEES FUTURE IN LUXURY SENIORS HOUSING, BOUTIQUE RESORTS, AND OTHER SPECIALTY MARKETS.

They’re a creative and hard-working bunch— but everyone keeps his or her ego in check. And that’s precisely what Tara Wells wants from her interior-design staff. “We are easy to work with,” says Wells, founder and principal of Portico Design Group Ltd. “I hear that time and again from our clients. We listen to the clients’ needs and wants, and then we provide the solution in a creative manner while paying close attention to costs. We have no prima donnas on our staff—nobody who tries to force their vision onto a project.”

Wells always wanted to be an interior designer, but faced an extremely depressed job market when she graduated from university. Instead, she entered the fields of commercial real estate and multi-family development as a marketer. After the employment climate improved, she was able to find work with an interior design firm. She stayed for three years before deciding to strike out on her own, establishing Portico in 1992.

During the years spent working in commercial real estate and multi-family development, Wells questioned whether the experience could further her interior design ambitions. As it turned out, the perspective was invaluable.

“It laid a great pathway of understanding how the industry works from a client’s perspective, right through conception and the development process,” she explains.

Most new businesses have an uncertain period during the fledgling years. Wells, however, knew there was pent-up demand for interior-design services before she began. She had a number of contacts in the industry through her previous profession, and this advantage led her to work on a large, Canadian-owned resort project in Florida—The Village of Baytowne Wharf, a job that put Portico on the industry map.

The resort, located on the state’s Gulf Coast, was conceived as a “condo hotel,” with a collection of condominium and rental properties surrounding the shore. Portico designed each of the buildings to have a distinct interior feel, drawing from varied influences including a contemporary, Miami-inspired aesthetic.

Portico’s work currently spans both Canada and the United States. In the U.S.—the country composes about 40 percent of the firm’s business—it has worked on resorts in Florida, Nevada, Colorado, and California, as well as on multi-family housing developments in the Pacific Northwest. In Canada, Portico has completed many projects throughout the western provinces—resorts, restaurants, multi-family housing, and corporate offices.

The green building movement has impacted the interior design field, and Wells says Portico has embraced the concept. The movement’s most significant effect has been a major increase in sustainability mandates for projects designed in the past three years. She estimates that 50 percent of the company’s projects now require elements of sustainability. More than anything, the interior-design industry has been most affected by the green movement through the flood of new sustainable products.

“We see many [new sustainable] products on the market,” Wells says, “but the ones that are most used are low-VOC paint, energy-efficient windows and appliances, recycled carpets, tiles manufactured using recycled water, and woods that are made in a manner so as to not exhaust the primary source.” She adds that she has two LEED-accredited designers on her staff.

Portico has won over a dozen awards presented by industry associations, including the Canadian Home Builders Association’s Georgie Award and its coveted Grand Sam Award, which recognizes the best marketing and development of a project in Canada.

Portico’s Grand Sam Awards were received in conjunction with Concert Properties for two projects: a luxury high-rise project designed for “empty nesters” and a seniors-housing development, both in Vancouver. Wells characterizes would i know if i had herpes the seniors-housing development as “the equivalent of a boutique hotel for seniors.” It is catered toward people who want to leave their luxury homes for more accessible retirement housing without sacrificing high-end amenities or style.

“We designed the living quarters to have a classic, timeless look with contemporary woods and clean lines,” Wells says. “It wasn’t your typical place with blue and pink flowers.” At the same time, each retirement suite was outfitted with features designed for accessibility and comfort as the resident aged—handrails, a therapeutic bath, a roll-in shower, firm upholstery, and colors more easily seen by aging eyes.

The awards, an extensive online portfolio, and a large number of repeat clients leaves little need for advertising or marketing. “Word-of-mouth [adverstising] and referrals bring us new business,” Wells says. “We try to meet with clients on a regular basis, so they often come back to us with new work.”

Customers don’t return only for special treatment; Portico also is known for relentless creativity. To put a unique spin on a bowling alley at the One Ski Hill Place resort in Breckenridge, Colorado, Wells and her staff designed it like an old mine shaft, evoking the state’s history and the rich imagery that accompanies it. “We had a lot of fun with that,”
she laughs.

Wells plans to continue pursuing larger projects, like One Ski Hill Place resort, in the future. Also planned are more seniors-housing projects, she says, noting that baby boomers want unique environments in which to live out their golden years.

Within an unpredictable but promising future, one thing remains certain: Portico will maintain its blend of down-to-earth service, creativity, and cost-consciousness. For Wells, there’s no other way.

Article by Russell Roberts
Canadian Builders Quarterly

View full article at: http://canadianbuildersquarterly.ca/2011/septoct-2010-vol-2/

or click to download PDF.

Sept/Oct 2010

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