Showing posts with label Water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Water. Show all posts

Edge Water Two Drawer Lateral File Estate Black Finish



A new interpretation of a classic furniture design motif, the Edge Water Collection from Sauder Woodworking puts a timely spin on Cottage style. With solid wood feet, decorative kick rails, elegant dark Spanish hardware, and framed doors and drawers, Edge Water offers a unique look and feel classic, but in line with today's trendier styles. Finished in Estate Black with a Warm Gold undertone, Edge Water brings relaxed style into the modern age.


The Edge Water Lateral File Cabinet keeps your important paperwork organized and easy to find Two large drawers hold letter or legal size hanging file folders, and operate effortlessly on fullextension drawer glides. For your safety, the builtin drawer interlock system only allows one drawer to open at a time to prevent tipping.Look no further than the Edge Water Collection for great value in quality office furniture. Rugged engineered wood construction with a durable lamiante finish ensure this Lateral File Cabinet will give you years of worryfree use. Ships ready to assemble.


Price: $328.95


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Sauder Edge Water Lateral Filing Cabinet



Switch out your old filing cabinet and file in style using the Sauder Edge Water Lateral Filing Cabinet.   The Edge Water Lateral Filing Cabinet is not only stylish, but it resembles a piece of furniture, allowing you to make it a part of any room or office. The two drawers feature an interlocking safety mechanism that allows only one drawer to open at a time. Each drawer holds letter and legal sized file folders. This cabinet is easy to assemble and will look great in your home office.   About Sauder Sauder is North America's leading producer of ready-to-assemble (RTA) furniture and the nation's fifth largest residential furniture manufacturer.


Based in Archbold, Ohio, Sauder also sources furniture from a network of quality global partners, including a line of office chairs that complement its residential and light commercial office furniture. Sauder markets more than 30 distinct furniture collections in a full line of RTA furnishings for the home, entertainment, home office, bedroom, kitchen, and storage.   Sauder is a privately held, third-generation, family-run business. The company prides itself on its awareness that all function and no fashion makes for a dull living space when it comes to home furnishing products.


That's why Sauder's award-winning design team has produced more than 25 collections of stylish furniture that span the design spectrum. From minimalist modern or contemporary to classic 18th century or country styles, Sauder has what you're looking for. The company offers more than 500 items - most priced below $500 - that have won national design awards and generated thousands of letters of gratitude from satisfied consumers. Looks like a beautiful piece of furniture. Wood finish. Estate black color. Holds letter and legal size files. Dimensions: 33.25W x 23.5D x 29.375H in..


Price: $292.00


Click here to buy from Amazon

Building a Garden That Makes the Best Use of Water



It's been raining a lot lately, this being hurricane season. While it's good to leave our drought of the past three years behind, it's clear that sudden drenching rains, or sustained heavy rain, can cause flooding and serious damage. When water falls too hard or for too long, it doesn't get absorbed into the soil; it runs off into storm drains or streams, and eventually into the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay. This contributes to pollution by carrying fertilizer, pesticides and roadway contaminants straight to waterways.


It's possible, though, to harness and clean this water. "Ideally, most if not all of the water that falls on a site should stay on the site," said Zora Lathan, executive director of the Chesapeake Ecology Center in Annapolis. But "we've leveled out the land and paved over paradise." One solution to cleaning up the waterways, Lathan said, is to put contours back into the land by creating rain gardens. These are gardens that imitate nature and allow rain to infiltrate the soil, be filtered of pollutants and recharge the ground water. "We all contribute to storm-water runoff, and we need to be part of the solution."


The rain garden concept has caught on, and there are initiatives in numerous places to promote them. In Kansas City, Mo., a public-private effort launched in 2005 aims to create 10,000 rain gardens in the metropolitan area. In Atlanta, the Clean Water Campaign seeks to encourage the creation of rain gardens with a detailed how-to brochure. Pepco has rain gardens at its Benning Road service center in the Anacostia River watershed in Washington. There have been efforts in Maryland by Pepco and by environmental organizations to promote the installation of rain gardens.


Lathan is starting a major public education campaign to encourage people in Anne Arundel County to practice Bay-saving landscaping techniques such as the use of green roofs, rain barrels, rain gardens and pervious paving that allow water to seep into the ground. She calls it "rainscaping." The effort will include posters and brochures, and also places where people can see what these elements look like and see and hear how they work. Right now her effort is concentrated on Anne Arundel County, but Lathan said what she and her associates are doing could easily be replicated throughout the Chesapeake watershed.


A rainscaping arbor has been installed at the Chesapeake Ecology Center, a nonprofit environmental organization that runs 18 native plant demonstration gardens on the grounds of J. Albert Adams Academy in Annapolis. The academy is an alternative school for at-risk middle school students, who work in the gardens. It has a green roof, rainwater-collecting barrels, permeable paving under the arbor and three rain gardens. Lathan's plans include a Web site, more rainscaping locations installed in public areas and nursery operations using these water-conserving practices.


Lathan said she always points out that rain gardens are simple to install. Some people have become intimidated by information about "bio-retention systems," which are often larger installations than required by homeowners. While rain gardens are a form of bio-retention, they needn't be complex or multi-layered, requiring massive earth moving or heavy labor. They can be fairly ordinary gardens of native plants.


These plants are installed in a shallow depression. "A garden in a saucer" is how Lathan describes it. Homeowners who want to install a rain garden should do some homework first. There are issues of siting and size, and some locales are simply not right for rain gardens. It's important, for instance, that the soil underneath be permeable.


It's common in modern construction for contractors to level the land and regrade it with compacted clean fill, said Stuart Schwartz, senior research scientist at the Center for Urban Environmental Research and Education at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. The leveled area is planted with sod or seeded. Turf grows on a very thin layer of soil. It looks green and healthy, but it no longer functions as a water-absorbing and -filtering system. "The perviousness of the soil has been compromised," he said. In these cases, he said, turfed areas actually increase runoff.


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