Showing posts with label homes for sale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homes for sale. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Holiday Safety - How to Keep Your Home Safe During the Christmas Season

Safety tips for the Holiday Season
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Don't let the rush and excitement of the holiday season make you careless. Let's make this season especially cheerful by ensuring the protection of our loved ones and valuables. Make sure decorations are not only put up beautifully but safely as well.  If you have recently bought a new home, take the time to consider safety hazards or potential vulnerabilities. The following tips can help you be more careful, prepared and aware during the holiday season.

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Keep any large displays of gifts out of sight

Securing your home this season: preventing burglary

The Holidays are a particularly vulnerable time for families and their home security. With the increase of purchasing and storing of desirable goods, burglars find this time particularly appealing. But home invasion can be easily prevented.  Keep windows, garages and sheds locked and don't forget to use deadbolts, even if you are just stepping out for a few minutes. Don't leave a spare key in a "hiding place." It's safe to say that if you put it somewhere that helps you remember where it is, it is probably somewhere others will easily guess. Lock your power box with an electricity authority lock (only you and the electric company have a key) so that your home security alarm system can't be cut off from the power supply.

Avoid drawing attention to your home by keeping any large displays of holiday gifts not be visible through the windows and doors of your home. You can discourage a lot of robbers by making your home appear "active" Use timers to turn on lights and a television or radio. Indoor and outdoor lights should be on an automatic timer. Think of it as the "Home Alone" method of home protection. When leaving home for an extended time, have a neighbor or family member watch your house and pick up your newspapers and mail. 

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Make sure your Christmas tree is mounted on a sturdy base.

Hazard Free Decoration Placement: Ways of avoiding tripping, fire, and other safety issues

Placing the tree and other holiday decorations should not only be based on the lighting and Feng shui. Safety should be factored in as well. When setting up a Christmas tree or other holiday display, make sure doors and passageways are clear. Be sure your Christmas tree is mounted on a sturdy base so children, elderly persons or family pets cannot pull it over on themselves. Delicate or dangerous ornaments (such as swallowing hazards or glass) should be placed higher up on the tree away from little hands or doggies. Maintain at least a foot of space between a burning candle and anything that can catch fire. Try to keep electrical elements plugged in near an outlet, draping cords across rooms can be a very dangerous tripping hazard. 

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Don't overload electric circuits with Holiday Lights

Fire Safety for all the lights, candles, wires, and highly flammable elements of the Holidays:

The Holidays can have quite the assortment of fire hazard possibilities. Materials such as dry pine trees and wrapping paper are highly flammable and surrounded by potentially fire producing sources. It's simple to make sure that all of our decorations and presents don't go up in smoke. When hanging lights outdoors, avoid using staples or nails which can damage wiring. Use UL-rated clips or wires instead. Each year check your string of lights on your Christmas tree to ensure the wiring is not damaged or frayed. Frayed or damaged wiring can cause a fire. Don't overload electric circuits with holiday lighting. Spread out the various electrical needs of your decorations to various outlets if possible. Always unplug lights before going to bed including your glittering tree. Place your Christmas tree in water or wet sand to keep it green and more flame retardant. Never place wrapping paper in your fireplace. It is not only enrionmentally unsafe but can contain toxins including lead!

This season while you check your Xmas "to-dos" off your list, keep track of safety as well. Make sure your home is always secure and appears "active". Place decorations aways from open flames and out of walkways. Check all of your wiring for frays and keep your tree quenched! And remember if all you want for christmas this year is a new home, Ricardo The Realtor and his team are here for you. We can find you homes in the Long Beach area for the same prices as renting. Our team will stay with you every step of the way and direct you to invaluable resources to help you have the best home purchasing experience.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Museum of Latin American Art and other Museums in Long Beach, CA

Museum of Latin American Art
and other Museums in Long Beach







CSU Long Beach, Univ Art Museum

The UAM collections have brought the University and Long Beach area recognition from both the professional art community and international public. The museum collections of site-specific outdoor sculpture, works of art on paper, and the Gordon Hampton Collection of American painting and prints, feature examples of the work of the most important contemporary masters. Presented as major exhibitions, offered for examination by students and scholars, and circulated to national institutions, the UAM collections are a permanent, regional visual resource and archive of contemporary culture.

Address: 1250 N Bellflower Blvd Long Beach, CA 90840

Phone: (562) 985-5761

Category: Art Museums





Long Beach Museum Art

The Long Beach Museum of Art is located on a magnificent bluff-top site overlooking Long Beach Harbor and the Pacific Ocean. The campus includes the historic Elizabeth Milbank Anderson house and carriage house, now called the Miller Education Center (built in 1912), oceanfront gardens, and a new pavilion with two floors of expansive gallery space for changing exhibitions with the Museum Store in the Masterson Atrium. The historic buildings are home to administrative offices, the Boeing Classroom and Café. In addition to changing exhibitions, the Museum offers extensive educational programs for children and adults, musical programs, festivals, and other special events. Become a Museum Member today!

Address: 2300 E Ocean Blvd Long Beach, CA 90803

Phone: (562) 439-2119

Category: Art Museums






Museum of Latin American Art

The Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA) was founded in 1996 in Long Beach, California and serves the greater Los Angeles area. MOLAA is the only museum in the United States exclusively dedicated to modern and contemporary Latin American art. Since its inception, MOLAA has doubled its size, added a 15,000 sq. ft. sculpture garden and expanded its permanent collection, ranging from works by Tamayo and Matta to Cruz-Diez, Los Carpinteros and Tunga.
The museum is located in the city’s rapidly developing East Village Arts District. Between 1913 and 1918 the site that the museum now occupies was the home of the Balboa Amusement Producing Company, then the World’s most productive and innovative silent film studio. Before there was a Hollywood, Balboa was the king of the silver screen, producing as much as 20,000 feet of negative film a week.

The building that was renovated as MOLAA’s Entertainment / Education / Special Event venue may have been part of the old Balboa film studio. MOLAA’s exhibition galleries, administrative offices and store are housed in what was once a roller skating rink known as the Hippodrome. Built in the late 1920s, after the film studios were gone, the Hippodrome was a haven for skaters for four decades. The building then served as a senior health center for fifteen years. The high vaulted ceilings and beautiful wooden floors were perfectly suited for the Hippodrome's final metamorphosis into the Museum of Latin American Art.

Address: 628 Alamitos Ave Long Beach, CA 90802

Phone: (562) 437-1689

Category: Art Museums






Rancho Los Cerritos Historic Site


4600 Virginia Road, Long Beach, California 90807

Phone: (562) 570-1755
Fax: (562) 570-1893

What is Rancho Los Cerritos?

Rancho Los Cerritos Historic Site is a public museum open for tours, programs and events. Built in 1844, the adobe home and grounds echo with the rich history of Spanish, Mexican and American California and with the families who helped transform Southern California from its ranching beginnings to a modern, urban society. The two-story Monterey-style adobe is primarily furnished to reflect occupants and lifestyles from the 1860s-1880s. The site, a National, State and Long Beach Historic Landmark, also includes historic gardens and a research library and archives. It is owned by the City of Long Beach and operated through the Department of Parks, Recreation and Marine.



 


The Pacific Island Ethnic Art Museum
 
The Pacific Island Ethnic Art Museum (PIEAM) is located at 7th Street and Alamitos Avenue in the East Village Arts District of Long Beach, California. The district lies in the eastern half of downtown Long Beach, within the borders of Ocean Boulevard, Long Beach Boulevard, 10th Street and Alamitos Avenue. The East Village offers an eclectic mix of artist lofts, high-rise condos, and a wide array of cultures, coffee shops, boutiques, restaurants and galleries. A central feature of the Arts District is the Museum of Latin American Art (MoLAA), which focuses on post-World War II contemporary artists from Latin America.
PIEAM is situated on a triangular piece of land bordered by 7th Street, Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, and Alamitos Avenue; it is, appropriately, an island. The mural design on the exterior of the PIEAM building, created by Long Beach native and famed muralist Art Mortimer, recreates a traditional Men’s House from the Island of Yap, one of the four states of the Federated States of Micronesia. Mortimer’s impressive resume and long history in painting murals throughout Southern California made him the obvious choice for this project.

The museum also showcases the diverse cultures from the Pacific who call this area home, including the Marshallese, Samoans, Chamorro, Fijian, Carolinian, Tongan, Micronesian, Hawaiian, the Ni-Vanuatu, Niuean, Tuvauluan, Maori, Polynesian, Papuan, Austronesian, Nauruan, Melanesian, Palauan, the I-Kiribati and many more distinct nationalities.

PIEAM’s mission is to generate interest in these diverse cultures and educate its varied audiences by bringing the beauty and culture of Pacific Island ethnic art to Southern California. PIEAM stays true to the heritage of the Pacific Islands, highlighting all forms of Pacific Island ethnic art.
PIEAM’s exhibits include sculptures, textiles, paintings, wooden tools, jewelry, and carvings from across the Pacific. Works are constantly being commissioned and acquired from all the islands for display at the museum. Aspects of the living arts showcase traditional island dance, interactive cultural demonstrations, and hands-on learning opportunities. The sculpture garden includes a Stone Money Bank (“Rai”) and a dance platform (“Mahlal”).
The late Dr. Robert Gumbiner created PIEAM in an effort to preserve and revive the island arts and crafts of the Pacific Island people. With his passing in January 2009, his personal collection of Pacific Island ethnic art was generously donated to PIEAM.



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The City of Long Beach is such a great place to live. We are truly blessed with these museums and so many other positive locations that truly enhance your living style. There is something for everyone.

We have so many different communities to choose to live in. There is a home style for everyone here. Call your Long Beach Homes and Lifestyle Real Estate Team. We can help you Buy or Sell your next home. Call us today.

562-533-4003 or email: RTR@RicardoTheRealtor.com

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Museum of Latin American Art and other Museums in Long Beach