Architecture – Restaurants
A friend sent me a link to an architecturally interesting restaurant and said perhaps there’s an architecture post in this. Well true enough! Below a selection of unique restaurant settings. If you know of others – let me know…
St Regis Hotel
Singapore
Steirereck
Vienna, Austria
White Rabbit
Moscow, Russia
Tori Tori
Mexico City, Mexico
Yellow Treehouse Restaurant
Auckland, New Zealand
Sarnic Restaurant
Inside a thousand year old cister
Istanbul, Turkey
Pitcher & Piano
Nottingham, England
Ristorante da Pancrazio
Rome, Italy
Eiffel Tower
Paris, France
Ithaa Restaurant
Under the sea
Maldives
Former RBC Bank of Canada
Montreal, Canada
What you’ll need to earn to afford a house in Ottawa in 2023
Ratehub.ca did an analysis of the income needed to purchase a house in different Canadian cities. At the moment the annual income required in Ottawa is $122,440.
Here is the annual income required for other Canadian cities:
- Vancouver: $212,800
- Toronto: $207,000
- Victoria: $169,250
- Hamilton: $159,100
- Calgary: $105,680
- Montreal: $103,560
- Halifax: $102,260
- Edmonton: $79,370
- Winnipeg: $72,500
Family Day 2023: What’s open and closed in Ottawa
CityNews Everywhere has put together a list of what is open and what is closed on Family Day. Good to note before venturing out and hitting your nose on locked doors.
Cluttercore
Cluttercore! A new, to me, word. A new esthetic. I’ve had to look at different posts to distinguish between maximalism and cluttercore. I’m not 100% I’d recognize one room done in one esthetic vs one done in the other. My impression is maximalism has no hesitation of various colours and paterns on all surfaces. Cluttercore is about collecting, and exhibiting those collections. There’s a distinction of editing made. I think that cluttercore does not edit whereas maximalism does. I’ve found a few posts on the subject perhaps various reads call help.
- Better Homes & Gardens
- Southern Living
- Apartment Therapy
- House Digest
- Designed – my impression is this article confused maximalism and cluttercore
Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) – Canadian Home Sales Begin 2023 at a 14-year low
The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) recently released its January 2023 national statistics.
Highlights:
- National home sales declined 3% month-over-month in January.
- Actual (not seasonally adjusted) monthly activity came in 37.1% below January 2022.
- The number of newly listed properties rose 3.3% month-over-month.
- The MLS® Home Price Index (HPI) declined by 1.9% month-over-month and was down 12.6% year-over-year.
- The actual (not seasonally adjusted) national average sale price posted an 18.3% decline year-over-year in January.
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