Renovation
fromArchDaily
1 day agoold residence in kitayama / td-Atelier + ENDO SHOJIRO DESIGN
The project involves renovating a nearly 100-year-old wooden residence in northern Kyoto, originally built in 1931.
Gravy runs in my veins. Tomato gravy. The kind that starts out at 8 a.m. on a stovetop and is still gently bubbling away come 5 p.m., slippery with fat from meatballs and sausages braised to unparalleled levels of tenderness. I am only half Italian, but it is certainly the louder half, descended from uncles who pounded a dinner table to punctuate a sentence, a grandfather who made wine in his basement, and a grandmother who wielded a wooden spoon like a scalpel in the kitchen and a cudgel everywhere else.
In 1928, Huang's great-grandfather opened Tai Kee Wonton's original location in Hualien, Taiwan. The business skipped a generation with the unfortunate passing of his daughter. Huang's mother and aunt inherited the restaurant and ran it together for several years. Huang moved to the U.S. with his mother and his sister, Heidi, in 1990. Then, in 2008, the family opened Tai Kee Wonton on Saratoga Avenue, a San Jose neighborhood with heavy traffic near the border of Santa Clara.
Debbie's journey began when she reconnected with her father in Mexico after decades apart. What started as an emotional reunion turned into something life-changing. Her father Senor Rio shared the secret of his small-batch, family-recipe tequila-crafted for generations and shared only with those closest to him. Made with traditional methods-single estate harvesting, 8-12-year mature blue Weber agave, slow roasting in stone ovens, and double distillation-it was pure, smooth, and soulful.
With 20 years of experience in the construction industry, Andrew O'Neill knew exactly how his dream home should look and feel, right down to the smallest detail.
"That such personalised paintings should come to light less than a year on from Bernard's story being published - and 84 years after his death - adds weight to the opinion within the Dillon family that Bernard is determined to be remembered."
"This is the wrong spirit," Jarvis told the Miami Daily. She described those profiting from Mother's Day as 'charlatans, bandits, pirates, racketeers, kidnappers, and termites.'
"We can't get the tractor into the fields and it is very stressful for the family. We're not looking for trouble, just to carry on as we always have. Do we have a legal right of way?"