It’s in the Details: Pompeii Quartz and TopZero Seamless Sinks
May04

It’s in the Details: Pompeii Quartz and TopZero Seamless Sinks

Bee Tree Homes’ recent build in Queen’s Harbour Yacht & Country Club incorporates two smart kitchen upgrades by Any Old Stone: a TopZero seamless, rimless stainless steel sink and Pompeii Quartz countertops.

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Design Works’ Designer Tile
May04

Design Works’ Designer Tile

Design Works of Jacksonville is North Florida’s exclusive distributor of Atlas Concorde porcelain tile, and are proudly introducing their new lines: Mark, Axi (above), and eWall (left). Each line offers fresh new looks with exceptional quality.

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AIA’s Vision for Downtown Gets Real
May04

AIA’s Vision for Downtown Gets Real

A lot has happened since last year’s art and architecture issue of Arbus unveiled the Jacksonville chapter of the American Institute of Architect’s (AIA) visionary plan that was tentatively called “River of Lights.”

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Jacksonville’s Greatest Works of Art Usher in a Bright Future for Downtown
May04

Jacksonville’s Greatest Works of Art Usher in a Bright Future for Downtown

The Fire
On May 3, 1901, Downtown Jacksonville burned to a crisp. In the third largest metropolitan fire in U.S. history, flames consumed a swath two miles long and one mile wide. On that one Friday afternoon, 146 blocks containing 2,368 buildings were destroyed.

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Global, Social & Local: Hobnob at 220 Riverside
May04

Global, Social & Local: Hobnob at 220 Riverside

Artist and designer Larry Wilson has a singular ability to distill the exhilarating aspects of a given environment into sublimely elegant and appropriate forms.

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Broward, Morgan & Hardwick: Champions of the Future
May04

Broward, Morgan & Hardwick: Champions of the Future

After the Great Fire of 1901 destroyed much of downtown Jacksonville, architects and builders from across the nation came to rebuild the city, bringing state-of-the-art building technologies and the latest architectural styles to shape a new modern city. A half-century later, a new generation of young architects made their way to Jacksonville after World War II. They were inspired by some of the vanguards of modern architecture, and they set about redesigning Jacksonville using advanced engineering, high-tech materials, and clean, brilliant design.

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