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Panel Edging From:

Panel Edging From READY-MADE panels are simply nailed between the posts. Prop each panel on bricks or offcuts of wood so that it is level before driving the nails home. You can prevent the panel edging from splitting by drilling pilot holes for the nails first. You can also buy U-shaped brackets for nailing to the posts. These allow the panels to be dropped into place and then secured with nails driven through the brackets. Where cement posts are used, the panels simply slot in from the top. Most ready-made panels are held together by short, thin nails or even staples, so if one needs shortening it is a relatively easy job to prise off the edging, cut the panel to length with a hand or power saw and nail the edging back on.

some cases, edging is purely ornamental, but in others it s needed to keep surface materials such as gravel and bark n place, and to keep soil from overflowing from the beds. NOT ALL surfaces need to be edged but it often adds the finishing touch. Use bricks or tiles or, for a more informal, rustic effect, logs. Plants themselves can also be used as edging. Low clipped hedges of box go particularly well with brick or stone surfaces. Lavender is a more decorative choice and it can also be clipped into neat shapes. Use edging around flowerbeds to stop the soil overflowing on to surrounding areas, especially gravel or paths laid with chipped bark. Edging also helps prevent the edges of hard surfaces breaking away or sinking. Bricks set in a number of ways are commonly used for edging, as is stone, but you can also use logs in a woodland setting. Tiles also serve the purpose well.


Panel to Judge Rutgers Redesign A panel has been selected to judge the international competition to redesign the College Avenue campus, a project that is part of a $300 million overhaul of the university's main campus. The panel includes experts in architecture, urban planning, landscape design and historic preservation as well as representatives of the Rutgers faculty, alumni and student body. The panel will evaluate and rank design concepts submitted by five teams of architecture and landscape firms and make its recommendations to President Richard L. McCormick. The winning team will have the opportunity to create the landscape for the greening of the College Avenue campus and to design a signature academic building. The panel will be chaired by Peter Primavera, a 1980 Rutgers University graduate and president of CRCG, a historic preservation firm.
 
 
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