The Times Online Property For Sale
Five-bedroom 'wooden spaceship' home featured on Grand Designs goes up for sale for £1. 1 million - boasting a home cinema and its own meadow The 'Roundhouse', in Deanshanger, was featured on Grand Designs in 2014 The five bedroom home in Northamptonshire is on the market for £1. 1 million Was created by Peter Berkin and his wife Chard, who spent £400, 000 on home At the time presenter Kevin McCloud described house as a 'wooden spaceship' Published: 15:35 BST, 21 October 2019 | Updated: 16:05 BST, 21 October 2019 Advertisement A 'wooden spaceship' property featured on Grand Designs has gone up for sale with the homeowners asking £1. 1 million for the five bedroom 'roundhouse'. The semi-circle shaped building in Deanshanger, near Milton Keynes, was created by Peter Berkin and his wife Chard who appeared on the Channel 4 programme in 2014. At the time, Kevin McCloud described the property as 'magnificent' and likened it to a 'giant wooden spaceship'. The five bedroom house, which also boasts a cinema room, and is set in communal forest land with a meadow and pond, is currently on the market for £1.
'Wooden spaceship' property featured on Grand Designs goes up for sale | Daily Mail Online
Many are small, with less than $10 million in assets, and underfunded, with some paying out more in benefits than they collect in contributions or investment returns. In Illinois, with a well-documented plague of local taxing agencies, it's not surprising that our government pension funds far outnumber those of any other state except Pennsylvania. New York has nine, for example, and Ohio has one fund for all police and fire personnel. Consolidation would save on administrative costs, but those are peanuts. The big idea Pritzker needs to broadcast is better investment returns from consolidation. Because of their small size, the Illinois funds can place little money in stocks. They must by law rely on U. S. Treasury debt, municipal bonds and bank CDs. Those are fine for safety and diversity, but for better returns, the funds need to visit the global stock markets. If they are combined into a larger fund, those limits are eased. The Pritzker task force found the difference in fund performance is substantial.
So it's frustrating for them because they get a bad rap just for living over here, " she said. Corey Brooks, whose New Beginnings Church neighbors Parkway Gardens, said he learned of the potential sale from a Related representative. "They felt they contributed 10 years of hard work in Parkway, beautifying and making it better, and it's time to move on, " Brooks said. Brooks said he expects the community, including many Parkway Gardens residents who are members of his church, will back efforts to ensure the apartment complex ends up in responsible hands. "I don't have hard feelings against Related, but I just wish that people who make money in certain areas would do more for the communities where they're making money, " he said.
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It was then that Hamilton made casts of the marbles which he took back and displayed in a purpose-built ballroom at Stanley House. The plaster casts remain in what is now the drawing room.
Opponents, and there are many with something to lose here, argue participants in the police and fire funds want local control and don't want to trust somebody in Springfield or at an 800 number to get service. James McNamee, a former Barrington police officer who is president of the Illinois Public Pension Fund Association, said a better answer would be to keep the funds separate but allow them to make more investments in equities. Even the larger funds, which can hold up to 65% of assets in equities, perhaps should go to 75%, he said. McNamee also cites the risk of liquidating assets to combine funds then have to buy them back again. More broadly, he's concerned about a hasty legislative vote involving $15 billion that could be handed over to a large fund where his members have little input. "It's a big rub with us. We performed as well as the law would let us, " he said. His problem is that haste sounds better when doing nothing costs about $1 million a day in lost returns, according to the governor's task force.