Latest news with #Patio


Scottish Sun
28-06-2025
- Lifestyle
- Scottish Sun
Tesco shoppers rushing to buy stunning ‘reduced to clear' summer garden furniture that's up to 40% off
But you'll have to be quick as offers end soon GARDEN GRAB Tesco shoppers rushing to buy stunning 'reduced to clear' summer garden furniture that's up to 40% off TESCO shoppers are rushing to stores to buy stunning "reduced to clear" garden furniture that's up to 40% off. With temperatures soaring, the sale provides some great options to add to your outdoor spaces this summer - but be quick as the offers end soon. 5 The Outsunny Foldable Sun Lounger has been reduced to a great price Credit: Tesco Shoppers can get their hands on the Outsunny Foldable Sun Lounger that comes with a side pocket and headrest for £23.19. Reduced from £28.99, this lounger is great for relaxing outdoors. It's complete with a 180 degree reclining back so you can set it to a position of your choice and the side pocket allows you to keep your small items, like your phone, nearby. With a supportive structure, it's fitted with a soft padded headrest for your comfort. What's better is that the foldable designs makes it easy to carry around too. You can also purchase in either black or dark blue. 5 These side panels will give your gazebo frames a new lease of life Credit: Tesco If you're planning a garden bash this summer and need to give your gazebo frames a new lease of life, these Outsunny Gazebo Side Panels might just be for you. The side panels have been reduced to £25.59 and come in two different sizes, both of which have windows to let in that natural light. Made from thick Oxford cloth, the panels are great for outdoor use and also feature a zipped door so you can enter and leave your gazebo easily. What's better is that they're designed to fit most 3m x 3m and 3m x 6m frames. 5 This swish patio umbrella can fit into any garden style Credit: Tesco The Charles Bentley 2m Garden Patio Market Umbrella at £23.99 is also a steal. Enhance your outdoor dining and relaxation with this stylish 2 metre parasol to provide ample shade on those warm sunny days. Crafted with a large canopy and durable steel frame, it can fit into any garden style with its sleek design and choice of colour options. It's easy to use too with a user-friendly crank winding system to easily open and close the umbrella. 5 Relax outdoors in comfort with this bargain cushion Credit: Tesco Tesco is also selling its Living and Home Outdoor Waterproof Tufted Swing Seat Cushion for £22.90, reduced from £29.00. So if you're looking for some extra comfort on your swing or egg chair, this is a safe bet. Designed in solid neutral tones it blends effortlessly into your garden setting. The cushion is filled with dense cotton filling ensuring optimal support and comfort and remains securely in place. It's a great option for relaxation if you're inviting family and friends over. 5 Put your feet up with the HOMCOM Round Storage Ottoman Stool Credit: Tesco And if you're looking to put your feet up, you can't go wrong with this HOMCOM Round Storage Ottoman Stool for £28.04. Wrapped in corduory, this product is both breathable and skin friendly. What's better is that it offers 32 litres of storage for all your essentials while doubling up as a chic vanity stool. That's not all Tesco has on offer either with other items such as base stands, garden furniture covers, gazebos and portable beds all up for grabs. But you'll have to be quick as the clearance prices are set to end in a matter of days.


CTV News
06-06-2025
- Entertainment
- CTV News
Steven Sabados- Decorating Outdoor Spaces
Regina Watch Be it a Patio or apartment balcony, Steven Sabados has you covered on budget-friendly ways to decorate your outdoor spaces this summer. #SponsoredContent


New York Times
26-03-2025
- Business
- New York Times
A No-Frills Irish Pub Draws a Martini Crowd
Misty Gonzales has been tending bar at T.J. Byrnes, an Irish pub in the Financial District of Manhattan, for 13 years. For most of that time, she has served office workers, college students and city employees. Two years ago, she noticed some unfamiliar faces. This new crowd was younger and usually stopped in for poetry readings, book-club gatherings and parties. Aside from their age, their drink orders set them apart. 'Martinis are the biggest thing — I couldn't even get over how many people are drinking martinis,' Ms. Gonzales said. 'Lots of Negronis, too.' In the past year, the pub has hosted talks led by the art critic Dean Kissick, a holiday party for the leftist publication Dissent, a monthly reading series called Patio, a performance-art karaoke competition and a pre-Valentine's Day party for single readers of Emily Sundberg's Substack newsletter Feed Me. Some of Ms. Sundberg's 180 guests were initially confused by the choice of location. 'This was the first time people have texted me before being like, 'What is this place?'' said Ms. Sundberg, 30, who first went to the bar for a friend's birthday a couple years ago. 'I wouldn't go as far as to call it the new Clandestino,' she added, referring to the downtown bar that is often bursting at the seams along Canal Street. 'But if you have brand events — magazine parties, readings — it's become a venue.' At first glance, T.J. Byrnes might seem like an unlikely draw for writers, artists and fashion types. The bar is nestled in an austere plaza behind a Key Foods grocery store, at the base of a 27-story residential building. The facade looks onto a courtyard it shares with a preschool and a diner. The interior is unassuming, with a dark wooden bar in the front and white tablecloths and red leather booths in the back. The bar's eponymous owner, Thomas Byrne, 70, can be found most evenings at a cluttered desk just inside the dining room or perched at a hightop near the entrance, keeping an eye on the scene. In a pinch, he pulls pints behind the bar. 'I am very hands-on,' said Mr. Byrne, who has a neat mustache and typically wears a button-down shirt tucked into black trousers. He commutes into the city daily from Yonkers, where he has lived for the last 32 years. 'I'm not saying I never take a day off, but I'm here a lot of the time, and I like that.' The youngest of three, Mr. Byrne immigrated from County Wicklow, Ireland, in 1972 to join his brothers in New York, where they made their livings working in bars. With his brother Seamus, he ran a pub on Fordham Road in the Bronx from 1975 to 1991. After they closed that spot, his brother Denis came across a vacant Chinese restaurant on Fulton Street. It needed some serious remodeling, but its sheer size and proximity to some of Manhattan's busiest office buildings made it too good to pass up. After months of construction, T.J. Byrnes opened its doors in October 1995. With the exception of a brief window during the city's Covid lockdowns, the pub has been open nearly every day for the last 30 years. 'People say, 'Oh, you're still here,'' Mr. Byrne said. 'We went through Sept. 11, we went through Sandy, the big storm and all that, and tough times. But you just hang in there, and it works out.' Mr. Byrne recalled finally getting through police barricades the day after the attacks on the twin towers to find the bar, helmed by his brother, teeming with people from the neighborhood. 'So many people came in here just to be together,' he said. 'People were in distress, and this was a meeting place to sit down and talk.' T.J. Byrnes has always had an eclectic clientele, he said. City workers from 100 Gold St. mingled with musical theater students from Pace University. Office employees, retirees from St. Margaret's House apartment community and residents of Southbridge Towers sat shoulder to shoulder at the bar. But it seemed to take a specific confluence of events to get a more artsy crowd in the door. It might have started in 2022, when the writer Ezra Marcus sang the bar's praises in the Perfectly Imperfect recommendation newsletter. 'Byrnes is a holdout against the mass extinction of normal places for normal people to get a drink in the city,' Mr. Marcus, an occasional contributor to The New York Times, wrote. A couple months later, Joshua Citarella, an artist in New York who researches online subcultures, called T.J. Byrnes the 'new Forlini's' in an article for Artnet, likening it to the red-sauce restaurant that had unexpectedly become a downtown cool-kid haunt in the years before it shuttered. At the same time, the micro-neighborhood a few blocks from Forlini's known as Dimes Square was becoming overexposed and — with the arrival of an opulent boutique hotel and fine dining establishments — a bit too upscale for some. 'It just has a better vibe,' Mr. Citarella said on a recent evening at T.J. Byrnes, where he was hosting a reading group with the author Mike Pepi. 'With the transformation of downtown New York, everything has turned into condos; it doesn't feel like anything is authentic or is here to stay.' The South Street Seaport area that surrounds T.J. Byrnes has undergone its own changes. Once a gritty neighborhood celebrated by the writer Joseph Mitchell for its fish markets, the district has been transformed over the decades, most recently by large real estate investments, new shopping destinations and independent art galleries like Dunkunsthalle, located in an old Dunkin' Donuts on Fulton Street. When McNally Jackson Books opened its Seaport location in 2019, making it a hub for literary events, T.J. Byrnes became a favorite post-reading spot. Jeremy Gordon, a senior editor at The Atlantic, was introduced to the bar after one of those McNally Jackson events. He took to it right away. Although T.J. Byrnes is unusually spacious for the city — another point in its favor — he described it as 'beautifully cozy.' When his debut novel, 'See Friendship,' was published this month, he decided to throw a book party there. With a lineup of readers and an open bar, Mr. Gordon invited around 60 of his friends to fete his book. The crowd sipped vodka sodas and hung out in the 'many little pockets' of the space, which includes a large dining room and a side area that's more tucked away. 'It is the type of place that I hope continues to exist for as long as I live in the city,' he said. For some, it is a necessary counterbalance to fussy bars and restaurants that cater to the TikTok crowd or to those seeking experiences behind red ropes. 'I don't want a concept,' said Alex Hartman, who runs the satirical meme account 'Nolita Dirtbag,' railing against what he sees as a trend of bars spending exorbitantly on interior design that panders to the downtown creative class. People are 'protesting this sort of aesthetic lifestyle,' he added. With reasonably priced bars in short supply and a surge of private clubs taking over nightlife, T.J. Byrnes, with its lack of pretense, is an antidote. 'It's the anti-members club,' Ms. Sundberg said. 'There's this huge cohort of New York City who wants to get into this locked, password protected, paywall door — and then T.J. Byrnes is right there.' Mr. Byrne keeps track of his bar's events and parties by hand, in a hardcover planner. Many people looking to entertain there simply text him to reserve the space — no fee or bar minimum required. 'I like the people that come here for the artist group,' Mr. Byrne said. 'They're really nice to deal with and enjoy the place, and we enjoy having them here.' During readings, he often listens from a spot toward the back. On a recent Friday night, the furniture designer Mike Ruiz Serra celebrated his 28th birthday at T.J. Byrnes with about 100 friends. His guests downed pints of Guinness, sipped martinis and Negronis, and ordered classic bar fare like mozzarella sticks. Away from the party, Andy Velez was closing his tab. Mr. Velez, who works for the City of New York in data communications, has been coming to T.J. Byrnes after work for 17 years, usually a few times a week. 'This is my 'Cheers,'' he said. Even when the crowd started to swell, as it was then, Mr. Velez said that the bar was almost never too loud to have a conversation. 'This is a very special place, a staple of the community,' he said. 'Only people in the neighborhood really know about this.'
Yahoo
20-03-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
T-Mobile grant will help Winfield Public Library project
WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) — A T-Mobile grant will help a Winfield Public Library project. The library received notice on Thursday that it received $50,000 from the company to support the creation of the Patio, a new outdoor community space designed to foster connections, creativity, and collaboration among local residents. 'We are grateful for receiving this very competitive, national grant from T-Mobile, which allows us to develop a space that fosters connections among our residents and provides additional ways to access the library's resources. This project underscores our WPL Board's ongoing commitment to improving public access to all areas of the library,' said Tabitha Hogan, Director of Winfield Library. What NCAA attendees in Wichita need to know The total budget for the project, according to a news release from the library, will be $140,000. Construction is expected to start this spring, with the opening planned later this year. Each quarter, T-Mobile awards 25 Hometown Grants to small towns with populations of 50,000 or less. To apply for a Hometown Grant, visit here. For more Kansas news, click here. Keep up with the latest breaking news by downloading our mobile app and signing up for our news email alerts. Sign up for our Storm Track 3 Weather app by clicking here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.