DLF Premium Plots Indore Project


About DLF Garden city Indore Project: The best way to understand nature is to make it a part of your life: DLF Group has launched new residential Plots DLF Garden City at NH-3, AB Bypass Road in Indore. DLF well & truly brings this sentiment to Garden city, where you live amidst nature and enjoy a contemporary lifestyle. Garden city’s 82 acres of pollution-free environs gives the residents a perfect answer to beat their stressful lifestyle. With theme gardens, Garden city brings you a step closer to nature. With a Club, School, Shopping Mall and a well-equipped Healthcare Center within the vicinity, DLF fulfills its promise of bringing world-class lifestyle to Indore.Features: The lush green 82 acres of Garden City offers plots in various sizes ranging from 1800 . to 3600 sq. ft. enveloped by open spaces. It also boasts of a world-class club, international school for your child’s future, a fully equipped healthcare centre, shopping complex and a shopping mall with multiplex right on the AB Bye-Pass Road.Location: DLF Garden City is located at NH-3, AB Bypass Road in Indore.

Type Size & Price of DLF Garden City Indore: Type, Size and Price————–On RequestFor Price Please Ring at: 09999684905, 09999684955.DLF Developer: DLF Limited, is India’s largest real estate company in terms of revenues, earnings, market capitalisation and developable area. It has over 60 years of track record of sustained growth, customer satisfaction, and innovation. The company has 406 msf of planned projects with 57 msf of projects under construction.For Booking and More Information: AFFINITY SOLUTIONS (P) LTD (The Real Estate Consultants) India: 09999684905, 09999684955 16469150050 (US) | 442030516831 (UK) http://www.affinityconsultant.cominfo@

Assisted Living – A Great Option For Seniors


Is it time for assisted living? Assisted living is a very useful transition for a senior who is no longer fully able to care for themselves, yet not needing a nursing home. Assisted living is a middle ground in which a senior still has their own housing, but has access to assistance when needed. Assisted living communities may be run by companies that provide home health care, so there can be a natural transition through life as the needs of a senior increase.In the past, assisted living was not one of the senior living options. A senior with failing health or mental abilities toughed it out at home with family help until it was time to go to a nursing home for nearly full time care.

Nowadays, assisted living facilities exist to provide yet another option for a senior as they age and their living skills decrease. For the senior who is not blessed with vigorgous health right to the end of life, assisted living can be a great step along the way.The senior will have their own apartment or condo in one of the communities that is dedicated to taking care of other seniors at a similar stage in life. The assisted living services that are available to any one senior can be tailored to their particular needs. One senior may have all their household chores under control, but not be able to drive. Another senior may not be able to move well enough to bend over and clean the house, so need housekeeping on a regular basis. Still another senior may have special needs for sleeping or bathing, and some of the apartments in assisted living communities may be outfitted with beds and baths that can handle these needs.One benefit of assisted living communities is that a senior can make friends who are living nearby and will continue living nearby even as their needs change. The facilities that are available in assisted living communities make it possible for a senior to move from one apartment to another as their needs change. Even if you move from one apartment to another, you are still in the same community, and all of your friends are still just around the corner to visit with whenever you like.

Assisted living communities can now be found in every large city in the country and many smaller cities as well. They have been found to be a top notch way to help a senior transition through the aging process. For more info, you can search online for “assisted living”, or call a state agency for services that they know about in your area. Assisted living facilities may be just the answer that you are looking for to help an aging parent with the best care possible, while still allowing them the independence that they want. While you may want to care for your parents as much as possible, family life keeps us very busy nowadays, and assisted living housing may be the best way to care for your parents at this time.

Traveller Eviction On Green Belt Land.


Last Monday an eviction was approved in regards to 400 people illegally living on a Europe’s largest traveller camp. Basildon Council’s decision means that the families living at Dale Farm in Crays Hill in Essex will only have 28 days to leave the site. The cost of the eviction is thought to be around 18million, around a third of their annual budget, and the travellers are threatening violence if they are made to leave. However the neighbours in the area are hell bent in making them leave. The community is divided in Crays Hill, one side you have the travellers who have lived on the green belt land for the last ten years, although they have lived there illegally. On the other side are Basildon Council who is determined to evict them with an army of police and bailiffs to throw them out if they will not go voluntarily. Villagers in the vicinity feel that the eviction cannot come soon enough. Some say that they have suffered years of hell from the travellers which have included death threats, abuse and harassment.

One villager’s yard backs onto the camp and he said that he has suffered a few break-ins and has had rubbish thrown into his garden. He admits that he has had to turn his house into a fortress with CCTV and huge gates installed. He wishes that he could move as he feels like a prisoner in his own home but the house has now lunged in value. His house used to be worth around 450,000 but he would be lucky to get 200,000 for it today. He feels that no one would seriously buy the house when the camp is just over the back wall. Nearby is the Belvedere Golf Club And Conference Centre and the owner admits that the travellers nearly ruined his business. The public bar had to be closed down even though it was making 5,000 a week due to behaviour of the travellers. When the owner approached the travellers to discuss the problem he was punched and people thought that the bar was for travellers which was why he closed it. However the owner says that the blame lies with Basildon Council. When he applied for permission to erect a marquee temporarily for weddings in the grounds the council refused. But he feels that the council simply stood by whilst the travellers erected their eyesore of a camp. As a result it has now cost the council millions of pounds to evict the travellers as they allowed the situation to spiral out of control. When the eviction takes place bailiffs will try and get the travellers out whilst they have back up from the police. One traveller admits that someone might die as they are not going to allow the police to just walk into the camp and things could turn nasty. The travellers have even called upon travellers from all over Europe to help them stay. Only half of the travellers at the site are being forced to leave as there are legal and illegal sides to the camp.

The legal camp was set up with council approval by 40 families in the 1970’s. At the time they had new chalets and the site was kept immaculate with large iron gates at the entrance. They drive Mercedes and Land Rovers and the council even built them a 12,000 community centre. It is the illegal camp which is causing all of the problems. This site was built on green belt land and only has a few chalets on there, instead it is littered with hundreds of caravans and there is rubbish everywhere. In the fields around there have been rats spotted due to the rubbish that is thrown onto them. The illegal site entrance has a scaffolding tower surrounded by piles of tyres and a banner saying “We Won’t Go”. There are no Tarmac roads in the site and there are cess pits for the sewerage. Some of the travellers are saying that if the bull dozers do come in then they will barricade themselves into their homes, even with their children inside. There are over 100 children at Dale Farm, including six month old triplets. Over 80 of the children go to the local school. Residents of the camp fear for the upheaval for the children rather than themselves. Some of the villagers feel that the amount of money spent on the eviction is ridiculous as they have not experienced any trouble from the travellers. The camp cannot be seen from the road so as long as they do not make any trouble, some feel that they should be allowed to stay. Council leader Tony Ball is adamant that the eviction at the site will go ahead as they have tried in vain to find a peaceful solution, however after ten years of continued and illegal development of green belt land the council feel that they must now take action.