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Show 14 SPRINGVILLE HERALD Thursday, September 9, 2004 Heritage Woodworks Nebo schools announced Continued from Page 1 made out of vinyl, stuck to the wood and can be done in various colors on different colors of wood. Ellen's shop is also one of the leading makers of gingerbread gin-gerbread trim in the valley. If you need your whole house trimmed, or just some details, Ellen is the one to see. They also make screen doors that can be plain or trimmed a number of different differ-ent ways. Ellen is also the originator of the Hobble Creek Barn boutique held each fall and spring at the old Mapleton Town Hall, this years fall boutique will be October 15th to the 23rd. There will be many great gifts and Christmas Christ-mas ideas at this years boutique. bou-tique. Along with all of these great services, Heritage Woodworks also offers many other items such as dishes, quilts, rugs, Willow Tree collectibles, clocks and dried floral arrangements. For those men out there who don't know quite what to get for their wives, Ellen is a great help with many ideas that will make your life easier easi-er when purchasing a gift ' y mm: h &nw4k'.WXMtXMVjw i i. in ii -'- 'X'i"w.l'JJUjwwiiwi.iw,iiLiijii i mini Ellen Zimmerman, owner of Heritage Woodworks, saws a plank for a piece of custom furniture which has become a trademark of her business. Continued from Page 1 Elementary (Santaquin). The new elementary . schools will help take the brunt of increased populations popula-tions when sixth-graders are moved down from middle mid-dle schools to elementary schools in the fall of 2007. "We're building schools where the most growth is," said Nebo spokeswoman Lana Hiskey. "The reason we're not building one in Springville is because we're converting the middle school into an elementary school." Hiskey said Mapleton Junior Ju-nior High will eventually house Springville Middle School students after the school goes from middle school to elementary. Nebo will eventually phase out all the middle schools and go to the junior high system Early estimates indicate the new junior high will be done by July 2006, allowing students to begin attending at the start of the 2006-2007 school year. Initial plans called for a winter completion, comple-tion, which would have forced students to transfer schools midyear. "It will realign a lot of areas ar-eas from -Spanish Fork, Springville and Mapleton," Hiskey said. "When we do that realignment we'll have a boundary change committee commit-tee formed. We'll pull community members, PTA members, teachers and administrators. Usually there are more from the community. "But you can't please everyone. Some people don't want change," she said. Realignment will likely be a continuing operation as three more elementary schools are set for construction construc-tion after the first three are completed in 2006. Then, sometime in 2006 and 2007, the district will pump an estimated $50 million mil-lion of the bond into building two high schools: Maple Mountain High School in Mapleton and Salem Hills High School in Salem. Nebo hasn't had new high schools for 50 years, but Sorensen said the current three Payson, Spanish Fork and Springville are now filled to capacity. In the last five years, Nebo has been at or near No. 1 in growth among Utah school districts, and in the last three years the district has built six new elementary schools to accommodate that growth. The steep increase has provided jobs for 250 new teachers and has created 40 new positions within the district dis-trict this year. District officials said as soon as the new elementary schools open they will be filled. Despite the changes in alignment, middle schools and new construction, residents resi-dents seem to be content with what's happening. for that Plus she wrapping. Take a Heritage special offers someone, free gift minute and visit Woodworks or give them a call at 489-8242. Mapleton city council Continued from Page 1 ment on how these facilities can be used. The city also voted to deny Don Henrichsen annexation of some 800 acres into the city because a majority of the owners of the property had not signed the annexation annexa-tion petition. This property is located on the south end of the city. Don Powell and Hal Johnson John-son met with the council to express their opposition to the payment of $10 per month for not using the pres surized irrigation system in their area. Councilman Ben Card expressed ex-pressed his concern about the city getting close to using up its capacity at the Spanish Fork Sewer Treatment facility, facili-ty, and instructed the city staff to keep the council informed in-formed about this matter. Because of commitments on the part of the mayor and council this will be the only council meeting held this month. The next council meeting will be on Wednesday Wednes-day Oct. 6. Entertainment center Continued from Page 1 with the Wasatch Mountains. Moun-tains. "Spectrum connotes something spectacular. When completed, the Wasatch Spectrum should have a significant impact in Springville and Utah. We believe be-lieve this one-of-a-kind entertainment en-tertainment center ... will raise entertainment opportunities oppor-tunities to a new level in Utah." Mountain Land Realty and Red Hawk Real Estate Professionals Pro-fessionals are seeking more than 50 national and local retail re-tail tenants. But no leases have been signed yet, he said. Favorable demographics, traffic flow and easy accessibility acces-sibility to and from Interstate Inter-state 15 are among reasons behind Springville's choice for the youth-and-f amily-ori-ented entertainment center, LeBaron said. "Our demographics study showed that by 2010, half the population in Utah County Coun-ty will be living south of Springville and the other half in the north of Springville. So this is a central cen-tral spot," he said., "We also have access to traffic from 1-15 from three offramps in Springville and Spanish Fork. "There's also talk of putting in another offramp on either the south end of Springville or the north end of Spanish Fork." The Springville City Council last month approved ap-proved a subdivision of the 51-acre Springville property proper-ty into 11 commercial lots, said Fred Aegerter, the city's community development develop-ment director. Ten of the 11 lots on 2600 West and State Road 77 -each ranging between 45,000 square feet and 105,000 square feet - are being be-ing sold for various uses including in-cluding banking and financial finan-cial services, he said. "We expect Wasatch Spectrum to submit a site plan that will show the footprint foot-print or layout of the property prop-erty and how it will be used," he said. Once the site plan is approved ap-proved by the Springville Planning Commission, the project's architects will submit sub-mit a building plan that details de-tails specifically where the shops and services are located, locat-ed, Aegerter said., Infrastructure improvements improve-ments including building roads and installing underground under-ground sewers andutilities should start later this month, LeBaron said., "We hope that actual construction construc-tion of the center will start sometime next spring or early summer." Aegerter couldn't specify the amount of sales and property tax revenues to be generated by Wasatch Spectrum. Spec-trum. "It will be almost like a Thanksgiving Point but with a different tenant mix. It will need hundreds of thousands thou-sands of visitors for it to work," he said. "It will also be attractive to the 50,000 college students stu-dents at BYU and UVSC because be-cause of its youth-oriented sights." Ken Harris Architect of Provo, known for its work on the new Wells Fargo Center downtown Provo and Midtown Village in Orem, will provide the architectural archi-tectural design for the Wasatch Spectrum, said Brett Harris, a design project pro-ject manager for the Springville Center. "The style of architecture is contemporary with lots of metal structures, shaped canopies and store front facades fa-cades for retailers to display their goods. "We'll have laser lights coming out from the top of Spectrum Plaza near the entrance," en-trance," he said. Carrying visitors through the entertainment complex is a river that slows through an exotic bird garden, around a shark aquarium, through the Pirate's Cove Restaurant, and past retail shops along the way. Guests will ride an mechanized mecha-nized catamarans that will load and unload passengers at three prime locations including in-cluding the Acapulco Gardens Gar-dens and the Pirate's Cove," Harris said. Designed by EDSA Cloward & Associates, a Provo water feature design and engineering unit of Ft. Lauderdale-based Edward D. Stone & Associates -famed for its waterscape work at the Venetian and the Atlantis Resort in the Bahamas - the shark aquarium aquari-um will be centrally located in the Spectrum's main atrium. atri-um. The 425-foot-long river walk, lined with boulders and trees, will flow around the aquarium, and guests will be able to stroll along the river walk on their way to the food court from the movie theater. -'rniin'ci2 months ' ;. ho nnm'MU-- 5 'EAR ADDITIONAL MS . ,Y WARRANTY .TL T ti-. . 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