Nestled in West Hempfield Township between Ironville Pike and Hempfield Hill Road is Lake Grubb Nature Park. 54 Acres of forest and walking trails surrounding Lake Grubb. The surrounding area is known as Silver Spring and has a zip code of 17575.
The park is the site of a former iron ore mine. The ore pit has filled with water, creating Lake Grubb. The historic name of the location is Chestnut Hill, and it was owned by the Grubb family, descendants of Peter Grubb, better known for his founding of the still-standing Cornwall Furnace in Lebanon County in 1742. Later, in 1851 the Chestnut Hill Iron Ore Company was incorporated and remained active until 1907. From this site thousands of tons of ore was mined and then sent to nearby anthracite furnaces to be processed. These furnaces were primarily located along the Susquehanna River between Marietta and Columbia, PA. due to higher grades of ore found in other parts of the country, and more efficient technologies, this site and others in Pennsylvania gradually closed.
Today, the park is open dawn to dusk with 2 pavilions available for rent. Click here for the Township webpage on the park. There is a new-style jungle gym setup for kids - very nice. The hiking trails are modest and make for a brisk morning walk. Geese and other birds often stop over on the lake and are interesting to watch. Take a moment as you drive by on Marietta Pike in Silver Spring and stop by Lake Grubb Nature Park - I'm sure you'll enjoy your visit.
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For Lancaster PA homes for sale click here. Jeff Geoghan is a top real estate expert in Lancaster County, PA, and an involved community member. Jeff's work has been featured in the Lancaster Newspapers, WGAL Channel 8, PA Business Journal and Wall Street Journal. Jeff's blog on Lancaster County and its homes is nationally-featured. Contact Jeff for more help with your Lancaster PA Real Estate needs. Jeff is also a photographer - view some of his portfolio. Comments are welcome!
This morning Lancaster County PA had the opportunity to "go solar" - at least in one small way.
The Lancaster County Career & Technology Center hosted an informational event surrounding the installation of a thermal solar system in their project "green" home adjacent to their Mount Joy facility. The event was promoted as an opportunity to see a hot water system going in and ask questions of the manufacturer's rep.
I had a great time talking to various attendees and looking over the systems involved. Kim Patrick and Doug Lyon from LCCTC have done their homework on many fronts. The system being installed is an Oventrop System 5 (see the brochure here) in conjunction with an instant-on electric heater by Seisco.
On-hand was the Managing Director for Oventrop US, Joseph Walsh. Joseph was very knowledgeable and has a good grasp of the emerging solar market in the US.
After a thorough explanation of the system and installation, he took questions from the audience. The topic quickly turned to cost issues, and his response was that a typical installation to drive an 80-gallon hot water heater was between $7,500 and $10,000.
The evacuated tubes that harness the sun's energy are made for Oventrop by Beijing Solar, and are based on a design originated by Daimler-Benz in Germany, where Oventrop is based. Joseph had a sample tube (he's holding it on in the photo) for attendees to handle.
Also note the Seisco unit on the wall in the corner of the photo. This heater will be arranged to provide support heat should the solar system fail to deliver the preset temperature. For example, if the desired temp. is 130 degree and the solar can only manage 100 degrees, the Seisco unit will pick up the extra 30 degrees.
Water distribution is via a PEX manifold - truly trick stuff!
This photo gives you an idea of how they've laid things out. The hot water is fed into a single manifold (to equalize pressure and allow a small 3/8 inch pipe to transmit better to the outlets) with separate valves for each need. Red piping denotes hot, blue cold. The white piping is another green building system - rainwater harvesting. As I've noted in other posts, this home has two 1,300 gallon rainwater harvesting tanks buried just outside. Water is pumped into the basement and into the lower manifold, which is completely separate from the upper blue/red manifold. The white pipes supply the washer, toilets, hose bibs etc. with recycled rainwater.
Overall, the morning was a great insight into just some of the new technologies that are revolutionizing home building in the US. If you are interested in talking green building in the Lancaster County area, keep your eyes on this space for more news as it breaks!
For Lancaster PA homes for sale click here. Jeff Geoghan is a top real estate expert in Lancaster County, PA, and an involved community member. Jeff's work has been featured in the Lancaster Newspapers, WGAL Channel 8, PA Business Journal and Wall Street Journal. Jeff's blog on Lancaster County and its homes is nationally-featured. Contact Jeff for more help with your Lancaster PA Real Estate needs. Jeff is also a photographer - view some of his portfolio. Comments are welcome!
The Intellingencer Journal reporter who called me Friday is a regular reader, and wanted to use my post about home prices in Lancaster County as part of an article he was writing about recent home sales numbers. The article was on the front page of Saturday's paper. Interested reader can see it here online. My analysis was fairly well-represented and even my chart was reproduced. Just another example that if you choose to work with me as your real estate representative you're getting an informed, forward-thinking professional as your partner. Kudos to the paper for sharing my blog with their readers!
Lancaster County Association of Realtors came out yesterday with their review of January's sales. While I agree in general with the commentary offered in the press release, my thoughts go more to the national real estate market and how Lancaster County needs to see the way forward to an improving local market. Here's how:

My take on the market situation is easy - list prices need to come down. The average new listing price isn't reported so you wouldn't know this, but Lancaster County continues to resist a price correction, although January's data is encouraging.
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For Lancaster PA homes for sale click here. Jeff Geoghan is a top real estate expert in Lancaster County, PA, and an involved community member. Jeff's work has been featured in the Lancaster Newspapers, WGAL Channel 8, PA Business Journal and Wall Street Journal. Jeff's blog on Lancaster County and its homes is nationally-featured. Contact Jeff for more help with your Lancaster PA Real Estate needs. Jeff is also a photographer - view some of his portfolio. Comments are welcome!
I was in our monthly council work session last night for East Petersburg, and the talk was all about "TNDs". Traditional Neighborhood Design is the buzzword for the new year in Lancaster County, PA as East Hempfield Township rejected an proposed ordinance to allow such high-density developments to go forward. At issue is the huge tract of land at State Road & Harrisburg Pike owned by Charter Homes, which is the site of a proposer 3,400 unit TND entitled "Independence". Charter has visions of grandeur by creating an entirely new town within a short drive of Lancaster City, including a train station along the adjoining rail line. They say that they are going to develop it anyway, and why not use the TND model to do "smart growth" rather than "urban sprawl"-style homes? Seems like an offer residents can't refuse.
The residents in the area did refuse, however, and lobbied the township officials to reject the ordinance crafted by Charter Homes last Wednesday. People are coming down on both sides of this issue, with some (those employed by Lancaster Newspapers, interestingly) advancing that "democracy won out over common sense" with the vote, and others saying that the TND model is untested and grandiose in it's conception, with local impacts on traffic and schools, etc. unknown.
I think everyone agrees that they want to see precious Lancaster County farmland preserved. I think the folks with the county agencies charged with planning for "smart growth" have done their homework. I even think that the TND model holds a lot of promise.
What the paid planners have not done, however, is translate their work into language & venues that the public can understand. I think the dialogue has to be county-wide, not on a case-by-case basis. And certainly the builder has to deliberately take a back seat during the discussion, or common folk will "smell a rat".
Let's all commit to keep talking about this.
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