plastic lawn chairs home hardware

plastic lawn chairs home hardware

plastic kid chairs for sale

Plastic Lawn Chairs Home Hardware

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Truck & Tool Rental The Home Depot Logo DIY Projects & Ideas Flooring & Area Rugs Lighting & Ceiling Fans Beach & Lawn Chairs Customize Your Patio Set Sofas, lounge chairs, benches & patio seating for oudoor spaces Today you have an extraordinary variety of different options for outdoor seating, including sofas and lounge chairs as well as outdoor chaise lounges, outdoor benches, adirondack chairs, beach chairs, and more. You can also mix and match or arrange and re-arrange these pieces to suit your lifestyle, mood or the occasion. Whether you opt for casual sling seating with a streamlined aluminum framing or a comfy, deep-seating lounge chairs crafted from all-weather wicker, we have a huge selection of outdoor patio chairs in the right colors, styles, and materials to accommodate your needs. Not all products available in all stores. Lattice Folding White Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Set your store to see localavailability




Chili Red Folding Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Classic White Oversized Curveback Patio Adirondack Chair Classic Black Patio Adirondack Chair HD Sand Castle Patio Adirondack Chair Midnight Folding Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Graphite Folding Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Mist Folding Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Simulated Wood Patio Adirondack Chair Tete-a-Tete Patio Chairs and Table Cape Cod Rainforest Canopy Patio Adirondack Chair Nectar Folding Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Buttercup Folding Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Unfinished Stationary Wood Outdoor Adirondack Chair (2-Pack) Kids Patio Adirondack Chair Classic Green Patio Adirondack Chair Teak All-Weather Plastic Outdoor Adirondack Chair with Hide-Away Ottoman Long Island Sand Patio Adirondack Chair White All-Weather Adirondack Rocking Patio Chair Seashell White Patio Adirondack Chair South Beach Lemon Patio Adirondack Chair




Mopani Teal Outdoor Patio Adirondack Chair All-Weather Patio Adirondack Chair in Lime Green Set your store to see localavailabilitySign up for our eFlyerLearn about great deals at your Home Store first!FREE SHIPPING ON QUALIFYING ORDERS $49 OR MORE Prices, promotions, styles, and availability may vary. Our local stores do not honor online pricing. Prices and availability of products and services are subject to change without notice. Errors will be corrected where discovered, and Lowe's reserves the right to revoke any stated offer and to correct any errors, inaccuracies or omissions including after an order has been submitted.Store HoursMonday8:00 am - 8:00 pmTuesday8:00 am - 8:00 pmWednesday8:00 am - 8:00 pmThursday8:00 am - 8:00 pmFriday8:00 am - 8:00 pmSaturday8:00 am - 8:00 pmSundayCLOSED, Phone:Fax:Connect with us: Our StoryOne of the first and most fascinating facts that makes Gow's Home Hardware so unique is the length of time this business has been around.




The firm was founded in 1848, making it the oldest established business in Bridgewater. Sign up for our eFlyerLearn about great deals at your Home Store first!eGift Cards Instant Gift GivingAeroplan Earn Miles HereThe Official Vehicleof Home Hardware © 2017 Home Hardware Stores Limited. All Rights Reserved.Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Return PolicyProudly Canadian Owned and OperatedBench PicnicFolding PicnicDiy PicnicPicnic AreaPicnic TablesFolding ChairBench BuildTable BuildDiy BenchForwardDIY Plans -- "beginner level" Could be painted in OMBRE -- Convertible picnic table | Do It Yourself Home Projects from Ana WhiteThe information requested could not be found. The error has been logged for review. Return to home pageForget the surreal prospect of a trafficless Times Square. Never mind the progressive transportation agenda.The scene-stealing star of the city’s newly opened, $1.5 million pedestrian plaza project may be its fleet of folding lawn chairs, humble refugees from the Ace Hardware catalog that have colonized the Broadway pavement.




In candy-stripe shades of pink, blue and green, the 376 rubber folding chairs and loungers are an unlikely import from the sphere of suburban swimming pools and budget trips to the beach. Average purchase price: about $15 apiece, or 0.001 percent of the project’s total budget.Since their Memorial Day debut, the chairs have quickly entered the zeitgeist, earning criticism from the mayor and wonderment from pedestrians, who have pronounced them both tacky and endearing. The obligatory merchandise tie-in has already appeared: a pair of local designers produced a T-shirt that replaces the heart in “I ♥ New York” with a lounge chair. A few dozen have already sold. “I’ve had people say to me both that it’s a stroke of genius and that I’m the king of trailer trash,” said Tim Tompkins, president of the Times Square Alliance, the business group that oversees furniture decisions for the plaza. “The lawn chair decision is far and away the most controversial decision I’ve made in my seven years as head of the alliance.”




“People seem to be jumping right past the issue of whether there should be this pedestrian space to what it should look like,” he added.Like penicillin and Silly Putty, the chairs were an accidental discovery.Six days before the unveiling of New York’s biggest pedestrian project in years, Mr. Tompkins realized he had a problem: there was no place to sit. Permanent furniture was on order, but the arrival date was August. Months of thoughtful planning would be no match for hordes of tired tourists with nowhere to rest.“Literally we were going out to whoever we knew to see where we could hustle up a few hundred lawn chairs,” Mr. Tompkins said.Faced with finding a temporary solution, Mr. Tompkins did what any pragmatic New Yorker would: he ran around the corner to his local hardware store, in this case American Home Hardware & More on Ninth Avenue.“He said he needed 150 of them. I said to him, ‘Are you out of your mind?’ ” recalled Felix Atlasman, the store’s owner.




Nothing in stock appealed to Mr. Tompkins, so Mr. Atlasman faxed over a few black-and-white pages from a catalog. Despite a brown-and-tan color scheme, model No. BY405-0786 caught Mr. Tompkins’s eye. A simple plastic webbed folding chair, it was the kind of thing “our grandmothers used to bring to the beach on the Jersey Shore,” he said. Sold, 150 at $19.99 apiece. (Later, the group bought several loungers in the same style, at $28.34 each.)Meanwhile, an alliance security supervisor called up an old friend in Brooklyn: Matthew Pintchik, whose eponymous hardware store is a Park Slope staple.“They didn’t want to spend a lot of money because clearly whatever was invested in these chairs would be disposed of,” Mr. Pintchik recalled in a telephone interview. He offered the alliance a discount on a line of Ace Hardware neon green and pink rubber chairs, 200 at $10.74 apiece.The store has since received calls about whether the model is still available for purchase. “People liked the fact that they were sort of campy,” said Mr. Pintchik’s brother, Michael.




“It’s too bad we didn’t know, otherwise we would have ordered them in bulk.” Despite the daily wear and tear, attrition has stayed low. After two weeks, only 25 of the nearly 400 chairs and loungers have been taken out of service. Fifteen others were reported stolen, and two more were picked off by an errant fire truck, according to Mr. Tompkins. (“It wasn’t going fast,” he added hastily.) In some ways, the attention paid to the chairs reflects the more consequential civic debate at the heart of the Broadway project: what is the best use of public space?“Some people say this is kind of cheesy and fun, and that’s part of Times Square’s identity,” Mr. Tompkins said. “But there’s just as many people who say, no, this is a special place and we should have something more special.”City officials were quick to reiterate that the lawn chairs will be gone by the end of the summer, replaced by sturdier stock.“As a temporary treatment in a temporary period, I think the chairs do match the atmosphere of the new space, and they reflect the fact that it’s an unofficial kickoff for summer,” said Janette Sadik-Khan, the city’s transportation commissioner.

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