interview: Ian Power of the Home Discovery Show

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You may have listened to some of my interviews on the Home Discovery Show with Ian Power.  I thought it would be fun if I interviewed Ian for Holistic Spaces instead!

AC:  Can you tell us about the Home discovery show?

IP:  The Home Discovery Show on CKNW News Talk AM980 Vancouver and the Corus Radio Network across Canada opens up where people live. Just think that if it's happening at your place, you should share. That could mean a quick how-to fix for a leaky faucet or leaky roof to how does a heat recovery system work to landscaping to design & decor to ripping down walls for a full-on renovation! The program also covers issues such as urban eco density, heritage restoration and preservation and other green living options and initiatives. And, of course everything in between with tons of listener participation via the open line.

How did you get involved with HDS and radio?

As a career broadcaster, I have been extremely lucky to try my hand at almost every facet of the media. Most of my career has been on-air as a presenter and interviewer, but some of my most rewarding work has been as an instructor. While I don’t teach on a regular basis anymore I am involved in mentorship and attend schools frequently to talk about students future careers as broadcasters. Three or four years ago I moved into Talk-Radio hosting a program called Talk to the Experts whereby I interview “experts” on a wide variety of fields. We talk about finance, real estate, automotive, health, food, taxation, dentistry, gardening, home improvement and so on. On the heels of this program an opportunity presented itself to take over a 25-year run from a Canadian home-improvement icon who was set to retire. On a regular basis I am joined by an 18 year veteran contractor to help out with the most technical discussions. And while I rely on “experts” to answer listener questions it really is a job that is close to home for me. I grew up with a father who was in the home improvement business as a contractor. Through osmosis, I learned about how the house works as a system as well as the need to roll up my sleeves to perform regular maintenance.

Can you give the readers some simple tips about home improvement?

The most important thing for any home owner contemplating home improvement is due diligence and preparation. For most people DIY will take twice the time as a professional and at least double the headache. Most home improvements are disruptive and invasive and the need for planning is crucial. Today there is so much information available that it is easy to understand, but it also opens the possibility of overload and confusion. It’s important to take the time, before you hire a contractor, to actually go out and talk to their references, see the work that they have done and ask the hard questions such as how were deficiencies and things like warranty handled. I would also encourage a home owner to look into the contractor's professional associations to see if they are in good standing among their peers. Try to avoid doing things on an impulse. The more prepared you are the more satisfied you are likely to be with the outcome. Planning is key.

Thanks Ian!

Click here to listen to Ian interview ME on the Home Discovery Show.

by Anjie Cho


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Ian Power is a career broadcaster, writer, producer, educator and mentor. He lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada with his family where he enjoys the west coast lifestyle, never far from the mountains and water, hiking, biking and walking his dog. Known for his easy going, comforting style he has interviewed some of the world’s biggest celebrities, but always seems to bring out the best in people when he’s talking to his many devoted listeners about what truly affects their own lives.

the Home Discovery Show


Listen: Feng Shui Considerations When Renovating a Kitchen

The Home Discovery Show - November 2013 - Anjie Cho
The Home Discovery Show

From the leaky faucet upstairs, to an entire back yard overhaul, when it comes to projects around your home, the advice you need is heard weekly on Vancouver’s CKNW Home Discovery Show.

Join Ian Power every Sunday from 8:30 am to 10:00 am as he’s joined by experts on home renovations and upgrades, plus the latest tools and tricks from the trades.

Listen as we talk about Feng Shui considerations when renovating a kitchen.

Interview Transcript:

IP: Anjie Cho is a registered New York State architect and Feng Shui interior designer. For over 15 years, she’s been creating beautiful and nourishing environments throughout New York City, San Francisco, Los Angeles and beyond. A graduate in architecture from the College of Environmental Design at the University of California at Berkeley, Anjie is a sought after expert in the fields of Feng Shui and Green Design. Anjie is also the founder of the online blog, Holistic Spaces, Integrating Beauty, Spirituality and Green Design. She creates and enhances balance and harmony by designing spaces with an understanding of sustainability and informed by the ancient practice of Feng Shui. Her focus is to create a nurturing and supportive environment for each of her clients, at whatever level they feel comfortable. Anjie is currently the co-chapter manager of the New York City chapter of the International Feng Shui Guild. She is a Feng Shui and Green Interiors blog contributor to inhabitat.com, which is a great site, and streeteasy.com’s blog on your home. Anjie is a LEED accredited professional and certified Feng Shui consultant from the BTB Feng Shui Masters Training Program. She’s also working on her forthcoming book: 108 Ways to Create Holistic Spaces: Feng Shui and Green Design for Healing and Organic Homes. Good morning and welcome, thank you for joining us.

AC: Good morning, good morning.

Nice to have you with us in New York City. What’s going on there, rain? Sun? Snow?

It’s actually sunny, it’s nice out. It’s a little bit cool. I was just out. It was about 50 degrees, but it’s really nice. It’s really beautiful, the leaves are just kind of starting to change.

Beautiful. Let’s start at the beginning, that’s always a good place to start. What is Feng Shui?

Feng Shui is an ancient art of placement that was developed thousands of years ago, and it seeks to enhance and improve the flow of energy through your home or workplace, or your environment in general, to maximize the positive potential in your life.

Now could anybody practice Feng Shui or do you have to be a certain ethnicity or do you have to be of a certain mindset?

Well, that’s an interesting question, because I think Feng Shui is very intuitive, and a lot of it is common sense, but I think where we are now in society, a lot of us have lost touch with our connection to nature and to our intuition. So ideally, yes anyone of any ethnicity could practice Feng Shui, but I actually studied in a 3 year master certification program, and I think it’s safe to say you should get somebody to help you out with Feng Shui that studied for at least 3 years. But that said, someone can just come to it naturally if you’re really in touch with your environment.

And would this apply to anybody in their home or in their office? Could I just suddenly decide I want to practice Feng Shui in my home?

Sure, you could, you absolutely could. Are you interested in becoming a Feng Shui practitioner?

Well not so much a practitioner per se, but I’m looking to find my chi in my home.

Well, I think anyone can do it, because it’s there, the energy is there. It’s just about recognizing it and being able to see beyond the superficial and being able to make a connection with your environment. Your environment is really a metaphor for you. Your home mirrors your inner self.

So what you’re saying then perhaps, if I could put it this way, I could be in fact practicing Feng Shui and not even know it.

Absolutely.

Yeah. So in effect it’s, if you’re in tune with the environment that you’re in and you’ve got the correct flow of energy then you are probably practicing some form of Feng Shui.

Yes, absolutely. There’s definitely people that I meet, clients I get, and I’ll tell them about certain Feng Shui principles and they’ll say, "oh, I’ve already been doing that," which is really great, because then you’re really listening to your intuition and seeing your connection to your environment. Then there’s other things that are not so easy to come up with on your own but they are practices that have been developed over thousands of years that have been passed down from teachers to student, teachers to students. Those things are harder to come by. But I think the principles of Feng Shui are really common, and I think that you can relate it to any culture.

How do we marry your architectural background and your LEED certification, that’s L – E – E – D certification, with Feng Shui? I imagine all those have something to do with one another, and how do you bring those elements together?

Well, I mean, I bring them together. It is challenging actually, because I get a lot of clients that want Feng Shui but aren’t necessarily doing any renovations in their home. And then I also get people who were doing renovations in their home and I can’t helpbut design with Feng Shui in mind and Green Design in mind, and I think it changes for each person but my main goal is to have people start to begin to see the relationship between their home and their workspace and how it makes them feel and how they are able to live their everyday lives. Hopefully, you want to create a space that’s nourishing, that’s beautiful that you want to go home to and supports you, right?

And does it have an effect on one’s, trying to think of a delicate way to put it, would it have a great effect on one’s wellbeing or their mental wellbeing?

Yes, absolutely. There’s something in Feng Shui we call the command position, and it really guides how you want to position yourself in your home or your workspace. This means where you would position your desk or your bed or where you want to sit in an interview even, and it’s about shifting the environment around you so you can actually be in a place where you are less stressed out and more relaxed and able to see what’s coming towards so you’re not in a precarious place where you can be surprised. And then if you’re relaxed and you’re feeling comfortable, then you can perform the best that you can.

Okay. Because we have a time constraint, let me, let’s see if we can get you to cite an example. Let’s take the kitchen for example because everybody can relate. The kitchen’s the social gathering spot for family and friends in most peoples’ homes. So if somebody’s thinking about a kitchen renovation right now and that’s really popular at all times, what are some of the things in terms of Feng Shui that somebody should consider when they are going about a kitchen renovation?

Yes, the kitchen is really important, because in Feng Shui, the kitchen represents how we nourish ourselves. This is where we cook, right? And the energy that you put in to your food while cooking is really important. It can add positive energy to your life or it could add negative energy. So when I was talking about the command position, the position of the stove is really important when you’re renovating a kitchen. Ideally, you want to have your stove located so you’re able to see the door and your back is not to the door or where people come in. So you want to be able to, when you’re standing at your stove cooking, be able to see the expanse of the room and see people come in. And at the same time, you don’t want to be in line with the door, so that’s really important. And there’s a few other things too that I always let my clients know about in terms of a kitchen renovation. One thing is having your cabinets go all the way up to the ceiling, your upper cabinets, and that just means if you’re going to get some custom cabinets, of course you can make them as high as you want, but adjusting the measurements and dimensions of it so you can have your ceiling all the way to the top or fill it up with crown or something.

Mmhm, okay.

But when you have that space between the top of your cabinet and the ceiling, that’s a place where stuck energy can collect and stagnant energy could collect, and you want to have that energy moving very smoothly in the kitchen, which represents how you nourish yourself and your wealth in the world. So that’s a really important thing too that people don’t think about. On a practical level, also you’ve maximized your storage, it looks better, you don’t have to clean up there as much, so there’s a lot of positive for doing that.

Sure. We’ve got to leave it there Anjie because we’re out of time I’m afraid. Clearly we need more time to talk about this so we would like to invite you back sometime soon.

Okay, it always go so fast.

Yeah, Anjie Cho is a registered New York State architect and Feng Shui interior designer. Her website is holisticspaces.com. Check it out, it’s a great website. Anjie’s a great writer and we really appreciate your time. Holisticspaces.com. We’re gonna take a quick break, we’ll come back in a moment, we’ve got lots of open house, open phones coming up next on The Home Discovery Show on the Corus Radio Network.

Click here to listen to my other interviews with the Home Discovery Show.

by Anjie Cho


Listen: Happy Chinese New Year!

The Home Discovery Show Feb 2013
The Home Discovery Show Feb 2013

This morning, on Chinese New Year, Ian Power, Co-Host of Vancouver's Home Discovery Show interviewed me about Feng Shui. Ian Power & Steve Seaborn host, taking your calls and chatting with a wide variety of guests in the field of home improvement.

  • How do you pronounce Feng Shui?

  • What is Feng Shui about?

  • Who is Feng Shui for?

Interview Transcript:

IP: Beautiful and nurturing environments with Feng Shui and Green Design, and we’re going to get the right pronunciation in just a moment. Anjie Cho is a licensed architect, LEED AP Feng Shui consultant and founder of Holistic Spaces and Anjie Cho Architect. With a decade of experience, Anjie has designed high-end residential and commercial spaces throughout New York City, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Anjie is also in the process of writing a book, “How to Use Feng Shui and Green Design to Create Healing Space,” and she’s joining us now on The Home Discovery Show. Thanks for being with us this morning.

AC: Hi, good morning Ian, and thank you for having me.

It’s a pleasure to have you here. Now, let’s get this straight, and let’s get it on the table right now. I looked up Feng Shui on Wikipedia and it said, F – E – N – G and then it says that the second, that’s pretty simple, but the second part is they say Shui and that’s probably not right, is it?

No, that’s not right, it’s actually Feng Shui.

Feng Shui. Now, and…

But you say it at the second popular way to say it.

Oh okay. So, I mean, is it a dialect thing or how is it, and what language is that?

It’s Chinese actually.

And is it Mandarin or Cantonese?

That I don’t know, but it’s Chinese, and it means Wind and Water actually.

So that would tie in nicely then in the year of the Water Snake, wouldn’t it? I guess that would add more significance to its meaning this year.

Oh yeah, definitely and Happy Chinese New Year.

Well thank you, and same to you as well. So what is this that we’re talking about here today?

First we can talk about Feng Shui. A lot of people ask me “What is Feng Shui?” It’s an Asian art of placement. I like to call it the original Green Design. I say it’s Green Design because, really, it’s a way to look at the environment around us and look at how we can shift our built environment to really harmonize with nature by looking at the cycles and patterns in the natural world.

And who is it for? Is it just for people of Asian descent?

No, it’s for everyone actually. Feng Shui was developed in China but every culture actually has their own form of Feng Shui. Feng Shui is really just a way that was developed to optimize the land and teach people how to really live with nature. So everyone can work with Feng Shui, or any kind of what we call geomancy, like working with the land, to really optimize your home and your office to have the best opportunities for success, happiness, good fortune, everyone wants those things.

Oh sure, absolutely. I’m wondering, is it something that you can practice after the fact or is it best to get in on it before you even start building?

I get that question a lot too. A lot of people will say, “Anjie, I’d really like you to come in but I can’t do any renovations, I’m just renting, I have this tiny apartment, everything is where it needs to be.” In fact, the principles of Feng Shui are universal and they can be used, yes, at the beginning of a project before you build your home, and that is ideal but you can make huge changes just by changing the arrangement on your desk. I have right now a flower, a plant, an orchid, on the top center of my desk, and that’s a wood element. That feeds fire, which is fame, and that’s to help my fame and recognition in the world.

Well you’ve come to the right place for that, let me tell you. If you want fame, The Home Discovery Show will deliver. The Lunar New Year is upon us, the Year of the Water Snake, so all joking aside, what are the special considerations at this time of the year? The New Year is underway, a Year of the Snake. What do we want to be thinking about, specifically when it comes to Feng Shui?

Okay, so the Chinese lunar calendar marks the beginning of spring actually. It doesn’t feel like spring, but it is the beginning of spring in the Chinese calendar. Last year was the Year of the Dragon, this year is the Year of the Water Snake. Last year, the Dragon energy was really about facing things head on, a much more aggressive energy, and this year is going to be much more subtle and thoughtful. Since it’s the beginning of spring, it’s the time for renewal and for new plants to grow and for new beginnings.

Okay.

So really it’s a great time to celebrate. You can get fresh oranges and tangerines, those represent luck and wealth. Actually, the words “orange” and “tangerine” sound like luck and wealth in Chinese.

Oh, okay, that’s kind of cool.

And then you can use those orange peels, which have a lot of life affirming bright energy, and that can be used to clear out any stagnant energy in your home and bring in some new bright, Chinese New Year energy and happiness.

Is there anything else that we should do physically to our home? Do we need to change the position of mirrors? I’ve heard that mirrors play an important role here, the way the energy flows through the house, that you have to have a certain flow or a chi through your home in order to fully appreciate what the Feng Shui can do to your environment? Anything to that?

Yes, definitely. That’s one of the main principles of Feng Shui, to really optimize the flow of energy and Feng Shui consultants like to say, “Take two mirrors and call me in the morning.” So we use a lot of mirrors to adjust things so if, say, you walk right in your front door and there’s a stair going straight up, that’s not so great because when you go walk in, your energy goes right up instead of flowing into the home and giving you the ability for that energy to gather. So you could put a mirror at the top of the stairs to kind of reflect the energy back. That’s one way to use a mirror.

Is that the place to start, right at the front door?

I think the place to start is in your home, because that’s the closest to you. The front door can be a good place because that represents your face to the world so, it’s adjusting what people see.

I’m just wondering if there’s one area of the home more than another that creates either positive or negative energy?

It depends on what your issues are, but important places are: Your bed, because that’s where you spend a lot of time. Especially, you spend unconscious time there so you get affected by the energy a lot. If you’re really interested in improving your work, your desk is a great place to start, or your home office. Another good place is your stove, because the stove represents how we nourish ourselves in the world, how we make money, wealth. All the energy that you put in your food, it happens at the stove, so you want to put the best energy into the food you eat to keep you healthy and give you the ability to be really successful.

Feng Shui is a holistic view of your wellbeing, so it’s not only your body and your person, but it’s obviously the environment in which you operate, whether it be your home or your office. Have I got that pretty much right?

That’s correct.

And who would be qualified to practice or advise in the art of Feng Shui?

A lot of people like to read books. There’s a lot of conflicting books, simply because there’s many different types of Feng Shui. There’s actually an International Feng Shui Guild that has a list of consultants that you can look at, and they’re qualified. There’s different levels of qualification, and that could be a good place to start. Of course, it’s always great to go by referral, and when you speak with someone, talk to a bunch of different consultants. See who you’re drawn to, and don’t be afraid to ask questions, because you really need to feel comfortable with them.

As an architect, how much of your Feng Shui experience and your consultancy plays into your work as an architect?

It’s actually very integrated in to my architectural work, because it really gives meaning to what I do. It’s not just about making something look good or making something stand up, it’s about giving depth and intention to what you do. I always consider it in all my designs. Sometimes it doesn’t work out the best way, because sometimes the client doesn’t necessarily want it, but the intention is always there and there’s ways to optimize the Feng Shui. Certain limitations, but I always have it in there.

One of the things I like to ask people who do the kind of work that you do, not to put you on the spot, but how much is Feng Shui a form and how much is it a function?

It depends. It depends on the client. Some people are more about how you behave in the world and they’re more about experiential qualities of space, so that would be more function. Form is actually very important too, because how you move through a space is really affected by environment and the shape, the form. One affects the other. You have to have both, I guess.

Yeah, fair enough. I know as an architect and Feng Shui consultant, you’ve worked in New York City, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Are there big differences between the way people on the East coast operate and the way that people on the West coast operate? I mean, are the needs different, are the wants different? Does the way you employ your services work differently on the different coasts?

The spaces are definitely different. In New York, they’re much smaller and it’s much more dense than it is on the West coast or most places, but everyone’s needs are the same in the sense that everyone’s feeling very stressed and detached because of all these technological changes. We’re getting so busy and we’re really losing touch with our environment and with ourselves, so I think that is something across the board everyone’s feeling, and people are looking for something else.

Anjie Cho with Holistic Spaces and Anjie Cho Architect to welcome projects of all sizes, from Feng Shui consultations to full-gut renovations. You do site visits and space cleaning and Chinese astrology analysis and your website is holisticspaces.com. We’ve also posted that and shared that on our Home Discovery Show Facebook Page. We’re unfortunately out of time, I wish we had a little bit more time but Anjie Cho, I hope that you’ll join us again sometime and we can talk about other things including some of the work in architecture that you do.

I’d love to, thank you so much for having me.

Nice to have you and we’ll talk to you very, very soon. Anjie Cho with Holistic Spaces and Anjie Cho architect, holisticspaces.com. This is The Home Discovery Show and we’re back in a moment on the Corus Radio Network.

Click here to listen to my other interviews with the Home Discovery Show.

by Anjie Cho


From the leaky faucet upstairs, to an entire back yard overhaul, when it comes to projects around your home, the advice you need is heard weekly on Vancouver’s CKNW Home Discovery Show.

Join Ian Power every Sunday from 10 to 11 am PT as he’s joined by experts on home renovations and upgrades, plus the latest tools and tricks from the trades.