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CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

November 3, 2008

Tall Crane on a Church Project
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

I loved this photo of a Kran crane working on a church that could double as the Space Shuttle. Dark Roasted Blend really presents some amazing stuff.

I can’t imagine the communications involved to safely operate the crane on this project.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 18, 2008

Anybody Got a Plumb Bob?
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

Sometimes it’s fun to build projects with some extra complexity, some flair that creates a challenge. Think of all the extra work in figuring out how to build the apartment buildings shown below.

I saw these in Dark Roasted Blend and thought they looked so odd. I wonder how many people want to live in them? Or pay the much higher costs to experience the non-plumbness? I guess that’s why they make chocolate and vanilla…and Tutti-Frutti.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 13, 2008

Peculiar Hotels
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

A few hotels shown at ProTraveler are so innovative and one-of-a-kind that I thought I’d share them with you. In the jungles of India, workmen built four hotel room tree houses with bamboo and local woods. Guests can hike in the mountains, ride an elephant or just watch the jungle go by.

In Vietnam, you can spend $60/night to stay in the Crazy House Hotel (so dubbed by the locals). Built in 1990, this free form building has lots of whimsy. I wonder if the Architect did detailed drawings or if it was a build/design project?

Finally, perhaps the oddest hotel on Earth, really was built to resemble a large toilet. The $1.6 M project was built just south of Seoul, South Korea to help raise awareness of the need for better sanitation throughout the developing world. The owner charges $50,000/night to stay in this crapper, but the money gets donated to help improve global sanitation. The name of this facility? Flush Hotel.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

September 24, 2008

What's the Past, Present and Future of the Facility You're Building?
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

If you were driving down the road and saw this

what would you think? Some kind of odd farm building, perhaps, or maybe an architect with a huge sense of insecurity about his naughty parts? You probably wouldn’t think “Air raid shelter”, but that’s the purpose for this odd building. The Germans in World War II built many of these silo like structures, many designed for up to 500 people to inhabit during times of bombing.

Since bombs dropped mostly vertically, most bombs would bounce off the steep sidewalls and explode at the heavily reinforced base. The small footprint also made a much more difficult target for bombardiers. Finally, the low cost of building up instead of excavating down made the design even more appealing for the government. In fact, Germany built 98 of these structures during WWII.

Today these structures present a challenge. They don’t provide much protection from the economic bombs that seem to be the biggest fear of the day. So what do communities do with these historical, if unsightly, structures?

Many just sit empty. Some get used for funky town museums or bus stops. Of course, the creative element sometimes has its way.

Do you ever think about what will be the history of the building you are now working on? When I’m involved with renovating an old structure (I’m doing one now built in 1755 and 1862) I think about the guys that worked on it. How did they decide how to proceed? What did they talk about at lunch? How did they live and what mattered to them?

Part of the green building process involves thought about how buildings get both commissioned and de-commissioned. For example, carpet tiles have gained popularity partly because they are easily removed and shipped back to the factory for recycling. When you build, do you think about who will be renovating your work, do you try to make it easier for them? Or for yourself, if you get to add to your previously built buildings. Think about what you build. Think how it will be used, renovated, added to and demolished.

By the way, if you want read more about those odd German air raid shelters, check out Strange Towers of the Third Reich.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

August 19, 2008

I've Got P— Envy
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

That’s right folks, I’ve got a case of Project Envy. Now I enjoy the projects people hire me to build. Each one challenges me and fulfills me in its own way. But when I saw the photo below, I got a serious case of the wows.

The Burj Dubai skyscraper is almost finished

The Burj Dubai skyscraper is almost finished

The tallest building I’ve had a chance to help build was 6 stories. I’m not complaining, I’ve got a nice little life here. I guess I just feel a bit like I did out in Montana at the naked hot springs when the one fellow stood up.

Anyway, just thought it’s a great photo you’d enjoy as well.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

August 16, 2008

Utility and Beauty in a Well
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

The Dark Roasted Blend website (which had a few other cool and/or funny pictures if you have some time) had this story about stepwells in India. The stepwells differ from normal hand dug wells because the people walk the many  stairs to  get to the water.  The 3500 masonry steps shown in the photo below would have been a construction challenge.

Can you imagine the miscellaneous metals job for doing the railings?

Something that has little to do with construction (except I suppose beer and construction generally aren’t that far separated), I found one of the best commercials ever for Guinness Beer. It’s a great festival of toppling things, from dominoes to upended cars, that took hundreds of Argentine villagers and lots of experts a week. It will make you laugh.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvde2252Brg]

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

August 4, 2008

A Great Energy Idea, But Not Quite a Stock Tip
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: , — nedpelger

Remember how some American Indians burned buffalo poop as a main source of fuel? How would you like to do that with your own sewage wastes, plus millions of other peoples? Ener Tech Environmental developed the Slurry Carb process that recycles the high moisture biosolids from a sewage treatment plant to create a burnable fuel.  The photo below illustrates the system, but a slide show at Slurry Carb process does a great job of describing the process.

I worked building several waste water treatment plants years ago and understand the difficulties of dealing with the solids. Both dewatering them and getting rid of them is a challenge. As the world goes green, I understand it’s becoming an increasing challenge to get rid of waste water solids. Every year, more counties in California outlaw the spreading of solid wastes on farm fields.

When I read in Engineering News Record this week that a $160M  plant  is being  built  in CA to use sewage solids from LA as fuel to power local cement production kilns, I thought it was one of the best energy ideas I’ve heard. I also thought, “I wonder if there’s a way to buy stock in that company?”.

Ener Tech Environmental is privately held, so no great stock tips today. But another thought occurred to me, as we get more Construction Supervisors coming to ConstructionKnowlege.net and visiting this blog, we should share ideas about projects we’re building for companies that seem well run and have great ideas. Everyone likes to be in on the ground floor of a great new business and I bet that Construction Supervisors have some useful insights to share.I’ve found in construction you really get a sense of the company for whom you build a project.

So how about it, are you currently working on a project for a company that you really think would be a great investment?

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

July 19, 2008

Building the Bejing Olympic Buildings
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

To check out some of the cool Olympic venues recently built in Bejing, look here and at the wrestling building shown below.

From MovingCities.org, by Bert de Muynck:

Olympic Architecture

In August, 31 stadiums and sport halls–both new and renovated–will form the backdrop to the Beijing Olympics. They’re not all spectacular, but they are all important contributions to a developing city.

When the Olympic Games start on 8 August, the ‘Bird’s Nest’ and the ‘Water Cube’ will no doubt be the centres of attention. It could almost make you forget that the majority of the athletes will not compete in these two stadiums. Beijing’s Olympic infrastructure consists of 31 venues that in their design, and re-design, aspire to carry out the threefold motto of ‘Green Olympics’, ‘High-Tech Olympics’ and ‘People’s Olympics’. Their focus on post-Olympic urban life is also important. With a lotus-like stadium, a flying saucer and a Swiss TV set turned into a Chinese bamboo box, some designs infuse an Olympic Order into the capital’s construction chaos of the past decade.

This article is from Danwei.org

It’s fascinating to see what’s being built halfway around the world for the Olympics.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

July 15, 2008

Harley Museum: Another Reason to visit Milwaukee
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: , — nedpelger

If you always look up when you hear a thundering Harley Davidson motorcycle coming down the street, you may want to visit the Harley Museum. Opening last weekend with thousands of motorcyclists to help celebrate, the Harley Museum covers 130,000 sf and cost $75MM to build.

Pentagram Architects designed the facility and has the following descriptions and pictures on their website. Visit to read more.

The museum sits on a twenty-acre reclaimed industrial site directly across the Menomonee River from downtown Milwaukee and has been conceived as an urban factory ready-made for spontaneous motorcycle rallies. The three-building campus includes space for permanent and temporary exhibitions, the company’s archives, a restaurant and café, and a retail shop, as well as a generous amount of event and waterfront recreational space. The museum’s indoor and outdoor components were inspired by the spirit of Harley rallies in towns like Sturgis and Laconia, where thousands of riders congregate every year.

The idea of the factory, a place defined by one basic style and with a single purpose, seemed especially appropriate as riders refer to the Milwaukee headquarters of the Harley-Davidson Motor Company as “the factory” and in acknowledgment of the site’s industrial history. When looking for images to inspire the look of the museum, we leaned heavily on the history of factories, rather than the history of museums or of Milwaukee’s cultural architecture. While we were looking at these images, we were also thinking about how the museum should function.

The Architects found the old factory photo below inspirational as they developed the design.

So did any of our blog readers work on this project? Has anyone visited it and would you recommend it to your friends?

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

July 7, 2008

Another Airplane house, but at 2% of the cost
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

After I posted about the $2,000,000 house made from a 747, I came across this article in the WebUrbanist blog that showed an airplane house already built. They bought the scrap plane for $2,000, paid $4,000 to move it and another $24,000 for renovations. So for $30,000 they have the cool house shown below.

While I know these weird houses aren’t what building Construction Supervisors deal with every day, I think many of you will find them interesting. I also plan to feature houses that Construction Supervisors have built for themselves. I know some of you have created some real works of art with your talents.

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