NEWSLETTER

 
Enter your email:

Construction Topics

GENERAL TECHNICAL KNOWLEDGE

SITE WORK

CONCRETE

MASONRY

METAL

CARPENTRY & WOOD

THERMAL & MOISTURE

DOORS & WINDOWS

FINISHES

SPECIALTIES

EQUIPMENT

FURNISHINGS

SPECIAL CONSTRUCTION

CONVEYING SYSTEMS

MECHANICAL

ELECTRICAL

PEOPLE SKILLS

JOBSITE MANAGEMENT

ADS

Become a FB fan


Construction Network


Trades Hub

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 24, 2011

Living Large in 500 sf Apartment
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

The site TwistedSifter shows some of the coolest things on the web. The photos below are from a 500 sf apartment in the East Village NYC. The design details are beautiful, creating many functional spaces in a tiny apartment. The design by Jordan Pamass Digital Architecture won the American Institute of Architects 2010 award for small projects.

The isometric layout gives you a sense of the long, narrow space, so you can better appreciate the other detailed photos.

The bedroom nook just feels like a place I’d like to retreat to at the end of the day.

The living room, though small, still provides a nice community vibe.

Not having to abide by Accessibility or ADA code requirements really opens up the design options for efficiency, especially in kitchens and baths.

My favorite single detail was the stairs doubling as drawers. Though the drawer pulls are a poor design, they should have used a router to create a finger pull rather than a steel pull that will get stepped on, bend and cut your foot or shins.

Overall, though, it’s an amazing design. We all get to do some of our own design in our living spaces. I hope you consider a project like this as a challenge to be creative. Since you likely have building skills that few possess, use them in your own space to create some beauty and efficiency.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 14, 2011

Featuring a Bed-to-Kitchen Concrete Slide
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

People need to play…or at least many of us want to. The most popular blog post of the year on Dezeen,  a fun design site, was  about a house with a concrete sliding board from the kid’s bedrooms to the kitchen. Located in Jakarta, Indonesia, the house shown in the photos below just shouts jocularity:

I love finding playgrounds and play elements worked into design. Too many people take themselves far too seriously. We all need to spend more time playing. Do you play? Find a kid somewhere and give it a try if you don’t. Remember, very little is as important as you think it is. And things like play, that you may think aren’t important, truly matter.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 13, 2011

Gov. Christie Passes the Duck Test
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

Gov. Christie of NJ recently cancelled the proposed $8.7B Hudson River rail tunnel from Northern NJ to Manhattan. Knowing that hundreds of millions and five years had already been invested in this project, I initially wondered if the cancellation was prudent. Gov. Christie stated that the likelihood of substantial cost over-runs, including the $1B overage already projected, made cancellation necessary.

As the records of current costs get examined, Gov. Christie’s decision looks prescient. The real estate costs for required properties and easements seemed to be spinning out of control. 172 properties or easements needed acquired and only 13 had been completed. The cost for those 13 properties was $28M.

It’s difficult to determine if that’s too high a price, but it’s clear that the state spent $12M on fees and expenses to obtain those 13 properties. That’s ridiculous. Imagine buying an industrial property for $10,000,000 and being told your attorney and engineer had spent $4,280,000 on fees. They’d have some explaining to do.

It appears the lack of clear guidelines made this project likely to become a boondoggle. The fact that one attorney booked 88 hours (at $200/hour) in September after the project was almost certainly getting shut down further shows the poor management of the process.

Gov. Christie saw it walking like a duck, quacking like a duck and swimming like a duck and concluded, it was most likely a duck. I applaud him for a good decision, but understand our industry needs to do better. We need to develop project management strategies that work in these complex times. We must get back to the basics of managing the cost, schedule and performance from the project start to the end.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 6, 2011

Beautiful Slaughterhouse by Francisco Salamone
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

Aren’t the lines on this slaughterhouse building stunning?

Francisco Salamone was an architect in Argentina who designed more than 60 municipal buildings in the 1930s. His persuasion skills must have been substantial, to convince the decision makers that paid for this building  to go beyond simple function. I mean, what’s more functional than a slaughterhouse? Yet Salomone designed and oversaw the construction of this Art Deco reinforced concrete tower shown above. I wonder if the tower had any practical uses. Any ideas?

During this time, roads, electrical lines and communications were being built to connect the small towns hundreds of miles from Buenos Aires. Many municipal buildings were also built. The ruins of the municipal building shown below also shows the creativity of Salamone’s design.

Are you striving to build structures that will be notable in the future? Whether you are a carpenter taking advantage of your “Carpenter License” to add some flair or a project manager fighting with the architect to control costs, strive to create beauty and quality that delights you and others. We can’t always do that, but we can sometimes.

“If you don’t take a risk then how are you going to make something really beautiful, that hasn’t been seen before?”Francis Ford Coppola

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

December 4, 2010

City of the Future
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

Sometimes it’s nice just to dream. I came across this winner of a CGSociety digital art competition for architecture and thought you’d enjoy it as well.

As things change, as the future becomes the present, are you positioning yourself to be near the action? Hockey great Wayne Gretzky said, “A good hockey player plays where the puck is. A great hockey player plays where the puck is going to be.”

He also said, “The only way a kid is going to practice is if it’s total fun for him… and it was for me.” Figure a way to love what you do, to want to get better, to excel. That’s the best way to succeed in this crazy business.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

November 17, 2010

Paris, Je T’aime
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

We just watched Paris, I Love You on DVD last night and I was yet again enthralled by the built environment of Paris. The film has 18 segments, each about 5 minutes long and set in each of the Parisian neighborhoods (Arrondissements). I think Paris is the most beautiful city in the world, followed distantly by St. Petersburg. Watching each of the 18 directors show a slice of Paris was a delight.

The Coen Brothers directed one of my favorite segments, casting Steve Buscemi (Fargo, The Big Lebowski and the intrepid zipliner from the recent Grown-Ups) as an American tourist in the subway. As Buscemi catches the eye of a young couple making out, he comically suffers the Paris nightmare experience.

Another favorite segment, set near the Bastille, shows a husband about to leave his wife for a younger woman but first finding his wife’s terminal Leukemia diagnosis. As he rises to the challenge before him, he rediscovers the love for his wife. I’m a big fan of stories of right action and redemption…I guess I can use all the help I can get.

My favorite segment was set in the Père Lachaise Cemetery, where an engaged couple fight, then make up with the help of the ghost of Oscar Wilde.

The hapless boyfriends uses two wonderful Oscar Wilde lines: “How could you ever be with someone who treats you like a perfectly normal human being?” and “Let’s go back to our room, I’ll make you love.” Another great Wilde quote came from his dying moments. He was in a horrid little apartment on the left bank and his final words were, “Either this wallpaper goes or I do.”

If you enjoy seeing beautiful buildings and cityscapes, and don’t mind sub-titles, check out Paris, Je T’aime.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 15, 2010

San Fran Tran: How to Spend $3M in 3 Days
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

My friend Jim Gravesand works for Bay Area Rapid Transit Authority (BART). We were young engineers working for the same firm 25 years ago and have stayed in touch. Jim enjoys his work at BART, helping put together major transportation projects for one of the most progressive organizations in the world. He sent me the video below that shows the time lapse photography renovation of Metro Line J at 30th and Church Streets.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7f6bHg_sO_s

I love seeing the process of demolition, grading/stoning, track installation, testing and paving. The 12 minute video length may discourage you, but I urge you to start to watch and see what you think. The songs were wonderful and work intriguing. Compared to what I did with most of my 12 minute blocks of time yesterday, watching this video was a good investment.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

September 29, 2010

London: Time for Another “Austerity Olympics”?
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

Cranes everywhere in London, renovation and new construction projects abound. Both large transportation projects (transit stations being redone) and huge building projects (like the new 55 story office building pictured below for Shard which will be the tallest building in the London).

It appears the 2012 Olympics helps spur lots of this work. On the quite entertaining Big Bus Tour ride, the commentator explained how London will be the first city to host the modern era Olympics three times. In 1900, when all the judges were British and England seemed to win an inordinate amount of medals. Then in 1944 the Olympics were slated for London, but cancelled due to WWII.

The 1948 Olympics were held in London instead, even though England was virtually bankrupt and the much of the city had be leveled by bombs. They called it the “Austerity Olympics” because of those facts. Instead of an Olympic Village, the athletes stayed with local families, being asked to bring their own bedding and towels. England ran out of food to feed the athletes part way through the Games. France and USA sent rations to tide them over. Perhaps with the current financial crisis we should be thinking about that kind of efficiency and cooperation.

I think if Winston Churchill were alive, he’d be leading us in that direction. Speaking of Churchill, we learned that he adamantly opposed the idea of having a statue of himself in any of the London parks. He repeated stated that he didn’t want a bunch of pigeons crapping on his head for eternity…or words to that affect. Turns out there is only one statue of Churchill, and the builders put an electric current running through the head to shock any pigeons that may have defecating ideas. Oh those British.

Speaking of British leaders, check out the suit of armor made especially for King Henry 8th. Pay particular attention to the area where the legs meet the torso.

Perhaps that explains all the wives.

Finally, the story of Frank Beck, an electrician in the subway in the 1930s, touched me. He didn’t think the subway maps of the day were particularly clear and developed his own graphic.

His map, which resembles a wiring diagram, became the standard method to map subways all over the world. The transit authority gave him 5 pounds.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

September 27, 2010

Those French, They Have a Different Word for Everything
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

It’s like a whole other language. TBW and I are traveling in Paris and Lyon. We’ve been seeing some incredible sites. What do you think this is advertising?

It appears Virgin Records wants to provide some advice about how to live one’s life. Don’t you just hate when people do that? Except me, of course.

We stumbled upon the amazing Brunly Museum, near the Eiffel Tower, that was just recently built. As we walked toward it, we discussed what the building might be. It looked like an old industrial building that had been retrofit in some weird way. As we got closer, we could tell it was a new building, but unlike anything we’d seen. Only when we saw the sign did we determine it to be a museum.

The outside gardens were spectacular. The naturalized plantings and paths offered so many delightful little areas to explore. To find all this open space in the high rent district of Paris amazed me. One detail I especially liked was the fiber optic light posts interspersed among the plants.

That seems like a reasonably economical design idea that should get more use.

As we walked through the museum, the interior design impressed us. The designers seemed to take every opportunity to do add cool and funky details instead of just normal. The curvy handrails, the out-of-the-way benches that felt like caves, the darkness of the space with every light intentional were just a few of the items we loved. If you get to Paris, don’t miss the Branly Museum.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

September 20, 2010

The Shoe House
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

While reading a Zillo article about unique houses, I saw a house I’ve been driving by every time I went to a church jobsite in York, PA. Since I was a little kid, I remember seeing the Shoe House from Rt 30 just over the York County line. Here’s the view from Rt 30.

Through the wonders of the internet, I discovered that the Shoe Wizard, Mahlon Haines, built the Shoe House in 1948 as promotion. The Shoe Wizard loved promotion, reportedly standing up at baseball games and offering a $20 bill to anyone who knew who he was.

The design of the house followed from Haines handing an old work boot to an Architect and saying, “Build me a house like this.” You’ve got to love a guy with vision. The Shoe Wizard was also a generous fellow, allowing elderly folks or newlyweds to stay free in the house for week-ends. The guest were treated like royalty by the live-in butler and maid. They also each got a free pair of shoes (worth $1.98) when they left. The front door has a stained glass portrait of the Shoe Wizard.

I’ve had a chance to build some kooky stuff in my career, but never reached the level of the Shoe House. I wonder if the guys who designed and built it are still around? I bet they have some great stories…

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »