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CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 31, 2008

Get Wisdom
Filed under: People Skills — Tags: — nedpelger

In this crazy journey through life, we get to choose what we care about. Getting wisdom has always been high on my list. I want to know what’s true and what’s not. I enjoy interacting with other seekers. I try to avoid phony poseurs, blowhards and self-righteous jerks.

My friend Kneal Leininger just sent me a good blog post called 10 Signs of Intellectual Honesty that will help you decide if you are an honest seeker or a phony poseur. It’s a long struggle toward truth, but that post will help you check that you’re moving in the right direction.

After I inserted this photo from Wikpedia of Rodin’s The Thinker, I remembered how much we enjoyed the Rodin sculpture museum in Philadelphia. If you’re near the Philadelphia Art Museum, perhaps running up the stairs in your best Rocky impersonation to celebrate the Phillies, you should go next door to the Rodin Museum.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 29, 2008

You Go, Girls
Filed under: Construction Superintendents — Tags: — nedpelger

I’ve often heard that few women work in construction supervision. In fact, I’ve never seen any. Of course I’m familiar with a few female Project Managers, but no Construction Supervisors. I was pleasantly surprised, then, in the last two days to read two stories about women who won awards for their work in construction supervision.

The Courrier News in Elgin, IL has an article about Shelley Costello of TranSystems, the construction supervisor on a downtown streetscape project. The downtown businesses presented her an award for excellent customer service. The funny hook in the article stated that they hardly recognized Shelley at the awards banquet. They were accustomed to seeing her in concrete caked work boots and an orange vest, but now saw her in a sparkling black dress with her hair done.  I take that as a sartorial challenge for Construction Supervisors everywhere.

In another news article, Holly Bowers, a 29 year old Construction Supervisor in Raleigh, NC, helped win a Gold Award in the local Parade of Homes. She started with Oak City Homes as a bookkeeper, but grew fascinated with construction and was given the opportunity to move into construction supervision. Having her first project win a Gold Award is quite a feather in her cap.

So a few reports of female Construction Supervisors doesn’t make a trend, but hopefully it encourages more women to enter this rewarding occupation. As Winny said, “You have nothing to fear but fear itself.”

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 22, 2008

The Importance of a First Favor Impression
Filed under: Construction Superintendents — Tags: — nedpelger

Lots of people tell you to try to make a great first impression on others. I don’t disagree with the standard advice of good eye contact and a firm handshake. What I’ve discovered over the years, though, is to distrust the first impression. The creepiest people often make great first impressions. Con men and swindlers learn to make that great first impression, relying on the fact that once you assume they are good folks, you’ll stop paying attention to what they actually do.

The first favor impression matters much more to me than the first impression. As a young engineer and project manager, I remember working for High Construction, part of a group of companies. A guy from High Steel or High Concrete would call and ask a simple favor. Perhaps they needed a beam sized or a quick budget for a project they were considering. These tasks weren’t in my job description, but I knew they mattered. These guys didn’t know me well and this was the first time they had asked for a favor.

I tried to make these first favor requests among my highest priorities. I knew that I’d develop the reputation of being competent and reliable if I quickly helped them with their problems. Other opportunities came to me, people recommended me for projects and jobs, because I’d established myself as a can-do guy. You must manage your reputation if you want to advance in this business.

Recently a young man offered to help me on a simple home project, but then never followed up. I remembered my concept of the importance of the first favor impression. This fellow now belongs, in my mind, to that large group of people that talk but don’t effectively act. Which group do you want to be part of?

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 21, 2008

Puerto Rico to Produce 20% of Electricity by Wind
Filed under: Energy — Tags: — nedpelger

The island of Puerto Rico, with those steady breezes, now pays almost $0.28 per kilowatt-hour for the energy generated by gas turbines. The state-owned Electric Energy Authority decided to invest in 20 wind turbines in hopes of generating electricity they can sell for $0.09 per kilowatt-hour. The project budget is $160,000,000 and slated completion is 2015. The photo below shows a New Zealand project.

The spiked energy prices of the last year will create lots of opportunities in the near future. I think biofuels (switchgrass, poplar trees, etc) converted to ethanol may be one of the big winners, but they still have a couple of chemical engineering challenges to solve at the large scale factory level. Corn ethanol has always been and will remain dead on arrival. It’s a terrible idea to tie food and energy together.

Who knows if the world is really ready to start permitting the construction of nuclear reactors again, but I doubt it in this NIMB (not in my backyard) world. Certainly America will have to have significantly harder economic times for that big of a shift in mindset.

The one rising star in the energy field will certainly be wind power. It won’t ever be a primary world source of energy, but in certain regions it will absolutely be significant. So way to go Puerto Rico, you did good!

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 16, 2008

And I Think I Waste Too Much Time…
Filed under: Ned Weirdness — Tags: — nedpelger

Some days I get frustrated with my lack of productivity. I have lots of things to do but just can’t get efficient about getting them done. A lack of productivity for me means more hours I have to work to get my job done.  But then I see a video like the one below and think, “Hey, I’m fine, at least I didn’t take all the time to make that…I just took four minutes to watch it.”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U82eWptFxSs&feature=related]

Here’s wishing you a good and productive day.

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

October 10, 2008

Construction Supervisor Rescues Abandoned Infant
Filed under: Construction Superintendents — Tags: — nedpelger

Robert Lee Hearn, a Construction Supervisor, just completed a site meeting with the Utility Locaters for a development project near the rural community of Indiantown in western Martin County, Fla.  As many of us have done on a new large site project, he drove around a bit, just exploring the roads. He wanted to get a feel of the place.

He crawled out of his truck to have a better look around and heard a whimpering sound. Initially thinking it was an animal, he planned to leave. But then he heard the unmistakable sound of a baby. He discovered a naked, abandoned newborn infant with the umbilical cord still attached, lying on a fire ant mound. Hearn said his first impulse was to “Beat a fast path out of there”. Instead, he scooped the infant into his hands and went to his truck.

As he called 911, he realized fire ants were crawling all over both he and the baby.  “Oh my God, it’s fulla’ ants! Hold on,” he yelled into the mike, brushing ants off the baby and himself.  The infant was barely alive, dehydrated and bitten hundreds of times by fire ants.

But that was 1989 and that baby boy didn’t just survive, he thrived. He’s in college now, part of an adoptive family that helped him steer a course from his rough start. Read the rest of the details here.

So I’d like to say to Robert Lee Hearn, whereever you are, thanks for getting involved and doing the right thing. You are certainly one of the heroes in this young man’s story. If you have any other stories about a Construction Supervisor acting as a hero, please share it with us in the comments section.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 7, 2008

A Project Failure in North Korea
Filed under: Construction Superintendents — Tags: — nedpelger

One of my favorite quotes comes from the brilliant, free market economist Milton Friedman who said, “If the Federal Government was in charge of the Sahara Desert, within 5 years there would be a shortage of sand.”

A few years ago the North Korean government decided to build the world’s tallest hotel. They sort of succeeded. The tall building pictured below was built, but they ran out of money to finish it. Then the poor quality concrete work started failing, so it’s never been occupied.

Built in the capital city of Pyongyang, the Ryugyong Hotel was placed on city maps and even stamps before it was built. Now the tour guides pass by the structure without mentioning it (as could only happen in a totalitarian government) and it has been removed from city maps.

The building that was to inspire great pride in accomplishment turned into an embarassment and a blight. I wonder if the Construction Supervisors and the Design Professionals were punished for the project failure. Do you think they should have been?

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 4, 2008

The Effective Construction Supervisor

James Adrian, a consultant and speaker for the construction industry, understands the importance of the Construction Supervisor to successful construction projects. He states in an article titled How to Identify an Effective Construction Supervisor that the 100 decisions a Construction Supervisor makes in a day greatly affects project outcome. He lists 10 skills and attributes below:

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