
Ned Pelger's blog on construction, design and other weirdness. Email him at ned@constructionknowledge.net
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I got my first ever email forward from The Beautiful Wife (TBW) this week with the subject, “Far be it from me to do this.” To begin to understand TBW, you need to recall Groucho’s line about not wanting to join any club that would have someone like him as a member. TBW refrains from putting herself out there, from getting into any position where she might appear ridiculous. Of course, almost everyone has a dose of this particular affliction, TBW has the full-blown disease. So when she sent me an email with a bunch of funky photos of stairs, I thought I’d better post about it. Not that she reads these posts, but still…
The curvy stair pictured below gives a kind of walking on a boat feel.
Looking across the stairs gives an even odder sensation.
The stairs below have a fun angular quality that combines with the wood grain to be beautiful. Wouldn’t it be fun to trot up these stairs to bed each night? Especially for kids.
Below are some stairs that probably shouldn’t be in a Dementia wing…probably shouldn’t be anywhere in a retirement community. In fact, maybe they just shouldn’t be anywhere.
And finally, I’m always a sucker for cantilevers. Defying gravity rocks.
Here’s your problem. You have over 1 Billion people to identify (let’s call them Indians). How do you set up a system that gathers and tracks identity data? To add some fun, many of the folks can’t read or write, don’t know their birth date and lots of the laborers have worked so hard they’ve worn off their fingerprints.
The Economist recently reported that the Indian government has undertaken to positively identify and give a Social Security type number with biometric data to its 1.2B citizens. Since hundreds of millions lack documents, addresses or even surnames, the project seems even trickier. Of course, the successful completion of the project could greatly reduce corruption and improve the efficiency of financial transactions. The upside to getting this done and done right is huge.
The Indian government contracted this project in a creative manner. They chose three contractors to:
The fascinating part of the contracting process involves which firm gets the most work. The firm that does the fastest and most accurate job gets 50% of the work, while the second best firm gets 30% and the worst firm gets 20%. This allocation gets reassessed often, so a firm can move up and obtain more work (and more rupees) by getting better.
Now think about how we typically award projects in construction contracting. Public bids go to the lowest cost bidder (regardless of their reputation or ability to get the job done well…other than requiring a bonding company to vouch for them). Private bids generally also focus on the lowest cost, though most of us limit our invited bid list.
I understand contracting for a building project isn’t the same as gathering biometric data, but I’m challenged to try to contract more creatively. I’m not sure where it goes, but I will contemplate how I can improve the contracting in my business. Do you have any ideas or thoughts you’d like to share?
For some Friday fun, the video below show the trials of an excited bricklayer. It really does pay to keep your mind on your work.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KV3vlNJdv8M&feature=related
Hope you have a great weekend. Enjoy the Super Bowl commercials. Pay attention to what they say and how they are saying it. Strive to understand trends and think about how you could use them to your benefit.
On February 3, 1959 Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J. P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson, as well as the pilot, Roger Peterson all died in a plane crash in Clear Lake, Iowa. They were on a 24 city tour in the Mid-West and had been traveling in an old bus with a broken heater. It was that cold that the drummer was treated for frostbite. Apparently, Buddy was frustrated with the bus and not having any clean laundry, so he proposed that they charter a plane to the next city. Three of the musicians each paid $36 for the flight. Richie Valens won the right to his seat in a coin toss with one of the other band members.
Waylon Jennings was going to fly, but when he heard the Big Bopper had the flu, he gave him his seat. From an interview years later, it was reported that when Holly learned that Jennings wasn’t going to fly, he said in jest, “Well, I hope your ol’ bus freezes up” and Jennings responded, also in jest, “Well, I hope your ol’ plane crashes”. This exchange of words would haunt Jennings for the rest of his life.
On Tuesday of this week, I got the news that my friend Bruce Jackson had just died in a plane crash in Death Valley, CA. He was piloting and alone in the single engine plane. Bruce was a mentor to me on the 1978 Bruce Springsteen tour. He was the lead audio engineer and house mixer, while I was the sound roadie that hung the PA system and helped mic the stage. In the parlance of the time, he was a wheel and I was a puke.
I was 21 years old and trying to figure out what it meant to be a man. Bruce Jackson, George Travis (the rigger) and Bruce Springsteen all modeled some great attributes that have stayed with me.
At every show, Bruce Jackson, Bruce Springsteen and I would walk every seat, listening to the E Street Band play and critiquing the audio delivery for that evening’s concert attendee. When Springsteen didn’t like the sound, Jackson would make suggestions, then tell me to go and make the changes (generally tilting speakers or adding more speakers). Since Bruce Jackson mixed monitors for Elvis and Bruce Springsteen was a big Elvis fan, I remember they’d often talk about Elvis.
I stayed friends with Bruce Jackson over the years. When I was building my first large building project for Pelger Engineering and Construction (Clair Brothers Audio), Bruce came out to the job site and reviewed my work. I was acting as Job Superintendent and Project Manager and neck deep in details. I’ll always remember Bruce saying to me, “Nedly, this is really impressive, this is something I couldn’t do.”
Since Bruce’s confidence was almost limitless, I took this as one of the highest compliments of my life. We are all going to miss you, Bruce Jackson. You took your God-given talents and used them well, you had fun, you changed the audio world.
My prayers are with your wife Terri and three children.
Building Information Modeling (BIM), Green Building Design (LEED) and lots of other specific design practices like LED lighting or daylighting design all promise to improve building design. Of course, we’ve been hearing those promises for many years, why should now be the time when change escalates?
Energy prices have bounced up and down for years. When I was in college, I won a grant to do alternative energy research from the US Dept of Energy. It was 1980 and I thought energy prices would rise at a rate well above inflation for most of my lifetime. The experts were predicting all the oil supplies would be exhausted by 2000. This thinking of coming oil scarcity was widely accepted at that time. It was wrong.
The ethanol biofuel that I was working on never made economic sense with the continuation of low energy costs. I think we are in a new time when energy costs will rise above the cost of inflation. The discovery of the Marcellus shale gas at many locations around the world will probably keep prices from hitting crisis levels, but cheap energy has finally died.
Many state governments (and much of Europe) have furthered that energy price escalation by requiring reasonably large chunks of their electricity to be produced from alternate (particularly solar) energy. Once these laws are passed and 30 year capital investments made, the laws become challenging to repeal. Think lots of bankruptcies of major firms vs everyone paying a bit more for their electricity. The politicians won’t struggle too long on that choice.
So energy prices will go up, how does that affect building design? Don’t expect too much innovation from design professionals. All but the top, marquis firms get so squeezed on fee pricing that they won’t be investing heavily in new ways to get things done. With the Design-Bid model, the design professional just don’t have a big enough piece of the pie to really force the major changes. Few owners want to pay 30% higher design fees for the promise that life cycle building costs should be lower.
The big changes will come through the design/build or other similar collaborative approaches. The construction industry probably has too many firms for the work available for the next few years. The firms that thrive will have to be offering more than just low first costs. So the construction firms need to innovate to survive. We haven’t had that scenario before.
Hospitals will likely be leading the way, since their many departments each have so many processes that can be maximized and integrated. Consider all the construction (and later energy) inefficiency and waste that typically occurs in emergency rooms, radiology suites, operating rooms, etc. Office buildings, schools, churches, etc will follow.
If you want to stay in the game, you’d better be thinking about how to improve the process (which includes saving energy) in the projects you build. Begin by putting the issue on the table. Now.