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CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

March 10, 2011

Stadium Seating: Buttocks or Crotch?
Filed under: Finishes — Tags: — nedpelger

I’ve been involved in various stadium seating projects over the years. It’s been fun working out the details for how to efficiently get these projects built. Here’s a dilemma that I hadn’t tried to resolve.

And the good natured response by the president of the American Seating Company.

Like so many of the things that I post about, my 28 year old son Lex shot this to me. He checks lots of sites and blogs, this one came from Letters of Note. Of course, the author of the first letter was just a wise guy trying to see what kind of response he get. It made me laugh, though, and hopefully gave you a smile as well.

I read today that toddlers laugh 400 times per day (every 2 minutes) and that number drops to 15 for average adults. As a competitor, my new goal is to laugh much more than 15 times each day so as not to be average.  Above all, I don’t want to be average.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

March 9, 2011

Don’t Blame the Construction Workers
Filed under: Productivity — Tags: — nedpelger

An ENR blog Rethinking Wrenchtime: Tell Us What’s Slowing Jobsite Production, and Why questions trade productivity. The writer noted that 40 years ago they blamed unions for featherbedding and producing low productivity. With the continual decrease in union presence, they wonder who to blame.

The American Society of Civil Engineers (by definition, engineers not deficient in common courtesy), produced a study in 2009 with the following conclusion:

Factors involving tools and consumables, materials, engineering drawing management and construction equipment were identified as having the greatest impact on productivity from the craft workers’ perspective.

I learned that truth early in my days on the jobsite and have continued to believe. A great construction supervisor can help deliver impressive trade productivity.

One of the comments on the ENR blog stated the case well.

In my view as a former journeyman, project manager and project executive, the keys to productivity are:

1. maintaining the flow of materials to the craftsmen performing the work.

2. maintaining the right ratio of Journeymen to Apprentices in order to ensure that the most difficult tasks are being performed by the most experienced craftsmen.

3. Avoid the need to stack the trades and other unnecessary inefficiencies by developing, maintaining and adjusting as needed, the best work plan possible (which includes a materials handling and delivery strategy).

4. Always involve the superintendent and general foremen in the development of the work plan and schedule.

5. Always remember two things, a safe environment is an efficient environment and you can’t buy back a bad estimate or schedule out of the labor budget. T.C.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

March 8, 2011

LED Light Bulbs: The Next Big Thing
Filed under: Electrical — Tags: — nedpelger

Light Emitting Diode (LED) lights provide low cost lighting with a long bulb life. The LED light uses electroluminescence through the semiconductor to create this light.

Introduced as an electronic component in 1962, the LED lights are just becoming commercially viable for building lighting. I’ve been following the development of these lights for a few years. Until now, they have simply been too expensive to be used except for remote locations that benefited from a super long lamp life.

The LED Waves website shows the large variety of LED bulbs and fixtures available…from the replacement for a 4′ long fluorescent tube to rope lighting. Screw in LED bulbs, dimmable and normal, also are available.

As you are working with Owners, ask them if they want to consider the benefits of LED light bulbs. For many facilities the payback will be viable and it’s a green building option whose time has come. Learn to calculate the payback for evaluating a LED light vs incandescent or fluorescent, it makes you look smart.

Try some LED bulbs in your home or office and see what you think. If you want to be a leader in this industry, keep up with the promising trends.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

March 5, 2011

Life’s Too Short for the Wrong Job
Filed under: Ned Weirdness — nedpelger

Hopefully you love your work in construction. We get to conceive, design and build things. Not many people in the world have that privilege. On the other hand, you may not like what you do. The following photos, from a German ad campaign for an online job search site, illustrate the concept of being boxed into a job you hate.

The caption, by the way, translates as, Life’s Too Short for the Wrong Job.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

March 3, 2011

BART Leads
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

I remember riding the subway in San Francisco in the mid 1970s. BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) had just built lots of track and stations. Their system was so automated, they claimed to not even need drivers. Since I was traveling from city to city as a rock and roll roadie, I had opportunity to ride most of the subways in the country. BART was the best.

So when my buddy Jim Gravesand, an engineer I worked with in the early days of civilization, went to work for BART in the 1990s, it was fun to keep track of what BART was doing. Jim just sent me this video of their latest station, built without Federal money. The public/private partnership executed a difficult project, building over an operating subway line and between a divided highway.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35BiPbmmERw&feature=email

The video shows some great construction footage as well as a cameo appearance by my old buddy Gravey. He comments on the importance of getting this project done without federal funding. As the USA moves into the new reality, projects like this should be studied and understood.

As I often opine, think deeply about the future and how it’s likely to look. You will be much better positioned to prosper if you have a sense of where to stand.

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