
Ned Pelger's blog on construction, design and other weirdness. Email him at ned@constructionknowledge.net
Please help him win his readership competition against his son Lex at the Construction Phone Apps Blog
Meeting with one of my customers yesterday, he started telling me about the phone app he uses for bike riding. We both previously tried MapMyRide, which created some nice maps and ride info. The newest best thing, he told me, was Strava.com, which does the following:
So when will we all be using smartphones to track construction production? Imagine having perfect data from every employee on a job site. The technology exists, we’re just not bothering to use it yet. The upside is huge for the firms that get this right.
If thinking big intrigues you, read this amazing Wired article about A/B testing. Google and Amazon, two of my favorite companies, no longer sit around debating changes. Everything gets live tested with an A option vs a B option. They’ve been A/B Test fanatics for the past decade. What they discover is their best instincts are never nearly as good as what the market data provides.
They deride the old decision making process: HiPPO—”highest-paid person’s opinion.” The HiPPO decisions put ego first instead of data and rarely are great.
Think about all the decisions you’ve seen made in building design, most are fair to poor. I’m not sure how the A/B Test model will help that, but I think there will be a way.
At the very least, start thinking about data and testing in your day to day operations. Don’t let the future get too far ahead of your business.
A 625-foot-tall, $230 million New York Wheel will be built on Staten Island overlooking the Statue of Liberty and the downtown Manhattan skyline. 1,440 passengers at a time will ride through the sky and get a varying NYC view. The developers hope to take about 5M folks a year on this ride.
After the 1,063′ Eiffel Tower was built for the 1889 Paris Exhibition, tall was in vogue. So George Washington Gale Ferris, Jr. designed and built his 264′ observation wheel for the 1893 Chicago Exhibition. As a Pittsburgh engineer and bridge builder, Ferris understood how to use the 71 tons of steel to make the structure safe. The wonderful photo below gives a sense of the structure.
Today the Singapore Flyer, at 541′ and shown below, holds the record for world’s largest Ferris Wheel. It’s about 98′ taller than the London Eye.
The free ferry to Staten Island currently carries about 2M visitors a year, but there isn’t much to do on the island after the free ferry ride. This big ferris wheel aims to change that.
The $230M project will be all privately funded, in fact they plan to pay Staten Island $2.5M per year rent. As Staten Island Live reports:
But there’s much more to this project than just the New York Wheel. The mayor also announced that BFC Partners will build Harbor Commons, a 420,000-square-foot retail complex adjacent to the Wheel and ballpark. It will house up to 75 designer outlet stores and a 120,000-square-foot hotel, with a 15,000-square-foot banquet facility.
The fact that this project is actively being planned should provide some optimism for anyone in the construction business. When developers start getting rammy and proposing big projects, recoveries follow.
I found the letters below at a young friend’s blog Perpenduum and they make me laugh out loud. Have a quick read:
I love unexpected and clever responses, especially to self-important jerks.
While humor can be risky, the management of a construction project provides too many opportunities to pass up. Don’t be too worried about offending someone, if they can’t take a joke…well, I guess they need to learn how.
Twenty years ago, then Virginia governor L. Douglas Wilder announced that he would build a $100M US Slavery Museum. Ten years ago, The Silver Companies, a real estate firm, donated 38 acres of prime land near Interstate 95 in Fredericksburg. Pei Partnership Architects spent more than $5M on building design.
So what’s happening now? The city filed a lien against the land for $300,000 of unpaid back taxes. Pei filed a lien on the land for the full fee amount. The Museum filed for bankruptcy, then rescinded their request. Their webpage looks like it’s been co-opted by some attorneys writing about business law and lawyer marketing. To make matters worse, the donated land has a restriction that requires it to be used for a museum.
It’s a shame that such a noble project has been so mismanaged. I understand that when an innovative project begins, it’s impossible to delineate all the challenges. It takes a certain leap of faith to move any project forward. But that faith needs to be backed up with intense budgeting, scheduling, and management. It’s the difference between a black eye and a feather in one’s cap. As an aside, does anyone besides my son recognize that last reference?
I got an email this morning from Brent Darnell, a construction writer and consultant (and has actually worked in this crazy industry). He focuses on the huge gains that can be made by construction guys improving their emotional intelligence and relationships. These important lessons will make you more valuable at work and at home. If you’re a life long learner (and you should be saying yes to that supposition), then put in some effort to better understand and improve your emotional intelligence.
Brent has offerer all 6 of his books for free downloads from now till 10/6/12. After that they will be $0.99/each, but why not get them now for free? His books include The People Profit Connection: How Emotional Intelligence Can Maximize People Skills & Maximize Your Profits which has sold over 30,000 copies (a huge number for a construction book).
He also offers The Tao of Emotional Intelligence which teaches emotional intelligence through 82 sayings from the I Ching. Then his The Tough Guy Survival Kit includes 3 earlier books: Stress Management, Time Management and Life Balance for Tough Guys, Relationship Skills for Tough Guys and Communication and Presentation Skills for Tough Guys.
So I strongly encourage to take a couple of minutes and go to Smashwords to get the free downloads. I downloaded the PDF versions, because I tend to read on my tablet or laptop. If you use Kindle or Nook, those versions are available as well.
Here’s a great opportunity to improve your people skills. Trust me, you need it.