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

February 4, 2011

Keep Your Mind on Your Work
Filed under: Masonry — Tags: — nedpelger

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.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

February 3, 2011

The Day the Music Died
Filed under: Ned Weirdness — Tags: — nedpelger

On February 3, 1959 Buddy HollyRitchie 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.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

February 1, 2011

Better Building Design: Coming Soon to America?
Filed under: Energy — Tags: — nedpelger

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.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 31, 2011

NC Bridge Project a 50% Off Sale
Filed under: Industry outlook — Tags: — nedpelger

A Balfour Beatty Joint Venture was the low bidder at $65M for a North Carolina bridge project expected to cost $130M.  The Winston-Salem Journal noted that the I-85 Yadkin River Bridge project covers about 4 miles of road and the bridge widening.

What does a bid like this tell us about our industry? Perhaps a few things:

  1. Design engineers and architects are often terrible at budgeting construction costs.
  2. The construction bid market is amazingly competitive these days.
  3. Balfour Beatty really hammers down the estimates.

I remember when Balfour Beatty beat GA &FC Wagman (a part of the company I was working for at the time) on the Lancaster Rt 30 road and bridge project. It was about $100M and Wagman was second by $83,000. Joe Wagman said they lost it by less than 1/10th of a percent or “Coffee and Donuts money”.

When Balfour Beatty was working on the project, they got in numerous disputes with PennDot and headed to litigation. I heard one of the Balfour Beatty guys was talking with a PennDot guy and mentioning that things were headed to the lawyers. The PennDot guy said, “That’s ok, we have attorneys on staff.”

The Balfour Beatty guy replied, “Yeh, so do we, but our guys went to Harvard.”

Later I read in the newspaper that the judges mostly ruled against PennDot. It wasn’t a big surprise.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 28, 2011

The Adventures of a Carpenter Gone Primitive…or “Who is that Masked Crusader?”
Filed under: Carpentry — Tags: — nedpelger

I’ve written previously about Randy, the amazing former carpenter who sold all his tools and decided to go primitive. He lives on our 5 acres, trains the alpacas, cooks the best meals known to this man, cultivates the field, builds whatever pops into his head and generally just does what makes sense around here…at least what makes sense to him.

Recently he got a call from an alpaca breeder. She wants to sell her stud male, but he’d become so aggressive with her that he’d attack her whenever she got near him. She couldn’t sell him acting that wild. Randy’s animal handling skills are uncanny and he agreed to give it a try. After the first day, he came home spit on, bit on and butted. This was one big, mean alpaca. He had a bad case of Berserk Male Syndrome (BMS) which comes from alpacas losing their respect for humans. BMS can become severe and lead to putting the animal down.

So Randy is in Day 2 of the battle, though he created a shield to block the smelly spit and intimidate the alpaca. As you can see below, the shield has BMS with a line through it and the mottoes, “Death Before Dishonor” and “Don’t Spit on Me.”

Of course, the shield had to be made to effectively do battle with the beast.

Do you think Randy has too much time on his hands? I’ll give you an update later on how the alpaca training went…because so far it’s BMS Alpaca 1, Randy 0.

Maybe carpentry as a profession doesn’t sound so bad after all?

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 26, 2011

How to Tell a Joke
Filed under: People Skills — Tags: — nedpelger

Many folks don’t realize how important jokes are in construction. Typically, we have some fun on the jobsite. The guy who knows how to tell a joke well has a certain status. My brother sent me this video clip today of Buddy Hackett telling a joke about a city guy, a country guy and a duck. It’s hilarious. Just watch how Buddy tells the joke.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDvgAbdsvOQ&feature=player_embedded#!

It’s a snowy day here in Central PA, a good day to laugh at some construction humor and just relax a bit.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 25, 2011

Snow Rollers
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

Ever heard of snow rollers? Neither had I till I saw the photo below in a Dark Roasted Blend post about environmental art. It’s beautiful to see the snow roll down the Victorian building detail.

I blogged about beauty yesterday, then went out to a job site and saw some lights installed in what appeared to be a haphazard fashion that just looked wrong. As I put together the process of how they got located there, I realized it made perfect sense to the lighting designer, but just looked terribly out of place. Andy Hess, a construction superintendent with a great artistic eye, suggested we paint a stripe in the wall that would pull the whole design together. I loved the idea. We went from an obvious mistake to a cool design feature.

That’s one of the reasons I love this industry. We have so much room for creativity at all levels.

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 22, 2011

Construction Superintendent’s Checklists: Helpful or Useless?
Filed under: Construction Superintendents — Tags: — nedpelger

I’m planning a re-write of ConstructionKnowledge.net Knowledge Database info and I need your help.

Have you ever used them or found the The Construction Superintendent’s Checklists helpful? I’ve been adding to them for 25 years, but wonder if anyone actually uses them. Please post a comment or send me an email if you ever use the Super’s checklists.

Don’t be afraid to hurt my feelings, I’ve boondoggled before. When you try new things and partake in adventures, sometimes lots of work swirls down the drain. That’s ok, because the things that do work compensate. And at least life isn’t boring.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

January 21, 2011

The Price of Meat has Just Gone Up and Your Old Phone has Just Gone Down
Filed under: Industry outlook — Tags: — nedpelger

Paraphrasing Frank Zappa from “Don’t You Jive Me with That Cosmic Debris“, I just saw a useful post about things that will cost less in 2011 and things that will cost more. These two posts should help you with your planning for the year.

The 12 Things that will Cost Less in 2011 illustrates some fascinating trends. For example, the Kindle book reader cost $259 in 2009, $130 in 2010 and should get to $99 in 2011. A 2 TerraByte (TB) hard drive went from $140 in 2009, to $90 in 2010 and should get to $50 in 2011. For $50, you could never have to worry about computer storage quantities again.

How about things going up? The 20 Things that will Cost More in 2011 also is worth the read. Car Insurance, Chocolate, Airfare, Cars, Food, Water, Gold, Ammunition and Movie Tickets are a few of the culprits. The fast food dollar menu items will soon be only a memory. And of course, postal rates and college tuition will continue their extended run above inflation rates.

What about construction pricing? Can it go down any further? I really doubt it. Lots of firms have been working below costs for the past two years. As these firm slide into bankruptcy, the cost of construction will rise. So the secret is…don’t go bankrupt before it gets better.

It’s like the Steve Martin joke about how to make a million dollars and not pay taxes. First, get a million dollars. Then, when the IRS agent knocks on your door and asks why you didn’t pay taxes, just say, “I forgot.”

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »