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    • daleD Offline
      dale
      last edited by

      Hey Simon
      Fickle weather here.
      Last week we dipped to minus -19(C), yesterday was +6 (C) and rained a lot of the snow away, and the went to below 0, and snowed like crazy.
      But winter can be sooo beautiful.Screen shot 2011-11-28 at 6.12.17 AM.png
      I will still do some exterior work, even in the cold, but we plan on a mixed set of siding which will include stone and stucco, so that will not be until spring.
      By the way I really appreciate all the links you post that take me on interesting paths, and a real vote of thanks to your Great Grandfather. Structural concrete has allowed some of the great beauties of architecture to be built, and I'm sure in his time it was scoffed at by the Status Quo.

      Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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      • simon le bonS Offline
        simon le bon
        last edited by

        @unknownuser said:

        By the way I really appreciate all the links you post that take me on interesting paths, and a real vote of thanks to your Great Grandfather

        Dear Dale, I'm so pleased you appreciate (and sorry for bumping this way your thread). Searching to find more in order to give some powder to this reply, I have found very interesting things (and especially a book written by my great grandfather which I didn't know). I have found also that the real big men around reinforced concrete at this time were Eugène Freyssinet and Albert Caquot. So would you please let me bump a little more and for the last time your thread with these last links, mostly in french. ( no comment: just in the case people be interested)

        PELNARD-CONSIDERE-CAQUOT 1994 035
        http://www.archivesnationales.culture.gouv.fr/camt/fr/egf/donnees_efg/1994_035+2007_048/1994_035_INV.pdf
        Experimental Researches on Reinforced Concrete (1906) by Armand Considère
        http://www.archive.org/details/experimentalres01consgoog
        Albert Caquot portrait: [url=http://sabix.org/bulletin/:27vfjpjp]bulletin[/url:27vfjpjp] de l'école polytechnique ([url=http://sabix.org/:27vfjpjp]Sabix[/url:27vfjpjp])
        [url:27vfjpjp]http://sabix.org/bulletin/b28/28.html[/url:27vfjpjp]
        [url:27vfjpjp]http://sabix.revues.org/370?lang=en[/url:27vfjpjp]
        Les chocolats Menier, le pont Hardi et Armand Considère
        [url:27vfjpjp]http://pone.lateb.pagesperso-orange.fr/pont hardi.htm[/url:27vfjpjp]
        http://pone.lateb.pagesperso-orange.fr/armand%20considere.htm

        Cintre du pont la Caille sur le ravin des Usses, en Haute-Savoie (1928).

        http://sabix.revues.org/docannexe/image/370/img-2.jpg

        Le pont de la Caille sur le ravin des Usses (1928), record mondial à l’époque

        http://sabix.revues.org/docannexe/image/370/img-3.jpg

        end of the bump 😉
        ++simon

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        • T Offline
          tim
          last edited by

          Hey Dale, isn't it fun doing the inside 'details'? I've been doing trim on my self-build timber frame for what seems like forever and it still has a want to go. I think the trick is to make sure you make some progress every day and just keep at it.

          I have a build blog athttp://www.rowledge.org/tim/building/building/blog.html for anyone interested - including full SU and LO files.

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          • daleD Offline
            dale
            last edited by

            Simon
            What a beautiful structure! As usual you have snet me on a really interesting exploration.

            Tim
            Thanks for the link to your blog.
            What a beautiful house, and I really admire your attention to detail, but given your background in computers and code, I'm sure detail is second nature.
            We seem to have a lot of similar taste ( ICF, Douglas Fir )and influences (Tedd Benson, Sarah Susanka) plus a love of woodworking (and tools) and time in the hallways of Colleges of Art. Not to mention the "From SketchUp to Reality" path of house building.
            I hope you don't mind... I poached one of your Illustrations in SketchUp to encourage people to visit your website and blog. Well worth the visit and really inspiring.Screen shot 2011-11-30 at 6.12.06 AM.png
            Here is the link againhttp://www.rowledge.org/tim/building/building/blog.html

            Keep on trimming!
            Oh and I still consult for a Nanaimo Company, and do make it down to the Island from time to time.
            Maybe we can meet sometime, and I can buy you a beer.
            Cheers

            Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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            • EscapeArtistE Offline
              EscapeArtist
              last edited by

              Fantastic! We are considering building our own slipform-style stone small home in the woods ourselves. Nice to see we aren't the only crazy ones out there with the idea. Thanks for the progress shots.

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              • GaieusG Offline
                Gaieus
                last edited by

                Dale, have you considered a submission to here?
                http://sketchupdate.blogspot.com/2011/11/how-do-you-make-ideas-real-with.html

                I think it would be very a interesting read for many. 👍

                Gai...

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                • daleD Offline
                  dale
                  last edited by

                  @gaieus said:

                  Dale, have you considered a submission to here?
                  http://sketchupdate.blogspot.com/2011/11/how-do-you-make-ideas-real-with.html

                  I think it would be very a interesting read for many. 👍

                  Thanks for this Gaieus, I wasn't aware of this. There are some quite interesting projects shown.
                  I will have to give it a go.

                  Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                  • daleD Offline
                    dale
                    last edited by

                    Meanwhile, things are plodding along.
                    We finished the stone floors, well all except my thermostat floor probes haven't arrived yet, so I had to leave out an area where we can insert those.Screen shot 2011-12-01 at 7.24.38 AM.png
                    The Stone is a silver mica, and came out a beautiful grey blue when we put the finish on it.Screen shot 2011-12-01 at 7.24.56 AM.png
                    The drywallers are hard at it, just one more coat of mud on the basement to go, and they have all the upper floor ceilings hung. Here's a picture of Todd, I'm sure cursing my skylite chute 😄


                    Screen shot 2011-12-01 at 7.25.14 AM.png

                    Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                    • daleD Offline
                      dale
                      last edited by

                      So with the drywallers inside, I went outside and started soffits.
                      Weather is hovering right around the freezing mark, so it's not unpleasant at all.
                      The soffits angle back down to the wall from the fascia, and have miters on the corners. So the old compound miter head scratching.Screen shot 2011-12-01 at 7.25.34 AM.pngScreen shot 2011-12-01 at 7.25.46 AM.png
                      The soffits are pine 1x6 tongue and groove, and of course require venting, so I let the vents in to the pine.Screen shot 2011-12-01 at 7.25.55 AM.png
                      And with the pine started.Screen shot 2011-12-01 at 7.26.05 AM.png
                      So it's back up the scaffold I go.
                      Cheers!

                      Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                      • daleD Offline
                        dale
                        last edited by

                        Oh and since this is a SketchUp related thread.
                        Since I haven't been on the tools for 7 years or so, I got lazy and figured out the compound miters in Skp.
                        The soffits have a 5' (1.52m) overhang on the front and 3'(.91m) on the sidesScreen shot 2011-11-30 at 9.35.26 AM.pngScreen shot 2011-11-30 at 9.39.01 AM.pngScreen shot 2011-11-30 at 9.39.32 AM.pngScreen shot 2011-11-30 at 9.46.12 AM.png

                        Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                        • T Offline
                          tim
                          last edited by

                          @dale said:

                          What a beautiful house, and I really admire your attention to detail, but given your background in computers and code, I'm sure detail is second nature.

                          That and being borderline sociopath/obsessive-compulsive…

                          For anyone else contemplating their own build I'd reiterate that obsession with detail thing; so many contractors are happy to let precision slip because it's just a job to them, day in, day out. If you show them the potential for making something nicer than they usually get to do, take part in the process and the work, turn up with enthusiasm every day, then it is amazing how much harder most of them will try. Details matter during the build, after the build as you live there and later when you want to change things.

                          It's also good to live on the Fine Homebuilding website for a year or two to learn (at least) the words and phrases that communicate some knowledge of what you're up to. Better yet, you're likely to know something new in the field that might interest your subcontractors.

                          @dale said:

                          Oh and I still consult for a Nanaimo Company, and do make it down to the Island from time to time.
                          Maybe we can meet sometime, and I can buy you a beer.
                          Cheers

                          Nice idea Dale. Sounds like a plan…

                          Oh, and

                          @dale said:

                          Since I haven't been on the tools for 7 years or so, I got lazy and figured out the compound miters in Skp.

                          I can't count the number of special printouts I did from the SU model to illustrate a detail of the roof decking angles, or rafter tenons, or electrical layout or, or, or. Invaluable.

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