Category Archives: Design

Taco Rack – Part 2

There has been a lot of exciting developments the past few weeks. Paramount of which is the purchase and move into our new home! Amongst the chaos of Realtors, lawyers and mortgage brokers I did manage to complete the cargo rack  for my Tacoma in time to transport the first of our possessions to the new digs.

The process is lengthy and about as exciting as watching stain, or urethane, dry.  In fact that is precisely what I did for almost 3 weeks.  Each night after the 45 minute commute home I had enough time to apply exactly one-half of one coat of either stain or sealant to the disassembled cargo rack.

The following is largely a photographic documentation of the finishing process, and as a bonus, the first few truck loads of items we moved into the new place using the still-not-fully-cured cargo rack.

Sand

Stain and Seal

Assemble

Final

Move

Fin.

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Filed under Building, Design, Tacoma Rack, Truck

Get a load of this… an update

Don’t let the title fool you, much of my recent activity has been quite benign, you know taxes and all that, but there have been a few highlights worth sharing.  As previously noted, The Wife and I have been quite busy.  At this point I believe this observation bears some explanation.

amplify logoWe have been organizing many changes within my home church and in coming weeks we will have the opportunity to see many of these to fruition.  Amplify, a new contemporary worship service will be commencing at Seneca Castle United Methodist Church Sunday evenings beginning April 17.  This service represents a culmination of a lot of hard work and preparation from many individuals.  The research, prayer, and study that has led us to this point has fostered a closer sense of community and renewed momentum for change within the church…and the new service hasn’t even started yet.

There have been other smaller projects that have developed in tandem with the creation of the new service.  I am designing and building my first website.  A lengthy process involved learning HTML and relevant software.  My first creation is the Seneca Castle UMC homepage which I created using basic HTML code.  The next will surly utilize some development software for assistance.

In addition to virtual construction, I am also facilitating some rather intensive renovation projects within the sanctuary that will expand the flexibility of our existing chancel and increase the usable space at the front of the sanctuary.

financial peaceOutside of church I have been stretched my techie muscles by reformatting one and a half computers.  (The half is where the stretching comes in, the laptop is 8 years old with a monitor that doesn’t work, I don’t have the original OS CD or administrative rights.)  I have moved on to a new book, by recommendation from Bryan, my local financial expert: Financial Peace: Restoring Financial Hope to you and your family by Dave Ramsey.  But don’t worry, our financial straits are not as fraught with disaster as the title of the book would make it seem.  The lack of hope alludes to the authors past, Ramsey was a successful real estate investor, lost everything, and climbed back out to lecture, teach, and write about financial success, the book is his story.  I’ll let you know what I think when I get through it.

gordon freemanI also managed to reinstall Half-Life 2 on a freshly reformatted computer, through much grief and stress thanks largely to the inadequacies of the Steam gaming platform.  The Half-Life saga is one of my guilty pleasures I choose to indulge in occasionally.  I love the story and enjoy exploring the universe created around a dynamic cast of characters.  Every few years I load up the past games and play through the whole series just for the experience.

I suppose the most unusual project I have tackles lately resulted directly from a walk in the woods with my father.  Each spring I wander through the woods that borders Flint Creek behind my house and dig through the debris that was washed ashore by the swell of the water as the earth thaws out.  Usually we find a host of old bottles, usually some plastic lawn furniture or kid’s toys or sleds or snow shovels left to close to the water’s edge.  This year we found all of that, and a beaver.

In one especially large log jam that has been accumulating for many years at a sharp bend in the river we found the carcass of a large beaver pinned between two logs.  We do not know how it died or ended up in the pile of logs, but it was a rather noteworthy discovery as no beavers had been in evidence in the area around my home my entire childhood.  I grabbed a few photos and we returned to the house.  A few days later though, and after some pointed research, I decided it was just too good a find to let the waterlogged carcass rot to nothing out there.  Part of it may have been scientific inquiry, part of it may have been morbid curiosity, or all of it might have just been my constant desire to begin new projects, but I got it in my head that I was going to attempt to preserve the skeleton of that beaver.

beaverThis process certainly deserves a dedicated posting as the endeavor should last through the summer, but the abridged version goes like this:  I went back and broke the animal free, put it in an old metal water tub, covered it with sheet metal, hung it by its legs, removed the hide and internal organs, replaced it in the tub.  Currently, the beavers is waiting for a more through cleaning and for the temperature to increase and the discovery of dermestid beetles to clean the flesh from the bones.

beaver face

At least if I put it in a separate posting it will allow readers the option of skipping the photographs if they prefer.

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Filed under Books, Construction, Design, Games, Outdoors

The Phoenix Commotion

I believe I need to start a new “Heroes” category to file some posts under.

I found this guy the other day while browsing through some TED talks and was greatly encouraged not only by his use of sustainable design principles, but more so by his utilization of salvaged materials, or garbage.  Perhaps this could be the outlet for which I gain validation for my obscure collections and unique accumulations.

All photos come from The Phoenix Commotion website and Flickr photo stream

Dan Phillips created The Phoenix Commotion in Huntsville, Texas as a way of proving that recycled and salvaged materials are a viable option in the construction industry.  The homes they construct are impressive, especially considering the labor is provided almost exclusively by unskilled laborers and volunteers, but more impressive are the design principles and their relation to human psychology.  It wasn’t  until about half-way through the TED talk that I realized Dan Phillips had a remarkable perspective on building homes.

Cross-cut wood counter top

Storybook House

It seems, through his lectures and text, that the primary design parti while using salvaged materials is that pattern and texture create beauty.  Bone, bottles and bottle caps, corks, broken tile, discarded tires, warped and bent lumber all can be used to create repetition and texture and therefore, according to Dan Phillips, beauty.  Using simple physics lessons like “gravity pulls down” and “water runs downhill” Dan has reverted back to a more primal way of viewing home building.  Fully complying with the local building code, a powerful distinction from others with similar ideals, Dan manages to construct beautiful, logical, and healthy homes for low-income owners.

My favorite application of these sustainable concepts is the natural wood banisters and the wine cork floor

Tree House

The Phoenix Commotion uses apprentice labor to keep costs down, and although there are no positions currently available, I am extremely interested in contributing my services, and hopefully learning a bit about myself and this process or looking at materials with all their potential.

What I take away from this: collecting cast-off material is fine, as long as I can use it to create pattern, repetition, texture, and beauty.

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Filed under Architecture, Building, Construction, Design, Heroes, Houses, People, Sustainability