Monday, December 29, 2008

Z-forms, flow throughs, and other tools of the trade

(btw that little yellow thing is our multi gas monitor "sniffer" making certain no toxic waste is in the air...)

Twice our z-form shields collapsed. We had a ten foot unshielded dig under a steam tunnel, and a typically dry sewer line decided to rage during our replacement of the existing pipe creating a three foot deep soup of caca straight from the chemistry building. S*&! happens. When you're tying in to an existing sewer line, however, it may happen in the form of a river. And when it happens behind the UVa Chem building, you just hope that the undergrads remember to put their hazardous waste in the proper disposal bin... So fierce the raging river that our three inch pump made not a dent, and a four inch diesel line was required... All in a days work. We gotter' done and got outta there before four PM.


Well at least the 4" Godwin pump (see bottom right) is working and the sewage swamp is low enough to walk around safely.



Setting the pipe - Dan you are the man for getting under that steam tunnel - yes we use chemical detectors aka sniffers... yet it stinks, especially the pipe glues for PVC.




Whattup Harley - we got real flow :)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Real art rests in our streets


"The art is IN the walls"
—Sally Mann

So spoke Sally Mann upon exiting the gallery. I have never heard a more accurate summary of an exhibit. While some acclaimed "artist" had draped some dreadfully dreary rags along the wall, Mrs. Mann spent her time studying the lay of the sheet rock, the joinery along the edges of the wall. An exceptional builder had framed and remodeled the gallery. A perceptive eye, Mrs. Mann saw under the sloppy tripe to the beauty beneath - where 2x4 studs and 16 penny nails sculpted a gracious and human space. The real art rested in the walls.

There is no one word in any Aboriginal language for the term 'art'. Art forms are viewed as an integral part of life and the celebration of life. Penny Tripcony

Art - the word now used of toothpaste spills came from a glorious Roman past - Ars - meaning skill or craft. It may be applied to any action that requires skill - as such many of the greatest artists I have ever known work in the field of construction. Industrial artists of the third millennium - greater civilization is their craft - indoor plumbing, electricity, running water. Trademarks of the work, the ars, of our land.

Those two 24" water mains running like Tron characters through a ditch line - those are pieces of modern industrial art. High art. Pure art. More whimsy than you can shake a stick at. The real art rests in our streets. Trackhoes and shovels are our paintbrushes. Earth is our medium. And back to work.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Steam Tunnels Part 2 -

OLD MAP OF THE TUNNELS - ALLEGEDLY FROM THE EARLY 90'S


The Bold and the Ruthless gets a new site - nice graphics tweaks too plus a great map of the tunnels... These folks are clearly having fun with the local scene - on a side note the edible Charlottesville deserves some credit - and during the recent summer at the South Lawn Project many a construction worker enjoyed the figs, apples, and plums in Pav IX, the pears in Pav 1, and generally napping around in the rest.... something about those serpentine walls... Perhaps when (if) they finish exploiting UVa grounds they'll explore the outlying lairs of C-ville too... Woolen Mills is awesome. The lochs along the river. And then there are the rolling hills..... Ah well fun stuff....

NB potential night hikers - the new steam tunnels we're laying are SERIOUSLY not great places to explore. There's no space plus two flavors of nasty bodasty insulation around the lines and the tar laid down to seal the boxes is still emitting toxic fumes.

DON'T DO IT (I know, thrill of the hunt and all, but really, there are much more beautiful places... this is just a dark, smelly, toxic hole.)

For more information read here Channel 19 News from last year.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Tunneling under UVa's famed steam tunnels

The UVa Steam Tunnels have a long and glorious past dating to the 1950's. Since then many students have spent hours and days wandering the underground maze. Working beneath them poses certain obstacles- hand digging is required and shoring must be installed as work progresses. OSHA guidelines for excavation are available, and must be tailored to apply logically to the situation.

1)The top view of a 50 foot long ditch. Visible as raised areas from the yellow ladder looking down the ditch are a steam tunnel, an electric line, another steam tunnel, a water main barely visible, and then another steam tunnel. That is a 24' ladder and it rests on the bank above a sewer line we need replace and move a few inches down and to the left. Digging under the steam tunnels must be done by hand. That's what makes it what it is.


The outside of the tunnel




A view from half way under a steam tunnel, about two hours in to digging ~11AM. By ~3PM we were through to the other side.




The next day with the laser set and Mike digging to make the grade ready for more pipe.

Monday, December 1, 2008

toilet humor


It is construction, and at the beginning of the day we were greeted with someone's Thanksgiving remains. We're not just talking s--- here, we're working and negotiating with it on professional level.

With that in mind some antics are certain to arise, providing certain levity and well... toilet humor.

A collection of favorites



















And it is all good, because at the end of the day we are all greeted with some of these