Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Towns Along Milwaukee Road (Chicago to Mobridge)


South Dakota           
  1. Mobridge           8. Andover 
  2. Glenham           9. Bristol
  3. Bowdle            10. Webster
  4. Roscoe            11. Waubay
  5. Ipswich            12. Milbank
  6. Aberdeen        
  7. Groton
Minnesota 
      13. Big Stone City    20. Bird Island        27. Red Wing
      14. Ortonville          21. Glencoe            28. Wabasha
      15. Odesa               22. Benton             29. Winona
      16. Appleton            23. Minnetonka
      17. Montevideo         24. Minneapolis
      18. Granite Falls       25. St. Paul
      19. Renville             26. Hastings

Wisconsin 
      30. La Crescent        37. Portage              44. Ranney
      31. La Crosse          38. Fox Lake             45. Pondout 
      32. Sparta              39. Horicon
      33. Tomah              40. Iron Ridge
      34. New Lisbon        41. Granville
      35. Mauston            42. Milwaukee
      36. Kilbourn            43. Racine

Illinois
       46. Glenview
       47. Chicago 

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Contact Information - Footings

After calling many people and construction businesses in and around the Mobridge area, here is the current information I have for the contractor I found to do the footings for the site. I was in contact with Matt from Keller Construction.

Keller Construction
Mobridge, SD

Office phone #: (605) 845-5777
Cell phone #: (605) 848-0169
Email: keller777@live.com

When I talked to him a couple weeks ago, he said he was able to do the footings when we need him to. Sending a group up to mark the exact spot of the footings would be helpful or Brian has mentioned marking the spots of the footings on a site drawing. That drawing and drawing of a footing would need to be sent to his email.


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Flag Pole Foundation


NOTE: THE FOLLOWING FOUNDATION DIMENSIONS ARE FOR OPTIMUM SOIL CONDITIONS.  DIMENSIONS MAY HAVE TO BE INCREASED IN YOUR AREA.
CONSULT A LOCAL FOUNDATION ENGINEER FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Exposed Height
A
BC
20' & 25'3'0"24"30"
30'3'6"30"36"
35'4'0"36"42"
40' & 45'4'6"42"48"
50' & 60'5'6"54"60"
70'7'6"66"72"
80'8'6"66"72"

IMPORTANT: PRIOR TO BEGINNING ANY EXCAVATION, VERIFY THE LOCATION
OF ALL BURIED UTILITIES, WATERLINES AND DOWNSPOUTS.

1. Use the foundation detail above to determine the required width and depth of your hole based on the exposed height of the flag pole being installed. Hole my be dug round or square.

2. Once excavated, locate the 1/2" x 12" long threaded rod, 3  hex nuts and 6" square plate in the carton with the foundation tube or the carton of flag pole accessories if the tube was shipped with flag pole. Screw threaded rod into the nut welded on the bottom plate of the foundation tube. Secure it in place using one of the hex nuts. Thread another nut onto the rod until it is 6" from the bottom of the foundation tubes bottom plate. Lower the 6" plate to rest on the this nut. Thread remaining nut to the 6" plate. Secure the plate by tightening both nuts.

3. Place the foundation tube in the center of the hole and push lighting rod in the ground so that the 6" square plate rests on the floor of the hole. While holding the foundation tube on rough vertical, pour concrete around the foundation tube until you have covered approximately 2/3 of the tube. CARE SHOULD BE TAKEN TO SEE THAT NO CONCRETE IS ALLOWED TO ENTER THE FOUNDATION TUBE.

4. At this point, completely level the foundation tube vertically using the inside or outside wall of the tube. NEVER ATTEMPT TO LEVEL TUBE BY RESTING THE LEVEL HORIZONTALLY ACROSS THE TOP OF TUBE AS TUBE MAY NOT ALWAYS BE CUT STRAIGHT.

5. Form up the sides of the hole using 2 X 4's or Sono Tube. Carefully finish pouring concrete until there is 1/2" to 1" of the tube exposed. Recheck level of foundation tube.

6. Trowel the surface as desired, allowing for some slight slope away from the foundation tube. DO NOT DISTURB THE LEVEL OF THE FOUNDATION TUBE.

7. Let concrete set for at least 72 hours before erecting flag pole.


©2007 Admiral Flag Poles, Inc.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Images of Sitting Bull








Inquiry from Haden in Mobridge

Haden writes:


Hi Elisa,

I'm going to be talking at the Senior Center about the Wrigley Square project on Thursday, Oct. 24 and would like to give them the most up to date info on what's going on with the project and when you will next be visiting Mobridge.

Would you please send me an update I can share? Also, if you do it by tomorrow morning, I can forward it along to the paper, and they might print something in this week's edition for the public.

Thanks so much--hope it's going well!

Haden Merkel
Executive Director
Mobridge Area Chamber of Commerce

We wrote in response:

Haden:

We're finishing up how to build the thing and what it will take us to build it.
By weeks' end we should have a budget, a schedule, and drawings out to the contractor to pour the foundation footings that the project will sit on.

Then next week we'll start fabricating the parts and we'll be out as soon as the contractor is ready to pour the footings to locate the project.
The rest relies on our ability to coordinate the process of building the forms, getting them to Gage Brothers in Sioux Falls, casting them, trucking them to Mobridge, and craning and fixing them into place.

I just wrote Dave Graves of the university press relations office this text:
At Mobridge's Wrigley Square the Department of Architecture at South Dakota State University is building a new civic plaza at the new Main Street railroad crossing.  We call our project "The End of the Line".  A triangle of curb has already been built.  When it is complete there will be an events and festival stage; seating and picnic areas; and a shade wall and walkway that will mark, frame, or enable five special things about Mobridge life and history.
1)the hunting and fishing seasons
2)the beautiful landscape
3)Sitting Bull's Grave & Sacagawea monument
4)the Milwaukee Road
5)the strong culture of festivals, competitions, and events

No building has ever been built on this spot in Mobridge.  For twenty years it was the "end of the line" in western expansion.  Every passenger heading west got off the train and crossed this place to go up into the city.  The materials and tools that went into the Black Hills to establish towns like Lead and Deadwood changed from train car to horse power at this spot.  Up through the 1950s, it was the freight drop yard for the Milwaukee Road local freight office.  For years now it has been the "end of the line" turnaround at the bottom of Main Street.  Today, with Main Street open to the lake and 34 acres of waterfront development potential, this location can be a link between new development and the things that makes Mobridge special.

None of the construction inside the curbs will come from public funding.  The Precast Concrete Institute, a national organization based in Chicago and Gage Brothers Concrete Products of Sioux Falls are very generously sponsoring the building of this plaza at Wrigley Square.  The Department of Architecture is committed to working with communities all over South Dakota to provide long-term study and, after three years of study, provide the expertise for our students to learn to build by constructing a public work for the community.  The Department's founding firms--Architecture Incorporated, Koch Hazard Architects, TSP Inc., and Perspective, all of Sioux Falls, have generously supported the department to do this sort of work.  We are highly committed to learning by doing and studying our South Dakota communities across time.

Over the next two months foundations will be dug, Concrete walls and walkways will be cast in Sioux Falls and erected on site.  Frames will be set in place.  In the winter we'll build the furniture and fixtures for the plaza and, as soon as the snow melts we'll finish the plaza surface and put the fixtures in place, making the new Wrigley Square ready for a new year of events, outdoor enjoyment, festivals, classic car cruising, and the good life in Mobridge.


There's a lot to come together in the next month.  Things are getting cold and not so fun to work outside in.  We're very excited about things--cold or no cold.
There's a lot happening here on the project.  We'll have some photos of progress on parts very soon.

More up-to-date project images will follow very soon.



Brian

Friday, October 11, 2013

Figuring the largest square to fit inside a circle (Footing Issue)

The argument requires the Pythagorean Theorem. Draw a circle with a square, as large as possible, inside the circle.
By the symmetry of the diagram the center of the circle is on the diagonal AB of the square. The length of AB is 60 inches and the lengths of BC and CA are equal. The Pythagorean Theorem then says that
|BC|2 + |CA|2 = |AB|2
Hence
2 |BC|2 = 242 = 576
and therefore
|BC|2 = 288
Taking the square root on my calculator I get
|BC| = 16.97
The largest square plate we can put in a 24 inch diameter circle is 16.97" inches on each side.
That's a little bigger than 16 and 15/16" (16.9375")

Phase 3 Team Assignments

Footings:
Emily

Panel Design:
Reggie
Jordan S.

Brackets:
Andy
Jordan L.

Walkways:
Ethan
Elisa

Stage:
Kyle


Frame Design:
Kristie
Spencer



Concrete Surface and Finish Experimentation:
Jacob
Amanda
Adam
Shawn
Mason
Godwin


Architectural Drawing, Shop Drawing, and Gage Brothers Interface:
Matt
Tulley

Gantt Chart:
Kyle

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Project Management Software

From Federico:

http://try.wrike.com/web-based-gantt-chart-software/?gclid=CKWS2Ne5iroCFWNg
MgodGC0A-A#

https://www.smartsheet.com

http://www.zoho.com/projects/gantt-charts.html

http://www.projectmanager.com/gantt-chart-software.php

Mid-Term Assignment

For the mid-term you should complete YOUR version of the project with a set of drawings and your 1/8"=1'-0" model of the site.


Your architectural drawings should include appropriately scaled drawings laid
out in page format of:
Wall and Walkway Plan
Wall and Walkway Elevations
All unique Wall and Walkway Sections
..each one with explanatory notation, dimensions, and referential notion.

Your shop drawings should include a sheet for each component of the project with planimetric drawings of the component drawn to a scale that ail allow the drafting and notation on the sheet of reinforcing, handling, and connection components as well as indications of surface finishes and all dimensions relevant to the component's manufacture.
Footings
Wall Panels
Walkway Brackets
Walkway Panels
and should include with these an associated well laid out sheets of appropriately scaled connection details.
..each one with explanatory notation, dimensions, and referential notion.

Current Press Release delivered for publication in the Newspaper

At Mobridge's Wrigley Square the Department of Architecture at South Dakota State University is building a new civic plaza at the new Main Street railroad crossing.  We call our project "The End of the Line".  A triangle of curb has already been built.  When it is complete there will be an events and festival stage; seating and picnic areas; and a shade wall and walkway that will mark, frame, or enable five special things about Mobridge life and history.
1) the hunting and fishing seasons
2) the beautiful landscape
3) Sitting Bull's Grave & Sacagawea monument
4) the Milwaukee Road
5) the strong culture of festivals, competitions, and events

No building has ever been built on this spot in Mobridge.  For twenty years it was the "end of the line" in western expansion.  Every passenger heading west got off the train and crossed this place to go up into the city.  The materials and tools that went into the Black Hills to establish towns like Lead and Deadwood changed from train car to horse power at this spot.  Up through the 1950s, it was the freight drop yard for the Milwaukee Road local freight office.  For years now it has been the "end of the line" turnaround at the bottom of Main Street.  Today, with Main Street open to the lake and 34 acres of waterfront development potential, this location can be a link between new development and the things that makes Mobridge special.

None of the construction inside the curbs will come from public funding.  The Precast Concrete Institute, a national organization based in Chicago and Gage Brothers Concrete Products of Sioux Falls are very generously sponsoring the building of this plaza at Wrigley Square.  The Department of Architecture is committed to working with communities all over South Dakota to provide long-term study and, after three years of study, provide the expertise for our students to learn to build by constructing a public work for the community.  The Department's founding firms--Architecture Incorporated, Koch Hazard Architects, TSP Inc., and Perspective, all of Sioux Falls, have generously supported the department to do this sort of work.  We are highly committed to learning by doing and studying our South Dakota communities across time.

Over the next two months foundations will be dug, Concrete walls and walkways will be cast in Sioux Falls and erected on site.  Frames will be set in place.  In the winter we'll build the furniture and fixtures for the plaza and, as soon as the snow melts we'll finish the plaza surface and put the fixtures in place, making the new Wrigley Square ready for a new year of events, outdoor enjoyment, festivals, classic car cruising, and the good life in Mobridge.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Class for this Week

Wednesday meeting from 1 to 4 or 5 working through drawings and schemes.  Emily should be studying where we can get bids for footings.  Schemes should be reduced and refined.  Shop drawings will be introduced.

Friday meeting from 1 to 2:30 we will review our status and build questions.  At 2:30 we will go over to the new building celebration.  Mr. Kelley is attending the event.  We will all come back and he will work with us on the project starting at 3:30 and we'll figure this project out and step into the next phase.

Form•Z Webinar Help

The 30-minute Model 

In this webinar we will show how you can quickly sketch your conceptual design ideas using only a few flexible tools and a simple interface. In fact, it’s so simple we will start with just a cube and sculpt it into a detailed design. Expand your design creativity by exploring alternatives as you quickly sculpt a form. All of this while making an accurate solid model that is usable for 3D printing, visualization, drafting and exportable to a variety of formats.

In this webinar you'll discover:

The simple design interface and work flow of bonzai3d and its big brotherform•Z 7.

How to start with a simple shape and playfully sculpt it into your own design while using just a handful of tools.

Hidden tricks and workflows that expand the already powerful reshaping tools, adding even more functionality.

Time saving techniques that allow you to quickly transform conceptual ideas into details for a richer design.

Texturing that can easily be used as an integral part of your design workflow.

A live question and answer session will immediately follow the presentation. Space is limited, so register now to avoid missing this special opportunity.

Thursday, October 3, 2013 12:00pm-1:00pm CDT (17:00-18:00 GMT)

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Dear Student Edition user,

We are offering free training webinars for users of the form•Z and bonzai3d Student Editions. These webinars feature live step-by-step demonstrations of topics that are proposed by the webinar attendees themselves. The training webinars will be offered twice a week throughout October. Webinars during the week start at 5pm EDT (21:00 GMT) and those on Saturdays are at 1pm EDT (17:00 GMT). The schedule and registration links can be found at http://www.formz.com/webinars/studentedition.html

We also have a series of topic specific webinars that are presented live weekly (followed by a Q & A session). For the schedule of upcoming webinars please visit: http://www.formz.com/webinars/webinar.html.These webinars are also available on demand here: http://www.formz.com/webinars/webinarReplay.html

Other resources that you might find useful include our YouTube channels that have many videos on a variety of topics for form•Z and bonzai3d.  Visit us at http://www.youtube.com/user/formz3d and http://www.youtube.com/user/bonzai3dSoftware. You can interact with the form•Z and bonzai3d community on our forums (http://www.formz.com/forum/discus41/discus.cgi?pg=topics) and Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/AutodesSys).

We hope that you are enjoying your Student Edition software and please let us know if there is anything that we can do to improve your experience.

Regards,

Autodessys