The Commercial Woods of Africa: A Descriptive Full-Color Guide Review

The Commercial Woods of Africa: A Descriptive Full-Color Guide
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The Commercial Woods Of Africa: A Descriptive Full-Color Guide by timber expert Peter Phongphaew is a truly excellent, superbly information-laden resource concerning over 275 wood types used for commercial use and originating from the African continent. Full-color illustrations of natural grain and patterns, botanical names, mechanical properties, seasoning and working properties, durability, suggestions as to which uses are most and least ideal for each wood type and more pack this quality descriptive guide from cover to cover. A unique reference, The Commercial Woods Of Africa is an enthusiastically recommended addition to academic and professional reference shelves.

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So You Want to Be a Garden Designer: How to Get Started, Grow, and Thrive in the Landscape Design Business Review

So You Want to Be a Garden Designer: How to Get Started, Grow, and Thrive in the Landscape Design Business
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As a landscape designer, I hear it all the time from new acquaintances... "I'd LOVE to do what you do... think about plants all day, design gorgeous gardens, get my hands in the earth."
But almost as quickly as their tone turns dreamy, they snap back to reality. There are just too many buts. "But I have a well-paying job!" "I don't know enough about plants." Or most daunting of all, "I wouldn't even know where to start".
Love Albrecht Howard has crafted a thorough and detailed guide to getting past all those "buts" and getting into a career you'll love. She's got suggestions for how to start out slowly if you can't afford to leave your day job, how to build your knowledge and professionalism, and suggests ways of handling common situations as a designer.
Of course, along the way you'll learn the unvarnished truth about what it's like being a landscape designer. We all have horror stories of clients who think designing with plants is like designing with objects - that we should be able to specify no-maintenance plants that will do well without water, in poor soil, with deer and dark shade - yet flower all year long!
Albrecht Howard shares her professional tricks on designing for tough conditions, as well as for communicating the possibilities to clients. And she shares the pitfalls she's found as a designer and advises you on how to work professionally through the expected and not-so-expected adventures you'll have as a designer.
If you know what knowledge gaps you're missing, it's not too hard to figure out how to gain skill at specific aspects. But so much of the value in this book is in teaching fledgling designers what they don't yet know they need to learn. These are the tricks most of us learn after years of mistakes, and Albrecht Howard shares her experiences honestly so that new designers won't have to learn from the school of hard knocks the way the rest of us did.
Now - two things you should know about this book. One is that it's full of text. Not a lot of pictures. This is great if you're really motivated to read her stories and learn from her experience; it's not fluff. But if you're expecting photos of gardens or illustrations of different materials, how-to photos, or just want to skim through casually reading bits here and there - this probably isn't your book. Invest the time to read it properly and you'll find your time well-spent.
Thing number two: While it has a lot of value to established designers (I've been designing for seven years and I adored the camaraderie of finding out how similar her experiences have been to my own!), this book is much more about how to begin the process of becoming a designer than about the specifics of building and growing your business. It's not a marketing or business book, it's a how-to-approach-this-thoughtfully-as-a-career book. You'll still need coaching from your local small business administration on how to do all the nuts and bolts involved in starting and running any business.
My take? This is an awesome book that will help you figure out whether this is really a business you want to be in, and if you do, she'll hold your hand and help you feel confident and professional tackling your first jobs and getting started as a designer. And if you're already a designer, like me? Read it just for the client stories! I laughed, hard, and felt so much better knowing I'm not alone...
(EDIT September 1, 2010: It's occurred to me that while the business practices Howard espouses are perfectly legal in her state, it might not be obvious to people new to this field that laws vary wildly from state to state.
The business practices Howard advises, such as overseeing a landscape installation as a general contractor without holding a contractor's license yourself, and taking 50% of the bid price for installation prior to the start of the job are both very illegal in CA, where I live. Here, designers cannot subcontract out the installation of the design unless you hold a general contractor's license. Just wanted to urge people new to the business to call their own state contractor's board to find out the laws in their own state and not take it for granted that all of the business practices Howard advises will be applicable to you.
This is a small part of the book, though, so shouldn't detract from your enjoyment or the usefulness of the book.)

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Best Practices Guide to Residential Construction: Materials, Finishes, and Details Review

Best Practices Guide to Residential Construction: Materials, Finishes, and Details
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Best Practices Guide to Residential Construction - Steven Bliss
Book review by Daniel Friedman
Bernie Campbalik used to make a sucking noise through his teeth when he saw one of us do something sloppy on the jobsite or in his carpentry class. Bernie knew a lot about good construction practices, and he regularly pointed out that the foul-ups were often in the details. Mistakes or omissions led to trouble down the road. We were to avoid such goofs by recognizing them and fixing them on the job. But beyond that sucking noise that I heard a bit more than I wanted to, I remember Bernie's description of his own first days working as a carpenter's assistant.
"The foreman would choose an 18' 2x10, after eying several for straightness, cup, and bow. Then he would disappear around the corner of the building where we were working. He'd return in a few minutes with a pattern rafter and would hand it to me. 'Here, ...' he'd growl as he handed it over, 'dig into that pile over there and cut me 23 more like these.'"
The foreman didn't want Bernie to know how to layout a birds' mouth cut or plumb cut. That little extra knowledge was what he figured was his edge, the data that assured his job as site foreman.
And that has been a problem in construction. While most people who build do so out of a real love of the work, there is a tradition of "not sharing" the how-to details that make the difference between "good enough" and "good work." Unlike his foreman, Bernie actually wanted us to know how to do it right. Not because he particularly liked us, but because he loved the work and wanted that to be right.
Steve Bliss, with a combination of real-world on-the-job construction experience and a long career as a writer and editor for the Journal of Light Construction , Progressive Builder, and Solar Age has written a new book, Best Practices Guide to Residential Construction, Materials, Finishes, and Details, which is full of details and product choices that make the difference etween "good enough" and "good work" - the stuff that all of us who build or have built homes wish we'd known sooner.
Best Practices has a simple organization. It's easy to find details can help the success of your construction project. Here are a few examples:

Exterior finish: a rain screen wall using Cor-A-Vent or folded insect screen at the bottom of a clapboard siding wall can keep out insects and still permit drainage. Text is accompanied by a photo suggesting installing siding over furring over the building sheathing. It's a small detail, one of many, that addresses trapped moisture in buildings - a common source of insect damage, rot, or the current enviro-scare topics. Beyond concepts, such as "rain screen," Bliss addresses sheathing wraps (house wrap), flashing membranes, wall flashing, and specific details regarding the installation of common exterior sheathings such as wood siding, wood shingles and shakes, vinyl siding, wood and composite trim. To go past theory and good ideas, the chapter also lists product suppliers and their websites or contact information. A product resource list is offered at the end of each chapter.

Roofing: Bliss's eaves details for metal roofing, such as remembering to include the rubber closure strip and to cap it with butyl tape address one of many omissions that at my building inspections I find have led to wind-blown rain or wind damage to the roofing. It's a small detail that makes a big difference. Bliss includes details for the common roofing materials and systems such as asphalt shingles, clay, concrete, composite tile, metal roofing, low-slope roofing, and of course he addresses the vexsome specialty of roof ventilation.


Windows and Doors: This huge topic is compressed to window types, materials and construction, energy efficiency, skylights, exterior doors. Picking an example almost atrandom, I came across the warning to avoid storing vinyl windows in a container, such as a trailer, or leaning them against a wall, "... as they can permanently deform." It was just this condition that I came across recently at a property, and while I saw the defect, I was at a loss to explain how it happened.


Decks and Porches: This chapter takes a look at framing and decking material choices, fasteners, construction details, and the notorious problem of rooftop decks, as well as covered/screened porches and deck finishes. After seeing a few terrifying deck collapses, both during and after construction (luckily not at my job sites), I was happy to see Mr. Bliss's details about fastenings and connections, especially at post to beam and post to pier points. Bliss also offers some simple details for creation of and sealing at a deck to house-wall gap, one of the most-common leak and rot points we find on buildings where these details are omitted.


Interior Finish: Drywall, various flooring types (wood, vinyl, the currently-popular laminate, carpets), trim, doors, stairs, sound, lighting are surveyed for the Achilles heel and remedy, and Steve includes his recommendations among these choices. Environmentally concerned clients will appreciate having some alternatives to vinyl and carpeting and plastic laminates, such as the cork flooring described in this chapter.

Kitchen and Bath: this chapter spends time on design basics - an area that counts for kitchens and baths as anyone who's lived with a thoughtless layout can testify. The author offers helpful tables of materials choices (such as flooring) with cost, suitability for radiant heat, pros, cons, and recommendations for each.

Indoor Air quality: It will be interesting to builders to review Bliss's perspective on IAQ, as this topic is much in the public eye, or I should say lung and mind. Ilike that the author stops at a succinct outline of the possible concerns and moves to some clear, basic advice about an overall strategy (about problem particles or gases: "keep it out, vent it out, dilute it, filter it out"), and goes on to offer some opinions about the various methods people are using to improve residential indoor air quality. This is a rather large topic to tackle in a single chapter, so don't look for an encyclopedic review here.
For a more encyclopedic resource on mold and IAQ inspection and testing methods see www.inspect-ny.com/sickhouse.htm - my web. But of use are Bliss's whole-house ventilation strategies and his table comparing the pros, cons, controls, cost, and his recommendations for various ventilation methods. As the author points out, (in my words not his), even the most brilliant and expensive design isn'tworth much if it's not used by the building occupants. He suggests "More important than the precise number of cubic feet per minute, however, is a well-designed system that is quite, reliable, and low-maintenance, ensuring it will actually be used." Precisely. Combine the real-world philosophy just stated, with a table of the characteristics, appropriateness of use, and cost of venting alternatives, and you have some good design details that can make a difference in the health and quality of life of the occupants of the home.



I like this book and I recommend it. I'm lucky - I didn't have to pay for it. Mr. Bliss sent me a review copy, probably knowing that I hold him in high regard, but probably also slightly worried by knowing that I won't pull any punches on a review. The book is well worth having, and it makes a good dent in the "secret pattern rafter layout" problem I mentioned above, by passing on many "best practice" details for residential construction. To collect and pass on all of them would produce more pages than the Harvard Classics, and more books than Google has indexed (so far). The length of this book, 308 pages including a useful index, gives space for a well-worth-having collection of helpful details beyond the usual arm-waving that pollutes most professions and contaminates ours too. The book's strengths are the perspective and choice of details selected by a writer who has spent a lifetime of hands-on building, writing about, and finally editing about good construction practices.
Give Best Practices Guide to Residential Construction by Steven Bliss as a holiday gift to your builder buddy and if someone doesn't give you a copy this holiday season, buy your own. ISBN-10: 0-471-64836-1 (cloth) or ISBN-13:
978-0-471-64836-9
The original of this review appeared with illustration and links to more building diagnosis and construction practice expert sources at my website, www.inspect-ny.com -- D Friedman


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Timber Construction Manual (Construction Manuals (englisch)) Review

Timber Construction Manual (Construction Manuals (englisch))
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The manual is a very complete study of construction with wood. The book is worth every penny if you want to understand the assembly of a building with timber. The details of facades are extremely useful, is shame that almost all case studies are European (of course the book is from a German publisher; and they totally mastered the construction and techniques).

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Fundamentals of Building Construction: Materials and Methods Review

Fundamentals of Building Construction: Materials and Methods
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Every engineer must have one copy of this book.This is an updated edition of the previous ones.Very detailed description and pictures about construction.

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Now in its Fourth Edition, Fundamentals of Building Construction is an essential textbook that has been used by thou-sands of students annually in schools of architecture, engineering, and construction technology. The best-selling reference focuses on the basic materials and methods used in building construction. Emphasizing common construction systems such as light wood frames, masonry bearing walls, steel frames, and reinforced concrete, the new edition includes new coverage of green design and energy-efficient construction energies, and is based on the International Building Code(r).

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Wood-Frame House Construction: Complete "How-To" Information on Constructing Wood-Frame Houses Review

Wood-Frame House Construction: Complete How-To Information on Constructing Wood-Frame Houses
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This book has many things to recommend it. It includes a wealth of material on wood frame house construction, from laying out a hole in the ground for foundations, to framing, to "paint and paper". And it's clear and generally easy to read. It was designed for people in apprenticeship programs and trade schools, so it's oriented toward practical details, not engineering theory, which will make it a good match for most do-it-yourselfers, too.
On the other hand, it clearly is an older book. Attempts have been made to keep it up to date with newer techniques, but a lot of obsolete material remains, and it's not always easy to tell which methods are new and which old. The obsolete material could be a plus, in some cases -- if you're renovating an old house, for example. But I wouldn't place absolute trust in this book as a bible of new house construction.
I am a structural engineer, and reviewed this book primarily in my search for resources to recommend to my residential clients who are involved in do-it-yourself renovation projects.

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This book presents sound principles for wood-frame house construction and suggestions for selecting suitable materials that will greatly assist in the construction of a good house.It is also meant as a guide and handbook for those without this type of construction experience.Many wood houses are in existence today that were built more than 200 years ago when early settlers arrived.The modern conventional wood-frame house, with wood or wood product covering materials, is economical, long lasting, and can be constructed in any location.The United States is well supplied with timber and has a diversified industry that manufactures lumber and other wood products used in the house.Few, if any, materials can compete with wood-framing in the construction of houses.However, to provide this efficient wood house, good construction details are important as well as the selection of materials for each specific use.While designing and planning are beyond the scope of this publication, the information on materials and building practices is intended to guide builders and prospective homeowners in erecting a good house with a minimum of maintenance.This handbook can also be used as a training aid for apprentices or as a standard by which to judge the quality of house construction.It sets forth what are considered to be acceptable practices in assembling and arranging the parts of a well-designed wood-frame house.While details of construction may vary in different localities, the fundamental principles are the same.This handbook deals essentially with established methods of construction, and does not attempt to show new ones that are used in various parts of the country.Construction details for houses are given in a series of drawings with accompanying text, which show the methods used in assembling the various parts.In general, the order of presentation confomrs to the normal sequence of constructing the building - from foundation to finish work.The final chapters add information on painting, protecting wood from decay and fire, and maintenance.A glossary of housing terms is also included at the back of the handbook to aid with unfamiliar or specific word usage.--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Black & Decker The Complete Guide to Landscape Construction: 60 Step-by-step Projects for Creating a Perfect Landscape (Black & Decker Complete Guide) Review

Black and Decker The Complete Guide to Landscape Construction: 60 Step-by-step Projects for Creating a Perfect Landscape (Black and Decker Complete Guide)
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I compared several landscaping books before buying this one. I viewed them in bookstores and at home depot. This one has excellent ideas and instructions, and I especially like the photographs which are very detailed and add clarity to the instructions with visual aids. I am very happy with my purchase.

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The Outdoor Shower: Creative design ideas for backyard living, from the functional to the fantastic Review

The Outdoor Shower: Creative design ideas for backyard living, from the functional to the fantastic
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Outdoor showers aren't just for camping anymore: they're popping up as trendy home add-ons to a garden, and Ethan Fierro's The Outdoor Shower: Creative Design Ideas For Backyard Living, From The Functional To The Fantastic allows for a range of ideas and applications. Lovely color photos of such showers run the gamut from very simple to amazingly detailed, while choices in heating from solar to convention and choices in design offer details for virtually any setting, whether it be stone, wood, metal or tile. A fine pick for any who would restore function to an outside setting.

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Showering outdoors after a day of playing in the surf, digging in the garden, or taking a daylong bike ride is the ultimate in summer relaxation. Designer/builder Ethan Fierro celebrates the creativity and whimsical inspiration of summer with this collection of original outdoor shower designs he's uncovered from coast to coast. He offers dozens of examples for homeowners to choose from, all pictured in stunning color photographs, ranging from the simple showerhead on the side of the cottage, to semi-detached and freestanding structures. Accompanying text describes the design and material elements involved in each example. Beginning with the basics, Fierro includes an overview of basic plumbing and structural requirements, along with suggestions for incorporating a wide range of building materials, including stone, wood, metal, frosted glass blocks, earth, concrete, tile, stucco, and landscape vegetation. His plans are environmentally sound and mindful of cost-saving techniques, with ideas for repurposing found and recycled materials. Fierro exhibits his own inspired aesthetic in the final chapter with illustrated plans for six fantasy showers, including a tree house, a vineenclosed frame, a stained-glass nautilus, and an underground cavity with a hole for sky-viewing. The Outdoor Shower will set free the inner spirit—and the inner builder—of any summer-home owner.

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Poolscaping: Gardening and Landscaping Around Your Swimming Pool and Spa Review

Poolscaping: Gardening and Landscaping Around Your Swimming Pool and Spa
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The writer starts out with "Swimming pools have come a long way from the turquoise water holes surrounded by stark paving. Increasingly pools are being integrated into the design of the house and garden..."
I'm happy to see a book on this topic, especially one written by an accomplished writer and photographer. Many garden swimming pools stand out like a sore thumb - a harsh rectangle of Hollywood blue water with cold tile edges. They're lovely and cool in hot weather, but UGLY. Anything that helps to change or disguise this is all good.
The writer has many suggestions for doing just this. She addresses in depth topics such as decking, enclosures, structures, furniture and plantings. She has researched and offers suggestions for problems such as awkward rocky sites and the need to have an enclosure around the pool that doesn't block the view or make the place look like a prison.
It was good to see a generous number of pages given to plants and plantings - everything from container planting to landscaping the entire site. The writer also focuses on planning ahead when installing a pool or landscaping around it, and on matters relating to the budget. Both are very important and often overlooked..
The writer obviously has an encyclopedic knowledge of her topic and her writing is crisp and to-the-point. She understands the issues facing people who want to integrate their pool into their garden and addresses them directly. Her photographs illustrate her points with relevance and clarity. I'd recommend this book to anyone trying to add some style and class to a garden with a swimming pool.

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Black & Decker The Complete Guide to Roofing Siding & Trim: Updated 2nd Edition, Protect & Beautify the Exterior of Your Home (Black & Decker Complete Guide) Review

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Habitat for Humanity How to Build a House Revised & Updated(Habitat for Humanity) Review

Habitat for Humanity How to Build a House Revised and Updated(Habitat for Humanity)
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Not a complete how-to, as doesn't cover excavation, concrete, plumbing, HVAC, and electrical, to say nothing of real estate agents, bankers, builders, or subcontractors, but otherwise very detailed procedures on how to build a simple home yourself (with a few Habitat for Humanity helpers of course). The author describes things he has personally done hundreds of times, so the writing is very clear. But many project photos, and the vast archive of Fine Homebuilding magazine pictures, are used to augment the written procedures, which removes any possible confusion.
On the downside, the houses look like mobile homes, and the building science is a little questionable in places, like using a drywall panel resting on the ceiling joists as an attic access, or suggesting insulation as protection against drafts coming through the framing. Nothing drastic though.
Overall, step-by-step instruction for framing, including windows and doors, asphalt roofing, vinyl siding, drywall, simple decks, interior trim, basic cabinets and painting. Perfect for the complete novice.

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Decks & Patios for Dummies Review

Decks and Patios for Dummies
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My husband is a construction type but I'm not and the deck was my project to plan. This book was great! I looked at a couple of dozen deck books and this was the only one that explained how to build a deck in a way that my contruction-impaired mind could comprehend. Very specific, step by step building instructions, a thorough review of the planning process and wonderful ideas for extra features. My only wishes are more photograhs and more information on alternative decking materials.

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Life is just so much sweeter when experienced from a good deck or patio. Breezes, sunlight, the smells of the garden, birdsongs…just a few minutes in your own backyard can enliven the senses and rejuvenate the spirit. Meals become relaxed affairs. Food tastes better. Conversations are richer. Time eases its hectic demands and drifts by at a more congenial pace. Whether for a neighborhood barbeque or just a quiet afternoon with a paperback, decks and patios offer us the perfect space to kick back and let the good times roll.
Decks and Patios for Dummies contains everything you need to know to design and build your dream deck or patio. Full of practical tips and clear, simple instructions, it shows the do-it-yourselfer how to solve problems in design and construction while avoiding pitfalls and unnecessary expenses. You'll find useful information on:
Choosing the location
Sizing
Choosing materials
Preparing the site
Building
Adding barbeques, fireplaces, etc.
Maintenance

This is a start-to-finish guide on all aspects of deck and patio construction – including when you should seek help from the professionals! Designed to make the most of your budget, it walks you through:
Dealing with contractors, codes, and feasibility
The building checklist
Lighting, outlets, faucets, and other add-ons
Decks – from frames to finishes
Patios: concrete, flagstone, or brick?
Steps, stairs, and benches
Special details and decorations

Whether your project is a patio just big enough for two chaises-lounges or a screened-in, wraparound deck on the side of a mountain, Decks and Patios for Dummies makes building understandable and fun with illustrations, diagrams, helpful sidebars, and a color insert of photos to stir the imagination. Take advantage of this comprehensive guide and build your dream deck today.

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Formwork for Concrete Structures Review

Formwork for Concrete Structures
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I was waiting for it for 22th of november. Today is 2th of december and nothing has appeared in my post box

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The definitive guide to formwork design, materials, and methods--fully updated
Formwork for Concrete Structures, Fourth Edition, provides current information on designing and building formwork and temporary structures during the construction process. Developed with the latest structural design recommendations by the National Design Specification (NDS 2005), the book covers recent advances in materials, money- and energy-saving strategies, safety guidelines, OSHA regulations, and dimensional tolerances. Up-to-date sample problems illustrate practical applications for calculating loads and stresses. This comprehensive manual also includes new summary tables and equations and a directory of suppliers.
Formwork for Concrete Structures, Fourth Edition, covers:
Economy of formwork
Pressure of concrete on formwork
Properties of form material
Form design
Shores and scaffolding
Failures of formwork
Forms for footings, walls, and columns
Forms for beams and floor slabs
Patented forms for concrete floor systems
Forms for thin-shell roof slabs
Forms for architectural concrete
Slipforms
Forms for concrete bridge decks
Flying deck forms


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Pools and Spas: New Designs for Gracious Living Review

Pools and Spas: New Designs for Gracious Living
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POOLS and SPAS
A coffee table book! If , like me, you want to learn more about the technical side of swimming pools, give this one a pass. In spite of the promise hinted in the promotional text of giving insights to "design details" this book doesn't even come close. Most of the pools are out of reach except to those whom money is no object starting with a pool costing $700,000. If for instance, you want to be educated on the pros and cons of vanishing edge pools, the Author tells us, "they have been overused and misused"-no clarification, no explanation, no examples. Of course none of the beautiful pools pictured in this section fall into either category. Design details? Each very beautifully photographed pool describes the multi-million dollar surroundings, the size of the pool pictured, construction i.e. Gunite, finish-Plaster. This scant, mostly irrelative information hardly qualifies as "design details".
If you want to show your pool contractor the kind of pool you have in mind and hand over a blank check, then this is the book for you. You'll get no feel for the typical cost of the pools depicted (except the one for $3/4M) nor will you be guided as to any of the unseen but extremely important mechanical components required.
I'd keep this book if there was just one piece of information that I could consider valuable advice. Thankfully, Amazon will take it back.

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Building Today's Green Home: Practical, Cost-Effective and Eco-Responsible Homebuilding (Popular Woodworking) Review

Building Today's Green Home: Practical, Cost-Effective and Eco-Responsible Homebuilding (Popular Woodworking)
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"Building Today's Green Home" by Art Smith
This is fun read, he has a nice informal writing style- just like having a conversation with the author. I liked the digressions about less lawn and more solar. We are seeing that up here in New England as well.
Great description and pictures of the construction, both shop and site. There needs to see more panelization in our homes. This will help get "green" points and make "deconstruction" easier, particularly when you screw the panels together!
This is a great book focussing on vernacular architecture for Climate Zones 3 and 4. We need such things as steep roof pitches for the snow loads up here in New England, but not down south.
The Timber Truss design is really attractive and that is a novel building method using SIPs. It looks like it would save lots of money since there would be no cutouts for windows and doors.

The afterword is very appropriate. We should be upgrading all the larger older homes to make them very energy efficient and building smaller new homes for the shrinking family!


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Backyards: A Sunset Design Guide Review

Backyards: A Sunset Design Guide
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Was looking for a book with pictures of attractive gardens, yards, and landscapes to brainstorm ideas. This book has lots of pictures with relevant information of important aspects observed in the pictures. The pictures cover a variety of yards from inner city, northeast yards, dry areas, big and small areas. Coverage includes use of accent pieces, colors, focal points, a variety of styles of walls, walkways, heavy plant areas, limited plant areas, high maintenance and low maintenance backyards. If there is a weakness, I would have like to see a few more "artsy" backyards, but there were plenty of creative, cleaver, and attractive backyards from which to get ideas.

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Monte Burch's Pole Building Projects: Over 25 Low-Cost Plans Review

Monte Burch's Pole Building Projects: Over 25 Low-Cost Plans
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This book is great. It has thorough, easy to follow instructions for various pole buildings, and free plans! Excellent for first-timers or experienced builders. Great reference!

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Over 25 low-cost plans include: garden srtuctures, backyard barns, vactation cabins, and sheds and shelters. More from Monte! How to build more that 25 low-cost projects big and small.

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