Energy Inc. Conference: the Future of Energy (Tue Tip)

alternative energy towersDid you know that North Carolina is one of the top nuclear power producers in the country, and also one of the top states in electricity consumption?  North Carolina also ranks among the top 10 states in wind power capacity (pdf).

If you are interested in the future of energy, come on out on for a breakfast seminar entitled “Energy Inc.””

Topics will include:

  1. How will alternative energies such as solar, wind, & water shape the future?
  2. What is the future landscape of collaboration between energy companies?
  3. How will energy laws change energy production/consumption in the future?
  4. How will the state’s energy change as a result of the  Duke Energy/Progress Energy merger ?

 

Panelists: 

Location: 

Cree LED Lighting,635 Davis Drive Ste. 100, Morrisville, NNC 27560

Date: 

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Time: 

7:30 AM          Registration & continental breakfast

8:00-10:00 AM:         Program

Are you interested in energy issues?  What do you think of the Duke Energy and Progress Energy merger?  Alternative energy issues?  Drop me a comment and share your thoughts! 

Photo:  (c) Freefoto.com.

Contract Essentials: 8 key points to consider

eight ball

As promised, my guest post on Contract Essentials is now live over on Construction Law Musings.   Go on over and check out my post on the 8 key points you should consider in your construction contract

While not an exhaustive list, the 8 issues I discuss will put you on the right path to avoid litigation later over a construction project “gone wrong.”

Be sure to check out Chris’ other great construction law articles while you are there, and leave a comment to say “hi”.  See ya there!

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Photo:  behind the eight ball via Ed Schipul/Creative Commons license.

Sneak Peek on Contract Essentials Plus Web Forum Tip

construction of a messy room

Sneak Peek:  Tomorrow I have the honor of guest writing on Chris Hill’s Construction Law Musings blog. I previously wrote a post on Chris’ blog back in August 2010.  I must not have have made too much of a mess over there, as he’s signed up for more.

My topic will be about contract essentials, so you won’t want to miss it.  I’ll post a link to the article here once it goes live.    Here’s the link.

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 Photo: from Moon, Stars & Paper via Creative Commons license.

Free Passive Solar House Plans (Tue Tip)

NC Energy Alliance Logo

Are you familiar with the North Carolina Energy Efficiency Alliance (NCEEA)?  The Alliance is a non-profit organization (funded by a federal grant through the NC State Energy Office) which “aims to educate all stakeholders in the home building industry about the benefits of ENERGY STAR homes.”

Among the resources on its website, the NCEEA offers a downloadable 59 page white paper entitled “Affordable Passive Solar Handbook for North Carolina“, which includes 12 different house plans that incorporate passive solar concepts.  Some of the plans are converted from a variety of sources including Habitat for Humanity; others are original designs.

Solar Features include:

  • 6-11% of floor area is south facing glazing
  • 2 foot overhangs
  • slab on grade construction with incorporated thermal mass
  • main living areas on south side of home

Affordable Features include:

  • even exterior dimensions, to eliminate construction waste
  • 900-1300 square feet footprints
  • simple roof lines than can be built with trusses

According to the white paper, full sets of working drawings are available for free online at www.energync.net  or www.ncenergystar.orgHowever, if you can find the applicable link at either of those sites, you are better than I am.   I’m sure that if you contact the NCEEA they will point you in the right direction.  (And if you do, please drop me a line as to where they can be found).

Have you reviewed the white paper?  What do you think of their design concepts?  Share in the comments below.  And, if you are new here, be sure to sign up for regular email delivery of blog posts to your inbox so you never miss anything.

Photo:  NCEEA Logo

Engineers: the Aliens who Make Our Lives Better (Guest Post)

Today we have a guest post by Tim Fausch (adapted from and reprinted with permission by BNP Media), publishing director of BNP Media’s Architecture, Engineering & Construction, Security and Mechanical Systems Groups, a collection of more than 20 trade magazines, Web sites and e-newsletters.

alien x-ray

I’ve been thinking a lot about engineers lately and concluded they must be alien beings. For reasons I do not understand, God sent these advanced life forms to earth to keep people like me from mass chaos. There must be an engineering angel whose job is to keep us from self-destruction.

A recent development led me to this epiphany:

This summer, I started demolishing a retaining wall and deck my father built back in the 1960s. The cinderblock wall and cement deck functioned beautifully around our above ground swimming pool for most of my youth.

Then, in the 1970s, my dad transformed our pool into a garden, and it has been producing tomatoes and onions ever since. Unfortunately, my father passed away and the secrets of his cement structure were lost forever.

The structure was showing some wear and tear, so the “smart” thing to do was to knock it down and return it to its long-ago status as a grass-covered hill.

“This will be a piece of cake,” I told my family members. “Just a few hardy swings with a sledge hammer and we’d reduce the structure to rubble.”

Somehow, I severely underestimated its structural integrity. The cinderblock wall wasn’t so bad, but the cement deck apparently was built to the same specs as the Hoover Dam.

The pad was several inches thick and hid an encased a wire mesh. Nearly a half century later, it was still solid as a rock.

It took five adult men countless hours to slay the beast. We only missed our target demolition date by three weeks.

Did I mention that my father was an engineer? This is the same guy who reveled in assembling televisions from 500-part kits (Heath kits), so it was really brainless of me to think this structure would come down in less time than the fall of the Berlin Wall.

If I had been in charge of this project it would collapsed decades ago. It would have caved in the pool, creating a tidal wave that would have flooded our basement. The insurance adjuster would have concluded a tornado blew through our yard. I would have nodded in agreement.

I don’t know about you, but every time I drive over a bridge, ride an elevator, or fly in a plane, I am thrilled to know that somehow an engineer made these things work.  Engineers – the aliens who make our lives better.

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Photo by suttonhoo via Creative Commons License.