View allAll Photos Tagged Build
Build a City activity hosted by CSM Engineering Club, CSM Architecture Club & Laura Demsetz.
Photo by CSM Architecture Club
Website builder, newsletter, email and newsletter sever, search engine optimization traffic generation tutorials all in one total package for small businesses and entrepreneurs to develop their own website in house.
Ever wonder what it takes to build a log house. These are pictures of the entire construction of our house from October 2006 to Nov 2007. It might take me a few days to put them all up, so if you're looking at these as I am posting them, check back for the rest.
I'll add these all to me log home set, so it might be easier to click that set to the right and go from there (I'll try to get them in order the best I can).
If you have any questions about the construction, feel free to ask. I was there pretty much everday and then I was there everyday after I fired our general contractor and had to finish his work myself.
Feel free to leave comments.
Kenny
Landscaping and signal work are performed as construction at Greene and West 5th Streets nears completion on Thursday, March 13, 2025.
Photo by Aaron Hines / City of Greenville
The City’s Better Utilizing Investments to Leverage Development (BUILD) Project, funded by a grant administered by the US Department of Transportation (awarded in 2019), officially began in August 2023. The BUILD Project is comprised of four greenway and sidewalk projects, and three streetscape projects, along E & W 5th Street, Dickinson Avenue, Town Creek near Town Common, and around Moyewood and the ECU Health Campus.
More information can be found at: www.greenvillenc.gov/government/engineering/major-project...
When we were on the land this morning we remarked that it was awfully dry and dusty. We also noticed that the ground was REALLY hard. Well this afternoon it rained on our newly excavated hole so while it is no longer dusty, the hard ground may keep our puddles around for a while.
This is our build site. You never realize how uneven the grade is until you have a level portion to compare it to. Two feet didn't seem like that big of a drop, but as you can see, it is.
187/365