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Up to shoulder height, pieces are in shallow drawers, various sizes, sorted by shape. Above that is deader storage; note the stepladder. There's now room for a chair between the table and the shelves.
I just get a new mobile hard drive for backup all my MP3 music collecction. Western Digital My Passport.
We just hit the maximum number of bikes allowed. Metra upped the limit per car from 3 to 5 in 2010. The conductor told me to enter this car and my friend to enter the other car.
Not as fancy as a Caltrain bike car.
Above the Storage Basin
After the uranium pellets had been transformed into Plutoniuim-239, they were ejected out off the back of the reactor core, and ended up in the Storage Basin, a large, deep pool of water.
Once the pellets were considered safe to handle, workers would walk out onto this floor, and lift the individual floor panels to remove the plutonium pellets and collect them in the yellow caddy seen on the right.
Introducing the very latest in heating technology - Intelligent Storage Heaters. Similar to traditional storage heaters, but with brains! At just an average of 3.0p per kilowatt hour to run at any time during the PEAK periods electrical heating is now one of the cheapest, if not THE cheapest form of home and office heating. 100% efficient at the point of use, all the electricity used is turned into heat, unlike boiler based systems where energy is wasted through the flue. Not to be confused with night storage heaters! These heaters do not require economy 7 or any special meters. They will operate at low running costs on the standard electricity tariff, just plug them in! Can be used on the existing night storage heater circuit with the economy 7 meter removed.Thermostatic Control: Each radiator has a thermostatic control, which can be built-in, operated by radio control, mains signaling or simple plug-in device. Each of these methods measures the air temperature of the room allowing the room temperature to be regulated to Wall mounted unit with radio thermostat Maintains a temperature set by the user. As the temperature drops in a room the thermostat senses the change and switches the heater on, perhaps for only a minute to re-heat the internal plates. This continual dynamic re-heat process continues thereby maintaining the room temperature. This ability to sense temperature changes and react immediately to them is one of the great benefits of this type of heating. Because of this ability to heat up quickly and store heat, the use of electricity is limited and the cost of using the heaters can be just a few pence per hour. Recent tests in the UK have confirmed the low running costs. These tests have shown that not only does Intelligent Storage radiator heat the room to a comfortable even temperature but also keeps the floor temperature within a few degrees of the ambient room temperature Please note: Our standard delivery charge for 1~ 5 radiators is 50.00 + Vat, price for Mainland UK only.
Sunday April 28, 10am–1pm
Learn with special guest teacher, Cheryl Arkison, the co-author of Sunday Morning Quilts in this fun workshop. Take your scraps, sew them together and make a box that stores scraps fabric, bits & bobs, toys, or more. In this class we will use scraps to create a slab of fabric then turn that into a quilted storage box.
photo courtesy of Cheryl Arkison
iewtainers are sturdy enough for balls (they're designed for nuts and bolts in the garage) but they work better for rods.
The boxes were made using birch plywood and the trim was all pine. Lots of gorilla wood glue (I think it's the least drippy) and a mix of nails (using our new nail gun) and countersunk screws. I used screws for the plywood and nails for the trim.
After sanding... and sanding... and sanding... :) Finish is two coats of Minwax Red Mahogony stain (conditioned it first) and then three coats of Minwax Fast Drying Polyurethane in semi-gloss. Did I mention how much I love this color?????
MAINTENANCE BUILDING 58 –
To the rear of building 62, and separated from it by an earthwork traverse, is building 58 (Drg No. 1244/53) it is designated Storage Building 'C-D'. It is approached along paths which lead back towards the bomb stores and the main gate, the entrances to the store are shielded by freestanding breeze block walls. The construction of the building is similar to the non-nuclear component stores, buildings 59-61, being formed from reinforced concrete columns and beams infilled with block work. It is, however, taller than the stores, buildings 59-61 and stands 23ft 11i from floor to ceiling. The main central section measures 70ft by 30ft, at each end of which are air lock porches 20ft by 15ft, while to the rear is plant and dark room 34ft 5in by 20ft. The root is a 5½in thick reinforced concrete slab, with a coating of bituminous felt. The building is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
▪︎RARITY – It is a rare building in a national and international context. Designed in the 1950's for storing innovative nuclear technology, RAF Barnham is the only such surviving facility in England.
▪︎HISTORIC INTEREST – A unique building surviving from the Cold War, designed to accommodate Britain's first nuclear weapon, the ''Blue Danube''.
▪︎GROUP VALUE – Building 58 has strong group value with the other buildings at RAF Barnham, both in terms of their function and historic significance.
▪︎INTACTNESS – Building 58 is a largely intact, bespoke structure.
Maintenance Building 58 was probably one of two buildings on the site (the other being the much altered Building 62) used for the inspection of the bombs brought from the airfields. Documents record some movement of bombs between the site and airfields and indeed pantechnicons designed to carry a complete weapon were known to have visited the site. It is now used for light engineering.
▪︎MATERIALS – Building 58 has a reinforced concrete frame and blockwork walls, over-painted at the east end, and is shielded by freestanding blast walls.
▪︎PLAN – The building has a rectangular plan, aligned approximately east-west.
▪︎EXTERIOR – The building has projecting entrance bays to the east and west, which contained airlocks internally, both of which have double height steel doors through which the bombs would travel. To the north are attached single storey toilet blocks and a store room with replaced fenestration.
▪︎INTERIOR – The central section of the building is largely featureless except for a runway beam which originally supported four hoists. The airlocks in the porches have been removed.
Although the site was used for storage of Mustard Gas and explosives during World War II, it was not until after the end of hostilities that the depot was constructed in its current form. In the early 1950's, the Air Ministry had a continuing need for high explosive bombs and storage facilities for them in anticipation of a future war in which atomic and thermo-nuclear weapons would be used by both sides.
It is within this historic context that the Special Storage Unit at RAF Barnham was constructed following the issuing of ''Blue Danube'', Britain's first nuclear bomb, to the RAF in November 1953. The bombs were held in clutches in V-bomber airfields such as RAF Scampton and RAF Wittering and the purpose of the store at RAF Barnham, and the almost identical site at RAF Faldingwoth in Lincolnshire, was to provide maintenance and refurbishment to support the airfields and hold spare warheads.
The Air Ministry plan for the Store is dated May 1953, although planning for the facility almost certainly had started before this, and it was fully operational by July 1954. In the first phase of works, the fences, earthworks, fissile core storage hutches, inspection buildings and gantries were built by August 1955. The small arms and pyrotechnics store, barrack accommodation, gymnasium, telephone exchange, meat preparation store and dog compound were erected shortly after to strengthen security. By mid 1955 the double fence was in place, later augmented by the current observation towers erected in early 1959 replacing smaller structures.
The Special Storage Unit remained the main holding place for the Mk. I atomic bomb, under control of Bomber Command until November 1956 when an independent Unit (95 Commanding Maintenance Unit) was formed. During the operational life of the site, second and third generation British nuclear weapons such as ''Red Beard'' and ''Yellow Sun'' were introduced and stored there. By 1962, the site was in decline and the Maintenance Unit ceased to exist on 31st July 1963. The closure of the station is probably linked to the operational deployment of ''Blue Steel'' from late 1962.
The site was sold to the current owners in 1966 and later let out for light industrial use. Some of the buildings have been altered and significantly, one of the Non-nuclear stores burnt down in the 1980’s, but there has been an on-going maintenance and repair programme agreed with English Heritage resulting in the preservation of the site.
Information sourced from – historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1402411
English Heritage.
Wonderful DIY Lovely Yarn Busket From Carboard
These yarn woven storage/busket are so pretty ! If you’re looking for some unique ways to organize your home, try out this …
wonderfuldiy.com/wonderful-diy-lovely-yarn-busket-from-ca...
I thought it would be nice to post a pic of my top 10 favorite monster high dolls. But as I was going through my three storage bins, I kept pulling out more and more until I realized that I am no longer capable of picking out a top ten. Maybe if I thought about it harder, I could narrow it down.
I keep thinking about selling off some of my collection but I cant even choose a top ten. Then I think about maybe narrowing it down to three dolls per character....but I cant do that either. They arent on display and I feel guilty about owning so many dolls that just sit in a box in storage. I keep thinking if im not enjoying them now why keep them? but then I open the boxes and fall in love with them all over again... There was a point when I first started collecting that I could have picked a top ten and kept my collection at that, but I am no longer capable.
sorry for the grainy photo quality. If i manage to pick a top ten, Ill take a better photo
This is what the queue looks like at the restoration ward at Dollby City. The poor things have to wait in line whilst I ferry them to and from my little hospital ward in the corner of my kitchen.
More info at www.mannakin.co.uk
The ornate fire-proof 'strong room' at the former Land Titles Office building in Queen Street, Melbourne. Constructed in 1874-1879, this building has not been used for decades. The complex is now owned by the Victoria University of Technology.
Some of the features include slate shelving and fireproof flooring.
Seen as part of Melbourne Open House
Creative Bike Storage • A round-up of the best bike storage we could find with many tutorials!
Source by gramz66
sharekid.com/creative-bike-storage/
#ShareKid
Using off-site storage for archived paperwork/documents will help maintain your office's work flow and productivity.
This is why I need to finish this renovation. I have the appropriate amount of furniture to fill the house jammed into half of the rooms. I feel like one of those hoarders from the TV.
Florence School of Regulation
Florence, 23 September 2011
Workshop: Electricity Storage
organized by Pippo Ranci \ FSR
New storage cubes from Target. There are two (9 cubes each) and they are stacked. The height is within inches of my ceiling. If I remember correctly, the cubes were $49 each... so I spent barely over $100 with tax.
Fabric on the shelves have been folded over comic book boards for organization. I found the tip on a website, but I can't seem to remember which one. This keeps the fabric neatly organized and I can see everything I have.
Books, patterns, and odds and ends make up the rest of the 18 cubes (top half shown here).
Here you can see the storage, which contains such items as; spices from Africa, gems from Asia, pickaxe and spear-gun, Horatio's Tesla Mk 9 (ray-gun), spare flag, fish, spare parts... and a stowaway frog!
P.S frogpunk!
Calgary self storage by Pak-n-Stor. We bring the pod storage to you.
Pak-n-Stor
5050 Skyline Way NE
Calgary, AB, T2E 6V1
Phone: (403) 255-7213