I found it interesting to see a clear poly like interior control layer around the windows and a white material below. I know Knauf Insulation from a project a few years ago. Some super insulating materials were used. Looking further into this I see they use a clear poly and blow the materials up inside the wall cavities. This explains the clear material. I am interested to know more about this wall assembly and what all the layers look like.
The drywall on sawhorses is a back-saver. It’s just good worker safety and a productivity booster. If you keep your tools and materials off the floor you reduce the number of times you bend over. Sawhorses and portable tables cost nothing.
Funny that... I see carpenters cutting and installing uPVC trim and think the the same thing. Timber will last and eventually break down gracefully; plastic... not so much - especially uPVC which, by design, contains organotins. The adhesive in the CLT is one question I have, though small in percentage.
I found it interesting to see a clear poly like interior control layer around the windows and a white material below. I know Knauf Insulation from a project a few years ago. Some super insulating materials were used. Looking further into this I see they use a clear poly and blow the materials up inside the wall cavities. This explains the clear material. I am interested to know more about this wall assembly and what all the layers look like.
Very cool to see!
The drywall on sawhorses is a back-saver. It’s just good worker safety and a productivity booster.
If you keep your tools and materials off the floor you reduce the number of times you bend over. Sawhorses and portable tables cost nothing.
OMG!! Surely that was NOT A SWASTIKA on the right wall @6:26 🤯🤯🤯
Every country has some a-holes, and looks like one got into this job site and vandalized that wall.
Why use so much wood?
Funny that... I see carpenters cutting and installing uPVC trim and think the the same thing. Timber will last and eventually break down gracefully; plastic... not so much - especially uPVC which, by design, contains organotins. The adhesive in the CLT is one question I have, though small in percentage.
The short simple answer is that wood has a better environmental score than concrete. But as we all Know, all answers aren't all black and white...
Price per square foot is a killer to CLT owner developer must have money to burn
CLT still susceptible to graffiti 😢