Sunday, August 27, 2023

Yoda's House in New Haven (Foam House)

 Historically, this thing was an experimental construction by Yale University dating to 1968.


If you look up a photo of it when it was new, it appears to have been built by spreading expanding plastic foam over a frame of inflated bags. The decayed state makes it look mysterious and slightly creepy-one would wonder WTF type of building it once was. I'd probably have guessed that it was some kind of alternatively-built utility building having to do with the nearby Yale Golf Course.

What I went through to find this thing! For various reasons, I was without a car or P.C. for two months, forcing to use my Slow Android Stupidphone to surf the web. it's a drag to work with 2" maps. I had taken up hiking in Maltby Lakes, and first heard of it because someone had placed a pin on Google Maps that said "Turnoff for foam house". I didn't know what that was (do they remove foam from the reservoir water there?)  but a search piqued my interest. I ended up on https://www.ctmuseumquest.com/, a very fine and interesting site where the guy describes hiking in the Maltby Lakes Recreational Area. He mentions hearing that the Foam House was somewhere near the Orange Trail, but he didn't search for it. 

This coincided roughly with the pin on Google maps, so I hiked the Orange and White trails looking for a side trail, but found none. I bushwhacked to nearby the golf course, but felt uncomfortable when I saw a cart. For all I know, Yale has the perimeter on camera. As it turns out, this area is nowhere near the structure.

Searching also turned up The Yale Nature Preserve, and  this website https://theairlandandsea.com/2020/04/yale-nature-preserve-trail-guide.html that mentions the Foam House. The preserve is a nice find in of itself, occupying the land in between the Golf Course and Merritt Parkway. He correctly states that the House is located near the southwest corner of the golf course, however when I hiked the Preserve, I saw no sign of it, nor any side trails. Nice hike anyway. 

I finally found it by following the White Trail in Maltby Lakes to a northerly bump just south of the golf course, and bushwhacked  toward the southwest corner of the Course, marking the way with sticks and little cairns. Remember, you should have a permit to hike Maltby Lakes 😉!

It sits on a little cliff about 100 yards from the fairway.


Moss covers the foam, making it blend into the landscape.


Porthole-like windows


Scraps of foam. I'm actually surprised at the low  level of vandalism and graffiti. Maltby Lakes was only opened to recreational use a few years ago, The Yale Nature Preserve is fairly obscure, and Yale never bothered to demolish the House.

Once inside, it doesn't really feel like a building any more, the roof having collapsed. As an experiment, it shows just how non-biodegradable foam plastic is.

Once I got back to my PC, I saw that Mapcarta gives an accurate location. 




 

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Building a Shed

After some concern about the "legality" of it, I decided to build a shed. I'm tired of lugging certain tools out of the basement. 


I dug 8" holes for a bed of gravel and two blocks. I leveled the blocks by adding or removing gravel. Leveling is weird: you tweak and tweak, "push-me-pull-you", and when it seems like you'll never get it, voila! its level! Its also weird how things that are measured level never seem to look that way by eye...?


The floor framed. My bubble level "swears" that its all level, but it still looks "funny". These are pressure-treated 2x6"s. I considered building the entire shed of P.T, but I didn't want to deal with the weight and blade-killing properties. The rest will be of water-sealed plain lumber. 


Decked. 


It doesn't look like much from a distance, but man this was heavy! I eschewed the carriage bolts called for in the plans, and attached the top piece with six deck screws each. The assembly had a mind of its own, and I fumbled and bumbled with clamps, scabs, etc. until I got it up there, something like plumb. I'm considering putting the front supports up individually (but I probably won't 😏) 


Ok, I didn't put the front posts up individually 😏. The front posts are shorter and lighter, so the whole assembly was easier to handle. The rear wall is attached with 4" carriage bolts and nuts, but they was really difficult to reach on the ground, so I resorted to 4" lag screws.
Its fun to watch the parts go together after all that measuring. I don't really do many carpentry projects.


Putting the rafters up brought a surprise. I made one "master" rafter, and used it to measure all the cuts on the others. I tried the fit all the way on the left side, and it was good. As I put more rafters up, I noticed that they looked "too short". I measured the distance between the uprights, and they were 1" further apart on the right. The rear/upper support had warped! Ratchet Strap Brute Force brought everything back together.
Once the rafters were up, I could see that this was going to be a building you can't stand up straight in.



The back wall up. The plans call for a 1" space between the boards, but I thought that was excessive and would have made it look too  much like "skid wood", so I went for 1/2" spaces. The plans also called for 8" deck boards, but I went for 6" instead. Their design is very open-air, but I want it to look more "like a building"


Doing the sides was straightforward enough until I got to the angle cuts. I don't get along well with bevels.


The trim boards went up fairly well, with some inaccuracies. I decided to stop stressing it so much- "Its a shed, not a kayak!". Roofing was routine. Looks a little lumpy.


I have to cut 14 pieces to the same length for the doors. After watching videos and considering various arrangements with the table and Skill saws, I made one "master" and used it as a  template to cut the others. They come out remarkably good, without marks from the power saws' blades or high-RPM mistakes. Using hand tools for 14 pieces seems more tedious than it is once you get into it.


Complete! I decided to back off a little on the Precision Measuring, and it looks fine. The doors were surprisingly heavy, and required Finagling Apparatus to get them in. Things may not be aligned ultra-precise, but... "Its a shed, not a kayak! 😁