Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Funny.
I learned (prior to purchase) the property is bound by ‘ridge restrictions’. Meaning height average cannot be more than 25’ (grade to peak).
I’d have to remove those little chimney tops - throwing the off the entire architectural silhouette and risking the blend. So, I’ll need to pass.
On a serious and competitive note; the purchase came with architectural drawings. I had brief discussion with the architect and he mentioned a few things that might be impossible to execute - in regards to my plans. Needless to say, I’ll be competitive with him.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Check your code...often times chimneys are exempt from the height restrictions that are placed on the roof peak, as their height is determined by a formula pertaining to flue size, distance from the roof and distance from the roof peak. Codes examples below...ymmv.
Understanding the 1-Foot 2-Foot 3-Foot Rule: How to Determine the Chimney Height of Class A Solid Fuel Pipe Above the Roofline
Chapter 1: Chimneys and Fireplaces, Residential Code 215 of New York State | UpCodes
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Hey man, congrats!! You are about 3.5 hours away from where I live. I’m sure you know how wonderful the area is.. once you get rolling on design and construction, feel free to reach out. I build/construct/weld for a living and tend to focus on sustainable sort of modern stuff. I’m no architect, just a guy that has been lucky enough to get to build some really cool structures.
I’m working through the winter building 4 lofts in an old hardware store-but lived for a long time in a commune that really focused on sustainability.
I will travel and I am for hire-as long as the riding is good... and I know it is.
Good luck-it’ll be fun
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
You picked a great spot. My inlaws live near Hot Springs, NC (they are moving and I lament what we are about to lose in terms of a playground home base). Riding aroudn there is off the charts.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Thank you very much! I’m also in the construction world, albeit high security commercial stuff. Perhaps the furthest thing from residential construction but, to build is to build.
I’ll reach out when that time comes. Unfortunately it won’t be soon enough.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rowdyhillrambler
Hey man, congrats!! You are about 3.5 hours away from where I live. I’m sure you know how wonderful the area is.. once you get rolling on design and construction, feel free to reach out. I build/construct/weld for a living and tend to focus on sustainable sort of modern stuff. I’m no architect, just a guy that has been lucky enough to get to build some really cool structures.
I’m working through the winter building 4 lofts in an old hardware store-but lived for a long time in a commune that really focused on sustainability.
I will travel and I am for hire-as long as the riding is good... and I know it is.
Good luck-it’ll be fun
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
No worries. Give me a bit and we’ll have a new playground home base.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
zambenini
You picked a great spot. My inlaws live near Hot Springs, NC (they are moving and I lament what we are about to lose in terms of a playground home base). Riding aroudn there is off the charts.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Do you have room to build a velodrome around the house ?
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sk_tle
Do you have room to build a velodrome around the house ?
When we bought our land, we were asked two questions by our friends. One was "are you going to put in a swimming pool" and the other was "are you going to put in a velodrome". So that pretty much describes the two kinds of friends we have - cyclists and everyone else.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Given the choice between my very own velodrome and, say, my very own 1.4 mile mtb trail (1.4 mi = circumference of a 100 acre circular plot of land) even though I'm much more of a roadie than an MTB rider, I think I'd take the mtb trail.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Agreed. The 1 acre parcel we just closed on completes the loop of old farm roads that will make an excellent cross country skiing course in the winter and, with some obstacles & terrain features (sand pit?) added, a nice cyclocross course the rest of the time. I am pretty excited about this.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Quote:
Originally Posted by
j44ke
Agreed. The 1 acre parcel we just closed on completes the loop of old farm roads that will make an excellent cross country skiing course in the winter and, with some obstacles & terrain features (sand pit?) added, a nice cyclocross course the rest of the time. I am pretty excited about this.
I made a ski trail in a field one winter with snowshoes, the old kind. It was work, and soon required more work, and then even more.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ides1056
I made a ski trail in a field one winter with snowshoes, the old kind. It was work, and soon required more work, and then even more.
You are building up a good argument for a snowmobile...
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
We're among friends so I feel safe to ask a stupid question - Without wifi and/or cellular service, is it possible to install a remote weather station?
I've seen stations with solar, so the power thing I get, but the transmission of information is another situation.
I'm wanting to position a station on this property to collect accurate weather trends. Can this be done?
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
I install a fair number of remote weather stations for work. If you dont need real-time data there are all sorts of low power dataloggers that you could just download whenever you visit. If you need telemetry then there are some radio options that might bridge you to the nearest cell or wifi access but that is a lot more complicated.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rainy rider
low power dataloggers
Interesting. I'm listening.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Probably need to start with what parameters you actually want to monitor. If you just want to know temperature or (unheated) precipitation then there are little units that will last 10 years on an internal battery. If you want a full blown meteorological station then the sensor choices can play a role in overall power consumption.
What parameters do you care about?
Are you a diy type are looking for a pre-packaged system?
Is accuracy really important to you or is close enough good enough? Related question: do you have a budget in mind?
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Thanks Rainy. Good questions.
Wish list of parameters would be temp, humidity, wind speed/direction, and rain fall. Ultimately, that could be scaled down to temp, wind speed and direction. Accuracy good enough to get me in the ballpark. Nothing too tech.
Because I'm away from this property more than 330 days per year, I want to use this data for building orientation and design reasons. So, I'm not going to split hairs.
I'm a full-on, 100%, do-it-your-own-gd-self kinda guy, but I'm very limited by lack of knowledge when it comes to electronics. So not apposed to a packaged unit.
And I'd spend up to $300 for this entertainment.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
I think the budget likely puts you in the diy realm. There are some packaged systems out there from companies like accurite that would fit the budget but in a quick google search I did not come across any that would not require some modifications as they are not really set up for long term data logging.
I think something along these lines would do what you want and would be fun (if you enjoy this kind of stuff) but it would be full on diy.
https://projects.raspberrypi.org/en/...eather-station
There are probably a dozen more tutorials out there for Raspberrypi and arduino weather stations. If these kinds of boards are unfamiliar I might suggest looking up a local maker space and you might find some helpful people and resources who could get you started.
Hope that helps a little. I have the luxury of large budgets and research-grade instruments at work but i dont have a lot of experience with the arduino/RaspberryPi side of things. I would love to tackle something like this someday for my own back yard but a busy family and work life mean I barely have time to ride my bike these days.
Re: Finally Bought Some Land II
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ras72
Thanks Rainy. Good questions.
Wish list of parameters would be temp, humidity, wind speed/direction, and rain fall. Ultimately, that could be scaled down to temp, wind speed and direction. Accuracy good enough to get me in the ballpark. Nothing too tech.
Because I'm away from this property more than 330 days per year, I want to use this data for building orientation and design reasons. So, I'm not going to split hairs.
I'm a full-on, 100%, do-it-your-own-gd-self kinda guy, but I'm very limited by lack of knowledge when it comes to electronics. So not apposed to a packaged unit.
And I'd spend up to $300 for this entertainment.
If you want a more "affordable" package in term of knowledge to make it run the micro:bits kits can be easier to deal with than doing it with ardunio's or a raspberry:
SparkFun micro:climate kit for micro:bit - KIT-1531 - SparkFun Electronics