Sunday, May 13, 2012

Door-table: Get a Piece of BSM.

Feeling nostalgic for the old BSM house? Wish that this week you could go there and do nothing between your classes? Well, we can do much for your work schedule but we can help scratch a BSM attachment itch. You could have a piece of BSM. Specifically, a door. 


This is one of the old doors from BSM. They are solid wood, 6 panel doors for the early 1930's. What will you do with one of these things? Well maybe you could make a table.


Here is a finished door-table. A few coats of paint, some stenciled words, a few coats of poly and presto-changeo you have yourself a table. The legs are from IKEA. You have a memory from BSM with which you can make new memories. Did you ever live up stairs? You might want Your Door. We are accepting donations now for the door of your choice.


We have lots of door left. 


 What will you do with your door.

Next week you get to see what we did with a cabinet door. 


Thursday, April 26, 2012

Whats in a name?


Letters on the building. Going Legit. 

Doors. Finally they are here.


This is a typical interior door. It gates one of the two small group rooms.


These are the new front doors. Don't think anyone will be knocking their first time there. 

Drywall!!

In just over a week the entire facility was drywalled. 
Impressed with how fast some of the contractors work.

Main room entering from west side.

Main room looking toward will a small stage will be. 120-140 can squeeze in here



Outside and in.


The front brick is going up. We have collected extras to give to our alumni at the homecoming event this July 28th.

Front brick is finished and the sides are complete. This is the finished exterior. It is what students from Rodney and Dickinson Halls will see as they go to class.

Electrical is all run. Waiting on drywall and paint before final switches are connected and the circuits installed

Insulation is in. It is already much warmer and quieter in here.


Fire suppression complete.


Friday, February 3, 2012

Roof, windows, and wrap.

We are now 2 months ahead of the build schedule. Great weather and great workers = big building real soon. So exciting to see the place take shape. I can imagine the 2012 Rodney/Dickenson freshmen walking by (and hopefully in).
Why did I ever doubt this would be a good idea. Look like we have an entrance. The brick will begin in a few weeks and then the place will look slammin'. (say i to the ugly pole)
This pic really gives some perspective of how big the building is. It is over twice the space we had before, though it is all functional. Max height 35'.

Framing (like a month ago)

The BSM construction is moving right along. In the pics below you can see the first floor in being framed. I met the framing crew. They are Amish. They were fun to talk to and very quick workers. In fact, I was not able to get a picture on the 2nd floor framing because they finished in in a matter of days. And you will see in the next post the place is going up fast.

That Utility pole is really an eyesore now.







Wednesday, January 11, 2012

The Plans

Here are the plans for the BSM Building. Below in the front view form Amstel Ave. Brick front and finally handicap accessible. This is the door through which 1000's of students will enter in the future. You might want to pause and pray about that.

From the side, the place is twice as long as our previous building. The two door on the bottom left are a separate entrance for the residents upstairs and a rear entrance in to the large space. Stone and brick accents with the majority of the surface being covered by stucco. The bank of four windows that light the stairs make a (unintended by the architect) cross.
First flor view. I described this in an earlier post. It is a big upgrade to our previous facility.

2nd floor. The space is split between a ministry portion in the bottom half and a residential portion in the top half. We will be able to have 2-3 small groups meeting in this space simultaneously. these rooms are perfectly sized for a huddle of 10-14 people. The residential section is pretty nice. The bedrooms are the size as the big rooms in the old house. In addition, we were approved to have up to 2 people per room making the BSM house a 8-person party. Small kitchenette to prepare meals, hall laundry, and comfy baths make this space ideal. We are already full for next year.

Foundation


The clean swept flat earth is gone. Enter the never ending piles of materials, trucks, and a port-o-potty. This finally feels like a build and not like we lost everything to a disaster. With the warm weather the footers and slab were able to be poured before any freezing. This represented a huge deadline completion. Now, the build should go as scheduled regardless of temperature.

From this angle, the site looks small, feeding my worst fears that we are building something that we will outgrow in a few years and not decades. The main meeting room begins just behind the four red support poles. We are to be able to have 130+ in a large group setting. At this point I am not seeing the possibility. I comfort my self believing we made the best possible decision with the information we had at the time. And that some walls might make it look bigger.

Below is the floor plan for the first level. Offices, baths, kitchen and main room. The office is 30% larger than the old office. The bathrooms are not the closet on the 2nd stair. In fact, they each have a shower in them giving us the ability to house mission teams. The kitchen will enable us to make a bunch of food for outreaches. We are thinking about having a meal before Tuesday BSM with some regularity.



The Earth is Flat


Ok not the whole earth is flat, just our little portion.



In just a week all the material was hauled away, the basement hole filled and the property leveled to grade.


The property stood for over almost 80 years and in 8 days it is only a sign.


Monday, January 9, 2012

Destruction

On november 18th the BSM House was torn down. I took these shots from the same prospective over about an hour time span.



The excavator made quick work of the structer. It even divided the mason work from the wood. This feat sometimes involved delicately picking up a single 2x4 to move to the correct pile.

It was so strange to think students were living in those rooms a few months ago.

I watched the house come down with Katie, our associate director, and three students. I was a little sad but mostly exciting for what the future might hold. Buildings are not sacred shrines. Well, at least not this one. It is a tool. This instrument is being refashioned and sharpened for greater impact in the kingdom.