Nôtre-Dame de Paris: 1163-2019

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
The cost and time frame might as well be double what they estimate, I don't know of a project that HIGH PROFILE
that realistically came in near the original estimate.

Count on scam artists to come out in droves to prey on the unsuspecting.

i know, that's the scary part of this, almost a billion dollars in the kiddy, think they is where the vultures come out...
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
...knee depressions and foot trails worn into the stone floor.
IKR? Just read a conservation article about The Scala Santa (The Holy Stairs), stairs Jesus climbed the day He was condemned to death. Originally at Pontius Pilate’s Palace in Jerusalem, Saint Helena brought them to Rome in the fourth century. They had been covered in walnut planking for the past 300 years because the Faithful (who only ascended these on their knees) had flat worn the centers down in the limestone. Can you imagine?

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/10/world/europe/holy-stairs-rome-restoration.html
http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/walking-where-jesus-walked-holy-stairs-reopen-to-pilgrims
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
The cost and time frame might as well be double what they estimate, I don't know of a project that HIGH PROFILE
that realistically came in near the original estimate.

Count on scam artists to come out in droves to prey on the unsuspecting.

i know, that's the scary part of this, almost a billion dollars in the kiddy, think they is where the vultures come out...
Scam calls incoming, like we don't get enough already.

I read somewhere that almost 50% of calls are telemarketing and scams now. My call blocker is filled with numbers.
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Scam calls incoming, like we don't get enough already.

I read somewhere that almost 50% of calls are telemarketing and scams now. My call blocker is filled with numbers.
mine too both at home and here at the shop.....me and another guy here have fun with them when we pick up the phone......

think the last one, they asked for the owner, my guy pointed at me...so i picked it and said "this is officer such and such from the fraud division, how can i help u" and they hang up.....

i think in this instance your gonna get alot of calls along the lines " of we are picking up donations for the cathedril how much would like to donate calls" aka scam call.....looking for free money..
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
mine too both at home and here at the shop.....me and another guy here have fun with them when we pick up the phone......

think the last one, they asked for the owner, my guy pointed at me...so i picked it and said "this is officer such and such from the fraud division, how can i help u" and they hang up.....

i think in this instance your gonna get alot of calls along the lines " of we are picking up donations for the cathedril how much would like to donate calls" aka scam call.....looking for free money..
Some guy called me for a donation to the police union or some shit.

So I called the number on my other cell and it said 'number not in service'.

So I ask the guy how the fuck is he calling from a number not in service and he hung up.

WTF?
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Some guy called me for a donation to the police union or some shit.

So I called the number on my other cell and it said 'number not in service'.

So I ask the guy how the fuck is he calling from a number not in service and he hung up.

WTF?
i've gotten those as well, i've also got the IRS calls to "saying i owe this much money" the called ID has them pegged in NW somewhere, so i ask them where are u calling from the they say Washington, i say "yeah, like Washington state huh" then they hang up....also becareful of the ones that say "just get us some money on this gift card or a prepaid CC card" those are scams too....there is one that's happening down here with our local power company, people will come to you house, yes i said that correctly, and literaly ask you for the money right then and there. Our local power company will never do that....they put a local advisement about it earlier this month.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
saw this on VOX today, an interesting perspective I hadn't thought of:

"My social media feeds have been overwhelmed by my friends and colleagues mourning the burning of Notre Dame Cathedral these past two days. As a scholar of medieval studies, I get it — the building had a special resonance for lovers of history, architecture, and art.

But when I read that the fire was most likely caused by restoration workers, my heart broke for them. These roofers and restoration experts do the tireless work of keeping these buildings functional for all of us, and they do it at great personal risk and with little recognition.

My father is a roofer. My brother spent 30 years roofing, while I did it for seven summers. I know how easy it is for a small mistake on any construction site to cause a massive disaster.

I’m sure there are dozens of workers associated with Notre Dame who are thinking and rethinking every single action they took Monday trying to figure out if they are in any way responsible. My heart is shattered for them. They might never know for certain and they may never forgive themselves thinking it’s their fault. I have been in their boots.

One summer when I was roofing, I was ripping cedar shakes off a fancy house. This is especially nasty, hot, itchy work. It’s also extremely flammable. Most of us smoked; one of my dad’s guys who I was working with pulled me over to a spot where a cigarette butt was smoldering and told me that we were probably 10 minutes from the entire million-dollar house burning to the ground. He held it up and showed me the brand: “That’s yours. Be more careful.”

This is just one of thousands of little opportunities to make a mistake on a construction site. 99.9 percent of the time, none of us screw up. But when we do, it can be disastrous.

To this day — despite all the many many regulations, controls and safety measures — building construction is among the deadliest jobs that exist. Roofing in particular ranks just behind logging, fishing, and aircraft operation as the most deadly jobs in the US. Iron and steel workers, the builders of our buildings, are just another step down. This kind of work is dangerous, physically excruciating, and essential. It is also largely invisible. Construction workers are rarely seen as heroes and death or injury on the job are not mourned outside of their families.

In fact, many of us only think of construction workers as a nuisance, especially at places like Notre Dame: Scaffolding messes up our pictures or work sites prevent us from accessing parts of historical structures we had hoped to see. Nobody thanks construction workers for their endless labor. Yet without them, we would not have these buildings at all.

When news broke Tuesday that the damage to the interior of Notre Dame was far less severethan had been feared, we were quick and right to praise the medieval craftspeople who built this phenomenal structure. But it’s not just 13th-century masons who deserve our respect today. Notre Dame and all monuments of its ilk are what they are today because of the continual maintenance and care of thousands of builders, workers, carpenters, roofers, glaziers, artists, masons, and wrights who keep our buildings alive. But none of these people show up in front-page photos the way that firefighters do.

But when the very worst happens, workers like that are going to return to that most dangerous work to preserve our buildings. I wish I could thank every single one of them this week."


Damian Fleming is a professor of English and medieval studies at Purdue University Fort Wayne. The biggest roofer he knows once called him “an okay guy, for a laborer.
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
saw this on VOX today, an interesting perspective I hadn't thought of:

"My social media feeds have been overwhelmed by my friends and colleagues mourning the burning of Notre Dame Cathedral these past two days. As a scholar of medieval studies, I get it — the building had a special resonance for lovers of history, architecture, and art.

But when I read that the fire was most likely caused by restoration workers, my heart broke for them. These roofers and restoration experts do the tireless work of keeping these buildings functional for all of us, and they do it at great personal risk and with little recognition.

My father is a roofer. My brother spent 30 years roofing, while I did it for seven summers. I know how easy it is for a small mistake on any construction site to cause a massive disaster.

I’m sure there are dozens of workers associated with Notre Dame who are thinking and rethinking every single action they took Monday trying to figure out if they are in any way responsible. My heart is shattered for them. They might never know for certain and they may never forgive themselves thinking it’s their fault. I have been in their boots.

One summer when I was roofing, I was ripping cedar shakes off a fancy house. This is especially nasty, hot, itchy work. It’s also extremely flammable. Most of us smoked; one of my dad’s guys who I was working with pulled me over to a spot where a cigarette butt was smoldering and told me that we were probably 10 minutes from the entire million-dollar house burning to the ground. He held it up and showed me the brand: “That’s yours. Be more careful.”

This is just one of thousands of little opportunities to make a mistake on a construction site. 99.9 percent of the time, none of us screw up. But when we do, it can be disastrous.

To this day — despite all the many many regulations, controls and safety measures — building construction is among the deadliest jobs that exist. Roofing in particular ranks just behind logging, fishing, and aircraft operation as the most deadly jobs in the US. Iron and steel workers, the builders of our buildings, are just another step down. This kind of work is dangerous, physically excruciating, and essential. It is also largely invisible. Construction workers are rarely seen as heroes and death or injury on the job are not mourned outside of their families.

In fact, many of us only think of construction workers as a nuisance, especially at places like Notre Dame: Scaffolding messes up our pictures or work sites prevent us from accessing parts of historical structures we had hoped to see. Nobody thanks construction workers for their endless labor. Yet without them, we would not have these buildings at all.

When news broke Tuesday that the damage to the interior of Notre Dame was far less severethan had been feared, we were quick and right to praise the medieval craftspeople who built this phenomenal structure. But it’s not just 13th-century masons who deserve our respect today. Notre Dame and all monuments of its ilk are what they are today because of the continual maintenance and care of thousands of builders, workers, carpenters, roofers, glaziers, artists, masons, and wrights who keep our buildings alive. But none of these people show up in front-page photos the way that firefighters do.

But when the very worst happens, workers like that are going to return to that most dangerous work to preserve our buildings. I wish I could thank every single one of them this week."


Damian Fleming is a professor of English and medieval studies at Purdue University Fort Wayne. The biggest roofer he knows once called him “an okay guy, for a laborer.

With extended coding it can do early recognition and alert.
 
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