Where are the Local Listings?

Where are the Local Listings? They're on my new website Locally Owned Locally Made Gosford at lhttp://locallygosford.blogspot.com.au/.


Feedback made urgent the moving of the Local Listings to the new site, so they can flourish without having to be hunted down on this site.

Locally Owned Locally Made Gosford
will have live links to businesses websites and business phone numbers for tradespeople and others who don’t need websites. When I first go live, I’ll be putting up some live links and phone numbers for free until I have things sorted out and I’m ready to charge (standard) pay-per-click rates. Enjoy!

Friday, 10 November 2017

Bonython Tower AKA Singo's tower

Bonython Tower site, November 2017
All the visible work done on this site since last week seems to have been done on the loading dock, down there at the bottom of this photo.


The loading dock, November 2017
The loading dock, at the back of the site, with its concrete poured and covered in protective sheets of timber, the re-bar structures sprouting up through it.


1st floor poured, primed & ready, November 2017
All primed and ready with great stacks of fresh materials, awaiting the next rash of activity on the 1st floor (U.S. 2nd floor).


White channels in the poured & protected floor, November 2017
The white lines in the floor are narrow channels between one section of floor and another. Are they for slotting glass walls into or some other purpose? One section of the floor, on the right hand side of this photo, is raised just a little bit. That change in floor level is about halfway between the front and the back of the 1st floor (U.S. 2nd floor).


More of this fast moving building site on Mann Street Gosford next week. Get out there into the lovely Gosford spring sunshine while you're waiting.

2 comments:

  1. Hi, Nothing to do with glass..The White Lines are Fillets that we install in the corners of the plywood so that when the form work is removed after pouring the concrete All the edges of the slab sofit will have a chamfer (rather then being sharp square edge) Regards Ben

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you for clearing that up, Ben. I genuinely appreciate clarifications like that :)

    ReplyDelete

Be nice.