Merry Christmas and thanks again for another quality video of the building's progress. I was hoping the "Ride'em Cowboy" statement for Chapter 10 meant we would get a reprisal of my favorite concrete power troweling song, "Hi Ho Cowboy!" But alas, it wasn't meant to be :( I sure hope there is another major construction planned within the range of your cameras in the future!
Lol Well the last Part was sent Pressure Plates was Trims for Doors lol any ways Wishing you a Very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year M8 thanks for the fun Content this Year
@@tardismole They are on any building of any size, at least in the US, but I'd guess elsewhere as well. They generally don't have a sign on them unless they are hidden, like behind a construction fence. All you usually see on the outside as three of for brass connections on the side of the building. But if you are in a stairwell you can often see the standpipes connected to them running up a corner of the stairwell. They allow the fire dept. to connect a pumper to the connection on the ground floor, then have water available on any of the upper floors by connecting a hose to the standpipe.
@@constructionwatcher5381 I don't live in the USA. In Britain, hydrants are under the pavement, under a marked concrete plate. So you never see them unless you happen to be around during a fire, or are in the fire service and have a pole key to lift the concrete plate.
@@tardismole The FDC is not the same thing as a hydrant. In the US, hydrants are generally on on the sidewalk. You can see on from time to time on this project, on the right side of the alley on the right of the building, a short distance back from the corner of the building. A FDC is not a water source. Rather, it connect to a dry standpipe that runs up inside the building, generally in a staircase. The Fire Dept. connects to it and pumps water in from a hydrant, then they go up the stairs and connect a hose to the standpipe in order to have water available on the upper floors without stringing hoses all the way up there.
Hello and good morning from Germany. Merry Christmas and now we are waiting for the latest episode of the Hospital Construction Channel. 001
Not many of us left I see. NY here. Happy holidays to everyone.
Me Too! Merry Christmas I'm waiting for Week 100
NO IS NOT CHRISTMAS
Thanks, HC, for another interesting episode. There seems to be not end of tasks to finish this one.
Thank you ,
🌲🎅🌲
Greetings From the UK
🐺
Ahhhhh, more caulk. I can see someone staying on site as the resident caulking man ( FOREVER!!!!!!)
Merry Christmas and thanks again for another quality video of the building's progress. I was hoping the "Ride'em Cowboy" statement for Chapter 10 meant we would get a reprisal of my favorite concrete power troweling song, "Hi Ho Cowboy!" But alas, it wasn't meant to be :( I sure hope there is another major construction planned within the range of your cameras in the future!
Christmas is over stop sayingitvin boxing day
Great. Well done.
acabando de ver do Brasil as 00:09 do dia 26/12/2021 mais um show da construção americana UM FELIZ NATAL A TODOS.
Dear All, good morning from Hong Kong.
10:30 looks like communications wires maybe some fibres
The cover of the access box says Street Lighting.
great
Were so close week 100 before 2 years week 104
We're winding down on this building I see. It's almost done.
Lol Well the last Part was sent Pressure Plates was Trims for Doors lol any ways Wishing you a Very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year M8 thanks for the fun Content this Year
Bonjour du 🇨🇦 👍👍👍
How long it will be done its nearly week 100
👍👍👍
L,animation ne manque pas 😳😳😳🤩🤩😅😅😅😅🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌
Hi
🇰🇬🇰🇬🇰🇬
Kyrgyzstan
20:52 What does FDC stand for? Great video. I hope you're having a Merry Christmas.
"FDC stands for Fire Department Connection. It is part of a fire sprinkler system or standpipe system." Also known as "Steigleitung trocken" ;-)
@@michaeld_aus_b I'm not German, but thanks. I've never seen one before.
@@tardismole They are on any building of any size, at least in the US, but I'd guess elsewhere as well. They generally don't have a sign on them unless they are hidden, like behind a construction fence. All you usually see on the outside as three of for brass connections on the side of the building. But if you are in a stairwell you can often see the standpipes connected to them running up a corner of the stairwell. They allow the fire dept. to connect a pumper to the connection on the ground floor, then have water available on any of the upper floors by connecting a hose to the standpipe.
@@constructionwatcher5381 I don't live in the USA. In Britain, hydrants are under the pavement, under a marked concrete plate. So you never see them unless you happen to be around during a fire, or are in the fire service and have a pole key to lift the concrete plate.
@@tardismole The FDC is not the same thing as a hydrant. In the US, hydrants are generally on on the sidewalk. You can see on from time to time on this project, on the right side of the alley on the right of the building, a short distance back from the corner of the building.
A FDC is not a water source. Rather, it connect to a dry standpipe that runs up inside the building, generally in a staircase. The Fire Dept. connects to it and pumps water in from a hydrant, then they go up the stairs and connect a hose to the standpipe in order to have water available on the upper floors without stringing hoses all the way up there.
Привет с России 👍👍👍👍👍👍
Before January 1, 2022.
2
L'animation ne manque pas 👍👍😅😅😂🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡