Draconaei’s Blog

Things have their shape in time, not space alone. Some marble blocks have statues within them, embedded in their future.

Archive for July 22nd, 2010

Shot Glass Shelving

What’s this?  Two postings in a row??

Some might say, “We are not fooled, this still does not make up for you posting hardly anything this past month!” and to you I say “shhh!” and point to the shiny – er, I mean, the new design below.

So, what have we here?  I collect shot glasses from (almost) every place I travel, but currently lack any way to display them.  Hence, the desired outcome: shelving that displays a variety of single and double shot glasses, uses only a couple materials, is easy to cut/prepare, and straightforward to assemble.

My method: modular design with only three types of components, because repeating a few basic forms is often the foundation for a good design.  Also, for assembling, the simpler the better.  These components are shelving (acrylic rectangles), vertical supports (threaded rods), and attachments (nuts.)

Notice that all the acrylic pieces are the same.  Shifting them is both for aesthetic purposes – I’m fond of asymmetry – and a practical purpose, which is providing space for double-height shot glasses.  The simplified side view on the left shows the general structure.

Both shelves on the top row will be hung on support screws protruding from the wall, and will carry the distributed weight of the remaining shelves.  Material preparation seems simple, only involving repeated straight cuts through the acrylic and rod-sized holes drilled at regular intervals.  Assembly is easy- slide threaded rods through the acrylic, adjust nut heights as desired.  Now to find this ever-elusive “free time”!

Construction Drawings

Lately I have been silent here – but as always, not for lack of work.  In preparation for graduate school applications, and as a warmup for the incredibly daunting task of redesigning my portfolio, I reworked and graphically refined my final semester construction documents.

Behold!  I present you with thumbnails of each page.  My favorite ones are also links to larger images.

Front Cover

Table of Contents

Occupation/Zones

Egress

Cost

Structure

Plumbing

HVAC

Skin/Enclosure

The end!  =)