Sunday, October 23, 2011

Tooting Todd's Horn!


With each passing day I am learning more about the complex, frustrating, but truly remarkable world of construction. Although natural landscape can not be rivaled, the human ability to design and construct is mind-blowing.

The spillway and dam wall


Standing on top of the wall looking at the intake tower 
 I first saw the dam two years ago on a family day. The usual strictly guarded gates are opened up to the workers’ family and friends for a casual day of bbq-ing and tours around the site. I remember piling into the bus and bumping along dirt roads flanked by piles of more dirt and clay. Over the hum of other families, the rumble of the bus, and the designated tour guide trying in vain to explain what was outside the dusty windows, Todd explained how the clay had to be kept to a specific moisture content in order to be fit for the clay core of the dam wall. The weather dictated the work flow as the clay would have to be dried or wetted down by huge sprinklers depending on the day and its use. We passed the quarry where the rock for the wall was “harvested,” aka, “taken off “the mountain side next to the reservoir and the temporary office spaces and caravans scattered over the grounds like little base stations.

The main embankment looking at the intake tower


Seeing this same space two years later was astonishing. Gone were the piles of dirt and rock and in their place: perfectly manicured lawns, sculpture gardens and roads of newly laid asphalt. Todd’s main projects throughout the dam were, being in charge of the quarry, "Todd's road", the road built up over the dam wall to give park rangers’ access to the spillway in order to monitor the wall and ensure that it holds and does not cause seepage, and the main embankment, 70 million cubic feet of rock that holds in the water  and was the main earthwork project.  Additionally, Todd is a little bit of a tech genius (or so I think) and so he was in charge of all the gps machine guidance, which are basically computer systems installed on the big construction machines that allow the controller to follow the plans more closely. Todd is such a big shot in fact that you can read an article he contributed to in Technology and More Magazine (http://www.trimble.com/technologyandmore/i1-2009/ - page 8).  Cool, huh?

Other awesome facts about the dam: 
The 20 million dollar capture building!
-      - They spent $20 million constructing a fish capture station that sorts and saves fish that are native and critical to the dam’s ecosystem. 
-      - This stage of the dam (second major upgrade) raised the dam wall by 49 ft and increased the water capacity by 82,000 million gallons!

The dam is now a complete site for sore eyes, complete with a beautifully designed visitor’s center, many recreational areas for the hundreds of visitors expected every weekend, complete with the picturesque backdrop of the Gold Coast Hinterland.  I could not be prouder of him! 
Visitor's Center


View from beyond the Visitor's Center


The beautiful landscape (Todd's workplace!)

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

My fairly routine life

Big salad (check), Mac (check), LOTS of textbooks (check)!
Most days look like this:



But occasionally, my day looks like this:


Roman after a surf at Currumbin
People playing with a "footy" ball at Currumbin 

Surfer's Paradise in the distance
Todd on the phone to his other half (Russ) :)
The Elephant Rock surf club - can you see
 the elephant's head peaking up behind the building? 


I have been really busy doing exactly what picture A illustrates so i haven't had time to write about... well, anything, but I am planning on writing the blog about Todd's dam this weekend! Hold me to it :)

Also, look what I got on Saturday :)


AND, the surprise was complete with a mini (thank G-d) box of chocolates that contained gluten. ie. Todd couldn't eat them! Is that true love or what... ;-)

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Date Night


At the Q1, Todd needs smiling lessons :)

True to his word, Todd has been keeping my life interesting so that I have something to occupy you all with. I think I am just going to have to blog forever because I love when he gets this proactive! This week we had a date night. The last time I was here, he promised he would take me to the top of the Q1, and this can now be checked off my list. The Q1 was the tallest residential building in the Southern Hemisphere (until that monstrosity in Dubai), but the view from the Skypoint Bar (over 700 feet in the air) is truly phenomenal. We walked around the building soaking up the view, while reading the facts and advertising plastered to the floor. Todd used to live in this impressive chick-magnet with his friend Russell, so he showed me the view they had and this experience completely solidified the fact that I never want to live in a building over 10 stories high. Hitchcock wrote that movie about a very real thing… yah, no thanks!


Dinner with the herbs under heat lambs
From vertigo central, we went to the Italian restaurant Vapianos, which was a very unique dining experience. When you enter, you are given a swipe card and all your food and drink purchases are put on the card. This is probably the way of the future, and although it didn’t really affect our one bill meal, if we would have been there with a group, this system would have been a G-d send. We looked at the menu, ordered drinks from the bar, and then walked up to the pasta station and the chef made our food in front of us. Despite the semi-fast-food feel, the quality and taste was superior.  Perhaps the best part of all was that every ledge, table and shelf, had different potted herbs so that you could go around the restaurant and add basil, rosemary, cilantro, mint, etc. to your hearts content. I can definitely see why this restaurant is opening chains all across Australia, and the night, like the restaurant, was an overwhelming success! 
Cooking station

View of the ocean when we arrived at twilight


Night view of Surfers Paradise