Thursday, March 7, 2013

Prefabricated Sports Buildings

Prefabricated Sport Building


Prefabricated Sports Buildings are being used in lots of sports nowadays. They provide flexibility, save building time and reduce costs. Hence, they are preferred for structures and even accessories like stands and seats for stadiums and gyms. Even prefabricated flooring options for various sports are quite in demand. Prefabricated Sports Buildings are available in various materials like steel, fiberglass, wood or aluminum, depending on the usage.

Prefabricated Buildings can be used as a horse riding area, gymnasium, swimming pool enclosure, tennis court, ice hockey rink, driving range, basketball / volleyball court, paintball or fitness equipment facility. These buildings provide the essential columns-free openness and the ceiling space needed for such types of sports. Both the sportspersons and the spectators need to feel comfortable. Thus, all such Prefabricated Sports Buildings are fully customizable, with unlimited building sizes, ceiling heights, perfect lights, insulation, and a wide variety of colors and finishes. In addition, there are accessories to choose from, including sliding doors, roll-up doors, overhead doors, windows, seating systems, vents, skylights and wall lights.

Flooring becomes an essential part of a Prefabricated Sports Building, since it can be ready along with the building itself, and offers portability and cost benefits. It can be overlaid on an existing floor and comes in panels, tiles or rolls. It is generally made from rubber and wood, depending on the need, and permits heavy usage. It can be found in many sportive colors and can be fixed permanently, if desired. It is considered ideal for tracks and play fields to have these prefabricated floorings.

Once you have decided to go in for Prefabricated Sports Building, check out your needs carefully and approach the Prefabricated Buildings manufacturers either in your area or through the Internet. It is better to confirm the credentials of the company before placing the order.

Prefabricated Buildings provides detailed information about prefabricated building, prefabricated metal buildings, small prefabricated buildings, prefabricated building manufacturers and more.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

New modular homes nail quick construction, high efficiency, hot design

The architect is known for his talents in contemporary design. The prefab home manufacturer is known for swift, economical construction.

They made a fine team.

"Our whole promise was: Could we do a cool, energy-efficient modern home and do it modular?" says Brad Tomecek, 35, an architect with Boulder-based Studio H:T. "The answer is 'yes.' "

Take a walk through Brad and Christa Tomecek's sleek 2,700-square-foot Barvista Homes house, in the Highland neighborhood northwest of Lower Downtown, and your preconceived notions of what a factory-built home looks like are dashed. Forget safe, neutral- toned Formica and standard finishes. The kitchen features bold black granite countertops, a colorful glass mosaic backsplash, stainless steel appliances and bamboo flooring.

Black-stained wooden stair risers and a smooth drywall finish add to the contemporary look.

Even the master bathroom is chic, with a riverstone shower basin, ceramic denim-colored tiles and black flooring.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Fine Living: Prefab cabanas catch on as affordable extra room

Prefab Cabanas home picture

Nate Cohen wanted to add on a guest bedroom to his home in Larkspur; instead he added a guest house complete with a kitchenette and full bath in his front garden, and was ready to welcome out-of-town visitors in just a few months.

"Everybody who sees it, wants to come and stay in it," he says of his compact 12-by-25 prefabricated building with knotty cedar siding and a 50-year steel roof.

And why not? There's a shower/tub combo and a tile floor from Tile Stone in San Rafael in the bathroom; a cooktop, maple cabinetry and granite countertops in the kitchen; and floor-to-ceiling windows and engineered walnut flooring in the open living space.

His studio by Modern Cabana, the latest model to roll off the San Francisco company's assembly line, is highly customized, but all models are "green" with recycled denim insulation, dual-pane or low-E coating windows, no or low VOC finishes and FSC-certified wood down to the studs. Because it uses off-the-shelf materials, "we have just a tiny pile of waste - only 5 percent waste compared to usual 30 percent of a site-built project, owner and architect Casper Mork-Ulnes says.