Carpentry in Commercial Construction
is unique. In many years of reading
books about building, I''ve never seen
one that organized and presented
material in quite this way. This book
is written for the builder who has
been doing single-family residential
work and who wants to branch out to
commercial. It attempts to inform the
reader about the many differences
between these two related construction
fields. Seven chapters cover
different tasks, from form work to
installing cabinets. But the uniqueness
of the book lies in the way each of its
chapters is written.
Each one opens with a list of
selected definitions, ranging from
time-line plan and procuring to rabbet
and straight edge. These terms should
already be familiar to readers