29 01, 2020

VisionAries – Tiffany Wilson

2023-09-01T20:18:27+00:00

Your formal title at Aries : Permian Basin Regional Sales Manager.

Your job duties & responsibilities : Selling  remote lodges to companies and individuals.

How long have you been at Aries? 9 months

Where did you work prior to Aries; was it in the same industry or something totally different? I have been in Sales for over 10 years !  Credit Card Processing , Solar , Chemical , Oil and Gas .

When you’re not at work, what would we find you doing? Hanging out with my 2 daughters, shopping , and traveling .

Hometown? Lubbock, Texas

Family, children? 2 daughters, Brooklyn and Mariana.

What would “your perfect day” consist of? It would consist of a beach , a tan , good friends  , and good music !

What’s your favorite part about working for Aries so far? My favorite part about working for Aries is the people ! When you work for good people and have a great boss like I do , it makes you love your company !

What sets Aries apart from other companies that deliver the exact same things? We all Care ! We are involved ! We are all a phone call away to help at any time ! Our customers know that they can count on any of us !

What do you hope to bring to Aries in terms of leadership and company culture? I hope to bring to Aries – growth , strength and a strong team effort on my part .

If you weren’t working for Aries, what job would you probably have? Something in Sales ! I love working in sales !

What do you think the future holds for Aries? My motto is – Give in or give it all you got and I choose to give all I got !! Aries Dream Team  2020 !!

VisionAries – Tiffany Wilson2023-09-01T20:18:27+00:00
18 01, 2020

Historic Moments in Early Modular Building

2024-11-12T21:21:25+00:00

: A square, brown, modern wooden house with a wide, bonnet roof sitting on top of a large dock in the middle of a pond; in the background are a few small hills with sparse green vegetation.

The Beginning of Prefabrication

The year was 40,000 BC: Early Homo sapiens could only make the most rudimentary of tools. They shared the earth with Neanderthals, and no human had yet to cross the Bering Land Bridge from Asia into North America. Yet it’s very likely that this early human invented a technology that is as relevant 42,000 years later as it was back then: prefabricated construction. Originally hunter-gatherers used animal skins, leaves, branches and wooden structures as makeshift homes for protection from the elements.

On verdant grass surrounded by trees sits a tee-pee made with thin branches, brown animal skins, and a small opening as a door. Through the trees you can see more tee-pees, resembling an early settlement. Attribution: Photograph by Pierre André Leclercq

It’s highly likely that one of these early humans, an innovator, made an amazingly, well-built tent, and, as the tribe moved towards their next destination, the innovator took apart her tent and bundled the animal skins around the frame-poles. She called over her eldest son and helped him secure the pack onto his back. Then, when they arrived at a new location and the rest of the tribe scrambled around looking for adequate sticks to build shelter, our innovator simply unpacked her prefabricated tent, set it up, and maybe spent her extra leisure time painting on the walls of a nearby cave. Our innovator has proven that prefabrication is just more efficient.

From Pre-fabrication to Modular building – Defining the Criteria for our list.

Prefabrication, then, is one of the earliest human innovations. Later, civilizations expanded upon the prefab tradition with modular construction. There is a difference between prefabricated and modular construction.

Prefabrication is anytime that the components of a building are manufactured off-site. Modular construction is a specific type of prefabrication where components of the building are modules; that is, self-contained units that can attach, either vertically or horizontally, and form structures that are more complex.

The nuanced difference between these two construction styles makes a big difference in what is included in our “Historic Moments in Early Modular Building” list. For example, the Eiffel Tower can never be a part of the conversation about the history of modular construction: it was prefabricated, not modular. All of the components of the tower were manufactured off-site, and the pieces were assembled together later, like a jigsaw puzzle.

Aries is a successful modular construction company because we rely on modular, turn-key solutions, or modules ready for operation as soon as they have been assembled on site.

These modules are manufactured with the internal complexity already in place. The delivered classrooms, offices, houses, cafeterias, libraries, and locker-rooms already contain the toilets, shelves, lights, wiring, air-conditioning, showers, and other amenities.

Aries provides truly self-contained units that offer efficiency and flexibility. The modules with internal complexity—i.e. lights, pluming, toilets—are ready for use once they are delivered to the site. The modules can operate either by themselves or be linked together to make a complex.

While older buildings might be modular in form, they usually require extensive interior set-up prior to use.

With this in mind, we can finally begin our “Historical Moments in Modular Building.” Besides each building in our list we will rank it 1-10, 10 being closer to Aries’ style modular building: self-contained units with the interior complexity already fabricated before delivery.

Historic Moments in Early Modular Building 

  1. 17th Century Ottoman Empire (Modular Ranking: 3)

A colorful painting portraying two kneeling men, with facial hear and turbans, facing each other in an offset position, one of them on an artistic decorated rug. They are inside of a tent with red, blue, green, and yellow interior.

The pure ambition of Ottoman Empire tents embodied the spirit of modular building in such a way that it earns the first spot on the list. Ottoman tents have been called multi-functional mobile palaces.[1]

These tents varied from “multi-storied, three-poled ovoid structures to individual parasols; and from rather austere bathroom and kitchen tents to ceremonial marquees and baldachins lavishly ornamented with layers of polychrome appliqué and gilded leather accents.”[2] The Ottomans customized each tent according to its use: ceremonies, cooking, executions, celebrations, military campaigns, or vacations. For example, kitchen tents always had ventilation holes in the roof.”[3]

These portable structures were not just useful; they were extravagant, beautiful, mesmerizing, and artistic. Externally, they were often made to resemble permanent palaces.[4] Internally, they had intricate and lovely artwork, sometimes containing detailed and accurate panoramas of entire cities embroidered into their sides. Like stained glass windows, the sun would filter through the tent causing the art to come to life.

Constantly on the move, Ottoman sultans used these tents as a home away from home, a tradition that Aries Residence Suites strives to maintain. These tents only have a modular ranking of 3, because they were transported through disassembling, not as a complete module, and the internal complexity—in this case lamps, cushions, chairs—would have to be transported and set up each and every time, separating these tents from ideal modular structures.

2. 1670 Colonial Modular Houses (Modular Ranking: 1)

Colonial modular homes of 1670 include any pre-fabricated colonial home, ranging the famous Australian modular homes, to the modular home sent to Colonial Massachusetts in 1670,[5] to the houses sent to the “forty-niners” who were prospecting gold in California.

A grey-scale sketch of a hilly settlement with a cluster of houses surrounded by pine trees on the border of a tumultuous river, on the river bank stand two men who are conversing by the side of a small boat.

With many different style choices and extremely easy to build, these houses made robust homes a reality for the European pioneers. The immigrants to Australia describe their frustration at learning to build with the local materials and their homes were repeatedly blown away by strong gusts of winds.[1] When they got an offer for modular homes from Great Britain, they couldn’t resist. Soon these sturdy houses, one of which still stands today, showed just how valuable it could be to pack up a home and unpack it at any site of your choosing.

[1] https://www.cornucopia.net/blog/found-objects-19th-century-ottoman-imperial-tents/

[2]https://www.academia.edu/7659821/Fabricating_a_New_Image_Imperial_Tents_in_the_Late_Ottoman_Period

[3]https://www.academia.edu/7659821/Fabricating_a_New_Image_Imperial_Tents_in_the_Late_Ottoman_Period

[4]https://www.academia.edu/7659821/Fabricating_a_New_Image_Imperial_Tents_in_the_Late_Ottoman_Period

[5] https://www.modular.org/HtmlPage.aspx?name=faq

[6] Herbert, G. (1972). The Portable Colonial Cottage. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 31(4), 261-275. doi:10.2307/988810

These houses pioneered the essential components of subsequent modular building: customization, ease of building, and designed for portability.[1] However, these houses only rank with a paltry “1” for modular construction. Although they are almost always included on modular construction lists, these houses could hardly be joined with other modules, and they usually weren’t delivered as true modules, but as “build-it-yourself” type sets with all the instructions and materials included.

3. 1851 “Portable” Crystal Palace (Modular Ranking: 9)

A grey-scale drawing of a long rectangular building, the center of which rises to a large cylindrical dome with a flag waving in the wind on top, and, in front of the building, congregate men and women on horses and on foot. The men are wearing top-hats and the women long dresses as a couple dogs and children walk around.

During its time, it was a wonder of wonders, a must-see for everyone traveling to London. It hosted the Great Exhibition of 1851 and its tremendous size and architectural advancements created awe and wonder as a perfect embodiment of renaissance and industrial revolution ideals:

“Innovative in structure, completely new in its function, unusual in form and significant in the associations it embodied, it takes its place with a handful of other preeminent buildings such as the Pantheon, Hagia Sophia and Abbot Suger’s St. Denis.”[1]

The Russian writer Dostoevsky, aghast at the size, ambition, and capitalistic relevance of the Crystal Palace would become obsessed with the building and would write about its symbolic existence as being something that “you feel that something final has been accomplished, accomplished and brought to a close.”[2]

It was 1,848 feet long by 408 feet wide. It was relocated and enlarged, eventually measuring more than a quarter mile long.[3] Within, it contained all types of wonders and technologies displayed during the Great Exhibition. More importantly, and the reason that it gets a ranking of 9 on our list, is that the

Crystal Palace astounded the world with modular buildings powers: its construction was fast, it could be relocated, and it could be expanded almost effortlessly, without sacrificing design or size.

4. 1855 Endless, Prefabricated Renkioi Hospital (Modular Ranking:7)

Florence Nightingale, a nurse who, from the destruction of war, brought about a revolution in medicine…and also, an advance in modular construction.

[1] Kihlstedt, F. (1984). The Crystal Palace. Scientific American,251(4), 132-143. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/24969462

[2] [2] http://sarahjyoung.com/site/2010/04/22/the-crystal-palace-in-russian-literature-2/

[3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNUrMS4N_cM

[1]Herbert, G. (1972). The Portable Colonial Cottage. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 31(4), 261-275. doi:10.2307/988810

The blueprints for a long rectangular building with a gable roof and rows of hospitals beds can be seen from the top, side, front, and back angles and labels, the largest of which says Renkioi Hospital.

Nightingale was a nurse working for the British in Turkey during the Crimean war. She developed advanced theories of ventilation for disease prevention in hospitals. In order to meet the growing demand for a hospital, the British commissioned and sent a modular hospital that met the ventilation needs stipulated by Nightingale.

As with other buildings on the list, Renkioi hospital traveled not as a modular unit, but as a prefabricated kit full of the parts.  However, Renkioi soars high to a modular ranking of 7 because it provided a modular solution to a common problem in the healthcare industry: the Renkioi hospital had an initial patient capacity, but the British weren’t sure just how many patients the hospital might have to hold. The solution was to design an endless hospital, the length equipped to be increased indefinitely. The wards could be linked to grow the hospital with demand.

With this innovation, modular construction increased its competitive advantage over other forms of construction.

5. 1908 Sears Kit Homes (Modular Ranking: 3)

Like the Colonial Modular Houses, Sears Kit Homes were delivered in “build-it-yourself” type sets. Ordered from a catalog, the home would appear at the delivery site where the new owner could assemble the house. However, Sears Kit Homes only garner a ranking of 3 because they couldn’t be united with other homes to make more complex structures, and their delivery in kits places them close to prefabrication rather than true modular building. These faults cause these gorgeous houses to fall well beneath the vanguard for modular building.

A grey-scale sketch with the title “five rooms Neat Porch” that shows a yard and curved walkway leading up to a house with an elegant, elevated front porch, chimney, and various windows running along its corrugated length. It sits in front of tall, bushy trees.

The Vanguard

To close out the blog, let’s take a quick look at the vanguard of modular building. In the 20th Century, modular science advanced in leaps and bounds as companies perfected the fundamentals of modern mass production: interchangeable parts and standardization. Modules were used in buildings during WWII, college dorms, fast food restaurants, and suburban housing. However, perhaps the most impressive leap took place with the advent of modular skyscrapers. All the predecessors on the list have led to this moment:

21st Century Skyscrapers (Modular Ranking: 10)

a ground-up, vertical view of a wide skyscraper with alternating blues window and grey columns that reaches high into a clear, light blue sky.

In 1852, an architect by the name of Burton proposed reformatting the Crystal Palace into a sky-scraper. He had recognized the potential of modular building for the rapid extension of buildings into the skyline.[1]

Burton’s proposal has now become a reality. Some modular skyscrapers include:

  1. In 1969, the Hilton Palacio del Rio had modular bedrooms installed onto the structure. The rooms included all the required wiring, plumbing, and other amenities.
  2. The 2017 Croydon Skyscraper in England was entirely built by modules that were delivered with wiring and plumbing
  3. The Mini Sky City (2015) in Central China boast of having built 3 stories per day on their 57-story skyscraper.
  4. The Clement Canopy building (2019) in Singapore has taken the record for highest modular skyscraper in the world at 459 feet, a height record that has changed hands 3 times in as many years, demonstrating the quick advance of the technology:

“Each module is around 85 per cent finished off-site, before then being assembled onsite,” Bouygues Bâtiment International’s head of modular construction Aurélie Cleraux told Dezeen.” This includes, for example, the painting, windows frame and glazing, doors, wardrobes and MEP (mechanical, electrical and plumbing) including water and sanitary pipes, electrical conduits and ducting, which are all totally finished before the modules arrives on site.”

These towers, infinitely stackable, modular, and with prefabricated internal-complexity, garner a perfect 10 rating on our list.

Aries Building (Modular Ranking: 10)

Aries continues to be a leader for modular building and design:

When you need to move quickly, Aries modular construction takes approximately half the time as traditional construction, saving money by reducing the on-site timeline. Besides turnkey project completion, Aries also offers a wide range of purchase and lease options. Our in-house financing is secured well before your building is delivered: one less thing you need to worry about. Aries is the commercial design, manufacture, transportation, construction and financing partner you need to make every project a success. Contact us and let`s make history!

[1] Kihlstedt, F. (1984). The Crystal Palace. Scientific American,251(4), 132-143. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/24969462

A wide panoramic view of a large, flat plain, brown in the distance, but near is a line of green trees and grass, in front of which are a four-story building and four long rows of modular trailers, white and grey, with wooden stairs at the ends and center and a dirt parking lot with a handful of parked cars.

Historic Moments in Early Modular Building2024-11-12T21:21:25+00:00
3 01, 2020

2020 And Beyond: How Modular Building Is Shaping Our Future

2020-01-03T01:01:31+00:00

Rendering of CitizenM Hotel: a grey rectangular cube-shaped building with rows and columns of large windows. Trees are in the foreground, and the hotel is set against a blue sky and other buildings

Modular construction is a process in which a building is constructed off-site in a factory-styled manufacturing facility. Businesses have understood the value of modular building for many years because of its cost savings, speed to market, and vast potential for various usage purposes. Thus far, developers have used modular for the construction of student housing projects, hotels, residential housing, healthcare offices, multifamily buildings, and more.

One signal that construction development is leaning towards modular construction is the development of a steel modular hotel in downtown Los Angeles. This is a ground-up, 11-story, 315-key modular hotel at 361 South Spring St. in downtown Los Angeles.

Though the modular construction industry has grown in recent years, it has yet to reach its full potential, experts say. Modular building will shape the future of building for three reasons: it’s eco-friendly, it solves complex problems, and it has many creative uses.

Modular building is green. One of the reasons that modular building is the future of building, in addition to being affordable, is because it’s good for the environment. Companies everywhere are turning to modular building because:

  • Efficiency and quality control: the bulk of fabrication and assembly takes place in a controlled setting, optimized for manufacturing, the process of design, manufacture, and construction are integrated for effective quality assurance
  • Reduction in material waste: cuts net waste, incident errors, and accidental damage
  • Reduction in life cycle energy and carbon: life cycle structure supports a long life cycle, energy and carbon cost of construction amortized over a longer period of time
  • Reduction in energy use for construction: factories are better able to control energy use and emissions than conventional construction
  • Reduction in transportation related impacts: cuts greenhouse emissions because there are fewer deliveries and fewer workers commuting
  • Reduction in operational impact (change): factory-made homes allow for tighter joints and seams, so portable buildings have more precise air barriers and installation of thermal insulation, the minimization of thermal bridging = more reliable thermal performance and conservation of energy
  • Support of adaptation reduce, reuse, recycle: modified structures are likely to be adapted or modified for a new use

Modular building solves complex problems. Recently in Austin, Texas, Mobile Loaves & Fishes used modular housing as an antidote to the city’s homelessness issue. Mobile Loaves and Fishes developed Community First! Village, a transformative residential program that seeks to serve those who have been living on the streets, while also empowering the surrounding community into a lifestyle of service with the homeless. Community First! Village is a 27-acre master planned community where more than 200 people who were once chronically homeless live in tiny homes and RVs. Everyone who lives at Community First! pays rent, ranging from $225 to $430 per month; many residents are employed on-site.

A wooden garden shed with orange doors and colorful tiles of green and turquoise, against patches of green grass and trees, on the grounds of Community First! Village.

Prefabricated housing is not just a solution to homelessness. Patrick Sisson, of curbed.com, reports that the United States is facing an affordable housing crisis, “Nearly two-thirds of renters nationwide say they can’t afford to buy a home, and saving for that down payment isn’t going to get easier anytime soon: Home prices are rising at twice the rate of wage growth.”  More and more, city planners and big businesses see modular construction as a solution to the affordable housing crisis as well.

Companies like Google and Microsoft are taking notice and providing a creative solution: modular building. Google reportedly spent $30 million for 300 modular homes in the San Francisco Bay area, and Microsoft is reportedly spending $0.5 billion for modular housing in the Seattle area. At a time when states like California and Washington are facing a severe housing crisis, labor shortages, and the high cost of traditional stick-built construction, modular construction is seen as a perfect alternative for creating more units that come to market faster. Millennials, and soon Gen Z, will more likely be buying these houses because they combine green design and eco-friendly building practices with affordability.

A crane lowers a modular home on top of the first floor of another modular home, other buildings in the background, and, in the far distance are the house-speckled hills of San Francisco.

The many creative uses of modular building

: In the foreground is a gray storage unit, on a patch of grass, surrounded by a fence; in the background is a large brown and red toned brick building with windows at the top.

Modular building is the future because, as mentioned above, it’s environmentally friendly and offers solutions to complex problems such as homelessness and affordable housing, but also because there are so many creative uses for prefabricated structures.

Here are some of the ways Aries uses modular building:

  1. Portable school classrooms: Schools that have too many students and not enough space, or are in the process of constructing more space can benefit from our portable classrooms that can be used as science labs, libraries, assembly halls, and modular cafeterias. This includes all schools from preschools all the way to community colleges!
  2. Mobile hospitals: Modular, portable infirmaries are beneficial, especially during critical conditions such as natural disasters and war. They can be used for any and every medical procedure, including triage, trauma, decontamination, general surgery, breast screening, pathology, and more.
  3. Workforce housing: Aries is a full-service provider of workforce housing.
  4. Mobile offices: A popular choice for construction crews who have tight deadlines and need to keep clear communication channels during a construction project.
  5. Temporary housing during disaster recovery: This type of housing helped so many people who lost their homes during Hurricane Harvey!

Here are some of the ways other people have creatively used modular building:

1.Tiny homes: With the rise of the new minimalist movement in architecture and interior design, in part popularized by Japanese organizing guru Marie Kendo, an increasing number of people have been using prefabricated structures as “tiny homes,” in order to save on money and space.

A gray, prefabricated tiny home on wheels on a concrete slab, with a hitch and several rectangular windows, a three-step staircase leading to the door, and green grass and trees in the background.

2. Man-cave/womb-room: For years, husbands and fathers have been using prefabricated structures as a place to drink beer, watch sports, or as the proverbial “doghouse.” Recently women and mothers have been using them as a space to drink chilled white wine or craft in order to escape the demands of wifedom/motherhood.

3. Artist studio/writing room: Are you tired of making a mess in your house every time you wish to pursue your favorite hobby? Do you need an art studio but can’t afford one? Do you need a quiet place to write that is close enough to home (like your backyard!) so that you can still be there when the kids need your help? Many artists and writers have found prefabricated storage containers as solutions to this problem.

An orange storage container full of art supplies, work tables, and fluorescent lighting

4. Playrooms. Some families have even found that prefabricated sheds make for great kids’ playrooms!

Have you found any creative uses for prefabricated buildings? If so, we’d love to hear your ideas, email us! Aries sells prefabricated office buildings to be used as construction offices, portable school classrooms, mobile hospitals, workforce housing at oil pipeline sites, storage containers, and for disaster recovery relief, but we’d love to help you buy one for any purpose at all!

About Aries – Aries offers full turnkey solutions with exceptional customer service and robust financing options. We pride ourselves on combining product quality, design expertise, technical and financial innovation, and strategy that has already established us a first choice to customers. Contact us today at 888-995-8560 to request a quote, or reach out to your local sales associate here.

2020 And Beyond: How Modular Building Is Shaping Our Future2020-01-03T01:01:31+00:00
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