PIECE WORKERS in the Construction Trades
comments (12) August 24th, 2010 in BlogsWork on this production line demanded that we all become specialists. Was there really any other way? Henry Ford used the production line to give us all an automobile. We took this same production line to the jobsite so masses of people could actually own their own home. Overall construction time had to be reduced from many months to weeks or even days. This was done by sub-contracting different parts of the building process to men and women who specialized in doing one aspect of the work. We were called piece workers or labor contractors.
>One at a time takes too long. Housing demand was so great in the 1950s that tract builders used every trick they could to build faster and more efficiently. Cutting multiples was a common theme. Here, an entire roof’s worth of rafters has been ganged up, and I am cutting the bird’s mouths using a worm-drive saw with a swing tableWe were often paid not by the hour, but by the piece -- by how much we actually produced -- by how many sq. ft. of walls we framed, for example. This approach unleashed a torrent of resistance along with another torrent of innovation and increase in productivity. Resistance came from unions that feared loss of work and from those workers who were just fearful of change. Innovation and increased production came not from having to work harder, but from simply working smarter. Most of what I know about production framing, and doing finish work for that matter, came from those times and endures through today.
When you have 500 level lots ready to go, you can go down the line staying busy doing nothing but setting concrete forms. Remember, this building boom went on for about thirty years. As framing contractors we worked on the job site, but much of the work was done by others. Fernando Ochoa, long dead now, nailed floors, shear walls, and roofs behind us framers for 30 years. Bob Harter set door jambs and window frames for 25 years. Ernie Wulken did the pickup work (punch list) forever it seems. All were highly skilled---masters of their part in building a house.
And so it was. Every project was broken down into its many parts and subcontracted out to willing workers. Instead of being a general carpenter you became a form setter, a joister, a floor sheather, a nailer, a person who did wall layout, a person who cut cripples and headers, another plated the walls, then came the wall framers, a roof cutter and stacker, a shingler, and on and on, a jamb setter, a door hanger, a cabinet installer.
For a time, I worked with a man who only did layout for walls on the subfloor---one floor after the other. I learned a lot from him. He knew that part of the trade quite well. Yes, the production line is an efficient way to build.
When you are working by the piece, your mind is constantly trying to figure ways that your work can be done easier, quicker, and more efficiently without having to work harder. New tools came into being and new ways of working seemed to appear like magic as workers came up with innovative ways to do their job.
Those of you who frame using a layout stick, a corner and channel marker, a bolt marker, a sidewinder saw that can cut flush (www.bigfoottools.com), and many innovative production methods can know that these came into being some 60 years ago.
Larry Haun
July, 2010
posted in: Blogs, framing
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Comments (12)
sincerely,
Thomas McKibben
Posted: 1:33 pm on January 13th
I started in 1970 in Westlake-Thousand Oaks racking horses for Rodger Wiggins, a roof cutter. I did the apprenticeship and stacked then cut and rolled a ton of truss.
Even coming in late it was an interesting time. Hippies were becoming carpenters!!
Look forward to more history.
Posted: 7:30 pm on November 8th
Posted: 1:15 pm on October 19th
Looking forward to more of your posts.
Matt
The Timber Tailor
Posted: 10:16 pm on September 19th
Posted: 10:30 pm on September 12th
Posted: 6:46 pm on August 30th
Posted: 12:10 pm on August 30th
Regards,
Matt
Posted: 11:51 am on August 30th
Posted: 10:59 am on August 30th
But I loved the post, we need a lot more of this. If you can talk Taunton Press into backing a history of this kind, I'd be more than willing to assist with the project, it would make a terrific book.
Posted: 9:07 am on August 30th
Posted: 11:21 pm on August 27th
Posted: 11:29 am on August 25th
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