Zx7 Pw Loft

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Bran Bast

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Aug 3, 2024, 2:41:22 PM8/3/24
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Greetings,
Here is another way to achieve a varying wall thickness. I sketched a square and and circle and did a loft. Then I made the body semi-transparent for visual clarity. I shelled the body, then selected the inner edges and used the Scale tool.

From a purely mathematical view, the projection between the orthogonal walls is zero over the entire space, so I might be wrong. Because this would mean you would need to offset the vertical sketch slightly too in order for the loft to work. But then again, it might be due to approximations that it actually works when you offset one of the walls

Indeed the tool is missing from the adaptive UI, thanks @Einar for spotting it. The issue occurs only if the two sketches have overlapping lines. If you move away one of them just a tiny bit, Loft is appears after selection.

Up to the Nurbs everything works fine Splines_Rhino.JPG706735 29.7 KB
But the loft has kind of a rotation in it as you can see at the pictures!
loftgrasshopper_unbaked.JPG526649 13.7 KB
As i baked the loft i saw that the line in the loft (I am not really sure what it means, probably starting points of the curves?) twists a bit as it goes down to the heel of the foot

Or at least it has not the same line as the loft of rhino itself (where also the rotation and also the resulting wrinkle does not appear)

University Residences partners with Bedloft.com to provide optional amenities for your room, including high quality wooden bed lofts, refrigerator/microwave combination units, and futons. A lofted bed raises the height of the twin bed to create usable floor space under the bed for a TV, futon, or desk. Lofts are installed by Bedloft staff, complete with a safety rail. Lofts, rented combo units, and purchased futons are delivered to your room for maximum convenience.

Orders submitted and confirmed before the deadline will be placed in your room before the scheduled underclassmen move-in date. After the deadline, the price for lofts increases and in-room delivery is not guaranteed prior to move-in. In the event your loft is not delivered prior to move-in, Bedloft will reach out to you to schedule a time for delivery and installation.

IMPORTANT: If your room assignment changes after you place your order, it is your responsibility to notify Bedloft.com to ensure your loft is delivered to the correct room. If you have any changes to your room assignment or other account information, please contact Bedloft.

Perched atop the old printing factory from 1910 in Copenhagen's Islands Brygge area that houses the Vipp office, the 400 m2 Vipp Loft invites you in for an urban habitat where design meets art. Conceptualised by Studio David Thulstrup, the high-sloped ceilings and grand volume of the light-filled Vipp Loft welcomes you in a holistic home environment.

The Vipp Loft is a true design experience just 10 minutes from the heart of Copenhagen. The loft is situated at the heart of the Vipp brand, on the top floor of the Vipp office. You have 400 m2 to play around in the kitchen, lounge on the couch, soak in the tub or catch up on some reading in the library. Just next door are bakeries, coffee-shops and the Copenhagen harbour. Scroll down to the bottom of this page for more facts on the room.

The Vipp Loft is a 400 m2 open space on the top floor of the Vipp office in Copenhagen. With a kitchen, dining and living area and a bedroom with ensuite bathroom. The mezzanine level features a bedroom and library/office space. There are three small outdoor terraces.

The vivacious city life and premiered dining scene welcomes you just around the corner. City center is a 10-minute bike ride away; rent your bike at the waterfront 200 m from the loft. Or start the day fresh with a dip in the canal.

Many students like to maximize their usable space in student rooms by incorporating lofts or bunks for their beds. A loft is a bed that is raised so that a student may place their desk or other furniture underneath to maximize space.

A bunk is when two beds are stacked on top of each other. Students can rent lofts or bunks from UHDS but may not build their own. Some rooms have beds that come with complimentary bunk or loft kits due to the room configuration.

Fall 2024 loft kit rentals will be available in July. The student must be assigned to a room in order to place the request. Based upon availability, all loft and bunk reservations confirmed by August 4, 2024, will be installed by UHDS staff and placed in the student's room before the school year begins.

UHDS rental loft kits are approximately 6 feet high, 7 feet long, and 3 feet wide. See below for examples of different styles of UHDS rental loft and bunk kits. Loft styles are dependant on the building you are assigned.

If there are no available loft or bunk kits, the student will be placed on the waitlist which continues into the school year. If a loft or bunk kit becomes available, the first student on the list will be notified via ONID email and will have 48 hours to accept.

During the academic year, if a student with a loft or bunk changes rooms, the loft can be moved with the student to their new room at no additional charge. The student may request this move by submitting a maintenance request through your online housing portal. They can also chose to transfer the loft or bunk to the roommate remaining in the room at no cost as long as there is no waitlist for lofts or bunks.

Some rooms require lofted and bunked beds as part of the room configuration and do not incur a loft charge. Additional information regarding room configurations may be found online on the Residence Hall pages.

UHDS requires the use of safety rails on all bunked and lofted beds. Not using a safety rail could increase your risk of falling and injury. Lofts must be at least 1.5 feet (0.46 meters) from the student sleeper to the ceiling due to the risk of smoke inhalation in case of a fire. UHDS staff do not inspect all lofts and room set ups but still retain the right to enforce a change if upon an inspection the staff feels the current set up to be unsafe.


The photos are a living visual document of the expansive spaces: old flophouses on the Bowery, garment factories in Tribeca and SoHo, glass factories in Greenpoint, and even a former ice cream factory in DUMBO. From the 19th to the 20th century, many buildings in NYC, including SoHo, were manufacturing centers for items from sewing machines to textiles to printing houses. The massive light-filled loft spaces with high ceilings were left empty when these businesses vacated in the mid-1900s and moved to other areas outside of New York City. The industrial-zoned lofts were not legal to live in, as they did not meet the building requirements for residential use, and oftentimes were completely raw spaces without a kitchen, shower, plumbing, or even heat. However, artists were attracted to these large spaces where they could work and create at any hour of the day. At the end of the 1970s, loft living started gaining attention in the media and the wealthy started to become attracted to this lifestyle. Soon landlords began to evict the artist tenants in favor of a wealthier clientele. A group of artists formed the Lower Manhattan Loft Tenants and spent years lobbying in Albany to gain legal protections and rent stabilization. At the time the Loft Law was first passed, there were tens of thousands of artists living in lofts across the city. Today, only a few hundred artists protected under the original 1982 Loft Law remain. This exhibition marks one of the first documentary insights into this vanishing history.

Joshua Charow (b. 1998) holds his BFA from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts in Film & Television. In addition to his documentary photography, Charow has also shot notable documentary films. Charow creates and directs an online documentary series titled LimeLight, which explores the unique lives of New Yorkers. Over the past year, the series has amassed a following of 150,000 people and garnered over 40 million views. His first feature film as Director of Photography, Untrapped, was an official selection of the 2022 Tribeca International Film Festival. He has directed and shot documentary films for The New York Times, TIME magazine, Amazon Prime Video, and Hulu.

A loft is a building's upper storey or elevated area in a room directly under the roof (American usage), or just an attic: a storage space under the roof usually accessed by a ladder (primarily British usage). A loft apartment refers to large adaptable open space, often converted for residential use (a converted loft) from some other use, often light industrial. Adding to the confusion, some converted lofts themselves include upper open loft areas.

In US usage, a loft is an upper room or storey in a building, mainly in a barn, directly under the roof, used for storage (as in most private houses). In this sense it is roughly synonymous with attic, the major difference being that an attic typically constitutes an entire floor of the building, while a loft covers only a few rooms, leaving one or more sides open to the lower floor.

In British usage, lofts are usually just a roof space accessed via a hatch and loft ladder, while attics tend to be rooms immediately under the roof accessed via a staircase. Lofts may have a specific purpose, e.g. an organ loft in a church, or to sleep in (sleeping loft). In barns a hayloft is often larger than the ground floor, since it would store a year's worth of hay.

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