THE CONSTRUCTION
of the

FRONT DOOR

I've spent many hours studying roots and vines. After the Loma Prieta quake of 89 there were big cracks where you could walk in under the Redwoods and look up at the roots in their natural state from underground. Many people only admire the beauty of the part of the tree that is above the plane of the soil. The hidden half of the tree has a beauty of it's own.

I take particular pleasure where tree roots encounter man made objects. This usually involves historic sites. Native structures wrapped in roots in Belize, Mexico, Peru, Hawaii and Bolivia have inspired my work. As a kid I marveled at old gold mining and logging equipment and structures I saw in the woods of Northern California and Washington, wrapped in tree roots. I looked at objects around me... and wondered what would happen if we all left... and the plants took back their land....

 

 

My medium of choice is the computer. Yeah, I've hand sculpted in wood, stone, clay, and metal first... and that's a part of all this... but with the computer, I can do things that would be impossible by hand. Like make two freeform curving shapes that perfectly nest into one another.

There are two reasons to use CAD CAM.
The first is that it makes mass production of identical parts cheap and easy.

The second is that it allows you to create shapes that couldn't be done, any other way.
This is how I like to use CAD CAM

Scroll down and keep scrolling... Take your time. Let 'er load.

 

 

The final sketch of the front door

At least 20 other sketches got tossed in favor of this one.

 

 

Next I built a Unigraphics CAD model based upon the drawing.

 

 

 

I added this image here so it's easier to compare the reality with the CAD.

 

 

Fun with Unigraphics kids.

 

 

Computer Aided Machining Programs are then generated from the CAD model

 

 

And then machined into real wood using my ShopBot CNC router.

The Door Jambs.

The piece of wood is then flipped over and machined from the other side, yeilding an almost finished piece. Locating pins in the table ensure perfect alignment when they are flipped.

Door jambs are usually straight lines....

Here is where the "You can't do this without CAD CAM" part comes in.
Have you ever seen a door jamb that shuts on a freeform curving shape before? Perfectly?
Me neither, which is of course why it needed to be done.

Note that there are roots that traverse from the outside to the inside.
In the computer I can open and close the door and design that root and it's mating nest so that I know the door will shut perfectly around it.

 

 

The Arch

The arch segments are biscuited together with pennies. Regular biscuits didn't fit on the curves. Pennies make great micro biscuits.
I slot for penny biscuits with a Dremel saw. The price is right!

Carving away. I've got a camera that rides along so I can keep an eye on things from my office while I do paying work.

Camera's eye view from my office, 100 feet away from the noise and flying sawdust.... designing Oakley sunglass molds while my cyberslave toils away for endless hours.

 

And last but not least

The Door

The door is sheathed in reclaimed Curly Redwood
I found it on a discard pile at a local sawmill about to be turned to chips. It was a pretty big slab of wood... a lot of cracks, a little rot.
Before I did anything I poured all the cracks full of slow set epoxy to allow it to run deep into the slab.
The slab was then rough sawn into thin sheets and laminated onto a plywood and steel core.
Redwood expands and contracts a lot with ambient moisture. The core stabilizes the otherwise unstable Redwood.

The door is over 3 inches thick, weighing in at about 200 lbs..

 

 

Curly wood deserves curly wood joints.

When you cut with a computer you begin to realize that straight lines are an artifact of primitive technology...
a limit dictated by the spinning of circular saw blades or of other flat saw blades.
When cutting with CNC, straight lines are meaningless. I'll use straight lines in the areas where there is a "Man made object".

Most of the joints are variable sine waves to emulate the waves in the wood.

 

 

The front is done and it's flipped over to reveal the plywood core.
More sine wave joints down the edges and the back Redwood will be epoxied on next.

 

 

Hinge pockets and back of door are all cut.

 

 

The Steel Frame

Redwood is weak, unstable over time, cracks easily and expands/contracts violently with temperature and humidity.
To pull this off I needed a stable frame. As such, the Redwood is only a facia over an underlying steel skeleton.
The frame, hinges, and lock are structually independent of the Redwood.

With the help of some Girl Power I got the steel bent perfectly.

I printed the computer model of the frame below, taped it to the floor and the girls bent the steel to the drawing for me.

 

 

To get a tight enough bend without creases I had to slot and weld the inside of the curve.

CNC cut templates ensure that I bend the brackets as per CAD so they will fit into the already machined slots in the back sides of the jambs and arch.

 

 

The jambs get glued onto the frame with Polyurethane adhesive

The frame is bent and welded close enough to CAD to fit within the 0.100 air gap and that gets filled with semiflexible and very strong polyurethane adhesive.

Note that the latch anchors into the steel frame, not the wood. At three inches thick the door weighs about 200 lbs.
Only the steel skeleton bears the weight and takes the closing impact.

 

 

The hinges get cut and fit.
3/8" thick reclaimed rust pitted steel plate is flame cut and then ground in to CAD plots.
The 3 part hinge knuckle is made out of altered "weld-on" hinges with integral brass bearings.

 

After fabricating the hinges I greased them well and gave 'em a week in a salt water bath hooked up to 12V DC current just to get some nice rust going. I then buried them in wet salty Redwood needles ( my super rust recipe ) for a month just to even out the patina.


Nice and rusty, they might pass for a few hundred years old.

The hinges emulate those observed on the cathedral doors visible for only a few frames in the movie
Wallace & Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit .

 

Hinge attached to steel frame.

 

 

 

Applied accent roots are cut to CAD

Many of these are so thin that the Redwood would just blow away while machining. To prevent this I first CNC milled tiny slots in the backs of the thin roots. Into the slots I then epoxy nylon string or small brass wire to give it dimensional stability. Then I flip it over and machine the visible side.

All this beautiful old growth redwood was salvaged from a burn pile. 2000 year old Redwood has a different smell than new second growth Redwood. When you cut it, it smells like an old book or Library does.

 

 

The lock is installed. It looks like it's mounted to wood but is actually drilled and tapped into 1/2" steel rods welded / epoxied into the door frame to transfer the loads resulting from a 200lb door being closed..

In high school I had a job maintaining hundreds of dormitory doors, locks, and hinges. A job with a pass to the girls dorm?....
I learned much there that I applied here. (about lock and door strength)

 

 

Jambs and Door in Place now.

We can lock our house for the first time in 5 years. How cool is that.

 

 

The arch goes in... and the door still closes!

Click the image below to watch it shut

 

 

First coat of tung oil stain

 

 

When a Redwood grows and then falls of natural causes it's roots sprout and a ring of trees is formed... like giant crabgrass. If this happens for several generations ( a generation is 2-3000 years ) the ring can become very large. The trees being 10-20 feet in diameter, I've seen rings of trees 200 feet in diameter. Most of these rings where I live were cut down about 1877, leaving a ring of massive stumps. At the center of a large ring you can frequently find a small pile of earth and roots... the remnants of the ancient mother tree. How old? Nobody knows. Probably 10's of thousands of years old.

The heart of the door is the heart of one of these ancient's, pulled from a pile at the center of a 100 foot circle of massive stumps.

Note the natural "aorta" near the top.
As it goes down it becomes more finished, revealing the interior beauty of the burl wood.

 

 

Some of the roots traverse from the exterior to the interior... but the door still shuts perfectly on and around them thanks to the computer model.

...... .

The steel frame is now hidden by interior trim... and more roots.

 

finished door pix
finished door pix
finished door pix

finished door pix