It’s interesting that wherever you go, the “builder” people all seem to have 
their own culture and identity - and uniform. The "construction workers" in 
america that frame houses all seem to be part of of a big club, and the 
specialty wooden house people here in Japan - daiku-san (大工さん) , with their 
long pants with gigantic oversized cuffs and split toe shoes also have an 
instantly recognizable uniform, just through tradition.  As in america, a lot 
of residential houses here are wooden framed, constructed onsite (not so much 
prefab work) - the job title fits the work - framers - but overall, just 
“construction worker” is good.

whereas in America the “handyman” or “repairman” would help you with house 
repairs - a “carpenter” (大工さん) title is still used for a general handyman here 
in Japan. 

This seems to be separate from people who work on steel trussed buildings, or 
are specialists, such as welders, pipe-fitters, etc. 


“A person or company who takes part in the construction, maintenance, and 
repair of common residential and commercial structures (and their systems), 
usually consisting of wood, concrete, or other easy to work with materials.

Known by several names depending on when they work on the structure 
(construction worker, handyman, repairman, carpenter, etc), the title of 
builder encompasses them all, as a single person or company usually performs a 
variety of tasks to complete their various jobs. “

sounds like a good def to me. 

-Javbw


> On Dec 17, 2014, at 2:36 AM, SomeoneElse <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On 16/12/2014 17:05, Andreas Goss wrote:
>> Just found this tag (craft=builder) on Taginfo and it has been used by a few 
>> times, but it does not seem very clear what it means: 
>> 
>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Builder <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Builder> 
>> 
>> So is there any good definition for this tag or should I just create a Wiki 
>> page that people should use more spefific craft etc. tags? 
>> 
> 
> Of the links there, "The Builders 
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Builders>, a Fawlty Towers episode" might 
> be most useful.  :-)
> 
> In English this sense of "builder" normally means a (usually small) company 
> that performs (house) building work, or a person that works for such a 
> company.  
> 
> A larger company that designs and oversees the construction of large housing 
> estates (or other commercial or industrial property) might also be described 
> as a "firm of builders", but it's not as good a fit.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Andy
> 
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