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2 revisions | Katie Pierce Meyer at Jan 11, 2024 01:31 PM | |
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18important, element affecting his comfort and pleas- | 18important, element affecting his comfort and pleas- ure*-'namely, the plaster. The plaster of a home is more in evidence than any other single item, and unsatisfactory plaster or a plaster failure may cause more unhappiness and inconvenience than any other failure, aside from the foundation or roof. Let ns consider for a moment the qualities and properties which plastering in the home should pos- sess. One of the objects of individual home build- ing is to insure privacy both in the broad meaning of the word and also as regards personal and in- dividual seclusion. It is, therefore, desirable to plaster with a material that will not transmit sound from room to room or from one part of the house to the other. In other words, it is desirable to use a sound deadening material. Lime plaster is such a material. It is essential to use a material that will provide at least a reasonable degree of fire protec- tion. Such a material is lime plaster. It is essential to use a material that will provide a suitable, stable, lasting foundation for decoration by one of the sev- eral methods, such as painting, frescoe, or papering, without danger of disintegration, cracking or discol- oration. Such a material is lime plaster. As the result of over two years’ study and in- vestigatxm, the Architects of the Board of Educa- tion, for the city of New York, specifically call for lime plaster in all auditoriums to be constructed in future school houses owing to the superior acoustical properties of lime plaster. Many public gathering places have proved unsatisfactory from an acousti- cal viewpoint because of unfortunate selection in plastering materials and the use of hard, resilient, sound reflecting material instead of the more por- ous and sound-absorbing lime plaster. In conclusion it may truly be said tliat “Lime Is Eternally Essential,” that it is the oldest and most time tried of any of our materials of con- struction, and tliat fit was a considerable factor in the establishment of civilization, and the uplift of mankind from the sloughs of savagery and priva- tion. New York Housing Conditions. Only such construction as will relieve the short- age of dwelling accommodations and such con- struction as is in the public interest, should be given building permits, says Mayor Dylan of New York City, urging that legislation be enacted authorizing some responsible body to pass on permits for con- struction. The Mayor's report on local housing conditions shows that at least 100,000 additional apartments are urgently needed to provide homes for the city’s population. A total of 12,662 apart- ments and houses are now under construction but to meet the normal demand a sufficient number of tenement houses must be erected each year to pro- vide at least 50,000 apartments. Under the state constitution New York City has no power to con- struct municipal apartment houses and rent them to private parties, but an amendment to the con- stitution can be passed and the city could then go ahead with its building program in January. 1922. In tin* meantime, the Mayor says, there should be no standstill in the erection of homes and multi-family liouses. Atlanta’s Big Building Record. The prosperity of the South is clearly evidenced in the enormous amount of construction work now in progress in Atlanta or proposed for the near fu- ture, building permits issued for June having al- ready reached a mark that will establish a new rec- ord for the city during any single month. While the Federal Reserve Bank’s curtailing of credit will doubtless have some effect on construction, it is not particularly noticeable as yet. Two of the largest building permits issued dur- ing June were for the new Metropolitan Theatre at Broad, Luckie and Forsyth streets, $350,000, and the new nurses’ dormitory to be constructed by the Georgia Baptists’ Hospital, $200,000. Two large building projects recently proposed include a new 400-room hotel at Peachtree and Kimball streets, to cost $1,500,000, and a new 10- story office building at Edgewood avenue and Equit- able place, to cost $1,500,000. C. P. Byrd, president of the Byrd Printing Co., purchased the property at Peachtree and Kimball streets for approximately $250,000, and made the announcement of the pro- posed hotel. The building will be 10 stories, and Mr. Byrd is now in consultation with architects re- garding the plans. The cotton interests will erect the office building, which will be occupied in the main by cotton brokers and agents, and by the At- lanta Cotton Exchange, which plans the expansion of its activities. New Building Inspector. James Coles has assumed Ms duties as building inspector for Charleston, S. C., being the first official of the kind on the city engineer’s staff. This of- fice was recently created, and is expected to result in improved building operations and a better build- ing code. Mr. Coles is now checking up building permits, seeing that work authorized is carried out, according to the ordinances. Charleston has been doing a lot of construction, in spite of generally ad- verse conditions, and the inspector will have plenty of work to handle. 18 October, 1920. THE CONCRETE AGE |