20th-Century Building Materials and Suitable Substitutes: Windows Visual Guide (Legacy 13-707)
Summary
The project created a visual guide to steel and corrugated wire windows and glass block, providing construction methods and contexts of popular use. The guide is intended to assist in the research, interpretation, and possible future mitigation
Cite this Record
20th-Century Building Materials and Suitable Substitutes: Windows Visual Guide (Legacy 13-707). ( tDAR id: 459804) ; doi:10.48512/XCV8459804
This Resource is Part of the Following Collections
URL: https://www.denix.osd.mil/cr/historic/rehab/index.html
Keywords
Culture
Historic
Material
Building Materials
Site Type
Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex
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Non-Domestic Structures
Investigation Types
Architectural Documentation
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Heritage Management
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Methodology, Theory, or Synthesis
General
Architecture
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building materials
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Documentation
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Identification
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Replacement
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Windows
Temporal Keywords
Early-Mid 20th Century
Spatial Coverage
min long: -128.232; min lat: 24.462 ; max long: -64.248; max lat: 49.678 ;
Individual & Institutional Roles
Contact(s): OSD Cultural Resources Program
Prepared By(s): A.D. Marble & Company; Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Mid-Atlantic
Resources Inside this Project (Viewing 1-2 of 2)
- Documents (2)
Documents
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20th-Century Building Materials and Suitable Substitutes: Windows Visual Guide - Guide (Legacy 13-707) (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text
The document is a visual guide to steel and corrugated wire windows and glass block, providing construction methods and contexts of popular use. The guide is intended to assist in the research, interpretation, and possible future mitigation.
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Technical Note 13-707: 20th-Century Building Materials and Suitable Substitutes - Windows - Report (Legacy 13-707) (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text
This document discusses suitable substitutes for 20th-century window types identified as character-defining features of historic 20th-century DoD buildings. This tool will assist DoD CRMs, facility planners, architects, and engineers responsible for the maintenance and repair of historic 20th-century buildings in complying with Section 106 of the NHPA.