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قراءة كتاب Convenient Houses With Fifty Plans for the Housekeeper, Architect and Housewife
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Convenient Houses With Fifty Plans for the Housekeeper, Architect and Housewife
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Convenient Houses, by Louis Henry Gibson
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Title: Convenient Houses
With Fifty Plans for the Housekeeper, Architect and Housewife
Author: Louis Henry Gibson
Release Date: April 5, 2013 [eBook #42469]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONVENIENT HOUSES***
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CONVENIENT HOUSES
WITH
Fifty Plans for the Housekeeper
ARCHITECT AND HOUSEWIFE—A JOURNEY THROUGH THE HOUSE—FIFTY CONVENIENT HOUSE PLANS—PRACTICAL HOUSE BUILDING FOR THE OWNER—BUSINESS POINTS IN BUILDING—HOW TO PAY FOR A HOME
BY
LOUIS H. GIBSON
ARCHITECT
NEW YORK:
THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.
Copyright, 1889,
By Louis H. Gibson.
C. J. PETERS & SON,
Typographers and Electrotypers,
145 High Street, Boston.
PREFACE.
When the reader is familiar with the writer’s general purposes, it is easier to understand the details of his work. This book is intended to deal with houses in a housekeeping spirit. In doing this, the architect has in mind convenience, stability, and that ideal of housekeepers, beauty of surroundings.
In carrying out this idea, the relation of architecture to good and economical housekeeping is first considered. Following this division is “A Journey through the House.” It begins at the porch, moves through the different rooms, and stops to consider the various details. This brings about not only a consideration of the general arrangement of a house, but such details as kitchens and pantries, plumbing, laundry, and heating.
These first two sections of the book—“The Architect and the Housewife,” and “A Journey through the House”—are, in a measure, educational. After this, and in keeping with the general principles that have been set forth, plans of fifty convenient houses are illustrated and described. For the most part, they are houses that have been built.
The next section is devoted to practical house-building. It is constructed by taking a complete specification for everything which may concern a dwelling-house, and ridding it, as far as possible, of all technicalities; thus putting in form all practical house-building questions for the benefit of the owner.
Following this is the consideration of business points in building, which sets forth methods of letting contracts with the view of securing the best results without waste of money.
The closing section is devoted to the getting of a home,—how to arrange the monthly-payment schemes, building-association plans, and other methods for getting a house on easy instalments.
LOUIS H. GIBSON, Architect.
Indianapolis, Ind., September, 1889.