NBN Online for the week of March 19, 2007

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Builders Testify on Housing Finance System Reform
‘Buy Now’ Advertising Assistance Grants Going Fast. Apply Now.
Some States Emerging From Housing Boom's Dark Shadow
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Coast to Coast
Where the Wolf Comes Knocking: Areas Already in Economic Distress Feel Rise in Housing Foreclosures
Politics & Government
Tax Relief Aimed at Preserving Affordable Housing
Bills Would Help Enlistees Qualify for Affordable Housing
Economics & Finance
Subprime Loan Uncertainties Erode Confidence of Builders
Eye on the Economy: Recession Not Imminent
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders' Tip: Making A Grit-Free Cap for Pneumatic Tools
Design
Vintage Bathtub Folds Up Like a Murphy Bed
King Kong Would Recognize America’s Favorite Building
Regulation
How to Overcome NIMBY Opposition to Your Project
Austin ‘McMansion’ Ordinance Squeezes Home Owners
Sales and Marketing
San Diego Web Site Gives Buyers an Edge
Building Systems
NAHB IBS Show Home Exterior Eats Smog, Is Self-Cleaning
NAHB Offers Educational Resources for Concrete
Multifamily
Market Realities, Emerging Trends at Pillars Conference
Remodelers
NAHB Remodelers Enter Rulemaking Advocacy Fray
New Award Recognizes Aging-in-Place Remodeling Projects
Apply for the NAHB Remodeler of the Month Award
Education
Education Calendar
Green Building
Bank of America Initiative to Address Climate Change
Legal
District Court Upholds Pygmy Owl De-Listing
Workforce housing
Terwilliger Gift to Bring $130 Million for Affordable Housing
MacArthur Grant to Support Study of Impact of Housing
Labor
Students Meet Potential Employers at IBS Job Fair
Building Products
Decorative Concrete Provides a Cutting-Edge Look
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV and DIY This Week
Endowment
Challenge/Build/Grow Initiative Proposals Due by April 16
Association News
1973 NAHB President George Clarke Martin Dies at 85
Get Free 'April Is New Homes Month' Resources Online Now
GM Business Choice, Lowe’s Team Up to Reward NAHB Members
Office Depot Deals: Music to Your Ears
Lock in 2006 Visa/MC Processing Rates. Offer Ends March 31.
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

King Kong Would Recognize America’s Favorite Building

Vintage Bathtub Folds Up Like a Murphy Bed

Innovation has always been a watchword for home builders. Be it the latest in luxurious bathroom furnishings and kitchen appliances or closet organizers and skylights, home buyers want the newest and the best. And America’s home builders have always strived to provide it.

But that wasn’t always as easy as it is today. Lacking the International Builders’ Show, cable networks solely devoted to housing and home building and, of course, the Internet, how did builders learn about innovative new products? One important source was the Manufacturer and Builder magazine, now archived in cyberspace by the Cornell University library, which showcased a folding bathtub and water heater in its February 1891 issue.

Similar in concept to a Murphy bed, the folding bathtub and heater was described as an “ingenious domestic sanitary invention.” When closed, the author said, it looked like “a wardrobe of pleasing appearance” and was a “compact arrangement” occupying a 4-by-3-by-2-foot space. Inside were “all of the essentials for a comfortable bath” — the tub, the water heater and a porcelain-enclosed space for drying towels. In comparison, today’s standard bathtub is larger at about five feet long.

The cabinet was designed to be attached to a wall, and after the cabinet was opened and the tub was lowered to the floor, a circular gas jet would heat water for the tub. Emptying the tub involved using a rubber hose to funnel the bath water into the household waste-pipe.

While it probably wouldn’t appeal to today’s consumers, the folding bathtub and water heater concept did appear to appeal to people of that era.

An advertisement for a similar bathtub made by the Mosely Folding Bath Tub Company of Chicago reprinted in the online Encyclopedia of Chicago notes that the product was designed to put “the comforts of a modern bathroom within the reach of every family.” According to the ad, the folding bathtub apparently won first prize in an 1892 competition sponsored by the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association. It was also displayed at the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893. And just for the record, at least one survives to this day. It’s on eBay.

Courtesy of Cornell University Library, Making of America Digital Collection
“A Folding Bath Tub and Heater.” The Manufacturer and Builder Magazine. Volume 23, Issue 2, February 1891  pp. 42



Design Matters. Register Now for the BALA Design Institute

In a competitive market, design can be the difference.

At the NAHB/BALA Design Institute for Builders, the only design conference specifically for building industry professionals, you'll learn the latest in residential housing design trends from the industry's top professionals, tour beautiful award-winning homes and communities that display the best in cutting-edge architectural design, and learn how to profitably apply these design ideas to the homes you build.

The Design Institute will be held June 25-27 in Bellevue, Wash. (near Seattle)

To register and for more information, visit www.nahb.org/designinstitute.


 

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