Subject: Watts Towers
National Historic Landmark that we can't stop from cracking after 50 years! All else is failing. Want to add your guess? We are in search of revolutionary materials "Eurekeum" or "Miraculum" or by any other name, so please respond if you know where some is available and how to apply it to the Watts Towers! Please. Since 1959 many "experts" (AIC Fellows and Professional Associates and members, registered structural engineers, MGM set designers, conservation consultants, curators, 'beat' 1960s artists and I) have spent almost $6M of private, state and City funds. We have all failed to find the elusive "magic" material to bond successfully the raw materials used to create the Watts Towers of Simon Rodia (1879-1965) on 107th Street in Los Angeles! Check out the web site <URL:http://www.trywatts.com> to see the sculptures. Inside a too-thin, cement mortar covering that bonds the assemblage together are: a. reinforcements of 1 to 2 1/4 inch structural steel shapes--about 1/4 inch thick (angles, 'T' sections, pipes, Rodia's 1928 red Hudson auto axle that he used after he disassembled and then buried his car behind the site when he found the LAPD was after him in 1930 for using a fire-engine siren on the car to get to work in Long Beach on time, etc.); b. wire mesh (chicken wire) wrapped tightly by hand around the reinforcements and tied with wire ties. c. California art pottery shards, milk of magnesia bottle seashells grinding wheels and more, placed by his own hands into the wet cement mortar covers. Rodia's 1921 to 1948 Portland cement is hand-mixed with a fine, dry sand. The problem is cracks (fissures, spalls, failures, de-consolidations, whatever). Trials have failed with repairs using a cement mortar slightly weaker than Rodia's: Jahn conservation mortars M70, M90 and others, SikaDur, and more since 1979. Work done by the State of California, City of Los Angeles and private consultants has all cracked regularly and often. Major "repairs" were done in 1960-1969; 1979-1985; 1987-1994 (Northridge Earthquake); 1995-2001 and 2001-2005. In each period there have been hundreds if not thousands of cracks and new cracks in original Rodia cement and in repairs of every material used to date. Send in your recommendation. Unsigned messages are welcome. *Anybody?* We do not pay for recommendations. Bud Goldstone 6719 West 86th Place #2 Westchester, CA 90045 310-568-1571 N. J. Bud Goldstone Art conservation engineer and author *** Conservation DistList Instance 18:44 Distributed: Wednesday, March 16, 2005 Message Id: cdl-18-44-021 ***Received on Tuesday, 15 March, 2005