Subject: Enclosing historic house in glass-walled structure
Sarah Price <sprice [at] rogersark__org> writes >Our museum is planning a major expansion and one of the design ideas >that is under discussion (sometimes argument) is enclosing our >historic brick home within a larger glass-walled structure. ... There are many potential consequences of doing what your museum is proposing, including green-house heating of the inside of the glass structure, condensation on the inside of the glass in cold weather, difficulty in controlling glare, potential damage to the brickwork, etc. I would imagine that the energy costs for air conditioning a glass structure would be monumental, and that surrounding the original structure with a glass one would make environmental control of the original building extremely complex. You need an experienced architect and/or engineer to assess the possibilities from a factual point of view, hopefully before people take sides and become wedded to their own points of view. Barbara Appelbaum Appelbaum and Himmelstein 444 Central Park West New York, NY 10025 212-666-4630 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:43 Distributed: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 Message Id: cdl-21-43-002 ***Received on Tuesday, 5 February, 2008