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People Who Live in Glass Houses
| Article
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11644 |
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Section : |
Life
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1986 |
801 Words |
| Author
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Rochelle Larkin Rochelle Larkin is the author of more than forty books and
writes a column for the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. She
resides in New York City. |
With the erection of the Crystal Palace at the Great Exposition in England in 1851, the whole nation, or at least that portion which could afford it, wanted their own scaled-down versions of the Palace. The glass house became, for the growing middle class, the hallmark of the proper Victorian home. Such structures had been part of the most forward-looking of the great estates for over a hundred years. Formal, fanciful, or downright functional, glass went beyond class and became fashion.
Originally used for protecting semitropical plants from European winters, large structures such as the Orangerie at Versailles, built to house and protect twelve hundred orange trees, were known as conservatories. In London, the Palm House at the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew was built in the decade preceding the Crystal Palace; as large as the Palm House was, far more elaborate structures had stood on great English country estates even earlier. The Great Exposition marked the high point of both interest in, and the technology for, steel framed buildings with great, soaring expanses of glass that allowed light and air to enter.
The domestic editions of the Palace were as varied as tastes and purses allowed. Usage dictated many applications, and it is from all of these that we get today's enormous range of possibilities: conservatories, greenhouses, solaria, sun porches, and even the small, simple constructions that turn a conventional window into a garden for the truly space-starved.
It is bewildering to contemplate the variety of possibilities available to those who want to add light and air to a dwelling--whether house or apartment--through the use of
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