The Cost of Shelter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 94 pages of information about The Cost of Shelter.

The Cost of Shelter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 94 pages of information about The Cost of Shelter.

The two illustrations here given show one little step in the right direction.  The cuts represent a remodelled kitchen in Providence, R.I.

The floor is of lignolith laid down in one sheet and carried up as a wainscoting so that no crevice exists for entrance of insects or dust.  Such floors are yet in their infancy and need suitable preparation for laying, just as macadamized streets fail if the foundation is faulty.  The idea is all that we are here concerned with.  One of the features to be especially noted is the use of glass for shelves.  Why should the hospital monopolize the materials for antiseptic work?  When it is understood how much hospital work is caused because of dirt in the preparation and keeping of food, the kitchen will receive its share of attention.

To-day the cost of shelter is about one third for the house and two thirds for the expense of running it, largely due to dirt and its consequences.  Mr. Wells wisely says:  “Most dusting and sweeping would be quite avoidable if houses were wiselier done.”

When the real twentieth-century house is put up our young engineer and college instructor will be willing to pay $400 to $500 rent, because wages and running expenses will be $100 less and the company owning the houses will not expect more than 4%, largely because repairs will be less and permanence of tenure more assured.  The old type of wooden house used by the old type of tenant could not be expected to last more than a few years, which justified a higher rate of interest.  For the tenement tenant of the better class twenty years has been the estimate, so that the cost of building could not be distributed over fifty years as it should be.

The house will be made of reinforced concrete or its successor; certainly not of wood.  Whether a single house or one of two or more “compartments,” each family will have a side, that is, the entrance doors will not be side by side.  Such have been built in Somerville, Mass., by a railroad company for its employees.  Those who wish to have a garden may; but no one will be obliged, for there will be regulations about the general appearance of the whole park, and every man his own lawn-mower will not be true.  The cultivation of taste will have so far advanced that the grouping advised by the landscape architect will appeal to the occupant more than his own fancied arrangement.

Since the heating will be supplied from outside, there will be a hothouse and cold-frames for those who wish to have a share in the garden, just as now there are bins in the basement.  The care of these may replace the exercise now gained in scrubbing the front steps.  The windows of the house will be dust-proof, fly-, mosquito-, and moth-proof; the air supplied will be strained by galleries of screens, if indeed social advance has not eliminated soot from chimneys and grit from the streets.  Most certainly dirt will not be permitted to come in on shoes and long dresses.  Warmed or cooled, moistened or dried air will be circulated as needed.  In such a house rugs may stay undisturbed for a month or more, books for years, and the dust-cloth be rarely in evidence; the redding will consist of putting back in place the things used; but as each member of the family will do this as soon as he is old enough, there will be but a few minutes’ work.

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Project Gutenberg
The Cost of Shelter from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.