Most of those World's Fair structures were as substantial as stage sets. They were only intended for that event. This one in Balboa Park, San Diego, lasted quite a while, long enough for me to see it as a child. https://www.balboapark.org/about/history
And it was disappointing inside, not nearly the palace it appeared to be.
They were made of horsehair and plaster. Somewhere I have the centennial issue of the Magazine of the Midlands on the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition held on Omaha Nebraska in 1898. I should scan it and post it. The building materials were mentioned there.
Yes. We used to have an old house built in 1910, and this was a common type of inner wall. The framing boards were covered with lath boards, the plaster was mixed with hair or thread or straw to prevent cracking, then pressed onto the lath wall firmly so the plaster would be forced through the gaps. It would sag downward a little before drying and make a little hook of plaster on the back to help hold it up. It works--really nasty to tear out and put up sheetrock.
Most of those World's Fair structures were as substantial as stage sets. They were only intended for that event. This one in Balboa Park, San Diego, lasted quite a while, long enough for me to see it as a child. https://www.balboapark.org/about/history And it was disappointing inside, not nearly the palace it appeared to be.
They were made of horsehair and plaster. Somewhere I have the centennial issue of the Magazine of the Midlands on the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition held on Omaha Nebraska in 1898. I should scan it and post it. The building materials were mentioned there.
Yes. We used to have an old house built in 1910, and this was a common type of inner wall. The framing boards were covered with lath boards, the plaster was mixed with hair or thread or straw to prevent cracking, then pressed onto the lath wall firmly so the plaster would be forced through the gaps. It would sag downward a little before drying and make a little hook of plaster on the back to help hold it up. It works--really nasty to tear out and put up sheetrock.