The dwelling house / by George Vivian Poore.
- Poore G. V. (George Vivian), 1843-1904.
- Date:
- 1897
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The dwelling house / by George Vivian Poore. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
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![a bouse, is an additional reason for reconsidering our methods of house-construction. 'J’iie main object to be ke])t in view in building a bouse is the supply of fresh air. Too much care cannot be taken to insure that all the channels of internal communi- cation-ball, passages, staircases—have independent ven- tilation of their own. Unless there be the means of getting these internal channels blown out by through draughts, the house cannot be wholesome; and in the event of any of the air-borne contagia getting a footing in the house, the liability to spread is enormously increased. Not only must these internal channels have air, but they must have light also. The dark passage, ending in a close cul-de-sac of bedroom doors, is one of the commonest features of the modern house, and is, of course, absolutely to be condemned. When we encounter the simill of the kitchen in the corridors, this may bo taken as sure evidence that the house is unwholesome, and that the internal channels of communication are as insutlicieiitly ventilated as is the kitchen. The smell of fried bacon which oozes through the keyhole of your bedroom may be accompanied by all the infective potentialities of all the inmates of the house. This test, as applied to corridors, is analogous to the smoke test or oil of peppermint test as applied to drains, and is quite as important. If the house be of several storeys, the ventilation of the staircase has an importance which bears a direct propor- tion to the height of the house. As a rule, in second-class, and, indeed, in many first-class houses, the ventilation and illumination of the staircase never trouble the mind of the builder or his architect. Starting from the front passage, the only light of which is from a closed fan-light over the door, the staircase oscillates between water-closet doors](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21723333_0016.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)