enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bottle wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottle_wall

    A ceramic tile cutter that has been used to cut bottles (seen on the ground behind the chair) to be taped together into a bottle wall. Although bottle walls can be constructed in many different ways, they are typically made on a foundation that is set into a trench in the earth to add stability to the wall.

  3. Privy digging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privy_digging

    Dug bottles manufactured between 1880 and 1915 have sold for hundreds or even thousands of dollars but statistically this is very rare. Although privy diggers usually attempt to focus on the contents of vaults built before the Civil War, these too can also contain bottles made as late as the 1920s or later up near the top. Depending on when a ...

  4. Trombe wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trombe_wall

    Also, Trombe walls using water as a thermal mass collect and distribute heat to a space in the same way, but they transfer the heat through the wall components (tubes, bottles, barrels, drums, etc.) by convection rather than by conduction and the convection performance of the water walls differs according to their different heat capacities. [1]

  5. Firewall (construction) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firewall_(construction)

    There are three main classifications of fire rated walls: fire walls, fire barriers, and fire partitions. A firewall is an assembly of materials used to delay the spread of fire a wall assembly with a prescribed fire resistance duration and independent structural stability. This allows a building to be subdivided into smaller sections.

  6. The Bottle Houses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bottle_Houses

    The gable house was built at 20 by 14 feet (6.1 m × 4.3 m) using about 12,000 bottles that formed the three main sections. [12] Arsenault carefully picked the size and colors of the bottles to create unique patterns on the building's façade as well as in the rooms when light shines through them.

  7. Tin can wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_can_wall

    Glass bottles around the first door frame, and much of the second, admit light. A door frame can be built into the can wall, or rather the can wall is built around the frame. The process involves initially having a door frame set in place (on the foundation ) and stacking cans to either side of the frame until they reach the other walls of the ...

  8. Glass bottle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_bottle

    Glass bottles and glass jars are found in many households worldwide. The first glass bottles were produced in Mesopotamia around 1500 B.C., and in the Roman Empire in around 1 AD. [ 1 ] America's glass bottle and glass jar industry was born in the early 1600s, when settlers in Jamestown built the first glass-melting furnace.

  9. Fire glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_glass

    Fire glass (also fire pit glass, fire rocks, fire beads or lava glass) is a type of tempered glass, chunks of which are used decoratively on fireplaces. Pieces of the glass are heaped around jets of burning gas, or around liquid ethanol , in order to conceal the jets and reflect the flames. [ 1 ]