Bathroom flooring materials - Wooden flooring cape town - Jack reacher killing floor
Bathroom Flooring Materials
A person of a specified quality or suitability
The matter from which a thing is or can be made
Things needed for an activity
(material) concerned with worldly rather than spiritual interests; "material possessions"; "material wealth"; "material comforts"
(material) the tangible substance that goes into the makeup of a physical object; "coal is a hard black material"; "wheat is the stuff they use to make bread"
(material) derived from or composed of matter; "the material universe"
A room containing a bathtub or a shower and usually also a washbasin and a toilet
A set of matching units to be fitted in such a room, esp. as sold together
a room (as in a residence) containing a bathtub or shower and usually a washbasin and toilet
A room containing a toilet
toilet: a room or building equipped with one or more toilets
A bathroom is a room that may have different functions depending on the culturalist context. In the most literal sense, the word bathroom means "a room with a bath".
The boards or other material of which a floor is made
(floored) provided with a floor
building material used in laying floors
floor: the inside lower horizontal surface (as of a room, hallway, tent, or other structure); "they needed rugs to cover the bare floors"; "we spread our sleeping bags on the dry floor of the tent"
PA - Mill Run: Fallingwater - Guest Bathroom
The bathroom walls and floors throughout Fallingwater are finished in cork--a softer, warmer, more strongly textured material than the usual ceramic tile. Edgar Kaufmann Sr. had initially wanted bus and basins to be hewn from native rock, but estimates from tombstone carvers persuaded him to purchase more ordinary Kohler fixtures.
Fallingwater, sometimes referred to as the Edgar J. Kaufmann Sr. Residence or just the Kaufmann Residence, located within a 5,100-acre nature reserve 50 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and built between 1936 and 1939. Built over a 30-foot flowing waterfall on Bear Run in the Mill Run section of Stewart Township, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, the house served as a vacation retreat for the Kaufmann family including patriarch, Edgar Kaufmann Sr., was a successful Pittsburgh businessman and president of Kaufmann's Department Store, and his son, Edgar Kaufmann, Jr., who studied architecture briefly under Wright. Wright collaborated with staff engineers Mendel Glickman and William Wesley Peters on the structural design, and assigned his apprentice, Robert Mosher, as his permanent on-site representative throughout construction. Despite frequent conflicts between Wright, Kaufmann, and the construction contractor, the home and guesthouse were finally constructed at a cost of $155,000.
Fallingwater was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1966. It was listed among the Smithsonian's 28 Places to See Before You Die. In a 1991 poll of members of the American Institute of Architects (AIA), it was voted "the best all-time work of American architecture." In 2007, Fallingwater was ranked #29 on the AIA 150 America's Favorite Architecture list.