Tuberculosis hospital and sanatorium construction; . ;;rMk-MT No. 94.—Municipal Sanatorium, Otisville, N. Y. Designed by Dr. Hermann M. Biggs. James , Architect. Lean-to, No. 103. View or Front Elevation and Floor Plans. TheSpecial Feature of this Building is an Arrangement that Forms the Patients into Groupsor Units by Sl^pplying a Separate Living Room and Toilet Apartment in Connection withEach Porch. Capacity, 32 Patients. Cost, $9,000. (See Illustrations 14, 28, 59, 60, 85 and loifor further description of this institution.) Municipal Sanatorium, Otisville, N. Y. Lean-to, No. 1


Tuberculosis hospital and sanatorium construction; . ;;rMk-MT No. 94.—Municipal Sanatorium, Otisville, N. Y. Designed by Dr. Hermann M. Biggs. James , Architect. Lean-to, No. 103. View or Front Elevation and Floor Plans. TheSpecial Feature of this Building is an Arrangement that Forms the Patients into Groupsor Units by Sl^pplying a Separate Living Room and Toilet Apartment in Connection withEach Porch. Capacity, 32 Patients. Cost, $9,000. (See Illustrations 14, 28, 59, 60, 85 and loifor further description of this institution.) Municipal Sanatorium, Otisville, N. Y. Lean-to, No. 103. (Illustration 94.)This is a two story building, with foundations of native stone, eighteen inches thick. Thewalls are of frame construction, covered on the outside with shingles, stained a darkgreen and trimmed white. The roof is also of shingles stained red. The interior is ceiledwith matched and fitted boards, and the floors are of wood, all finished in oil. Theplan of the building follows the general lines of the lean-to, but its special f


Size: 2220px × 1125px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpu, booksubjecthealthresorts