[caption id="attachment_9633" align="alignnone" width="497"] Sunlight pierces the rainscreening of a building at 15th and Alder.[/caption]
Here's another building that has, as they say, "taken the veil." Must be a hard decision and a major step in any leaky building's life.
It represents a near-lifetime commitment, or it must feel that way to the people who not only have to live under the tarps and mosquito nets for a year or more, but who also get to pay for the privilege.
Considering how many building I can see in this condition in Fairview alone, I am led to wonder: If this tarp, mesh and scaffolding arrangement is so gosh-darned waterproof, why aren't people just building this way to begin with? Click the images to enlarge them.
[caption id="attachment_9635" align="alignnone" width="497"] Too nice a day for all that rain gear.[/caption]
Here's another building that has, as they say, "taken the veil." Must be a hard decision and a major step in any leaky building's life.
It represents a near-lifetime commitment, or it must feel that way to the people who not only have to live under the tarps and mosquito nets for a year or more, but who also get to pay for the privilege.
Considering how many building I can see in this condition in Fairview alone, I am led to wonder: If this tarp, mesh and scaffolding arrangement is so gosh-darned waterproof, why aren't people just building this way to begin with? Click the images to enlarge them.
[caption id="attachment_9635" align="alignnone" width="497"] Too nice a day for all that rain gear.[/caption]
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