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Excerpt:
The town of Rockport, New England is a mecca for both
artists and connoisseurs, whose galleries add cachet
to this favoured weekend destination. Venture off Main
Street into Rockport’s residential area, however, and
a series of handmade signs point the way to a singular,
off-the-beaten-track attraction: the Paper House, on
Pigeon Hill Street.
At first glance, the house looks like any other. With
its wrap-around porch, tidy wood trim and flower and
rock garden, the small cottage fits right into the neighbourhood.
But a hanging rectangular sign, ‘Paper House’, highlights
the unique newspaper construction of this unlikely landmark,
Elis F. Stenman’s personal testament to human creativity.
Stenman, a mechanical engineer and amateur inventor,
lived in Cambridge, Massachusetts and designed machines
to make small wire devices such as paper clips and hook-and-eye
fasteners for clothing. When he bought land in Rockport
in 1922 for a ‘summer house’, it was not surprising
that, with his love of tinkering, he would build something
unusual. Stenman was fascinated by the subject of insulation
material. At the time, people were laying paper on the
floor in the attic or under a rug for insulation, and
he decided to try using it on the walls. With no apparent
pre-conceived master plan, the house design evolved,
becoming a quasi-scientific experiment to measure the
strength and insulating properties of newspaper and
the durability of newsprint.
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Being a thrifty Swedish immigrant who hated the idea
of wasting anything, Stenman began to save the three
newspapers that he read each day. ‘I always resented
the daily waste of newspapers after people read them
for a few minutes,’ he told a local news reporter. Other
people became involved in saving newspapers for him.
One friend, who lived in Washington, DC, gave him foreign
newspapers; another wrote letters to each state capital,
explaining the house project and requesting a newspaper.
In 1924, Stenman hired a carpenter to erect a frame
for the house and lay a wooden floor. He himself proceeded
to wrap sheets of paper around a piece of fine wire,
rolling them tightly until he had a thin, stiff rod
about three-quarters of an inch (20mm) in diameter.
He inserted the rods into the frame of the house and
added wallboards made with 215 sheets of paper glued
together using his own concoction of flour, water and
apple peel. Similarly, he fashioned hundreds of shingles
from triangular-shaped sheets of paper. These were varnished
several times to make them weatherproof. Stenman’s original
plan had been to cover the outside of the house with
clapboards, but when the paper walls survived their
first winter with little damage, he became curious to
discover how long such a house could last.
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