BASWA®phon featured in home theater on This Old House
At some
point or another all of us have watched This
Old House. The Emmy Award winning This Old House is television's premier
home improvement series. The show that unlocked America's passion for
home improvement, celebrates its 22nd anniversary season on PBS this year.
This Old House's mission is to demystify the home improvement process
and to celebrate the fusion of old world craftsmanship and modern technology.
Each season features two renovation projects.
Project
One traditionally consists of eighteen or so episodes and is filmed in
Massachusetts. Project Two is taped in a different region of the country
to highlight the variety of American architectural styles and renovation
issues. Additionally, the second project is generally located in a town
with a mild climate where outdoor work can be undertaken in the winter
months. We have all enjoyed watching the staff consisting of host Steve
Thomas, master carpenter Norm Abram, plumbing and heating expert Richard
Trethewey and general contractor Tom Silva.
Project One this year is The
Manchester House, owned by Janet and David McCue.
RPG was brought into this renovation by John Storyk of WSDG,
Highland, NY who is responsible for the home theater design in the living
room. The room will be used for both viewing movies and live piano recital.
Storyk selected BASWA®phon
to treat the existing focusing upper ceiling areas. The installation of
BASWA®phon is now complete and will be presented in a series of programs
listed below. Please consult local stations for airing times.
Installation Photos:
| 
After ¼" bendable drywall was applied to
the flat ceiling and concave soffits, BASWA®phon precoated panels
are glued to the surface.
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View of one soffit with all BASWA®phon panels
glued in place.
|
| 
Certified BASWA®phon master plasterer Bob
Welsh fills the seams with BASWA®phon Seamfill
|

Master plasterer and BASWA®phon trainer
Guido Koch illustrates 31 ½" (800 mm) smoothing trowel used for
Baswa®phon application
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Guido Koch applies the final top coat
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The junction of two concave soffits creates
a complex inside corner detail which is easily achieved with the
BASWA®phon system
|
| 
Closeup of finished flat ceiling. Cove lighting
will accentuate this ceiling.
|
|
NPR This Old House programs featuring BASWA®phon
Program #2113
Roger Cook and crew have begun to tear up the old asphalt driveway in
preparation for a newly configured one. Painter John Dee shows Steve his
approach to restoring the turn-of-the-century portico: some stripping
of existing features, and some replacement of those decorative elements
- brackets and capitals - that are simply not salvageable. Homeowner David
McCue tells Steve about his desire to install an outdoor hot tub, for
his two boys to enjoy alone or, importantly, with him, and Steve takes
him to see the one Steve installed in his own backyard for the exact same
reasons. Back at the site, Tom and our master carpenter use - and approve
of - polyurethane exterior trim, while Steve joins acoustical consultant
John Storyk as he works with David to tackle some of the sound issues
in the new music room. Our master carpenter and Tom discuss the state
of the original diamond-paned bumpout, its usefulness as a place for plants,
and the possibility of replacing it with a proper greenhouse. To research
the concept, architect Steve Holt shows Steve around a nearby guest house
he designed, complete with a very high-end conservatory.
Program #2116
The last of the wallboard has arrived, including 1/4" bendable board for
the music room's curved ceiling. Lighting designer Susan Arnold shows
Steve the many choices in recessed downlights, including the ones picked
for the kitchen, which electrician Peter Woodbury is installing. In the
basement, Richard Trethewey explains the plumbing setup to homeowner David
McCue, who is eager to understand which part does what and what he should
and should not do when interacting with his house's heating plant. Painter
John Dee shows Steve the progress on the portico restoration project;
his latest achievement is making a mold to cast missing pieces of the
decorative plaster. Roger Cook shows Steve the three patios he and his
crew have built, then takes Steve to a nearby nursery where he and landscape
architect David Hawk lay out, at full scale, David's proposed planting
plan for the turning island in the new driveway. Back at the site, Tommy
and our master carpenter put up a new porch column made from expanded
polyurethane and given bearing strength by a core of steel tube.
Program #2117
Steve drives down to the house, checking out the newly opened vistas of
the house and yard through the newly bare trees along the road. Inside,
the study and dining room are shaping up, with blueboard on the walls
and the old fireplace rehabilitated. In the music room, the dramatic coved
ceiling is getting the first part of its acoustical plaster system: fiberglass
panels coated with plasterlike coating that's invisible to sound, allowing
the panels to absorb unwanted echoes while maintaining a traditional look.
Acoustician Peter D'Antonio explains the multi-coat system to Steve. Our
master carpenter checks out the new aluminum half-round gutters manufacturer
Augustin Crookston and his crew are hanging from the roof shingles. Steve
sees John Dee's slow but steady process on the portico restoration; today
he's installing new plaster brackets to replace the originals, which were
too deteriorated to salvage. Steve takes viewers to the Chicago factory
where they were made, the same way they have been for 100 years. Finally,
Roger Cook shows off the new back patio, made up of massive pieces of
Goshen stone.