THE PACIFIC CONNECTION February 2009 Miles Lewis stud and balloon frames building frame, (purported to be Noah building the ark), from the Bedford Hours, early C15th Donald Matthew, Atlas of Medieval Europe (Oxford 1983), p 145 Joseph Moxon, Mechanick Exercises ([nominal] 3rd ed, London 1703), House Carpenter's Work, plate 11 trussed partition, 7 Robert Adam Street, London, c 1780 Robert Ayton principal member discontinuous studs stairway partition, 4 New Quebec Street, London, c 1790 Robert Ayton eighteenth century timber framing nineteenth century trussed partition Francis Price, The British Carpenter (London 1753), plate C R S Burn, Building Construction (London 1877), p 49, fig 231 butting joints; 4 New Quebec Street, London, c 1790; display at Carpenters Hall, Philadelphia Robert Ayton’; Miles Lewis balloon frame, USA I.C.S. Reference Library, 'Carpentry' (1900 [1897]), in [vol 14] Carpentry Joinery Stair Building &c (Scranton [Pennsylvania] 1904), fig 72 the 'combination frame' of the USA C M Gay, 'Wood Framing' in F E Kidder & Harry Parker, Kidder-Parker Architects' and Builders' Handbook (18th ed, New York 1931), p 723, modified. St Mary's Church, Chicago, 1833 Sigfried Giedion, Space, Time and Architecture: the Growth of a New Traditions (4th ed, Cambridge [Massachusetts] 1963), p 345 balloon frame of a two storey house, USA, 1859 sills 3 X 10 [75 X 250] W E Bell, Carpentry Made Easy (1859) , plate 5 detail of the James C Cowing house near Peotone, Illinois, 1855 after a drawing by Allan Nelson in P E Sprague President's Gallery, Queens' College, Cambridge, c 1540 Miles Lewis 'Elevation of two studd work cottages of the smallest size, with brick gables', by Nathaniel Kent, 1776 Nathaniel Kent, Hints to Gentlemen of Landed Property (2nd ed, London 1776), facing p 263 house at the Bokrijk Museum, Belgium Marc Laenen, no 59 'Elevation of two studd work cottages of the smallest size, with brick gables', by Nathaniel Kent, 1776 Nathaniel Kent, Hints to Gentlemen of Landed Property (2nd ed, London 1776), facing p 263 house at the Bokrijk Museum a 'frame house‘, ?USA, 1853 R S Burn, The Colonist's and Emigrant's Handbook of the Mechanical Arts (Edinburgh 1853), p 46 details of an American balloon frame (simplified joints and skew nailing) R S Burn, Building Construction (London 1877), pp 90, 91 characteristics of the US balloon frame derived from Europe close studding the horizontal girt new industrial characteristics smaller sizes of timber standardised sizes of timber simplified timber joints extensive use of nails factors responsible for the balloon frame in the USA high cost of labour makes complicated joints and shapes impractical efficient sawmills make smaller and standardised timber sizes more economic than larger and more varied ones cheap cut and wire nails make nailed joints cheaper than traditional ones the social acceptability of timber makes two storey timber houses common base details of the Fencible Cottages, Panmure, New Zealand, parallel and transverse to the joists after C P Murphy, 'The Fencible Cottage: Soldier Housing‘ (MArch, University of Auckland 1995), pp 138, 139 plan of the corner of a cottage at Burra, 1849 after Peter Bell, 'An Early Timber Cottage at Burra' [undated typescript], p 10 Model School for the National School Commissioners, Victoria, by F M White, 1852; section and elevation Lawrence Burchell, Victorian Schools: a Study in Colonial Government Architecture 18371900 (Melbourne 1980), p 46 Model School for the National School Commissioners, my modification of Burchell's reconstruction after Burchell, Victorian Schools, p 48 bracing treatments 'Barwon Bank', Geelong, 1853, studs and braces both 100 mm square, studs fully interrupted Anglican Church, Clunes, 1860, light bracing let into the studs 'Glenown', Glenmaggie, Gippsland, a farmhouse of c 1871, close to a sawmill and built with light sawn scantling but traditional interrupted stud bracing Australasian Steam Navigation Co, Sydney, by a conservative architect, W W Wardell, in 1883, with traditional sizes and interrupted studs, as at 'Barwon Bank Miles Lewis Robert Haddon’s illustrations of the Australian stud frame, 1908 & c 1910 Robert Haddon, Australian Archi-tecture (Melbourne, no date [1908]), p 327 'Detail of Framed House', Robert Haddon, 'Australian Planning and Construction', in G A T Middleton [ed], Modern Buildings (6 vols, London, no date [c 1910]), V, p 192 balloon frame construction, asw illustrated by Woodward, 1869 G E Woodward, Woodward's Country Homes, 1869. balloon frame of a 1½ storey house, USA, c 1845-1859 sills 8 x 8 [200 x 200] studs 2 x 4 in [50 x 100] puncheons 4 x 4 [100 x 100] corner posts undefined ribbon 4 x 1 or 6 x 1 [100 x 25 or 150 x 25] W E Bell, Carpentry Made Easy (1859) , plate 5 Bell’s balloon frame house sills 8 x 8 [200 x 200] studs 2 x 4 in [50 x 100] puncheons 4 x 4 [100 x 100] Kent’s studd-worke cottages studs 3 x 5 [77 x 125] puncheons 5 X 6 [235. W E Bell, Carpentry Made Easy (1859) , plate 5 Kent, Hints to Gentlemen of Landed Property ribbon 4 x 1 [100 x 100] or 6 x 1 [150 x 25] stud 2 x 4 in [50 x 100] puncheon 4 x 4 [100 x 100] sill 8 x 8 [200 x 200] ? corner post unspecified Bell’s balloon frame 1½ storey house