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Catherine Hostetler: I would like to reiterate Martha's sentiment about the original fabric <br />of the house. I think those windows, in my opinion, can be restored using the techniques <br />that we have available, what we have learned in workshops, what we have sent our staff <br />down to, to learn the skills to do that. I truly believe that these windows can be made <br />weather tight using as much of the original fabric of those windows as is there today, <br />having them re -glazed and then exploring the options of interior versus exterior storms. <br />The argument for using storm windows on the interior because your want to have <br />ventilation through the house is certainly understandable but usually you don't use storm <br />windows in the winter time in a breakfast nook and want ventilation at the same time <br />So have storm windows on the interior, just for that time of year, I don't think is going to <br />be that invasive and shouldn't stop you from getting the air dynamics in your house <br />working properly. So you could use, as a compromise, interior storms, just in that <br />particular area and maintain those original windows. I also think that you may have other <br />issues going on, that aren't just the windows. I think that there have been foundation <br />issues on that bay, because you can see on that bay some of the molding isn't quite level; <br />that there might be some other issues going on here that putting new windows in, isn't <br />going to solve that problem. In fact you might be opening up a huge can of worms and <br />have take out all of those new windows and rebuild that whole bay area. So I think that <br />we will really need to explore this after seeing the structure with the possibility that there <br />might be some foundation issues. Otherwise what you may be doing, Professor, is <br />compounding a problem that needs to be addressed at a more fundamental level. I would <br />call for not only restoration of the windows but investigation into the foundation of the <br />house so that when you do come up with a solution it's the best one for you and the best <br />one for the house. <br />Joann Sporleder: May I speak? I would like to address some of the things that Catherine <br />brought up. One, there is a lot of suppositions in that and supposes. I think that this is an <br />inappropriate time to think what might happen if he allowed to do what he is proposing to <br />do. Also neither Tim nor Catherine's suggestions of what to do, if Tim made suggestions, <br />of how to solve the problem of a single pane windows which are very uncomfortable to <br />live next to. Everybody knows and we all acknowledge that the original windows can be <br />retro fitted in a sense, rebuilt and sustained so that the caulking works, the windows work <br />and all the rest of the things work. However, we are still stuck at that juncture with single <br />pane glass which is, as Wayne has said, no insulating characteristics, whatsoever. So <br />what we are suggesting, I think, here is that Professor Enderle despite two years of <br />investigating this problem of how to solve it, especially the four windows in the dining <br />room, that his living and living and trying to come to some understanding of how <br />he can best solve the other problem of making the house comfortable and livable without <br />stretching plastic over the windows every year or leaving it on year after year after year. <br />It's obvious that these windows, all of them, have led to a variety of attempts to make the <br />house more comfortable and energy efficient at some point. And, I think that we should <br />make more effort at understanding his solution to this problem. Unless, and I refer this to <br />Counsel, unless our standards actually say that the aluminum clad wooden windows are <br />not allowed. If our standards actually say that, then all this discussion is pointless. <br />Thank you. <br />IN <br />