- Joined
 - Sep 6, 2011
 
- Messages
 - 11,918
 
- Location
 - Philadelphia
 
- Tractor
 - John Deere 3033R, 855 MFWD, 757 ZTrak; IH Cub Cadet 123
 
Our house was built in 4 phases starting 1734, and has a door on each and every one of our several staircases. I honestly don't know how I'd live in a house without this feature, as they isolate noise in addition to controlling heat flow.I was watching a YouTube video yesterday that was showing an centuries old townhouse in London. One of the things that caught my eye was they had built a thin, wood paneling over the opening for the stairs on of the floors. The panel had two doors, one for going up a level and the other was for going down stairs. I think they did this for noise but also to keep the warm air in the room(s) on that floor instead of going up the stairwell to the next floor.
More interesting than their existence, is the wear imposed on them by past inhabitants. There was apparently a very determined mouse, trying to get thru this door into the 1775 kitchen at some point, before the kitchen was relocated to a new addition ca.1896.

This 1775 kitchen is now my home office, and that door is what keeps me somewhat separated from the noise of kids and family during the work day. The older 1734 kitchen is directly below, and is now our tiny billiards room.
