The famous mural that most University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point
students have grown to love is getting a much needed facelift over the
next few weeks.The mural was designed by art professor Richard
Schneider, and takes up an entire side of the Trainer Natural Resources
Building facing the sundial. Construction started on the mural in 1977
and was completed in 1982. The mural consists of a variation of 28
different ceramic tiles that have symbols on them representing the
college of natural resources.
A team from Conrad Schmitt Studios
Inc. of New Berlin started cleaning the 286,200 tiles that make up the
giant mural on Wednesday. Facilities planning director Carl Rasmussen
said the project will last about three weeks and costs almost
$39,000.Theyre bringing it back as much as possible to its original
luster, he said. We did not know going into this whether or not it was
ultraviolet, internal bleaching, deterioration of the tiles, but
apparently the tiles are in very good shape for as much extreme
conditions that theyre dealing with.
Rasmussen said UWSP has
been looking at various methods of restoring the almost 30-year-old
mural over the past few years after noticing the mural didnt have the
same vibrant look as it once did.Some were very expensive and involved
bead blasting it with walnut shells which is a typical art curative and
restoration process but the dollar amounts were astronomical, he said.
This year, we happened to engage the state masonry expert from the
department of state facilities.This is a basic background on siliconebracelet.
UWSP
had been working with a curator and asked them to take a look. The
curator did some test samples and said they thought they could make a
significant different using light detergents and scrubbing.Schneiders
daughter, Lora Hagen, said that several special tiles are hidden
throughout the mural to represent different key members of the UWSP
community like former chancellor Lee Sherman Dreyfus.
There are a
dozen or so tiles here representing special people, such as Dreyfuss
red vest and Phil Marshall, who was the chancellor after him,We are
always offering best quality earcap the affordable price.The marbletiles is
not only critical to professional photographers. Hagen said. The urban
myth is that Dreyfuss tile is red, but its not.Hagen said the idea for
the mural was mainly a way to honor the university cupola, the dome-like
structure on top of the Old Main building on Main Street.
The
deal was that the Old Main building was going to go away and Schneider
wanted the cupola to be remembered and went to China and saw great
public art works with all kinds of people, she said. He apparently came
back and said I want to remember the cupola and we could have this
public project.
One ACRE Cafe, A Community Restaurant for
Everyone regardless of their ability to pay, has received its nonprofit
status and is moving full steam through the reconstruction of its West
Walnut street location.Still on track for a soft opening in September,We
offer a wide variety of high-quality standard granitetiles and controllers. the cafe building, at 603 W.A quality paper cutter or paper partypaymentgateway can make your company's presentation stand out. Walnut St., has undergone an interior demolition and the rebuilding is on.
Boosted
by more than 80 individual, church and corporate supporters, including a
professional architect and an interior designer, the work has moved
quickly since the May 1 signing of a five-year lease on the former
Desert Rose restaurant, putting the cafe well into the third of six
phases of development toward its opening, referred to by cafe officials
as the reconstruction phase.
Booth dividers in the dining room
have been taken out. Walls have been removed. The brick bar has been
lowered. New picture windows and a new back office have been framed in. A
meeting room has been partitioned off. And a couple of slate walls
where the cafes daily menus and monthly work schedules will be posted
are painted, framed and ready for chalk.
Cafe Director Jan
Orchard said that 67 volunteers have so far had a hand in the renovation
and 600 hours of volunteer labor have been invested. There have been
eight large Saturday work days since the lease was signed and many
after-hour work sessions with Orchard, a couple of volunteers and the
buildings owners, who she said have been as generous in the remodeling
as they were in the lease.
Architect Tom Mozen and Designer
Ginger Rocket have laid out all the plans. Daltile is wrapping up work
on the blue and beige tile floor it donated for the cafes restrooms. And
Ferguson plumbing will be back soon to install the bath fixtures it
donated.
A permit that will allow the insulation to go in is
expected at any time. And with the insulation in place, the walls will
be closed, the electrical outlets wired in and the cafe will be one
final inspection away from the start of interior painting.
Click on their website www.tilees.com for more information.
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