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Some of the wall and ceiling materials were removed or demolished during asbestos abatement. What remains includes grey tile walls and drop ceilings. Construction drawing specifications called for acoustical tile ceilings with a perforated metal frame with glass fiber pad. In places where acoustical tile was to be applied/adhered to a concrete ceiling, a mineral-type fissured surface acoustical tile was used. The Library/Conference Room on the first floor still retains its original solid wood American walnut base, blackboard trim, and picture molding. The room also features black walnut veneer wainscotting and rubber molded base molding. Most of the original ceilings in Building 29 were designed to be exposed concrete that was painted. It is likely that over the years as spaces changed, additional drop ceilings/acoustical ceiling tiles may have been added.

Openings

  • Doorways and doors:Many doors have been removed from the interior of Building 29, likely during the asbestos abatement or removal of scientific equipment in 2014. Construction drawing specifications called for hollow metal doors in most rooms, and some of these do remain in place. The lobby and vestibule doors on the first floor are aluminum-framed fully-glazed doors.
  • Windows:Windows are one-over-one, double-hung-sash, polished aluminum frame units.

Decorative features and trim

Decoration in Building 29 was very minimal, as utility was emphasized. The Library/Conference Room trim and wall coverings were described in Section 4, Wall and Ceiling Finish.The glassware and cage washing rooms had quarry tile base molding. The stairwells, Canteen, bathrooms, and vestibules to sterile rooms had cove structural facing tile as base molding. The sterile rooms had stainless steel base molding.

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Some original hardware remains in the building, including some hinges and door and window hardware, including handles and window locks.

Mechanical equipment

  • Heating, air conditioning, ventilation:The original mechanical design included no recirculation of air, and all air was triple-filtered. Sterile rooms had their own exhaust systems that incinerated the air. Fume hoods could be installed in any room without any additional work needed. The sub-basement and the penthouse/rooftop provided room for HVAC equipment. Some of this equipment has likely been upgraded over the years as technology evolved, including the known HVAC modifications in 1991.
  • Lighting:Due to the layout of Building 29, with a central hallway and laboratories on each side, there is good natural light in the rooms on floors 1–5. The basement and mechanical sub-basement are quite dark. All spaces were supplied with overhead lighting originally, but it is likely that many of these fixtures have been replaced over time. Possible original metal light fixtures were seen in the ceilings of the bathrooms on the 3rd floor, and in rooms 332, 413, and 520. It is likely other originals may still exist in additional rooms.
  • Plumbing:Bathrooms were located near Stairwell #2 on each floor of Building 29 and required plumbing and fixtures (all of which have since been removed). Each laboratory space would also require sinks, sterile hoods, fume hoods, and other equipment to maintain a safe, sterilized working environment. There are construction drawings for several types of sinks, fume hoods, sterile hoods, tissue culture cabinets, and faucets on file at the NIH.

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