Homasote

Homasote is a brand name associated with the product generically known as cellulose based fiber wall board, which is similar in composition to papier-mâché, made from recycled paper that is compressed under high temperature and pressure and held together with an adhesive. It is 12 inch (13 mm) thick and comes in sheets 4 by 8 feet (1.2 by 2.4 m).[1][2] The Homasote Company operates a 750,000-square-foot (70,000 m2) factory in the West Trenton section of Ewing Township, New Jersey.[3]

History

The Agasote Millboard Company was founded as a division of the Bermuda Trading Company in 1909 by Eugenius Harvey Outerbridge. Outerbridge brought the process to the US from England.[3]

The first commercial use of the panels were for lining railroad cars. In 1915, the company won a contract to use the panels as automobile tops. From 1915 to 1925 they supplied board for the tops of Ford Motor Company, Buick, Nash Motors, Studebaker, and Dodge. They also manufactured a larger panel, sold as "vehisote" for truck panels.[3] The panels were used for the exterior of field hospitals and military housing in France during WWI.[3] By 1925 car manufacturers switched to canvas tops and Agasote lost sales, so the company heavily promoted Homasote for its versatility and insulation properties. The company then changed its name to Homasote after its now largest product.[3] The company makes a version called "440 SoundBarrier".[4]

Model railroading

Homasote is frequently used by model railroading for the sub-roadbed or roadbed,[5] because of its noise-deadening qualities, ease of forming into shapes used as roadbed for tracks, ease of driving nails to hold track sections to the bed, light weight and retention of form under plaster scenery. Cork, plywood, hardboard, drywall, and foam insulation are common alternatives to Homasote.

Other uses

Homasote was widely used as wall sheeting from the 1940s into the 1970s. Due to the development of more fire-resistant gypsum board it has decreased in popularity as a wall sheeting.

Homasote is found in studio spaces and featured in many art institutions as a wall covering and doubling as a type of cork board. It often receives hundreds of coats of paint over the years due to the product's strength.

Homasote is used for blocking knit or crochet pieces. "Homosote is sturdy, and incredibly absorbent. It will wick water away from your garment so it dries more quickly. And it's like a bulletin board -- you can stick pins in it easily."[6]

At Northwest Folklife the dance floor[7] in the Fisher Pavilion is built each year from two layers of Homasote overlaid with a layer of painted Masonite. The Homasote base reduces the incidence of impact injuries such as shin splints caused by dancing on the concrete floor.

Homasote is used in theatrical sets as a noise deadening layer for stage platforms consisting of a 34-inch (19 mm) plywood sublayer, a 12-inch (13 mm) Homasote layer, and a 14-inch (6.4 mm) Masonite top layer.

Leadership of Homasote

References

  1. "Sticky after all these years". Boston Globe. December 6, 1991. ... Homasote is a type of papier-mache 1/2 inch thick and comes in sheets 4 by 6 and ...
  2. "How to treat old Homasote". Boston Globe. June 20, 1999. Retrieved 2008-12-18. It is a papier-mache material, ground-up newspapers wetted down and compressed ...
  3. "Homasote Company". Homasote Company. Archived from the original on 2008-02-14. Retrieved 2008-12-18. Homasote Company is the oldest manufacturer of building products made from recycled materials in the US, and the only manufacturer of its kind in the Americas. Our 750,000-square-foot (70,000 m2) factory complex in New Jersey ...
  4. "440 SoundBarrier by Homasote: The High-Performance Sheathing Alternative to OSB and Plywood". DCD. Retrieved 2008-12-18. One advantage of 440 SoundBarrier is the reduction of exterior sound entering a home achieved when sheathed with Homasote.
  5. Larson, Russ. N Scale Primer. Kalmback Publishing Company, 1974, p. 20.
  6. http://www.knitty.com/ISSUEwinter02/FEATdiyknitter.html
  7. Doug Plummer (February 22, 2010). "The Folkfloor Story". Youtube. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  8. "Three-alarm blaze damages Hopewell Township home". Trenton Times. 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-18. Police and fire officials at the scene confirmed that the two-story house nestled among the trees along Pond View Lane is owned by Warren Flicker and his family. Flicker is CEO of Ewing-based recycling company Homasote.
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