User:Fatfrog69/Adirondack Architecture

Adirondack Camps
In Adirondack Architecture, many sites, buildings, and lodges are referred to as 'camps'. A camp can refer to any area in which people can find shelter and gather in one location for an extended period of time. The word 'camp' dates back to the early days of Adirondack exploration. Hunters, homesteaders, explorers, and loggers in the area would establish temporary campsites as a place to meet, rest, and eat. These early camps initially featured temporary, scattered, open-air structures which later on evolved to semi-permanent canvas tents which sat atop a wooden platform. These tents were suited for resting, relaxing, and cooking, and were even heated by fireplaces. As logging became more predominant in the area, large companies of loggers required larger camps with features such as dormitories, a mess hall, and even stables. The logging camps featured basic log buildings which were meant to last until the area had been logged, then were left to rot. By 1850, New York had become the most heavily logged state in the entire country. The rapid growth of the logging industry demanded larger inns for the loggers to stay at which created demand for logging camps to become more permanent. The first permanent structures were constructed by Adirondack guides and early settlers using only logs from the area and hand tools. These early log cabins became popular with hunters and explorers in the area, as they would pay the cabin owners for a warm place to stay. Many travelers would come to the area to find a place to get away from everyday life and travel by foot to enjoy a comfortable stay in a simple log cabin, surrounded by nature. Tales of these Adirondack getaways began to get published in books which became very popular in the general public. Demand for these permanent structures increased as more people migrated to the area, and soon, log camps featuring multiple buildings all in one area had been established and were known as 'commercial camps'. By the 1890s commercial camps had grown so popular that some featured three-story hotel style buildings. Despite major growth, these sites were still referred to as 'camps' as they offered a rustic, outdoor experience unlike other resort hotels. Eventually, wealthy visitors purchased large lots of land and established private 'family camps' featuring a large central building or lodge called the 'main camp' which would often be surrounded by up to a dozen smaller, separate buildings used for sleeping, dining, laundry, cooking, etc. By the beginning of the 1900s, development of roads, railroads, and advanced building methods made it affordable for middle class families to purchase land and build a camp in the Adirondacks. As development in the Adirondacks continued, many of the new structures built were not entire compounds, but single structures for a single family, however the term 'camp' is still used to this day to describe all buildings of this style in the region. Most camps to this day are still constructed of natural materials such as wood and stone, and have a predominant focus on the wild nature of the early exploration days of the Adirondacks.

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