http://www.lorettochapel.com/history.html
Here are some of my pictures:
[ATTACH]24131[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]24132[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]24133[/ATTACH]
Pictures do not do it justice. If you are a woodworker - and on this site all of us are - you get goosebumps when you are up close and personal with this wonder of the Western world. Whoever built this staircase had no tools with an electric cord. Imagine what he or she could have done with a SS.
I always thought the casement beneath the stairs was figured wood. Not so. I learned it is plaster filled with horse hair and painted to look like burl wood.
I was inspired by this staircase back in the late 80's to look for, buy, and use hand tools. It expanded my wookworking experience and skills and I have been forever grateful to the gift it gave me.
[ATTACH]24134[/ATTACH]
It is important to note, that the staircase was made without a railing which was added nine years after the steps were completed. They hired another carpenter to make the railing because it was too disconcerting to walk up the stair without a railing. The stairs are about 25 feet high. A staircase wasn't originally built because a ladder saved space and in times past only men sang in choirs. The Sisters wanted to include women in their choir.
Engineers have studied these stairs and offer several theories about what keeps them from collapsing. Unfortunately, none of the theories are totally satisfactory. Bottom line, no one knows what keeps the stairs up. While there, I viewed pictures in the museum with all choir members from the 1940s standing on the stairs for a picture, so they will hold considerable weight.
I guess I am posting this because the winter has been long and hard and we all need moments of inspiration.