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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Secondary usage  



1.1  Poland  





1.2  Romania  





1.3  Sweden  







2 References  





3 External links  














Carpet hanger






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


A carpet hanger in Prague
Children playing at a carpet hanger, Łódź, c. 1960s

The outdoor carpet hanger (also carpet standorcarpet rack) is a construction to hang carpets for cleaning with the help of carpet beaters. It is known in Germany, Poland, Lithuania, the Czech Republic, Finland,[1] Sweden, Romania, Russia, and other countries.

Secondary usage

[edit]

It was a small center of social life.[2] German writers Walter Benjamin and Erich Kästner described hangers as important places during their childhood.[3] Children may use it as a playground, as a soccer goal, as a drumming implement,[4] a gymnastic device,[5] etc.

Poland

[edit]

InPoland the outdoor railing for hanging the rug is called trzepak (a noun from the word trzepać, "to beat"; the beater itself is called trzepaczka).

Since the 1990s, it is very rare to see anyone using a trzepak for its prime function [citation needed]. In the newest housing developments, trzepak are rarely installed.[citation needed]

Romania

[edit]

InRomania the carpet hanger (bara de bătut covoareorbătător de covoare) was an important landmark in the social life of each neighbourhood during the communist and post-communist period, where it served as a meeting point for neighbours and was frequently used in children's games.[6] Before important holidays, queues would form around the railing, as few people owned a vacuum cleaner, and even those who did would still beat their carpets in order to 'freshen them up'.[7] During the rest of the year, "it was generally used as a football goal by the boys, while it suddenly transformed girls into Nadia Comăneci."[7]

The carpet hanger has been described as representing a sort of "Arc de Triomphe in front of the apartment block",[8] while writer Paul Gabor dubbed it "the ancestral belly of the totalitarian regime" during the communist era.[9]

In recent years, the carpet railing has been a topic of debate for urban planners and local authorities, as many Romanian cities have passed (and sometimes rescinded[10]) laws forbidding their placement or decreeing their immediate removal, citing aesthetic or noise pollution reasons.[11][12]

Sweden

[edit]

InSweden the carpet hanger is called piskställ, derived from piska (meaning "to whip") and ställ (meaning "stand").[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  • ^ Thomas Blubacher, Wie es einst war: Schönes und Wissenswertes aus Großmutters Zeiten
  • ^ "Užkliuvo kilimų dulkinimo stovas"
  • ^ "Joanna Mucha chce rozruszać dzieci. "Kiedyś trzepak, dziś komputer i iPhone. Rośnie pokolenie sprawnego kciuka""
  • ^ (ro)kit - Identitate romaneasca in 50 de componente - Alexe Popescu, Doru Somesan (in Romanian).
  • ^ a b "Bara de covoare". www.vice.com (in Romanian). Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  • ^ "RO-KIT | Promenada Culturala". 2017-05-21. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  • ^ "Țara mea suspendată (My Suspended Land) de Anca Mizumschi | TORO fest|Țara mea suspendată de Anca Mizumschi". torofest.ca. 4 October 2018. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  • ^ Live, Ziare. "Batatoarele de covoare si culmile de rufe pot fi montate din nou in Pitesti. Gentea a initiat un proiect de hotarare in acest sens". ZiareLive.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  • ^ rootstirea. "Război cu bătătoarele de covoare și sârmele de rufe – ȘTIRI ZILNIC". Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  • ^ "Culmile de rufe si batatoarele de covoare de prin incintele de bloc ar putea fi interzise la Onesti". Ziarul de Bacău (in Romanian). 2010-07-27. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  • [edit]
  • t
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  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Carpet_hanger&oldid=1207396481"

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    This page was last edited on 14 February 2024, at 18:35 (UTC).

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