Eureka! Northern Breeze - Screen House


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List Price: $459.90
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A great option for backyard barbecues, days at the beach, or evenings lounging in the campsite, the square Eureka Northern Breeze is nicely light and easily transportable thanks to its aluminum frame. It features a 144 square foot area (12 by 12 feet)--just directly to fit a standard-sized picnic table--and a roomy 7 foot, 7 inch center height. The near-vertical side walls also provide more usable interior space. This versatile screen house also features four side walls that might be used as waterproof walls or awnings--with 64.5 square feet of awning-covered exterior space on each side.
The 150D polyester splash cloth and roof provide excellent UV resistance, and offers more durability than other screen houses with 75D polyester roofs. The strong durable shockcorded aluminum frame attaches to the body by the central hub and clips for a fast and simple set up every time. Other features include two full-length doors, no-see-um polyester mesh walls, as well as an optional snap-in floor (sold separately).

About Eureka
Though the exact year is unknown, Eureka’s long history begins ahead of 1895 in Binghamton, New York, the place that the company still resides today. Then known as the Eureka Tent & Awning Company, its first wares were canvas products--most notably, Conestoga wagon covers and horse blankets for nineteenth century American frontiersmen--as well as American flags, store awnings, and camping tents.

The company increased production of the custom canvas products locally throughout the 1930s and throughout the 1940 and even fabricated and erected the IBM "tent cities" just outside Binghamton. The seven acres of tents housed a large number of IBM salesmen through the company’s annual stockholders meeting, which have since outgrown its previous locale. In the 1940s, with all the creation of Wwii as well as the increased need for hospital ward tents, Eureka expanded operations and began shipping tents worldwide. Ultimately, upon the post-war return with the GIs and also the resultant housing shortage, Eureka turned its attention to the home front during the 1950s by supplying awnings for that large number of mobile homes that were purchased.

In 1960, Eureka’s new and innovative Draw-Tite tent, with its practical, free standing external frame, was adopted in a very Himalayan Expedition to Nepal by world renowned Sir Edmund Hillary, the first person documented to summit Mt. Everest only six years earlier. In 1963, Eureka made history during its own Mt. Everest ascent, with more than 60 of the company's tents sheltering participants from fierce 60+ mph winds and temperatures reaching below -20°F during the first all American Mt. Everest Expedition.

For backpackers and families, Eureka introduced its legendary Timberline tent inside 1970s. Truly the first StormShield design, this completely self-supporting and lightweight backpacking tent became one of the most widely used tents the entire industry with sales reaching over One million by its ten year anniversary.

Eureka tents have also traveled as part of several historic expeditions, such as American Women’s Himalayan Expedition to Annapurna I in 1978 as well as the first Mt. Everest ascents by the Canadian and American woman in 1986 and 1988. In recent history, tents specially designed and donated by Eureka sheltered Eric Simonson and his team on two historic research expeditions to Mount Everest, this time in the quest for truth regarding the 1924 attempted summit of early English explorers George Mallory and Andrew Irvine. During the 1999 expedition, the team made history finding the remains of George Mallory, but the complete mystery remained unsolved. Returning in 2001 to find more clues, the team found amazing historical artifacts that are now on display in the Smithsonian.
Built-in wind/rain curtains convert into awnings for additional space.



Product Features
Portable square screen house with built-in rain curtains and awning
Measures 12' by 12'; full mesh panels
Shock-corded, pre-bent, aluminum frame lighter than fiberglass
Two full length doors zip completely open and out of the way
Center height of 101 inches; weighs 28 pounds


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