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  2. Polychrome brickwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polychrome_brickwork

    Porch of All Saints, Margaret Street, 1850-59, William Butterfield. The revival of polychrome brickwork is generally thought to have been instigated by British critic and architectural theorist John Ruskin, in his 1849 book The Seven Lamps of Architecture, where he lauded not only Medieval and Gothic architecture as 'truer' than the Classical, but also the ‘honest’ medieval use of ...

  3. Listed buildings in Worthing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_buildings_in_Worthing

    This narrow, two-storey building—now a shop—has attic space below its mansard roof, a sash window on the façade of the upper storey and a tiny square window below the roofline. A short chimney rises from one end of the roof. There is a very old wall at the rear. 302243: 19 Broadwater Street East Broadwater

  4. Pilkington's Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilkington's_Group

    Pilkington's Group Plc was a UK-based manufacturer and supplier of wall and floor coverings and building materials. The group had a history in ceramic tile manufacturing with the head office located on Rake Lane in Clifton Junction, near Manchester, England.

  5. Church of Our Lady of the Incarnation (Porches) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_Our_Lady_of_the...

    The interior is notable for the chancel, dedicated to Our Lady of the Incarnation, with ribbed vaulting, and faced with tiles from the 17th century; and an 18th-century altar-piece of gilded carved wood with several images. [1] The vaulted-ceiling within the presbytery is decorated in azulejo tile, while the chancel is gilded in gold. [1]

  6. Maw & Co - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maw_&_Co

    Maw & Co have supplied ceramic wall and floor tiles to some of the world’s most prestigious buildings. [7] In Maw’s printed catalogues the 'Lists of persons and establishments supplied' ran to five pages and included the British Royal Family , Alexander II of Russia , maharajas, dukes, earls, railway companies, cathedrals, hospitals, public ...

  7. Ditsworthy Warren House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ditsworthy_Warren_House

    The original roofing material would have been stone roof tiles. Originally the house comprised a symmetrical two-storey building with central door and porch, but in the late 19th century a one-room, two-storey extension was added to the right-hand end of the house. Next to the house is a shippon stand, the animal living quarters. [1]