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  2. Rumford fireplace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumford_fireplace

    Rumford fireplace in a New England home. A Rumford fireplace, sometimes known as a Rumford stove, is a tall, shallow fireplace designed by Sir Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford, an Anglo-American physicist best known for his investigations of heat.

  3. Fireplace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fireplace

    A fireplace or hearth is a structure made of brick, stone or metal designed to contain a fire. Fireplaces are used for the relaxing ambiance they create and for heating a room. Modern fireplaces vary in heat efficiency, depending on the design. Historically, they were used for heating a dwelling, cooking, and heating water for laundry and ...

  4. Thomas Stedman Whitwell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Stedman_Whitwell

    The engraving of Whitwell's famous perspective of the proposed town was entitled "DESIGN for a Community of 2,000 Persons Founded upon a Principle Commended by Plato, Lord Bacon and Sir Thomas More". [10] The direct influence of Sir Thomas More's book Utopia (1516) on Whitwell's design is obvious. The layout of long communal dwellings of the ...

  5. Utopia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utopia

    The opposite of a utopia is a dystopia. Utopian and dystopian fiction has become a popular literary category. Despite being common parlance for something imaginary, utopianism inspired and was inspired by some reality-based fields and concepts such as architecture, file sharing, social networks, universal basic income, communes, open borders and even pirate bases.

  6. Utopian architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utopian_architecture

    In July 2018 MoMA opened a 6-month exhibition entitled "Toward a Concrete Utopia" that provided visitors with a large collection of images, architectural models, and drawings from Architecture of Yugoslavia from 1948 to 1980. [18]

  7. Hearth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hearth

    Hearth with cooking utensils. A hearth (/ h ɑːr θ /) is the place in a home where a fire is or was traditionally kept for home heating and for cooking, usually constituted by a horizontal hearthstone and often enclosed to varying degrees by any combination of reredos (a low, partial wall behind a hearth), fireplace, oven, smoke hood, or chimney.

  8. Ideal city - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_city

    Zamość in the 17th century. The Renaissance concept of an Ideal town developed by Italian polymath Leon Battista Alberti (1404–1472), author of ten books of treatises on modern architecture titled De re aedificatoria written about 1450 with additions made until the time of his death in 1472, concerned the planning and building of an entire town as opposed to individual edifices for private ...

  9. Atomic Heart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_Heart

    Atomic Heart takes place on the grounds of Facility 3826, the Soviet Union's foremost scientific research hub in an alternate history 1955, located in the Kazakh SSR.In 1936, scientist Dmitry Sechenov developed a liquidized programmable module called the Polymer, sparking massive technological breakthroughs in the fields of energy and robotics in the USSR and freeing much of the populace from ...