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Beach House, an 1820s house built by John Rebecca and refurbished by Maxwell Ayrton, was saved from demolition in 1978 and is now in residential use. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) Worthing, a town with borough status in the English county of West Sussex, has 212 buildings with ...
It is constructed in red sandstone with slate roofs, and is in one and two storeys. Its features include coped Dutch gables with ball finials, casement windows in cream stone surrounds, a glazed porch on a sandstone plinth, and a recessed platform canopy supported by a decorated cast iron column. [7] Christ Church
The south porch is gabled, and the shallow north porch from the 17th century masks a 13th-century moulding on the north door, which is framed by yew trees. The north aisle features three late tracery windows and one small 13th century lancet, and the south aisle features 14th century tracery. The chancel includes tall 14th century windows which ...
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]
The meeting house is roughcast with sandstone dressings, a slate-hung gable wall, a slate roof, and two storeys. On the front is a porch on a sandstone plinth with a moulded doorway and an inscribed lintel. To the left of the porch are three casement windows, and to the right are two mullioned windows.
Porches were a natural idea in India, a mostly warm, tropical country. In Gujarat the porch area is called the otala and in the Hindi belt it is known as alinda . These structures are not only used to cool off, but also as a centre of social life where neighbours can talk and kids play, or as a religious centre where rituals and worship of ...
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 ...
A pronaos (UK: / p r oʊ ˈ n eɪ. ɒ s / or US: / p r oʊ ˈ n eɪ. ə s /) is the inner area of the portico of a Greek or Roman temple, situated between the portico's colonnade or walls and the entrance to the cella, or shrine. Roman temples commonly had an open pronaos, usually with only columns and no walls, and the pronaos could be as long ...