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A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin, beach box or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box above the high tide mark on popular bathing beaches. They are generally used as a shelter from the sun or wind, changing into and out of swimming attire and for the safe storing of some personal belongings.
According to Rubén Carrillo, palapa is derived from the traditional construction methods of the bahay kubo ("nipa hut") architectural style of the Philippines, carried to Nueva España (along with coconuts, which are not native to the Americas) via the Manila galleons during the Spanish colonial period.
A cottage is a small house, usually one or two stories in height, although the term is sometimes applied to larger structures. Cape Cod-style house or Cape: a style of a double-pile one-story cottage; low, broad with a steep side-gable roof to which dormers are often added to create a second story (in some locations, referred to as 1.5-story)
Beach House Hilton Head Island, including the iconic Tiki Hut beach bar, is getting an upgrade, changing the landscape of Coligny Beach Park’s entrance and bringing live music closer to the ...
The Brighton Bathing Boxes are 93 beach huts on Dendy Street Beach in Brighton, Victoria, Australia, in the City of Bayside. They are a significant tourist attraction for the area. [1] In November 2019 a bathing box was sold for $340,000 [2] and historically they have been valued at about 15% of the median Brighton house price. [3]
Beach cabin, a small wooden hut on a beach; Log cabin, a house built from logs; Cottage, a small house; Chalet, a wooden mountain house with a sloping roof; Cabin, small free-standing structures that serve as individual lodging spaces of a motel
A Samoan beach fale. A beach fale is a simple thatched hut in the architecture of Samoa.Beach fales are also common in other parts of Polynesia.They have become popular in tourism as a low budget accommodation situated by the coast, built with a few posts, no walls and a thatched roof with a round or oval shape.
A clochán (plural clocháin) or beehive hut is a dry-stone hut with a corbelled roof, commonly associated with the south-western Irish seaboard. The precise construction date of most of these structures is unknown with the buildings belonging to a long-established Celtic tradition, though there is at present no direct evidence to date the ...