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The public house was altered and extended in the 18th and 19th centuries. The original part is timber framed with brick infill, the extensions are in painted red brick, and the roof is tiled. The 17th-century part is L-shaped, the 18th century range is at the rear, and in the 19th century a wing was added to the north.
The house is in red brick with blue brick headers, and has a dentilled eaves band, and a tile roof. There are two storeys, an attic and a basement, and three bays. In the right bay is a full-height canted bay window, and the other windows are 20th-century casements.
Earth dredged from the new boat basin and canals anchored the brick walls. With eighteen-inch-thick (46 cm) walls, supported by steel beams framing the home, the basement was a feat within itself. The basement was a storage and service area, including 16 rooms, a wine cellar, root cellar, and laundry room with an electric washing machine.
The house has a ground floor in red brick with a blue brick band at the base, the upper floor is timber framed with plaster infill, and there is a pantile roof with stone coped gables and kneelers. There are two storeys and two bays, one long and the other shorter, a lean-to on the right, and a single-storey two-bay rear extension.
The Mercado Mansion is a heritage house located in Carcar, Cebu, Philippines. It is a two-storey bahay-na-bato painted Mediterranean blue owned by the Mercado clan along Cebu South Road. [1] It was declared a Heritage House by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines in 2009.
A dark blue wall helps define this bed nook in a beach house bedroom. The paint color is paired with coordinating drapes and wallpaper on the ceiling to up the cozy factor. Get the Look:
A farmhouse, later a private house, it was altered and extended in the 20th century. The house is in red and blue brick, with a dentilled eaves band and a tile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, two parallel ranges, a front of three bays, and a 20th-century extension to the south.
Brick made by H Doulton & Co. of Rowley Regis, displayed in the Black Country Living Museum. The brick is made from the local red clay, Etruria marl, which when fired at a high temperature in a low-oxygen reducing atmosphere takes on a deep blue colour and attains a very hard surface with high crushing strength and low water absorption.