Plumpton Place
…stayed and not in the main house. The best things at Plumpton are the garden features: the banks and intricate steps down to the lake, the waterfalls patterned by the…
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…stayed and not in the main house. The best things at Plumpton are the garden features: the banks and intricate steps down to the lake, the waterfalls patterned by the…
…Sussex: East with Brighton and Hove. The Buildings of England. New Haven: Yale University Press. Historic England. Marvells. [Online] Available from: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1028205 Also Cited In Butler, A., 1950. The architecture…
…the elevations. The design incorporated a Banking Hall on the ground floor and flats above. The façade demonstrated a facility, much admired to the 1920s of ‘how to get up…
…sills coming down segmentally. Narrow windows in the upper storeys. Attic recessed between broken-pedimented aedicules, above which rise matching square open turrets, visible at a distance. Saucer domes in the…
Photographer: John C. Trotter Magdalene College Gazetteer No. G0476 Date 1931-32 Address Cambridge, Cambridgeshire CB3 0AG England Description Only the West range was built of a three-sided South facing court,…
…in 1951. The statue was remarkable, for architecture and sculpture were fused. The figure of the King was comparatively small, but his robes became part of the tall pedestal, modelled…
…Eleigh Hall in 1933–4. The principal external change was the Early Georgian-looking entrance doorway, and a new kitchen wing on the w side. He remodelled the entrance hall, enlarged the…
…N., Cherry, B. (1989) Devon. The Buildings of England. New Haven: Yale University Press. Butler, A., 1950. The architecture of Sir Edwin Lutyens: the Lutyens memorial series. Vol 1: Country…
…the front entry, pour light into these rooms and balance the fenestration of the front elevation. The exterior elevations are dominated by an encompassing, steeply pitched roofline which sweeps down…
…and the fact that there is no crowning cornice. There are many intricacies: the upper walls are battered and the windows decrease in width as they rise. Note, too, that…