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Row houses of Cotswold stone in Broadway, Worcestershire. The quaint buildings of the village attract many tourists. A 2017 report on employment within the Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty stated that the main sources of income were real estate, renting and business activities, manufacturing, and wholesale & retail trade repairs.
Crossroads of narrow road near Stow-on-the-Wold, looking towards Lower Swell and the town. The house was designed by architect John Loughborough Pearson and built in 1856–59 for £8,000 (equivalent to £940,000 in 2023) for Reverend Robert William Hippisley, who was the local parish priest [6] (rector) (1844–1899).
The stone slates were naturally thick. The walls had to compensate by being thicker than the slates in Cotswold traditional houses in order for the building to be supported. [2] The king mullion is a common element of the Cotswold style. [10] The windows of Cotswold cottages were glazed with lead. In smaller structures, the windows were the ...
Liz Hoekzema of KLH Custom Homes designed a family home in Western Michigan that's a mix of Craftsman, Shingle and modern design. Call it "Modern Cotswolds."
Chavenage House, Tetbury, Gloucestershire is an English country house. A Grade I listed building, it is described in the Gloucestershire: Cotswolds volume of the Pevsner Buildings of England series as "the ideal sixteenth-century Cotswold stone manor house".
The house and outbuildings are of Cotswold stone. [3] The entrance walls and gateway date from the early 18th century. [8] The 16th-century house now forms the north wing. The east front has a symmetrical centre with the north and south wings to either side. [1] When it was a hotel, the property offered 18 rooms. [9]
The property is a typical Cotswold manor house, [1] made from local stone; the main part of the house dates from the 16th century. It is a Grade II* listed building, having been so designated since 4 July 1960. Also listed are the brewhouse, the dovecote, some of the garden buildings, the wall and gate-piers, and the group of four Manor Cottages.
Asthall Manor is a vernacular two-storey house with attics, built of local Cotswold limestone on an irregular H-plan with mullioned and mullioned-transomed windows and a stone-slated roof typical of the area. There are records of a house on the site since 1272 when Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall, owned a house on the site worth 12d.
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