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A double storey house forming an integral part, of the Old Grey Institute group of buildings. The building is noted for its twin gables, wrap-around veranda, tracery and entrance porch. Architectural style: Victorian house. Type of site: House. 9/2/073/0022 7 Castle Hill, Port Elizabeth A double storey house restored and used as a museum.
A double-storey house with corrugated iron roof; window openings of a large glazed panel sash variety. It represents one of the few remaining Berea villas which exists in an intact condition. It is the 3rd element of a group of three buildings which have It was built originally as a villa for Mrs Joel In 1903 and was designed by W.E. Robarts.
Double storey house with central projecting covered gable with round vent. Double storey verandah. Type of site: House. Current use: Residential. Intrinsic architectural and cultural significance: 9/2/049/0120-030 2 Loch Road, Kimberley Large house with decorated gables on two sides. Wrap around verandah on plastered brick columns. Type of site ...
It is a red brick double-storey building, with a pitched corrugated iron roof. There is a veranda wi The building known as the Mapikela House is closely associated with its owner and builder, T.M. Mapi Type of site: House Current use: Residential. This red brick double-storey house was built in 1926 by Mr Thomas Mtobi Mapikela.
A double storey twin gable fronted house with corrugated iron roof, painted brick walls with express Type of site: House Current use: house. The building has architectural merit and is part of a grouping of architectural merit, over eighty y Pietermaritzburg, Central: Pietermaritzburg Heritage Register (KZN Heritage Act)
This house is the only known example in South Africa of the European-Chinese architectural style of the 18th and 19th centuries. It is a double-storeyed house with two projecting pavilions with bow-fronted ends.
The Grosvenor House is a mansion that depicts the period c. 1803, and is the ancestral home of the Neethling family. The site on which it stands was granted to Christiaan Ludolph Neethling in 1781, and a year later he had built a double-storey house on the property. Successive owners kept the house virtually unaltered.
Contemporary houses were one-room stone structures, two-storey square houses, or roundhouses of sandstone with basalt foundations. Villas were generally two-to-four storeys tall and had sprawling rectangular plans (cf. Dungur ruins). A good example of still-standing Aksumite architecture is the monastery of Debre Damo from the 6th century.