Ad
related to: 150mm half round gutter brackets angled fascia
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The horizontal "fascia board" which caps the end of rafters outside a building may be used to hold the rain gutter. The finished surface below the fascia and rafters is called the soffit or eave. In classical architecture, the fascia is the plain, wide band (or bands) that make up the architrave section of the entablature, directly above the ...
The shop has a stone front and is in brick elsewhere. It has stone gutter brackets, a stone slate roof, three storeys and four bays. In the ground floor is a 19th-century shop front with panelled pilasters and massive consoles flanking a modillioned fascia, and the upper floors contain sash windows. [50] II: 42–48 New Street
Dutch gable, gablet: A hybrid of hipped and gable with the gable (wall) at the top and hipped lower down; i.e. the opposite arrangement to the half-hipped roof. Overhanging eaves forming shelter around the building are a consequence where the gable wall is in line with the other walls of the buildings; i.e., unless the upper gable is recessed.
The Victorian gutter was an ogee, 115 mm in width, that was fitted directly to the fascia boards eliminating the need for brackets. Square and half-round profiles were also available. For a brief period after the first world war , asbestos-cement guttering became popular due to it being maintenance free: the disadvantages however ensured this ...
The lower edge of the half-hip may have a gutter that leads back on to the remainder of the roof on one or both sides. Both the gablet roof and the half-hipped roof are intermediate between the gabled and fully hipped types: the gablet roof has a gable above a hip, while a half-hipped roof has a hip above a gable.
The house, which was later extended, is in magnesian limestone, with paired gutter brackets and a slate roof, hipped on the left. There are two storeys, three bays, and flanking screen walls, the left converted into a two-storey one-bay wing. The doorway has a three-pane fanlight and a peaked canopy on shaped brackets, and the windows are ...
A classically detailed bracket at the chapel of Greenwich Hospital, London Bracket for a shelf or hanging items. A bracket is a structural or decorative architectural element that projects from a wall, usually to carry weight and sometimes to "strengthen an angle". [1] [2] It can be made of wood, stone, plaster, metal, or other media.
The house, which was enlarged in the 19th century, is in stone with quoins and gutter brackets, and has a stone slate roof with coped gables and kneelers. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows in the ground floor are mullioned, and in the upper floor they are sashes. In the left return is a doorway and two blocked taking-in doors.
Ad
related to: 150mm half round gutter brackets angled fascia