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The farmhouse is in limestone, with quoins, a stepped eaves course, and a pantile roof with a coped gable and a shaped kneeler on the left. There are two storeys, three bays, a recessed single-bay wing on the left, and a rear outshut. In the angle is a lean-to porch, and the windows are sashes, one horizontally-sliding. [25] Prospect Farmhouse
The farmhouse, which incorporates material from a 17th-century building, is in sandstone on a plinth, with a stepped eaves course, and a pantile roof with shaped kneelers and coped gables. There are two storeys, three bays , and a single-story outbuilding on the left.
The largest part of the estate is the Dry Howe Farm of about 1,888 acres which includes the farmhouse and a large part of Bannisdale Fell. [2] At 22,095 square feet, Lowbridge House is the largest one family owner-occupied house in private ownership in Cumbria (i.e. not National Trust or English Heritage).
A housebarn (also house-barn or house barn) is a building that is a combination of a house and a barn under the same roof. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Most types of housebarn also have room for livestock quarters. If the living quarters are only combined with a byre, whereas the cereals are stored outside the main building, the house is called a byre-dwelling .
Marco and Alix Landolt stayed at Whatley Manor whilst visiting their son, Christian, who was competing at the Badminton Horse Trials.When Whatley Manor came up for sale in 2000 they acquired it [6] and restored it. 12 acres of land [5] have been transformed into 26 distinctive gardens, many of them based on the 1930s plans.
Great Pulteney Street, where Baldwin eventually lived, is another of his works: this wide boulevard, constructed c. 1789 and over 1,000 feet (305 m) long and 100 feet (30 m) wide, is lined on both sides by Georgian terraces. [22] [23] Outside the city of Bath most of the Grade I listed buildings are Norman- or medieval-era churches.
The Bernard (and Fern) Schwartz House, also known as Still Bend, is a 3,000 sq foot Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house in Two Rivers, Wisconsin. It is considered to be Wright's Life magazine "Dream House," and is a rare example of a two-story Usonian house. Wright originally developed the design for the house for Life in 1938.
It is a good example of the smaller farmhouse of its time. With a central doorway, two windows with shutters on each side and one door at each end of the stone flagged walk. The walls are rendered and marked as stone and the roof is corrugated iron. It is a well proportioned colonial farmhouse built in the traditional style.