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  2. Bleachfield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bleachfield

    A bleachfield or bleaching green was an open area used for spreading cloth on the ground to be purified and whitened by the action of the sunlight. [1] Bleaching fields were usually found in and around mill towns in Great Britain and were an integral part of textile manufacture during the British Industrial Revolution .

  3. Panorama of London - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panorama_of_London

    The earliest topographical drawings preceded maps according to modern definition, although they were mainly based on surveys or multiple drawings reduced to a (fairly) consistent perspective, as it is clearly impossible for them to have been produced from any single real viewpoint, unlike modern photographic panoramas.

  4. Long View of London from Bankside - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_View_of_London_from...

    After spending time in Stuttgart, Strasburg, and Cologne, he travelled with Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel to Vienna and Prague and then accompanied Lord Arundel when he returned to England in 1627. Hollar created a 3 feet (0.91 m) long "View of Greenwich" in his first year in England, and a similar panoramic drawing in two parts has ...

  5. Britannia Illustrata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britannia_Illustrata

    Depiction of Kensington Palace Depiction of Henbury Hall. Britannia Illustrata, also known as Views of Several of the Queens Palaces and also of the Principal Seats of the Nobility & Gentry of Great Britain is a 1707–09 map plate folio of parts of Great Britain, arguably the most important work of Dutch draughtsman Jan Kip, who collaborated with Leonard Knijff.

  6. Haerlempjes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haerlempjes

    Perhaps the most famous is Ruisdael's view of Haarlem bleaching fields from the north-east, which is why many assumed that all Haerlempjes were painted from the same perspective, not realizing that the entire area is relatively flat and so they were painted from an imaginary point somewhere up in the air, and not from a mountaintop.

  7. City Hall, London (Southwark) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_Hall,_London_(Southwark)

    The City Hall building was designed by Norman Foster and was constructed at a cost of £43 million [5] on a site formerly occupied by wharves serving the Pool of London. It opened in July 2002, two years after the GLA was created, and was leased rather than owned by the GLA. [6] Despite its name, City Hall did not serve a city (according to UK ...

  8. See inside the stunning $6.1 million home the Queen bought ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2016-05-24-birch-hall-see...

    Birch Hall boasts 7 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms and 5 living spaces -- including a gorgeous "summer room." It has charm the charm of its 1740 origins but also modern updates for comfortable living in ...

  9. City Hall, London (Newham) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_Hall,_London_(Newham)

    City Hall, in the London Borough of Newham in east London, is the headquarters of the Greater London Authority (GLA), the regional government for Greater London. It replaced the previous City Hall, in Southwark in 2022. The building opened in 2012 and was previously an exhibition centre for sustainable architecture, known as The Crystal.