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A red brick house with painted stone dressings, a moulded timber eaves cornice], and a slate roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway has a moulded surround, a fanlight and a bracketed porch roof. The windows are sashes with wedge lintels and incised voussoirs. [36] II: Tulip Tree House
The main house is surrounded by mature plantings including jacarandas, bunya pines, palms and figs. In the centre of the carriage loop is a circular grassed area with a standard rose in the centre, and to one side is a circular rose garden. On the opposite end of the house to the entrance is a grassed terrace with new plantings around the edges.
A red brick house on a rendered plinth, the right gable end rendered, with a dentil eaves cornice, and a tile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The central doorway has pilasters, a radial fanlight, a frieze, and a triangular pediment, and above it is a round-headed window.
The Jackson Collins House (aka "The Red Brick House" to those who have lived there) in Centreville, Maryland was built in 1887 of pressed brick. The plan and roof forms are unusually complex. The house's style is a mixture of Queen Anne and Italianate style, unusually expressed in brick. [2]
Redhouse was settled in the 1840s. The origin of the name is debated, as it could have been named after the nearby Red House Tavern, or a large red brick house. [3] A post office for the town opened in 1883, and closed in 1954.
The old house was probably demolished when the barn to the west of the house and coach house were built in the mid-18th century. [1] The house is constructed of red brick, unusual in a village built of local sandstone, and consequently was named the Red House. The exterior and interior were remodelled during the 18th century, and in 1920 the ...
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The John M. Armstrong House is in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. John Milton Armstrong, son of John Armstrong, Jr. (April 20, 1793 – December 22, 1865) hired architect Edward P. Bassford to design this side-by-side duplex in 1886 as income-producing residential housing. The red brick house was originally located at 233-235 West Fifth ...