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Calthorpe and on
Architect Peter Calthorpe promoted and popularized the idea of urban villages that relied on public transportation, bicycling, and walking instead of automobile use.
Important writers on urban design theory include Christopher Alexander, Peter Calthorpe, Gordon Cullen, Andres Duany, Jane Jacobs, Mitchell Joachim, Jan Gehl, Allan B. Jacobs, Kevin Lynch, Aldo Rossi, Colin Rowe, Robert Venturi, William H. Whyte, Bill Hillier, and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk.
* Ground Photos At Calthorpe Associates redesigned Web site, " the page you are looking for no longer exists "; Laguna Park not amongst eleven " Community Design " listings on Web site ; " Sacramento County General Plan and Guildelines " covers region.
The Calthorpe family offered twenty-five acres ( 10 hectares ) of land on the Bournbrook side of their estate in July.
She went to the independent Edgbaston Church of England College for Girls on Calthorpe Road in Edgbaston, Birmingham ( which became the co-ed St. Georges School, Birmingham in 1999 ).
Henry Calthorpe Blofeld OBE ( born at Hoveton Home Farm, Norfolk on 23 September 1939 ) ( nicknamed Blowers by the late Brian Johnston ) is a sports journalist.
Blofeld's uncle was the Honourable Freddie Calthorpe, who captained England on their first-ever tour of the West Indies in 1929 / 30.
British forces occupied various points throughout the Empire, and through their High Commissioner Somerset Calthorpe demanded that those members of the leadership who had not fled be put on trial, a policy also demanded by Part VII of the Treaty of Sèvres formally ending hostilities between the Allies and the Empire.
It was built in 1897 and opened by Lady Calthorpe on October 20, 1898 to celebrate the Silver Jubilee of Queen Victoria.
Cannadine went up to Clare College, Cambridge where he read History, and wrote a doctorate on the history of the development of the Calthorpe estate, Edgbaston, Birmingham, while at St John's College, Oxford, supervised by Peter Mathias.
Calthorpe captained England in his only four Test matches: on the first ever Test tour of the West Indies in 1929 / 30, which was drawn 1-1.
* Cricinfo page on Honourable Freddie Calthorpe
Calthorpe House, an office tower on the Edgbaston Galleries site, was demolished by controlled explosion on 9 March 2008.
* Carr-Calthrop, Colonel Christopher William, C. B. E., M. D., & c., Notes on the Families of Calthorpe & Calthrop, 3rd edition, London, 1933, p. 43.
* Lady Charlotte Sophia Somerset ( 25 April 1795 – 12 November 1865 ), married, on 12 August 1823, Frederick Gough-Calthorpe, 4th Baron Calthorpe and had children.
Lord Malmesbury married Dorothy Gough-Calthorpe, daughter of Augustus Gough-Calthorpe, 6th Baron Calthorpe, on 27 April 1905.
The land that now makes up Edgbaston Cricket Ground was originally owned by the Calthorpe Estate, who have now sold the site onto Wylam Investments ( Edgbaston Holdings ) on a long lease.
The Pavilion and East Stand in 1895The club had initially favoured the Wycliffe Ground on Pershore Road, but were instead offered a 12-acre " meadow of rough grazing land " in an undeveloped area on the banks of the River Rea by the Calthorpe Estate – the less attractive development land having more to gain from association with the cricket ground.
John Eaton Calthorpe Blofeld ( Born Anthony, 2 April 1913 – 7 June 1987 ) was a British writer on Asian thought and religion, especially Taoism and Chinese Buddhism.

Calthorpe and developed
Mesa del Sol, New Mexico — the largest New Urbanist project in the United States — was designed by architect Peter Calthorpe, and is being developed by Forest City Enterprises.
Calthorpe Estates had developed the manor of Edgbaston into an exclusive Birmingham suburb over the course of the 19th century, and believed that a cricket ground would be an asset that would add to the genteel image of the area.

Calthorpe and for
Advocates for regional planning such as new urbanist Peter Calthorpe, promote the approach because it can address region-wide environmental, social, and economic issues which may necessarily require a regional focus.
* Peter Calthorpe & William Fulton, The Regional City: Planning for the End of Sprawl, ISBN 1-55963-784-6
In 1991, the Local Government Commission, a private nonprofit group in Sacramento, California, invited architects Peter Calthorpe, Michael Corbett, Andrés Duany, Elizabeth Moule, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, Stefanos Polyzoides, and Daniel Solomon to develop a set of community principles for land use planning.
Calthorpe, Duany, Moule, Plater-Zyberk, Polyzoides, and Solomon founded the Chicago-based Congress for the New Urbanism in 1993.
In his first edition, Calthorpe allowed that Cardigan's horse may have bolted, but later editions pointedly stated the earl was too fine a horseman for this to be a satisfactory explanation.
By then, properties which would have their names used for halls of residences such as Wyddrington and Maple Bank were under discussion and more land was obtained from the Calthorpe estate in 1948 and 1949 providing the setting for the Vale.
Legend has it that Hunter originally came to Birmingham planning to sign for Calthorpe FC, but after failing to locate them was persuaded to sign for Villa instead by George Ramsay.
The nearby city of Broomfield likewise contacted California planner Peter Calthorpe, who espouses many New Urbanist ideas, to begin designing a master plan for their community.
It was later home to William Withering and since 1936, thanks to negotiations initiated by The Birmingham Civic Society with the owner, Calthorpe Estates, it has been the clubhouse for Edgbaston Golf Club.

Calthorpe and with
The first reference to the city is believed to be in Colonial records of a land grant to Christopher Calthorpe in 1631 by a court in what became the former Elizabeth City County ( which consolidated with the Town of Phoebus and the City of Hampton in 1952, assuming the latter's name, and becoming a single large independent city ).
Somerset John Gough Calthorpe, alleged in his book Letters from a Staff Officer in the Crimea that Cardigan had only survived because he had fled the scene before the charge made contact with the enemy.
Upon his arrival in the English Midlands he became involved with a local football club, Calthorpe, which had been formed by a fellow Scot, Campbell Orr.
The film is hosted by Canadian broadcaster Barrie Zwicker and features discussions with James Howard Kunstler, Peter Calthorpe, Michael Klare, Richard Heinberg, Matthew Simmons, Michael Ruppert, Julian Darley, Colin Campbell, Kenneth S. Deffeyes, Ali Samsam Bakhtiari and Steve Andrews.
The latter year saw the first parade in Calthorpe Park, the opening of the range at Bournbrook, and the formation of the twelve companies forming the first battalion, but, notwithstanding many liberal donations ( the gunmakers giving £ 850 ), and the proceeds of the first annual ball, it closed with the corps being in debt by over £ 1, 000.
He made the runs with a long-handled bat borrowed from his captain Freddie Calthorpe and a pair of ill-fitting boots borrowed from Patsy Hendren.
* Henry Gough-Calthorpe, 1st Baron Calthorpe ( 1749 – 1798 ), married in 1783, Frances ( died 1827 ), second daughter of General Benjamin Carpenter, with issue, eleven children.

Calthorpe and ).
* Calthorpe, Peter ( 1993 ).
* Calthorpe, Peter and William Fulton ( 2001 ).
A diagramatic illustration of the streets ( blue ), paths ( green ) and open spaces ( yellow ) in a " Pedestrian Pocket " superblock ( after P. Calthorpe and D. Kelbaugh ).

on and other
The hall, on the other hand, appeared lifeless and deserted on these long waterfront afternoons.
But if they really hoped to succeed they needed professionals, men who knew how to use a gun against men, who would match the killers on the other side.
They were headed straight for each other on a collision course.
I seized the rack and made a western-style flying-mount just in time, one of my knees mercifully landing on my duffel bag -- and merely wrecking my camera, I was to discover later -- my other knee landing on the slivery truck floor boards and -- but this is no medical report.
Two uniformed officers, a couple of plain-clothesmen I knew, and two other men stood on a gray cement area next to the pool on my left.
They discussed the way people never tell each other the things on their minds.
Thirty minutes later, the outrigger grated on sand and other girls, waiting on shore, rushed forward to pull it up on the beach and make it fast with vine ropes to a large boulder.
`` If you want to see something, he's back on the other side by the trunk of the car ''.
The Brahmaputra has its headwaters in the tableland of the world, the towering white headwalls of the Himalayas that are unknown to man as any other space on the planet.
He bounced exuberantly on the sagging bed and was even more delighted when Madame Lalaurie -- after closing the door -- showed the slave that the bed was designed for something other than slumber.
The lives so many of them gave, to forestall what they believed would be a fatal encroachment by the Union on the powers reserved to their states have continued ever since to safeguard all Americans against freedom's other foe.
Otherwise, we go on endlessly trying to draw the line, color and other, as to which kind of man we wish to see dominate.
Research, on the other hand, has shown many stepmothers to be eminently successful, some far better than the real mothers.
But because it is the function of the mind to turn the one into the other by means of the capacities with which words endow it, we do not unwisely examine the type of distinction, in the sphere of politics, on which decisions hang.
Mother and son recognize each other and, in Mann's version of this legend, make a remarkable confession of guilt to each other, the confession of unconscious motive and unconscious knowledge of their true identities from the time they had first set eyes on each other.
A useful comment on his relation to his region may be made, I think, by noting briefly how in handling Southern materials and Southern problems he has deviated from the pattern set by other Southern authors while remaining faithful to the essential character of the region.
As a consequence of the tensions thus produced in his thoughts and feelings, he wrote on the one hand sketches of idealized hunting trips and on the other an anecdote of the village of Hardscrabble, Arkansas, where no one had ever seen a piano ; ;

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