Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "William Guilfoyle" ¶ 18
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

gardens and around
Let us have more benches and fewer forbidden areas around fountains and gardens.
Most of these gardens were built around a central axis and they were divided into different parts by hedges.
Gardening also takes place in non-residential green areas, such as parks, public or semi-public gardens ( botanical gardens or zoological gardens ), amusement and amusement parks, along transportation corridors, and around tourist attractions and garden hotels.
A gardener Gardening also takes place in non-residential green areas, such as parks, public or semi-public gardens ( botanical gardens or zoological gardens ), amusement and theme parks, along transportation corridors, and around tourist attractions and hotels.
With its around 40 parks, forests and gardens, a couple of lakes, two rivers and one canal, Hanover offers a large variety of leisure activities.
Hops were cultivated continuously around the 8th or 9th century AD in Bohemian gardens in the Hallertau district of Bavaria and other parts of Europe.
Kew Explorer is a service that takes a circular route around the gardens, provided by two 72-seater road trains that are fuelled by Calor Gas to minimise pollution.
Azaleas are frequently used around foundations and occasionally as hedges, and many larger-leafed rhododendrons lend themselves well to more informal plantings and woodland gardens, or as specimen plants.
His objectives were to improve the health of the inhabitants, towards which the blocks were built around central gardens and orientated NW-SE to maximize the sunlight they received, and assist social integration.
* The Palazzo Ducale, famous residence of the Gonzaga family, made up of a number of buildings, courtyards and gardens gathered around the Palazzo del Capitano, the Magna Domus, and the Castle of St. George.
He rented out a suite of rooms above the archways around the gardens of the Palais Royal, which was once owned by Cardinal Richelieu.
The innermost ring was used for gardens and orchards that followed a fallowing cycle around the ring.
Henry Hawkins ' descendants each made significant contributions to the development of the gardens, including the ornamental plantings along the estate's Long Drive, the Jungle, the hybridizing of rhododendrons and their planting around Flora's Green, and the creation of the Italian Garden.
The restoration, which was the subject of a six part Channel 4 television series in 1996, proved to be an outstanding success, not only revitalising the gardens but also the local economy around Heligan by providing employment.
A 1928 plan to build a spacious Moorish Revival campus around several gardens and courtyards was cancelled by the Great Depression of 1929 after only one building had been erected.
Efforts to restore it centre around intensively managed land areas, such as gardens and golf courses.
: You have gathered around you the rarest plants growing on French soil .... as we inspect them in the beautiful gardens of Malmaison, an impressive reminder of the conquests of your illustrious husband ...
However, despite the discovery of a medicinal well in 1714, and the creation of gardens and a fine room to exploit the water, Kilburn did not attract any significant building until around 1819 in the area near St John's Wood.
Several parts of Notting Hill are characterised by handsome stucco-fronted pillar-porched houses, often with private gardens, notably around Pembridge Place and Dawson Place and streets radiating from the southern part of Ladbroke Grove, many of which lead onto substantial communal gardens.
In 1620, a small portion was leased by James Stewart ( a Scots settler in the area ) and lands around the townland of Cor Criche were leased to an English ecclesiastical lawyer, Dr. Cooke, who fulfilled the covenants entered in the lease by building 10 houses on the land ( today covering the area known as Oldtown ), which he stipulated were all to have front gardens ( a tradition which still remains in place ).

gardens and Parliament
The poet Thomas Tickell owned a house and small estate in Glasnevin and, in 1790, they were sold to the Irish Parliament and given to the Royal Dublin Society for them to establish Ireland's first botanic gardens.
Sir Charles Barry FRS ( 23 May 1795 – 12 May 1860 ) was an English architect, best known for his role in the rebuilding of the Palace of Westminster ( also known as the Houses of Parliament ) in London during the mid-19th century, but also responsible for numerous other buildings and gardens.
On the eastern side of the road, a series of tree-lined open spaces and front gardens make up Rush Common — an area of common land that, although it is subject to protection under an Act of Parliament of 1811, has seen some incursions for building.
The complex cost around 128 crore BDT ( 1. 28 billion ) to build, including the Parliament building, North Plaza, South Plaza, residential building, hostels, gardens, roads and lakes.
Statue of La Trobe near Parliament StationMuch of Melbourne's substantial inner city parks and gardens can be attributed to La Trobe's foresight in reserving this land.
The gardens were officially restored and re-opened in December 2004 following their decline after the Parliament moved to the new Parliament House in 1988.
* Brisbane City Botanic Gardens-established in 1855-located at Alice and George Streets, the gardens are close to Parliament House and the Queensland University of Technology.

gardens and House
Abbotsford House as seen from the gardens.
The Museum is located near the Casa de Juntas ( old Assembly House ), the Tree of Gernika and surrounded by old gardens now turned into the Parque de los Pueblos de Europa ( Park of the European Nations ).
* Erasmus Darwin House Erasmus Darwin Museum house and gardens
Built in the Brucheion ( Royal Quarter ) in the style of Aristotle's Lyceum, adjacent to and in service of the Musaeum ( a Greek Temple or " House of Muses ", hence the term " museum "), the library comprised a Peripatos walk, gardens, a room for shared dining, a reading room, lecture halls and meeting rooms.
It forms part of a path designed to encourage visitors to visit more of the gardens than had hitherto been popular and connect the two art galleries, via the temperate and evolution houses and the woodland glade, to the Minka House and bamboo garden.
Dollis House, Gladstone Park, as seen from the gardens
The gardens include some glasshouses of architectural importance, such as the Palm House and the Curvilinear Range.
Jones, a gifted architect steeped in the latest European taste, also designed the Queen's House at Greenwich for Anne, one of the first true Palladian buildings in England ; and the Dutch inventor Salomon de Caus laid out her gardens at Greenwich and Somerset House.
Nash's House, and the gardens of New Place
* Chiswick House Villa, Middlesex: The " Casina " in the gardens, 1717, was Burlington's first essay.
The Lost Gardens of Heligan completely surround Heligan House and its private gardens.
The Heligan estate was originally bought by the Tremaynes in the sixteenth century, and earlier members of the family were responsible for Heligan House and the ( still private ) gardens that immediately surround it.
The town is the location of several significant historic buildings, including Lewes Castle, the remains of Lewes Priory, Bull House ( the former home of Tom Paine ), Southover Grange and public gardens, and a sixteenth century timber-framed Wealden hall house known as Anne of Cleves House because it was given to her as part of her divorce settlement from Henry VIII, though she never lived there.
Her career included commissions to design the gardens for private residences, estates and country homes, public parks, botanic gardens, college campuses, and the White House.
Works in Ireland include the Irish National War Memorial Gardens in Islandbridge Dublin, which consists of a bridge over the railway and a bridge over the river Liffey ( unbuilt ) and two tiered sunken gardens ; Heywood Gardens, County Laois ( open to the public ) consisting of a hedge garden, lawns, tiered sunken garden and a belvedere ; extensive changes and extensions to Lambay Castle, Lambay Island near Dublin consisting of a circular battlement enclosing the restored and extended castle and farm building complex, upgraded cottages and stores near the harbour, a real tennis court, a large guest house ( The White House ), a boathouse and a chapel ; alterations and extensions to Howth Castle, County Dublin ; the unbuilt Hugh Lane gallery straddling the River Liffey on the site of the Ha ' penny Bridge and the unbuilt Hugh Lane Gallery on the west side of St Stephen's Green ; a Lodge at Costelloe, County Galway ( that was used for refuge by J Bruce Ismay the Chairman of the White Star Line following the sinking of the Titanic ) and a hunting lodge near Rosapenna in northern County Donegal, most recently used as a youth hostel.
The water tower was built in the early 18th century primarily to house a water driven pump supplying water to Carshalton House ( now St Philomena's School ) and its gardens.
By the 1750s the Crown ( rebuilt in 1889 ), was providing for coach travellers and by the 1800s it had a handful of cottages and Cricklewood House as neighbours, and was known for its “ pleasure gardens ”.
The Hanoverians maintained the strongest links with Kew, in particular Princess Augusta who founded the botanic gardens and her husband Frederick, Prince of Wales who resided at the White House in Kew and commissioned the building of the first substantial greenhouse at Kew.
The formal gardens of the Peckham Manor House, rebuilt in 1672 by Sir Thomas Bond were particularly noticeable and can be seen on the Rocque map of 1746.
* Lanhydrock House, near Bodmin, Cornwall ( 1857 ) an Elizabethan mansion rebuilt after a fire, formal gardens assisted by Richard Coad
A national register of historic parks and gardens, ( e. g. Rangers House, Greenwich ) was set up in 1984, and a register for historic battlefields ( e. g. the battle of Tewkesbury ) was created in March 1995.
The Horticultural Society's gardens were close to the gardens of William Cavendish, 6th Duke of Devonshire at Chiswick House.

0.918 seconds.