Building england 

764 creative works found

  • A 1940’s kitchen – found in a prefab from teh mid 1940’s these house were built following the detruction caused during World War II. This prefab has been re-located from Moat Lane, Yardley, Birmingham, England. Avoncroft Museum – Worcestershire, England

  • This building was designed by Daniel Libeskind but he forgot to put a prop under this part. Not to worry Sophia Super Girl is hear to hold it up. But for how long? I think the stain is beining to show!

  • Boston office building

  • This old building was built in the mid 16th century and can be found in Plymouth England, It’s original purpose was as a merchant house, trading goods from all over the ‘New World’. It is used today as a museum and still has most of its original oak beam frame. See my video on YouTube

  • Bath Somerset England The Abbey Church of Saint Peter, Bath, commonly known as Bath Abbey, is an Anglican parish church and a former Benedictine monastery in Bath, Somerset, England. Founded in the 7th century, reorganised in the 10th century and rebuilt in the 12th and 16th centuries, it is one of the largest examples of Perpendicular Gothic architecture in the West Country. The church is a listed building, cruciform in plan, seating approximately 1,200 people. It is used for religious services, secular civic ceremonies and lectures.[1] The building contains monuments to several notable people

  • Somerset England The terms balnea or thermae were the words the ancient Romans used for the buildings housing their public baths. Most Roman cities had at least one, if not many, such buildings, which were centers of public bathing and socialization. Baths were the most important for Romans. They stayed there for several hours and went there daily. They were accompanied by 1 or more slaves. When they paid their fee, they would strip naked and put on sandles to protect their feet from heated floors. The slaves carried around their masters towels and got drinks for them. After bathing, they exercised. They did things such as running, mild weight-lifting, wrestling, and swimming. After exercising, oil and dirt got scraped off by servants. Roman bath-houses were also provided for private villas, town houses and forts — these were also called thermae

  • Warwick, England.

  • Red telephone box at Portland Lighthouse, Portland, Dorset, England

  • Cannondale Train Depot, Wilton Connecticut by RD Riccoboni. New England train station on the New Haven line.

  • Taken on a Vivitar “Ultra Slim & Wide” – Lomo without the expense….

  • Character just jumps out of this image beckoning you to travel down its pathways, admire the history and get lost in the antiquity and stories behind its English walls in Newport, on the Isle of Wight.

  • A man waits alone for a date, or maybe just lunch on his own… Paternoster Square is a busy square in the financial area of London, and is home to the London Stock Exchange. This roof-top dining terrace is seen from the Golden Gallery, at the top of St Paul’s Cathedral.

  • The first record of The Elvetham is in the Domesday book. In 1426 it became the home of the Seymour family and through a succession of Seymours it came to be owned by Edward, the brother of Jane Seymour (the third wife of Henry VIII and mother of Edward VI.) Edward’s brother Thomas married Catherine Parr, Henry VIII’s widow. He was also beheaded for high treason after becoming embroiled in scandalous liaisons with the then Princess Elizabeth. After his death, his estates were forfeited but eventually restored to his son Edward (by now created Earl of Hertford) who married the younger sister of Lady Jane Grey. Queen Elizabeth only heard of this bigamous marriage when Catherine became pregnant. The Queen reacted with great fury by sending them to the Tower of London. Eventually both were released, Catherine in 1567 and Edward in 1572. In order to regain favours and to have his children legitimised, he entertained the Queen at The Elvetham in 1591. The lavish entertainment lasted four days with a range of luxurious pavilions built near the house to accommodate Queen Elizabeth and her retinue of 500. The Oak tree she planted to commemorate the occasion still stands here today and is now more than 32 feet in circumference. The original house that Queen Elizabeth visited no longer exists having burned down in 1840. The new house was rebuilt on the same site in 1860. St Mary’s church was built in 1840 to resemble a Twelfth Century Norman church. The area of 35 acres surrounding The Elvetham is much the same today as it was recorded in the Domesday book.

  • Central Motorway, Newcastle Upon Tyne

  • Compass Monument Overlooking Manchester Cityscape at Night / Taken in Werneth Low, Hyde, Manchester.

  • Castle remains, Bristol, England – Panasonic Lumix DMC-FS5

  • A winter’s evening in Manchester, capturing the bright lights of the city including the movement of the ferris wheel

  • Horfield Methodist Church, Bristol, England Panasonic Lumix DMC-Fs5, sepia setting

  • Taken on a very cold February day in Staffordshire England at the National Memorial Arboretum. D300 f/3.5 1/500 ISO450 18-55@18mm / Photoshop CS3

  • Alms House – Stydd – Lancashire Ribchester is an small village in Lancashire which has the remains of an old Roman fortress.Just out side the village is a place called Stydd.The name ‘Stydd’ apparently just means ‘place’ or ‘farm’ an ‘estate in land’ / In 1728 under the terms of John Shireburne’s will he wished to found and build “a good almshouse on his estate at Stydd for ‘five poor old single women, professing the Roman Catholic religion’ to live separately therein”. / This rather peculiar building remains much the same today.

  • The fast pace of Manchester captured with the black cabs racing past, with Kendals department store in the background. Taken with a Nikon D80 at f13

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