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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Article
lig hted either by gas or by reflectors from the gallery above . The ground-floor of the second building would be the public dining-hall , on a level with the kitchen , for the convenience of carrying in the food ; or if the crossing of the gallery by waiters were considered a disadvantage , the communication mi ght be under ground , placing the dishes on a large frame , to descend from the kitchen by cords , to be drawn along in the same manner ,
and to ascend in the opposite apartment , and then return for a fresh supply . Jets of water falling into stone-basins , and strong-worked ventilators , would keep it cool in summer . The floor over the dining-hall would serve as a public reading-room and library , or it might , if required , be divided into two . The floor above that might serve as a public dancing or music room , or lecture-room , or any similar purpose . The roofs of both buildings should be terraced , and joined by a platform , in order to afford a pleasant walk and prospect , when the weather might permit .
Thus far as to that portion of the establishment whose uses are common to all the inmates . I now proceed to the private dwellings . On either side of the two buildings before described are left open spaces some eighteen feet wide , into which the side-windows look . These spaces may be planted with flowers and shrubs , either in the open air or in greenhouses , in pots , which may serve
to adorn the dining-hall and reading-room , as well as the niches in the gallery ,, which would also be applicable to the reception of paintings or statues , in the lighter parts , falling beneath the skylights . Beyond these open spaces or gardens are placed the first four houses , each with a front of eighteen feet , and about thirty feet in depth , standing in pairs back to back , and joining over the roof of the gallery . On the sides next the public buildings there are no windows . The look-out will be from the front and on one
side , the latter into a g arden ei ghteen feet in width , and bounded by the wall of the gallery on one side , and the back wall of the next house on the other . The roof of the gallery , provided with skylights , would rise to a sufficient height between the two dwellings placed back to back , and thus prevent the inmates from overlooking each other ' s gardens . The entrance or hall-door of the dwellings would open into the gallery , and low windows would give access to the gardens . The front portion of the gardens mi g ht be screened from the observation of passengers by a lig ht hedge and trellised wicket ; beyond which , running parallel with the whole range of buildings , and accessible to all , might be a
narrow strip of garden , with shrubs and flowers , after the style of the ordinary squares about town . The first six pair of dwellings , on either hand the public buildings , might be of larger size than the others , containing—say , six or eight rooms on the ground plan before described . The other nine pair of dwellings beyond them might contain from four to six rooms on a ground-plan of
Untitled Article
576 Housebuilding and Housekeeping .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1834, page 576, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2636/page/46/
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