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  • Second floor balcony
    BGS027_QL-11.tif
  • Detail of balcony of wooden stilt house in the Water Village, Kampung Buli Sim Sim, Sandakan, Sabah
    Sandakan-Sabah-Borneo-04.jpg
  • One of the most characteristic tangible cultural heritages of the Cham and also one of the most sensitive to change is their house. The Cham build their houses on the ground and arrange them in orderly rows. Their houses are surrounded by a garden with a wall or hedge. The doors open to the south-west or between. The architectural style is similar to that of the Viet with walls made of brick or a mixture of lime and shells, and covered with tiles or thatch. Houses of more than one storey are rare. In certain localities, houses on stilts are found but the floor is only 30 cm above the ground. The rooms of Cham houses are arranged according to a particular order: the sitting room, rooms for the parents, children, and married women, the kitchen and ware- house (including the granary), and the nuptial room for the youngest daughter. This arrangement reflects the break-up of the matrilineal extended family system among the Cham. The Cham living in Ninh Thuan and Binh Thuan believe that they have to perform certain religious rituals before the building of a new house, particularly praying for the Land God and asking for his permission to cut down trees in the forest. A ritual is also held to receive the trees when they are transported to the village. A ground-breaking ceremony called phat moc is also held. The precinct of the Cham traditional house is the residence site of a Cham family. It is an assembly of several houses with different functions and these houses relate closely with each others.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-06.jpg
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Detail of front facade with balcony intended for speeches. The Palace of the Parliament (Also known as Ceausescu’s Palace or House of The People) in Bucharest, Romania. Built 1983-1989. Architect: Anca Petrescu
    Ceausescu-Palace-Bucharest-12.jpg
  • Detail of front facade with balcony intended for speeches. The Palace of the Parliament (Also known as Ceausescu’s Palace or House of The People) in Bucharest, Romania. Built 1983-1989. Architect: Anca Petrescu
    Ceausescu-Palace-Bucharest-02.jpg
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Maize drying on a balcony of a house near Marcapata next to the Interoceanic Highway
    IOH_Document_QL-08.tif
  • Balcony. The Palace of the Parliament (Also known as Ceausescu’s Palace or House of The People) in Bucharest, Romania. Built 1983-1989. Architect: Anca Petrescu
    Ceausescu-Palace-Bucharest-23.jpg
  • View from balcony. The Palace of the Parliament (Also known as Ceausescu’s Palace or House of The People) in Bucharest, Romania. Built 1983-1989. Architect: Anca Petrescu
    Ceausescu-Palace-Bucharest-22.jpg
  • View from balcony. The Palace of the Parliament (Also known as Ceausescu’s Palace or House of The People) in Bucharest, Romania. Built 1983-1989. Architect: Anca Petrescu
    Ceausescu-Palace-Bucharest-08.jpg
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Detail of facade showing balcony detail
    BGS027_QL-05.tif
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Balconie Point trig,  3,764mm above sea level! Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    332-AlnessBay-Alnessferry-02.jpg
  • Rosebay Willowherb with a bee, Balconie Point, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    332-AlnessBay-Alnessferry-01.jpg
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