Loudon's Architectural Magazine: And Journal of Improvement in Architecture, Building, and Furnishing, and in the Various Arts and Trades Connected Therewith, Volume 1John Claudius Loudon Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman., 1834 |
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Page v
... Ventilation , particularly as applied to Hospi- tals and Sick Wards On the Ventilation of Living - Rooms , & c . Fittings - up and Furniture . A simple and effective Preventive for the Slam- ming of a Passage Door On a Method of curing ...
... Ventilation , particularly as applied to Hospi- tals and Sick Wards On the Ventilation of Living - Rooms , & c . Fittings - up and Furniture . A simple and effective Preventive for the Slam- ming of a Passage Door On a Method of curing ...
Page vii
... Ventilation of hospitals · 118 , 119 54-56 . Plan and two elevations of an Italian villa 163--182 . Plans , elevations , sections , perspec- tive views , interior views , and furni ture of an Anglo - Norman villa 334-348 201. Plan of a ...
... Ventilation of hospitals · 118 , 119 54-56 . Plan and two elevations of an Italian villa 163--182 . Plans , elevations , sections , perspec- tive views , interior views , and furni ture of an Anglo - Norman villa 334-348 201. Plan of a ...
Page 35
... ventilation of houses ; for should the air become stagnant from want of a free ventilation , particularly in houses that have a story underground , it is highly injurious to the persons living , and particularly sleeping , in them ...
... ventilation of houses ; for should the air become stagnant from want of a free ventilation , particularly in houses that have a story underground , it is highly injurious to the persons living , and particularly sleeping , in them ...
Page 64
... Ventilation of Living - Rooms , Domestic Offices , & c . By JOHN MILNE , Esq . , Architect . No subject of equal importance has been so little attended to as ventilation . From the pigsty to the cottage , and from the cottage to the ...
... Ventilation of Living - Rooms , Domestic Offices , & c . By JOHN MILNE , Esq . , Architect . No subject of equal importance has been so little attended to as ventilation . From the pigsty to the cottage , and from the cottage to the ...
Page 65
... ventilation depends upon two exciting causes ; and that , whether these are in an active state or not , ventilation is necessary . The first of these causes is the force and direction of the wind , without reference to temperature . The ...
... ventilation depends upon two exciting causes ; and that , whether these are in an active state or not , ventilation is necessary . The first of these causes is the force and direction of the wind , without reference to temperature . The ...
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ancient appear applied arch archi architect Architectural Magazine architrave artist beauty Bonnemain bricks builder building centre character chimney shafts church classical architecture colours columns composition considered construction Corinthian Corinthian order cornice cottage decoration diameter display door Doric Doric order edifices Edinburgh effect elevation employed Encyclopædia entablature erected executed expense floor flues give Gothic architecture Grecian ground heat height Hindú idea imitation improvements invention Ionic iron isometrical projection kind light lines London manner mode mouldings nature notice object observe original ornaments pedestal pilasters pillar pipes placed plates portico present principle produced proportions readers remarks Roman Roman architecture Roman cement roof side simplicity Sir John Soane spandrils square stone stove Street taste tecture temperature tion Tiryns tube Tuscan order upper variety ventilation villa walls whole
Popular passages
Page 327 - That man is little to be envied, whose patriotism would not gain force upon the plain of Marathon, or whose piety would not grow • warmer among the ruins of lona.
Page 385 - For, on that principle, the wedge-like snout of a swine, with its tough cartilage at the end, the little sunk eyes, and the whole make of the head, so well adapted to its offices of digging and rooting, would be extremely beautiful.
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Page 267 - RAZ. — ESSAY ON THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE HINDUS. By Ram Raz, Native Judge and Magistrate of Bangalore, Corr.
Page 318 - ... there is hardly a county in England, Wales, or Scotland, in which they may not be pointed out. The Menai and Conway bridges, the Caledonian Canal, the St.
Page 349 - For no man can bear to be entirely deprived of such enjoyments: it is only because they are not used to taste of what is excellent, that the generality of people take delight in silly and insipid things, provided they be new. For this reason...
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Page 349 - Men are so inclined to content themselves with what is commonest ; the spirit and the senses so easily grow dead to the impressions of the beautiful and perfect, that every one should study, by all methods, to nourish in his mind the faculty of feeling these things.
Page 307 - It is vain for painters or poets to endeavour to invent without materials on which the mind may work, and from which invention must originate. Nothing can come of nothing.
Page 307 - But no man can be a true critic or connoisseur who does not possess a universality of mind, who does not possess the flexibility, which, throwing aside all personal predilections and blind habits, enables him to transport himself into the peculiarities of other ages and nations, to feel them as it were from their proper central point; and, what ennobles human nature, to recognize and respect whatever is beautiful and grand under those external modifications which are necessary to their existence,...