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Re: Maryland...
Posted By: Lizzie, on host 212.219.118.18
Date: Tuesday, October 10, 2000, at 08:52:41
In Reply To: Re: Maryland... posted by Beasty on Tuesday, October 10, 2000, at 08:09:59:

> > It's been about 12 or 15 years since I've been to England, but I say houses built with the framework on the outside!
>
> Tudor style houses, fashionable around the mid 16th century. The framework is usually either decorative or because lack of building material meant fill in the gaps between rather than cover over the top.
>
> > Some of the row houses I saw in Wales were incredibly small.
>
> Known as tenements if they're that small! Otherwise known as terraced houses.
>
> > A lot of the differences were because houses around here are almost never over 200 years old, but in England they date back many centuries. I loved the old stone houses with thick walls that get thinner as you go up, and doors that vary greatly in size from one part of the house to the next. In public buildings, the steel beam are sometimes round where we would use an I-bean. I noticed that as soon as I stepped off the plane at Heathrow. My sons are both building contractors so I notice different styles of construction. Here a brick house is a woodframe house with a one-brick-thick layer of bricks on the outside. Over there a brick house is a brick house. Roofs seem to be steeper, and most houses have a chimney or two.
> >
> > I call a faucet a faucet if it is over a sink, but if it's outside it's a tap. It's sort of like stairs inside and steps outside. Stairs have risers and steps sometimes don't.
> >
> > Houses in San Francisco are not typical of American houses, but they surely give the place character. Maybe they build them close so they won't fall over when the ground shakes.
> >
> > I think you just put Essex on my must see list. I never got past Greenwich. Is the official name Essex or Middlesex? I spend a lot of time in Middlesex County, Massachusetts.
> > I guess that's where they got the name.
> > How"that travel bug is biting"ard
>
>
> My mistake in the sentence above. It's actually Greater London that is called Middlesex, although the name is not really used except in the west areas like Kingston, Uxbridge and Harefield. Essex is the proper name for where I live. It also has the 'famous' Lakeside shopping centre, but in US terms it probably only ranks as a medium sized mall!
>
> Beasty

Lakeside? Famous? It's horrid!!

Apart from when it's Christmas and there's a hugeous teddy bear in the foyer.

Liz

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