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This view was from the patio, but is not longer possible, as the passage was split into three. The section of the passage nearest the patio in now a laundry room. The door on the right was also removed and a new entrance was made closer to the patio. A wooden door was inserted between the front door and the new entrance to the main part of the house.
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Front Of Rijksmuseum.
front of Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, Netherlands with tourists and bicycles
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[ID: front of Rijksmuseum ]
This Crab Apple was grown from seed by one of our club members. Planted in 1982 and grown in the ground for about 10 years. I bought it about 7 years ago and haven't really done much with it. I decided this year to give it a major redesign. It has great roots but the branch structure is not very good. I reduced the tree about 50%. There was very little taper on the top. I was tempted to remove all the branches but decided to leave these few this season.
The massive front entry hall greeted visitors when they entered the house. The high ceiling, the large and graceful staircase, the fancy plasterwork at the cornice, and the many paintings and engravings hanging on the walls were meant to impress. In spite of its grand appearance, visitors did not spend much time in the hall in the cooler months, as it was unheated. Otis made sure that the scale was so large so that visitors would be suitably impressed during the few moments they spent there. On a more practical level, the hallway was also used for storing extra furniture. In the Otis hallway are side chairs and a section of the dining room table. Storage space was desirable because furniture was often rearranged to fit the changing uses of each room.
(From Otis House website)
The front of the derelict farmhouse. It was in quite bad condition. I nearly put my foot through the floor.
it was so not square and not the right size, it had to be remade. And then we discovered that there were originally rods with curtains instead of doors.
In case I was...fatigued...on the walk back I took a picture of this once noteworthy corner in Columbus. Now I70/71 passes next to it tearing a hole though the downtown.
Oddly enough, years later they put in in ANOTHER interstate though downtown without disturbing much of anything - I670 follows the old New York Central mainline. They just pulled up the tracks and put down the highway.