View allAll Photos Tagged ToLet

somewhere, this summer

to/let plus mp5 from Crack! 2007, Forte prenestino, Roma.

to/let

foto di pazzeski

A few weeks earlier, I took kite aerial photographs of this building while the landscape around it was still green.

Not the most spectacular location but the parking is free and its quyiet. Ideal for a driver to take a break between pick ups.

 

1:76 Scale, OO Gauge.

Coach is a Plaxton EFE diecast, Panorama Elite and has been detailed, modified and weathered.

Canal Basin home made.

A lot of For Sale and To Let signs

Another thing with a return to Stratford was to get these shops from the other side of the road (last time I walked past them on the same side of the road as the shops).

 

The Shakespeare Hospice Charity Shop is at 18 Greenhill Street.

 

It is a Grade II listed building.

 

Town house now shop. C16 with C20 alterations. Close-studded timber-framing with plaster infill; old and renewed tile roof. 2-unit plan with rear wing. 2 storeys; 2-window range. C20 entrance. Jettied 1st floor with C20 windows and entrance below. 1st floor has 3-light leaded casements. Gablet to end of rear wing. INTERIOR: exposed close-studded framing and heavy chamfered beams and joists. (Bearman R: Stratford-upon-Avon: A History of its Streets and Buildings: Nelson: 1988-: 31).

 

Listed as the Fountain Laundry. And before that as the Tudor Dairy.

 

Fountain Laundry, 18 Greenhill Street - Heritage Gateway

 

Since my last visit to Stratford, all signage of the former Teddy Bear Museum has been removed. Not sure what is happening to it.

 

The Teddy Bear Museum is at 19 Greenhill Street. And is a Grade II listed building.

 

House, now museum. C16 or early C17 with c1800 refronting. Painted brick with some internal timber-frame; tile roof with brick end stack. 2 storeys; 2-window range. Top modillioned brick cornice. Ground floor has C20 shop front with recessed central entrance and top frieze and cornice. 1st floor has 2 windows with 4-pane sashes. End wall posts, that to right full-height that to left 1st floor only. Rear range under catslide roof. INTERIOR: exposed chamfered beams and timber-framing; blocked segmental-headed entrance to right return; roof has 3 trusses with tie beams and collars, the central truss lacking collar, that to left end with exposed arch-brace, wind braces. (Bearman R: Stratford-upon-Avon: A History of its Streets and Buildings: Nelson: 1988-: 31).

 

Teddy Bear Museum - Heritage Gateway

 

To the right is Prontaprint.

107 High Street, Crawley, May 2025

 

20250511_379EF1

Further down Spencer Street in the Jewellery Quarter.

 

Shops - Crock O Gold at no 56 and The Little Guitar Shop at no 58.

 

Grade II listed building at 56-58 Spencer Street

 

997/0/10413 SPENCER STREET

16-JAN-09 56-58

 

II

A pair of small, purpose built factories of c. 1870-80, later combined to form a single works. The buildings are of red brick with blue brick and painted stone dressings and with slate roofs. These appear on stylistic grounds to be of slightly different dates and a vertical break in the brickwork, between the buildings confirms this. It is probable that No. 56 is slightly earlier in date than No. 58.

 

PLAN: Each building has a three-storey range facing onto the street, of three bays. Each has a showroom on the ground floor with a lobby leading to a staircase which leads to offices or warehousing on the upper floors. The continuous window at second floor level on No. 58 indicates a probable use as a workshop. The rear yard is approached through an archway in the facade of No. 56 and is flanked by ranges of shopping. Originally both were of three storeys, but that to the north was damaged in the 1940s and repaired as a range of two storeys.

 

EXTERIOR: The street front of No. 56 has blue brick and painted stone dressings with a cornice above the ground floor fascia and sill bands beneath the first and second floor windows and a heavy, bracketed cornice to the top of the wall. The ground floor has a central window with stone sill, to either side of which are cambered-headed doorways. The right hand door leads to the yard and that to the left leads to a lobby and staircase. The three first floor sash windows have plate glass panes and segment heads with alternating brick and stone voussoirs and a continuous hood mould. There are decorative cogged bands of red and blue bricks beneath the first and second floor windows. No.58 has a renewed shop window to ground floor at left, which appears from marks in the brickwork to have been enlarged. At right a panelled door with iron reinforcing band leads to a lobby which has brass lettering in the floor which reads `F.HARDING/&/SON'. At right again is a passage door which leads to a side door and the rear shopping wing. The first floor sashes each have a projecting cornice supported on brackets. To the second floor is a continuous window of six lights with a sill of moulded bricks which would seem to indicate the use of this floor as workshop space. Both addresses have iron letter boxes of the Birmingham type set into the wall with arched tops.

The yard has brick paving. The metal windows to the rear of the street range are renewed and apparently enlarged. Projecting at either side are the shopping wings. The southern wing is in largely original condition and has cambered heads to seven windows at ground and first floor levels, with blue brick headers above the arch and metal-framed windows. The second floor has similar metal-framed windows with wooden lintels and a lean-to slate roof. The northern wing has had larger openings inserted at ground floor level, with brick piers and H-beam lintels. The first floor arrangement co-incides with that to the north wing, although two of the metal windows have been removed. At the western end of the yard an extension has been added, running N-S in the early-C20. This has walling of stretcher bond brickwork and an eastern-facing skylight.

 

INTERIOR: No. 56 has a lobby to the foot of the stairs and a straight flight of steep stairs which leads up to both upper floors with a quarter-turn winder to the top. This has gas brackets to the sides of the well, a skylight and an internal window to light the front room at second floor level. The staircase to No. 58 also survives intact, although the upper part is not used due to an archway created in the party walling at second floor level. There is a fixed seat to the first floor landing. Long work benches for presses and stamps survive to the ground floor shopping on both sides of the yard and peg benches are present in the ground floor of No. 56 and at first floor level in No. 58. Chimney breasts with forge openings survive to the rear walls in both ranges of shopping in the street-front ranges. The cellar beneath No. 56 has a series of three substantial alcoves with cambered heads which may have been intended to house safes.

The design of No. 56 is similar in several respects to that of No. 27-28 Warstone Lane and 67-69 Warstone Lane and it is possible that the same architect designed all three buildings.

 

HISTORY: The Ordnance Survey map of 1890 shows shopping to the rear, together with a marked line, presumably a dividing wall, running along the length of the yard. By the time of the edition of 1904 this had been removed and this period may well mark the time of combined ownership and the building of the present matched shopping wings. Both of these ranges were originally of three storeys, but damage in the Second World War meant that the northern range was reduced in height to two storeys with a flat roof. In the early C20 a further, two-storey, range was built across the width of the yard, backing onto the end wall and incorporating parts of the earlier ranges at either side. The ground floor openings facing onto the yard of the north wing were widened and new, H-beam lintels were inserted in the early C20. In the later C20 the entrance to the north cellar was created with its steps down from the yard. The buildings are now divided and rented as separate workshops although they all fall within one ownership. For the most part they continue to operate as jewellery and silver workshops.

 

SOURCE: John Cattell, Sheila Ely and Barry Jones, The Birmingham Jewellery Quarter, 2002.

 

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION DECISION:

Nos. 56 and 58 Spencer Street are designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:

 

* They retain a high degree of their original appearance and layout despite continuous use as industrial buildings.

* The quantity of original, intact, structure allows the original functioning of the building to be understood.

* Their street frontages are carefully designed, well-preserved and indicative of many similar buildings of the period.

* They represent a continuous use of buildings in the Birmingham Jewellery Quarter for metalwork and jewellery production since the time of their building.

in a toilet in prague in 2005

I don't know - does that count as a bin in it's underwear?

Above you, offices to let!

  

City Square, Leeds.

woman smoking in the rain, wakefield

Recently refurbished building in the centre waiting for new owners. Good to see money spent on doing up old buildings. There's a lot of haters who criticize everything but ignore the effort and money being spent in the city.

13 February 1983: Cannon Streeet from Monument

Old buildings at the corner of Sheepcote Street and St Vincent Street in Birmingham.

 

All part of the historic Roundhouse complex.

 

Grade II* listed buildings.

 

Horse Shoe Shaped Former Stables and Stores at Number 23 (City of Birmingham Engineers Depot), Birmingham

 

SHEEPCOTE STREET

1.

5104 Ladywood B16

Horse-shoe shaped former

stables and stores at No

23 (City of Birmingham

Engineers Depot)

SP 0586 NE 31/9 22.11.76

II*

2.

C1840 and built for the London and North Western Railway as a mineral and coal

wharf. Asymmetrical composition of horseshoe design built within the angle of

Sheepcote and St Vincent Streets where the entrance is flanked by 2 houses.

Ribbed ramps laid from the entrance, one straight down and under an arch at the

crown of the horseshoe, the other around the horseshoe and over the arch. Red

brick and some stone trim; slate roofs. The stables and stores are arranged in

a horseshoe shape and stand above more streets approached by the many roads under

the arch. They consist of 10 single storeyed bays, a central 152 storeyed bays

and another 10 single storeyed bays. The arrangement is somewhat impaired on

the right by a later glazed wooden addition. Round headed wooden casement

windows and segment headed stable doors. Beneath the arch, at the back of this

building, more streets within arches separated one from another by battered buttresses.

   

Listing NGR: SP0563586790

   

Beyond the corner of St Vincent Street and Sheepcote Street is a bus lane. And I saw one car illegally go up it.

Victorian buildings at the bottom of Hagley Road in Stourbridge, West Midlands.

 

This building is the former Free Library & Technical College.

 

On the corner of Church Street and Hagley Road.

 

It was Grade II listed in 1989 under the title Stourbridge College of Art.

 

But the whole building is currently To Let, for office, leisure, studio and storage usage.

 

Stourbridge College of Art, Dudley

 

HAGLEY ROAD

1.

5106

SO 9084 1/103 Stourbridge College

of Art

GV

II

2.

College of Art, formerly town library and technical college. 1903-4 and 1908-9 by

Frederick Woodward. Red brick with terracotta dressings and Cumberland and Welsh slate

roofs with various brick stacks. In Netherlandish Renaissance style. Complex plan

with various ranges occupying corner site. Mostly of 3 storeys, basement and attic.

Entrance to corner on right has elaborate terracotta archway surmounted by relief figures

within a tympanum. Steps lead to part-glazed doors filled with elaborate stained glass

including portrait roundels of Kelvin, Shakespeare, Rubens and Mozart. Tall basket-

arched windows over, with moulded terracotta frames and ornamental cornice hoods.

Coped Dutch gable. To right a canted battlemented section containing the staircase

with similar elaborately ornamented window frames. Further to right, facing Hagley

Road, a 2-storey range in similar style. On right an elaborate terracotta archway

leading to door, and a clock tower over with clock faces within balconied arches and a

domed open belvedere on top. Behind this section rises the second span of the range facing

Church Street. Wide sash windows, some with terracotta decoration. On the roof ridge

an elaborate domed lantern. To left of the front entrance the end of the range facing

Church Street which has a large polygonal 2-storey bay with battlemented parapet and

large arched window over. To left the front facing Church Street which is a 9-window

range with 4 slightly projecting gabled sections and similar fenestration with elaborate

terracotta window surrounds. Further doorway in 2nd gable from left. 2 elaborate

domed lanterns on roof. Interior: glazed doors and partitions, staircase with

decorative cast-iron balustrade and a fine and extensive series of stained glass windows

in art-nouveau style, one signed S Evans, Stained Glass Works, West Smethwick. These

are most elaborate on the stairs but continue on both the Hagley Road and Church Street

fronts and are a very important feature of the building. Andrew Carnegie contributed

£3,000 to the library's foundation and a further £700 to the 1908 newsroom extension.

  

Listing NGR: SO9038184050

i chiodi sono delle to/let!!! cosi non me lo chiedono più

foto di pazzeski

Nursery premises to let in Harefield, Hillingdon, Greater London (not listed, but I just liked it).

 

GOC Hertfordshire's walk on 13 June 2015, in and around Rickmansworth and Batchworth Heath in Hertfordshire and Harefield in the London Borough of Hillingdon. Maritn T led this walk of 9.6 miles, with 14 attendees. The purpose of the walk was to have a view of the small part of Hertfordshire countryside that will be affected by the construction of HS2. Please check out the other photos from the walk here, or to see my collections, go here. For more information on the Gay Outdoor Club, see www.goc.org.uk.

at tolet =]]

Flickr kia vào mãi chả đc nhở =[[[[[[[[[

Shop Bill đã về hàng QC ai ở HN thì sang shop xem wa nhé thks all

 

hoặc pm yh Vĩ : datvi.cola (chiều tối Vĩ mới onl đc nhé ! )

Manifattura tabacchi

june 2008

Bologna

có bonus chụp vs các t.y nè :x click xem nha <3<3<3

1 ngày đẹp trời cả đám rủ nhau đi ăn uốg chụp hình....lên Vincom ăn lẩu 1 ng` nè....ròi xog chui zô tolet chụp hình =]] đúg khùg lun....xog ròi kéo nhau lên khu trò chơi chụp tà la tè le lun....ngta nhìn như là sinh vật lạ áh....xog òi ra tà Ngtrãi tí ròi về....ta nói đúng zui lun :)) nhớ mấy t.y lắm đó nhaaaaaaa :x :* <3

Gouda, Holland

Source: Digital image.

Image: P...

Date: 3rd Feb 2015.

Copyright: (c)SBC 2015.

Repository: Local Studies, Swindon Central Library.

www.swindon.gov.uk/localstudies

Moseley Village community art at the ex Boots store.

 

On Alcester Road in Moseley Village near Salisbury Road.

 

This Boots closed during 2020 (first year of the pandemic).

  

Changing buses, in the rain, off the 35, walked up Alcester Road, before crossing at the lights then walking up St Mary's Row, to a bus stop on Wake Green Road, and shelter before waiting for the 1A bus.

Typical of chocolate - here one moment, gone the next!

Chocolatier's new business didn't last long.

I'd love to say they were eaten out of house and home but suspect this was not yet quite the right location for a high-end business.

With Maximum 140 persons, Venetian Lady is 130 feet long and comes equipped with luxurious 8-foot ceilings, three decks, two dance floors, state-of-the-art audio/visual equipment and our signature cuisine.

This page has a lot of free Toilet paper roll animal craft for kids,parents and preschool teachers.

    

www.preschoolactivities.us/toilet-paper-roll-animal-craft...

PLEASE, NO invitations or self promotions, THEY WILL BE DELETED. My photos are FREE to use, just give me credit and it would be nice if you let me know, thanks.

 

This public latrine (forica) was installed in what had previously been two shops, near the Forum Baths, perhaps when the Baths themselves were repaired in the 4th century A.D. The stone seating is still preserved around the walls, there was a basin next to the pillar at the doorway.

 

For people who want to know, the hole in the front is so the person can wipe themselfs. They would use a sponge on a stick and in front on the floor there is a small trench that had running water to clean it off.......

PLEASE, NO invitations or self promotions, THEY WILL BE DELETED. My photos are FREE to use, just give me credit and it would be nice if you let me know, thanks.

 

This public latrine (forica) was installed in what had previously been two shops, near the Forum Baths, perhaps when the Baths themselves were repaired in the 4th century A.D. The stone seating is still preserved around the walls, there was a basin next to the pillar at the doorway.

 

For people who want to know, the hole in the front is so the person can wipe themselfs. They would use a sponge on a stick and in front on the floor there is a small trench that had running water to clean it off.......

The Boerentoren tower (right) and the Meir Building in the Belgian city of Antwerp

15 June 2019

 

La tour Boerentoren (à droite) et le Meir Building à la ville belge d'Anvers

15 juin 2019

Victorian buildings at the bottom of Hagley Road in Stourbridge, West Midlands.

 

This building is the former Free Library & Technical College.

 

On the corner of Church Street and Hagley Road.

 

It was Grade II listed in 1989 under the title Stourbridge College of Art.

 

But the whole building is currently To Let, for office, leisure, studio and storage usage.

 

Stourbridge College of Art, Dudley

 

HAGLEY ROAD

1.

5106

SO 9084 1/103 Stourbridge College

of Art

GV

II

2.

College of Art, formerly town library and technical college. 1903-4 and 1908-9 by

Frederick Woodward. Red brick with terracotta dressings and Cumberland and Welsh slate

roofs with various brick stacks. In Netherlandish Renaissance style. Complex plan

with various ranges occupying corner site. Mostly of 3 storeys, basement and attic.

Entrance to corner on right has elaborate terracotta archway surmounted by relief figures

within a tympanum. Steps lead to part-glazed doors filled with elaborate stained glass

including portrait roundels of Kelvin, Shakespeare, Rubens and Mozart. Tall basket-

arched windows over, with moulded terracotta frames and ornamental cornice hoods.

Coped Dutch gable. To right a canted battlemented section containing the staircase

with similar elaborately ornamented window frames. Further to right, facing Hagley

Road, a 2-storey range in similar style. On right an elaborate terracotta archway

leading to door, and a clock tower over with clock faces within balconied arches and a

domed open belvedere on top. Behind this section rises the second span of the range facing

Church Street. Wide sash windows, some with terracotta decoration. On the roof ridge

an elaborate domed lantern. To left of the front entrance the end of the range facing

Church Street which has a large polygonal 2-storey bay with battlemented parapet and

large arched window over. To left the front facing Church Street which is a 9-window

range with 4 slightly projecting gabled sections and similar fenestration with elaborate

terracotta window surrounds. Further doorway in 2nd gable from left. 2 elaborate

domed lanterns on roof. Interior: glazed doors and partitions, staircase with

decorative cast-iron balustrade and a fine and extensive series of stained glass windows

in art-nouveau style, one signed S Evans, Stained Glass Works, West Smethwick. These

are most elaborate on the stairs but continue on both the Hagley Road and Church Street

fronts and are a very important feature of the building. Andrew Carnegie contributed

£3,000 to the library's foundation and a further £700 to the 1908 newsroom extension.

  

Listing NGR: SO9038184050

Shotts Scotland based Stuart Nicol Transport Volvo FH coupled to a three axle tautliner parked in Church field road Sudbury

PLEASE, no multi invitations (none is better) in your comments. Thanks.

 

Stopped at a doctor's office to use the washroom. Had to remove our shoes and after using the toilet had to use the pot to flush the toilet. The place seemed clean but the equipment seemed very old, not up to our standards in Canada. Bangkok, Thailand

StrikeTheStreet

@ strike s.p.a.

aperto tutti i giorni dal martedi al giovedì.

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