View allAll Photos Tagged deck
Sanding the deck in 97°F heat, so much fun. Hoping to get a coat of new paint in the floor boards and top rail before summer rains start.
Like what you see here? Contact Long Island Decking for a free in home design consultation. In Nassau 516-594-0390 or Suffolk 631-728-7272. www.lidecking.com
All pictures copyright Long Island Decking Inc.
Fine craftsmen use Eb-Ty hidden deck fastening systems so you to see only the beauty of your deck, not the objects used to construct it.
Heritage Iron is a Full Service Company providing custom designed and built Driveway Gates,Railings, Fences, and Spiral Staircases. Telephone Entry Sytems and More!
Aluminum and Steel OptionsPowder Coating
Unique Painting available
Please visit us online
75/365
I went here this morning so I could use this very deck/boardwalk. Hey, but glad they are getting it done!
A shot of the main staircase on board the Re-Imagined Disney Magic. Because of last weeks weather ... I shot a lot if interiors of the ship, but not too many exteriors ;).
You can follow me on Pinterest, Instagram, Tumblr, and Twitter now.
Or just check out the site, with newly updated galleries here: Studio2719
This is the boat deck of the Mauretania.
The Mauretania was built by the shipbuilders Swan Hunter and Wigham Richardson Ltd, at the Wallsend shipyard.
RMS MAURETANIA was one of the most famous ships ever built on Tyneside.
Ref number: TWAS:DS.SWH/4/PH/7/6/51
(Copyright) We're happy for you to share this digital image within the spirit of The Commons. Please cite 'Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums' when reusing. Certain restrictions on high quality reproductions and commercial use of the original physical version apply though; if you're unsure please email archives@twmuseums.org.uk.
To purchase a hi-res copy please email archives@twmuseums.org.uk quoting the title and reference number.
Inman Valley and Lower Inman valley.
This well-watered valley was explored by Police Inspector Henry Inman in 1838 when he was chasing a couple of criminals. Inman was the first SA Police Inspector and founding commander of the SA Police Force which was established in 1838 by Governor Hindmarsh. With governor Gawler he designed the first police uniforms for SA but in 1840 Governor Gawler dismissed Inman for selling hay he owned for the police horses. Inman’s name was also given to the river in the valley. Because of the early interest in Encounter Bay by Governor Hindmarsh, the first white settlers moved into Inman Valley in 1839 led by Thomas and Giles Strangways and three James brothers. Freehold land was only generally available for purchase from 1840 when most but not all of the valley was surveyed. This was one of the first districts identified by Surveyor General Colonel William Light for survey. A further survey of other parts of Inman Valley occurred in 1844. (Richard James with others purchased the 60,000 acre Old Canowie Station near Jamestown and moved there in 1858.) The Strangways and James brothers soon had wheat crops sown and a few cattle and sheep. The Strangways brothers stayed in the valley and acquired over 1,000 acres in 1840. Thomas left and Giles Strangways sold some of their land to Governor Sir Henry Fox Young in 1849 but he remained in the valley on the remaining land and land leased from Bingham Hutchinson until they moved to Adelaide in 1873. In the 1850s more people moved into Inman Valley once the survey was completed, but some tenant farmers to the early landowners like Bingham Hutchinson. The population was also boosted at this time in 1855 by the arrival of around 100 immigrant Irish girls who wanted work as servants and to find husbands in the Inman Valley, Hindmarsh and Yankalilla valleys. The government established work depots from which they girls were offered employment at Willunga, Yankalilla and Encounter Bay in that year. With well-timbered country sawmilling and wood cutting was an early industry of the valley. The timber cutters provided the timber for the 1863 bridge across the Inman River at Glacier Rock, and for the decking of the causeway from Victor Harbor to Granite Island in 1864. Later much timber was provided for railway sleepers.
Although Inman township was located in a relatively prosperous farming region it never developed and has never had many town facilities. Outside the town on Hancock Road are the ruins of the Congregation Church and cemetery. Reverend Newland from the first settlement on Encounter Bay at Yilki conducted services in people’s homes until this Congregational church was built in 1856. Services ended in 1901 and the church closed in 1905 and the contents dispersed to other churches in 1919. It was known locally as the Sheoak Hill Congregational Church. From 1860 until 1885 when the town school opened it was used as the Inman Valley School. A memorial plaque was laid at this historic site in 1976. Near the centre of the town is the former government school built in 1885.It had wooden classrooms added to it in 1954 and it finally closed in December 1970. Across the road from the former school is the old Bible Christian Methodist Church. A foundation stone from the 1859 Bald Hills Bible Christian Church is in the current church’s porch. The current church in Inman Valley was built in 1871. It became a Methodist Church in 1900 and the transept was added in 1906. The front porch was added in 1936 and it became a Uniting Church in 1976. Sadly it closed in September 2020. In 1885 Inman Valley also got a small galvanised iron Anglican Church, St Thomas’s. It was not located in the town but near Glacier Rock 5 kms away. When the Anglican Church closed in 1990 it was transported to the Yankalilla Museum where it remains. A stone cairn was erected on the site where it once stood in 1992 made from its foundation stones. Inman township has a general store and café and the Inman Valley Memorial Hall built in 1954. Like all small settlements a post service was vital in the 19th century. Inman valley services began in 1855 in several basic structures. In the 1920s the Post office got a stone building erected by volunteer labour. But the site of the original Post Office of 1855 is marked with a plaque. It was the former John Robertson’s Springrove homestead. All that remains of the homestead today is the stone fireplace.
Further down the valley towards Victor Harbor, beyond Glacier Rock is Lower Inman. The memorial hall there is a galvanised iron one built in 1923 to commemorate World War One. Almost beside it is the Lower Inman Valley School. This stone school was built in 1901 but closed around 1922. But from its opening the school room was used by the Congregational Church for their services. It then became known as the Congregational Church and it remained a church until 1962. It is still used for other community purposes located next to the tennis courts and hall.
colocador de deck pergolado deck de madeira deck para piscina fachada de loja, mezanino, cachepo, em joinville e regiao
Like what you see here? Contact Long Island Decking for a free in home design consultation. In Nassau 516-594-0390 or Suffolk 631-728-7272. www.lidecking.com
All pictures copyright Long Island Decking Inc.
The decks featured build in planters that acted as partitions to continue that private feel without taking away from the incredible view.
Cedar Deck Design created by Rick's Custom Fencing & Decking based out of Washington and Oregon. www.ricksfencing.com
700 sq. ft. multi-level deck with roof structure. We installed sunlights and fans in the roof structure over the kitchen area. The kitchen area is faced with cultured stone. The seating area is flush with the top of the built in planter boxes giving a feeling of being on the ground while still being a few steps over ground level to keep an eye on guests in the pool.
The new operative word in today’s latest deck ideas is ‘synthetics’. New types of man made products in the deck builder arsenal that combine wood and plastics for the perfect marriage of aesthetics and low maintenance durability. Search for best deck and patio contractors in your area at www.HireContractor.com
N.S.S Sobraon - on the deck
Dated:No date
Digital ID: 4481_a026_000004
Rights: www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/rights-and-permissions
We'd love to hear from you if you use our photos.
The ships Vernon (est. 1867) and Sobraon (est. 1892) were Industrial Schools for Boys. Boys received a combination of moral training, nautical and industrial training and instruction, and elementary schooling. The ships were made use of this way as there were no separate boys' reformatory schools until 1895.
The Vernon was docked at Cockatoo Island. The Sobraon, which replaced the Vernon in 1892, was used until 1911, when the remaining boys were set to the Mittagong Farm Home for Boys and the Brush Farm Home for Boys.
The Industrial Schools Act of 1866 authorised the Governor to proclaim "any ship or vessel or any building or place together with any yards, enclosures grounds or lands attached thereto to be a 'Public Industrial School' ". Any vagrant or destitute child under the age of sixteen could be directed by two Justices of the Peace to attend an Industrial School and to remain the responsibility of the Superintendent until the age of eighteen, unless apprenticed out or discharged.
More information can be found in Archives Investigator -> Advanced Search -> Agency -> 411
This series of photographs was taken by officers of the Government Printing Office during the years 1860s-c.1920. The photographs cover a wide variety of subjects, for example, public buildings, railways, tramways, street scenes, harbour views, Sydney University, groups of people, ships, public occasions, the Botanic Gardens, military camps, wharves, dams and waterways, statues and slums.
Many other photos in our collection are available to view and browse on our website using Photo Investigator.
Like what you see here? Contact Long Island Decking for a free in home design consultation. In Nassau 516-594-0390 or Suffolk 631-728-7272. www.lidecking.com
All pictures copyright Long Island Decking Inc.
720 NW St. Helens Ave.
The house that Saul Zaik designed for his family in 1961, natural wood, carefully placed windows w/ wooded views. The main house & bedroom wing are separated by a glass entry lobby. Constructed using post & beam, main living space is a "great room" w/ dining, living & kitchen below a vaulted ceiling. White wall panels balance the large amount of wood & partial-height walls control spatial organization while allowing the ceiling to float overhead.
Historic Preservation League of Oregon Mid-Century Modern (Saul Zaik) Home Tour