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6 juillet 2022 à 03:06 : SilasClopton17 (discussion | contributions) a déclenché le filtre antiabus 4, en effectuant l’action « edit » sur Grand Designs: House Of The 12 Months Slam Awful 1960s Water Tower. Actions entreprises : Interdire la modification ; Description du filtre : Empêcher la création de pages de pub utilisateur (examiner)

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<br>The constructing would not fall down because of the ingenious picket staircase which acts as an anchor for the house. They type an enormous corkscrew that helps to pin the tower to the bottom. It was made from 182 blocks made from superstrong timber, layers of wood glued alternatively at proper angles. The roof was praised by the judges, as had been the ground-to-ceiling home windows within the bedrooms, and the dwelling space in the main tank itself. The primary space featured a concrete polished ground, a wood kitchen and a 21st century wrap-round window. Dennis and his son acted as the main contractors and did the demolition work themselves on the property. Dennis mentioned: 'I was bodily right here quite a lot, we transformed a transport container and that i stayed there at the weekends. For their architect Mike Tonkin, he mentioned: 'When you start, you want to understand who the individuals are, what their desire are. But it was also vital to Mike that whatever they did could be embraced by the local individuals close by.<br><br>The second home to be shortlisted by the judges was the House on the Hill, which was located within the remote Welsh borders. It was half traditional Georgian farmhouse and half area-age monolith with jagged partitions and minimalist [https://www.google.com/search?q=surfaces&btnI=lucky surfaces]. In the meantime, inside it was a temple for light. The outdated house now options a triple home art gallery, a bedroom and a examine. In the meantime the extension home contains the primary living space, and kitchen and dining house. There are additionally two en-suite bedrooms. An office which opens onto a balcony. The design mastermind behind the building was the architect Alison Brooks. But the unusual combination does work,. She stated: 'I all the time assume that when you're working with historic buildings, it's a lot more effective to do something that contrasts it. West Wing providing a quieter and more subservient area, as if it had been an angular servant of the [https://www.wired.com/search/?q=farmhouse farmhouse].<br><br>But mendacity in wait behind the five foot thick walls was a welcoming, contemporary family residence, stuffed with glass, mild and twenty first century options. It was designed by Katie Woolacott and Patrick Gilmartin, who have been drawn to the romance of working with a 14th century tower. Completely different chunks of the house had been construct at completely different times - the central part was initially built within the fifteenth century, whereas the oldest half was the tower itself, which now homes a library, bedroom and a bathroom. The judges commended Patrick and Katie for sensitively modernising the tower whereas holding on to the historical past. Patrick said: 'For me, one thing a couple of tower, it brings out the child in you, you want to climb it. Their master stroke was creating space between the outdated partitions and the new roof of the building, perfectly 'slotting' the new into the previous space. From exterior, you'd never guess such decadence lay behind the arrow slit home windows. In the meantime they've additionally left a space between the walls, so that one aspect of the tower grew to become a gentle well. Katie said: 'We really wished you to really feel you were contained in the smash. Patrick stated: 'Many of the problems we encountered throughout the tower were uncommon issues you encounter within an city setting. The light effectively served properly for that function.<br><br>He said: 'Plenty of them had climbed it as a kid. Whatever we did needed to be fascinating. Speaking about the judges determination to shortlist the home, the RIBA explained it had 'very sturdy sustainability angle on this', saying: 'It's been approached with delight and humour. Once you're inside you can see the spiralling staircase. Dennis had an open day and like 1,000 people turned up. The extension house comprises the main dwelling area, and kitchen and dining house. Kevin defined: 'These are buildings that make you sit up and take notice, that jolt you out of the humdrum of day-after-day life. Others simply faucet you on the shoulder quietly but brewing with eccentricity. Some leap out at you like brash associates that you had misplaced contact with a few years ago. Be they mansions, maisonette or seaside homes, these are all properties that refresh and invigorate.<br><br>Inside, there was no sense of separation between the new and the previous, with living, dining and cooking areas joined collectively. The undertaking took 10 yeas to finish and was finished in phases,  [https://controlc.com/3b83866d 90731 Roofing] with the grand finale being the pool space which is inside a walled backyard. The judges praised the skewed geometry which leads the attention. It's designed with an obsession with geometry. Michelle explained that while structure like this doesn't come low-cost, House on the Hill exudes excellence. Michelle stated: 'There's a number of issues that shouldn't actually work right here, but they do. Constructed with commitment to craftsmanship. House-Inside-a-Home stands out amid Victorian homes on a road that suffered bomb injury throughout World Warfare II. In the meantime a 'home within a house' in south London was also longlisted by the judges and featured on the programme. The architect designed a 'pores and skin' to be constructed around an existing two-storey 1960s house constructed in an area left behind by World Battle Two bomb damage. The 'pores and skin' brings the building up to contemporary standards by including a component of insulation, 'wrapping the retained external partitions in a thick warm coat', in line with the jury. The jury added: 'The composition of the elevations, having retained a whole lot of the original opening, may be very pleasing, poetic and fluid.<br>

Paramètres de l'action

VariableValeur
Si la modification est marquée comme mineure ou non (minor_edit)
Nom du compte d’utilisateur (user_name)
SilasClopton17
Groupes (y compris implicites) dont l'utilisateur est membre (user_groups)
* user autoconfirmed
Si un utilisateur est ou non en cours de modification via l’interface mobile (user_mobile)
Numéro de la page (article_articleid)
0
Espace de noms de la page (article_namespace)
0
Titre de la page (sans l'espace de noms) (article_text)
Grand Designs: House Of The 12 Months Slam Awful 1960s Water Tower
Titre complet de la page (article_prefixedtext)
Grand Designs: House Of The 12 Months Slam Awful 1960s Water Tower
Action (action)
edit
Résumé/motif de la modification (summary)
Ancien modèle de contenu (old_content_model)
Nouveau modèle de contenu (new_content_model)
wikitext
Ancien texte de la page, avant la modification (old_wikitext)
Nouveau texte de la page, après la modification (new_wikitext)
<br>The constructing would not fall down because of the ingenious picket staircase which acts as an anchor for the house. They type an enormous corkscrew that helps to pin the tower to the bottom. It was made from 182 blocks made from superstrong timber, layers of wood glued alternatively at proper angles. The roof was praised by the judges, as had been the ground-to-ceiling home windows within the bedrooms, and the dwelling space in the main tank itself. The primary space featured a concrete polished ground, a wood kitchen and a 21st century wrap-round window. Dennis and his son acted as the main contractors and did the demolition work themselves on the property. Dennis mentioned: 'I was bodily right here quite a lot, we transformed a transport container and that i stayed there at the weekends. For their architect Mike Tonkin, he mentioned: 'When you start, you want to understand who the individuals are, what their desire are. But it was also vital to Mike that whatever they did could be embraced by the local individuals close by.<br><br>The second home to be shortlisted by the judges was the House on the Hill, which was located within the remote Welsh borders. It was half traditional Georgian farmhouse and half area-age monolith with jagged partitions and minimalist [https://www.google.com/search?q=surfaces&btnI=lucky surfaces]. In the meantime, inside it was a temple for light. The outdated house now options a triple home art gallery, a bedroom and a examine. In the meantime the extension home contains the primary living space, and kitchen and dining house. There are additionally two en-suite bedrooms. An office which opens onto a balcony. The design mastermind behind the building was the architect Alison Brooks. But the unusual combination does work,. She stated: 'I all the time assume that when you're working with historic buildings, it's a lot more effective to do something that contrasts it. West Wing providing a quieter and more subservient area, as if it had been an angular servant of the [https://www.wired.com/search/?q=farmhouse farmhouse].<br><br>But mendacity in wait behind the five foot thick walls was a welcoming, contemporary family residence, stuffed with glass, mild and twenty first century options. It was designed by Katie Woolacott and Patrick Gilmartin, who have been drawn to the romance of working with a 14th century tower. Completely different chunks of the house had been construct at completely different times - the central part was initially built within the fifteenth century, whereas the oldest half was the tower itself, which now homes a library, bedroom and a bathroom. The judges commended Patrick and Katie for sensitively modernising the tower whereas holding on to the historical past. Patrick said: 'For me, one thing a couple of tower, it brings out the child in you, you want to climb it. Their master stroke was creating space between the outdated partitions and the new roof of the building, perfectly 'slotting' the new into the previous space. From exterior, you'd never guess such decadence lay behind the arrow slit home windows. In the meantime they've additionally left a space between the walls, so that one aspect of the tower grew to become a gentle well. Katie said: 'We really wished you to really feel you were contained in the smash. Patrick stated: 'Many of the problems we encountered throughout the tower were uncommon issues you encounter within an city setting. The light effectively served properly for that function.<br><br>He said: 'Plenty of them had climbed it as a kid. Whatever we did needed to be fascinating. Speaking about the judges determination to shortlist the home, the RIBA explained it had 'very sturdy sustainability angle on this', saying: 'It's been approached with delight and humour. Once you're inside you can see the spiralling staircase. Dennis had an open day and like 1,000 people turned up. The extension house comprises the main dwelling area, and kitchen and dining house. Kevin defined: 'These are buildings that make you sit up and take notice, that jolt you out of the humdrum of day-after-day life. Others simply faucet you on the shoulder quietly but brewing with eccentricity. Some leap out at you like brash associates that you had misplaced contact with a few years ago. Be they mansions, maisonette or seaside homes, these are all properties that refresh and invigorate.<br><br>Inside, there was no sense of separation between the new and the previous, with living, dining and cooking areas joined collectively. The undertaking took 10 yeas to finish and was finished in phases, [https://controlc.com/3b83866d 90731 Roofing] with the grand finale being the pool space which is inside a walled backyard. The judges praised the skewed geometry which leads the attention. It's designed with an obsession with geometry. Michelle explained that while structure like this doesn't come low-cost, House on the Hill exudes excellence. Michelle stated: 'There's a number of issues that shouldn't actually work right here, but they do. Constructed with commitment to craftsmanship. House-Inside-a-Home stands out amid Victorian homes on a road that suffered bomb injury throughout World Warfare II. In the meantime a 'home within a house' in south London was also longlisted by the judges and featured on the programme. The architect designed a 'pores and skin' to be constructed around an existing two-storey 1960s house constructed in an area left behind by World Battle Two bomb damage. The 'pores and skin' brings the building up to contemporary standards by including a component of insulation, 'wrapping the retained external partitions in a thick warm coat', in line with the jury. The jury added: 'The composition of the elevations, having retained a whole lot of the original opening, may be very pleasing, poetic and fluid.<br>
Diff unifié des changements faits lors de la modification (edit_diff)
@@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ - +<br>The constructing would not fall down because of the ingenious picket staircase which acts as an anchor for the house. They type an enormous corkscrew that helps to pin the tower to the bottom. It was made from 182 blocks made from superstrong timber, layers of wood glued alternatively at proper angles. The roof was praised by the judges, as had been the ground-to-ceiling home windows within the bedrooms, and the dwelling space in the main tank itself. The primary space featured a concrete polished ground, a wood kitchen and a 21st century wrap-round window. Dennis and his son acted as the main contractors and did the demolition work themselves on the property. Dennis mentioned: 'I was bodily right here quite a lot, we transformed a transport container and that i stayed there at the weekends. For their architect Mike Tonkin, he mentioned: 'When you start, you want to understand who the individuals are, what their desire are. But it was also vital to Mike that whatever they did could be embraced by the local individuals close by.<br><br>The second home to be shortlisted by the judges was the House on the Hill, which was located within the remote Welsh borders. It was half traditional Georgian farmhouse and half area-age monolith with jagged partitions and minimalist [https://www.google.com/search?q=surfaces&btnI=lucky surfaces]. In the meantime, inside it was a temple for light. The outdated house now options a triple home art gallery, a bedroom and a examine. In the meantime the extension home contains the primary living space, and kitchen and dining house. There are additionally two en-suite bedrooms. An office which opens onto a balcony. The design mastermind behind the building was the architect Alison Brooks. But the unusual combination does work,. She stated: 'I all the time assume that when you're working with historic buildings, it's a lot more effective to do something that contrasts it. West Wing providing a quieter and more subservient area, as if it had been an angular servant of the [https://www.wired.com/search/?q=farmhouse farmhouse].<br><br>But mendacity in wait behind the five foot thick walls was a welcoming, contemporary family residence, stuffed with glass, mild and twenty first century options. It was designed by Katie Woolacott and Patrick Gilmartin, who have been drawn to the romance of working with a 14th century tower. Completely different chunks of the house had been construct at completely different times - the central part was initially built within the fifteenth century, whereas the oldest half was the tower itself, which now homes a library, bedroom and a bathroom. The judges commended Patrick and Katie for sensitively modernising the tower whereas holding on to the historical past. Patrick said: 'For me, one thing a couple of tower, it brings out the child in you, you want to climb it. Their master stroke was creating space between the outdated partitions and the new roof of the building, perfectly 'slotting' the new into the previous space. From exterior, you'd never guess such decadence lay behind the arrow slit home windows. In the meantime they've additionally left a space between the walls, so that one aspect of the tower grew to become a gentle well. Katie said: 'We really wished you to really feel you were contained in the smash. Patrick stated: 'Many of the problems we encountered throughout the tower were uncommon issues you encounter within an city setting. The light effectively served properly for that function.<br><br>He said: 'Plenty of them had climbed it as a kid. Whatever we did needed to be fascinating. Speaking about the judges determination to shortlist the home, the RIBA explained it had 'very sturdy sustainability angle on this', saying: 'It's been approached with delight and humour. Once you're inside you can see the spiralling staircase. Dennis had an open day and like 1,000 people turned up. The extension house comprises the main dwelling area, and kitchen and dining house. Kevin defined: 'These are buildings that make you sit up and take notice, that jolt you out of the humdrum of day-after-day life. Others simply faucet you on the shoulder quietly but brewing with eccentricity. Some leap out at you like brash associates that you had misplaced contact with a few years ago. Be they mansions, maisonette or seaside homes, these are all properties that refresh and invigorate.<br><br>Inside, there was no sense of separation between the new and the previous, with living, dining and cooking areas joined collectively. The undertaking took 10 yeas to finish and was finished in phases, [https://controlc.com/3b83866d 90731 Roofing] with the grand finale being the pool space which is inside a walled backyard. The judges praised the skewed geometry which leads the attention. It's designed with an obsession with geometry. Michelle explained that while structure like this doesn't come low-cost, House on the Hill exudes excellence. Michelle stated: 'There's a number of issues that shouldn't actually work right here, but they do. Constructed with commitment to craftsmanship. House-Inside-a-Home stands out amid Victorian homes on a road that suffered bomb injury throughout World Warfare II. In the meantime a 'home within a house' in south London was also longlisted by the judges and featured on the programme. The architect designed a 'pores and skin' to be constructed around an existing two-storey 1960s house constructed in an area left behind by World Battle Two bomb damage. The 'pores and skin' brings the building up to contemporary standards by including a component of insulation, 'wrapping the retained external partitions in a thick warm coat', in line with the jury. The jury added: 'The composition of the elevations, having retained a whole lot of the original opening, may be very pleasing, poetic and fluid.<br>
Lignes ajoutées lors de la modification (added_lines)
<br>The constructing would not fall down because of the ingenious picket staircase which acts as an anchor for the house. They type an enormous corkscrew that helps to pin the tower to the bottom. It was made from 182 blocks made from superstrong timber, layers of wood glued alternatively at proper angles. The roof was praised by the judges, as had been the ground-to-ceiling home windows within the bedrooms, and the dwelling space in the main tank itself. The primary space featured a concrete polished ground, a wood kitchen and a 21st century wrap-round window. Dennis and his son acted as the main contractors and did the demolition work themselves on the property. Dennis mentioned: 'I was bodily right here quite a lot, we transformed a transport container and that i stayed there at the weekends. For their architect Mike Tonkin, he mentioned: 'When you start, you want to understand who the individuals are, what their desire are. But it was also vital to Mike that whatever they did could be embraced by the local individuals close by.<br><br>The second home to be shortlisted by the judges was the House on the Hill, which was located within the remote Welsh borders. It was half traditional Georgian farmhouse and half area-age monolith with jagged partitions and minimalist [https://www.google.com/search?q=surfaces&btnI=lucky surfaces]. In the meantime, inside it was a temple for light. The outdated house now options a triple home art gallery, a bedroom and a examine. In the meantime the extension home contains the primary living space, and kitchen and dining house. There are additionally two en-suite bedrooms. An office which opens onto a balcony. The design mastermind behind the building was the architect Alison Brooks. But the unusual combination does work,. She stated: 'I all the time assume that when you're working with historic buildings, it's a lot more effective to do something that contrasts it. West Wing providing a quieter and more subservient area, as if it had been an angular servant of the [https://www.wired.com/search/?q=farmhouse farmhouse].<br><br>But mendacity in wait behind the five foot thick walls was a welcoming, contemporary family residence, stuffed with glass, mild and twenty first century options. It was designed by Katie Woolacott and Patrick Gilmartin, who have been drawn to the romance of working with a 14th century tower. Completely different chunks of the house had been construct at completely different times - the central part was initially built within the fifteenth century, whereas the oldest half was the tower itself, which now homes a library, bedroom and a bathroom. The judges commended Patrick and Katie for sensitively modernising the tower whereas holding on to the historical past. Patrick said: 'For me, one thing a couple of tower, it brings out the child in you, you want to climb it. Their master stroke was creating space between the outdated partitions and the new roof of the building, perfectly 'slotting' the new into the previous space. From exterior, you'd never guess such decadence lay behind the arrow slit home windows. In the meantime they've additionally left a space between the walls, so that one aspect of the tower grew to become a gentle well. Katie said: 'We really wished you to really feel you were contained in the smash. Patrick stated: 'Many of the problems we encountered throughout the tower were uncommon issues you encounter within an city setting. The light effectively served properly for that function.<br><br>He said: 'Plenty of them had climbed it as a kid. Whatever we did needed to be fascinating. Speaking about the judges determination to shortlist the home, the RIBA explained it had 'very sturdy sustainability angle on this', saying: 'It's been approached with delight and humour. Once you're inside you can see the spiralling staircase. Dennis had an open day and like 1,000 people turned up. The extension house comprises the main dwelling area, and kitchen and dining house. Kevin defined: 'These are buildings that make you sit up and take notice, that jolt you out of the humdrum of day-after-day life. Others simply faucet you on the shoulder quietly but brewing with eccentricity. Some leap out at you like brash associates that you had misplaced contact with a few years ago. Be they mansions, maisonette or seaside homes, these are all properties that refresh and invigorate.<br><br>Inside, there was no sense of separation between the new and the previous, with living, dining and cooking areas joined collectively. The undertaking took 10 yeas to finish and was finished in phases, [https://controlc.com/3b83866d 90731 Roofing] with the grand finale being the pool space which is inside a walled backyard. The judges praised the skewed geometry which leads the attention. It's designed with an obsession with geometry. Michelle explained that while structure like this doesn't come low-cost, House on the Hill exudes excellence. Michelle stated: 'There's a number of issues that shouldn't actually work right here, but they do. Constructed with commitment to craftsmanship. House-Inside-a-Home stands out amid Victorian homes on a road that suffered bomb injury throughout World Warfare II. In the meantime a 'home within a house' in south London was also longlisted by the judges and featured on the programme. The architect designed a 'pores and skin' to be constructed around an existing two-storey 1960s house constructed in an area left behind by World Battle Two bomb damage. The 'pores and skin' brings the building up to contemporary standards by including a component of insulation, 'wrapping the retained external partitions in a thick warm coat', in line with the jury. The jury added: 'The composition of the elevations, having retained a whole lot of the original opening, may be very pleasing, poetic and fluid.<br>
Horodatage Unix de la modification (timestamp)
1657069569