Sunday, March 31, 2013

Cool House Balcony Design images

Blended balcony / Balcón doblado
house balcony design
Image by . SantiMB .
Baeza, Jaén (Spain).

A beautiful balcony in a house close to the Cathedral. / Un precioso balcón en una casa cercana a la Catedral.

ENGLISH
Baeza is a town of approximately 15,000 in Andalusia, Spain, in the province of Jaén, perched on a cliff in the Loma de Úbeda, a mountain range between the river Guadalquivir on the south and its tributary the Guadalimar on the north. The town has existed since Roman times, when it was called Beatia, but it is chiefly known today as having many of the best-preserved examples of Italian Renaissance architecture in Spain. UNESCO added Baeza and Ubeda to the World Heritage Sites list in 2003.

In the middle ages Baeza was a flourishing Moorish city, said to contain 50,000 inhabitants, but it fell to the forces of Ferdinand III of Castile in 1227. The Cordova and Úbeda gates, and the arch of Baeza, are among the remains of its Moorish fortifications.

In the 16th century, Baeza and nearby Úbeda grew rich from the production of textiles, and local nobles hired important architects, such as Andrés de Vandelvira, to design new palaces, churches and public squares in the fashionable Italian style. The economy collapsed in the 17th century, which had the fortunate side effect of preserving Baeza's Renaissance architectural legacy, because few newer structures were built. Baeza appears much more Italian than Spanish, with an unusual sense of lightness, order, and proportion.

Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baeza

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CASTELLANO
La ciudad de Baeza se encuentra en el centro geográfico de la provincia de Jaén, al este de la Comunidad Autónoma de Andalucía, (España).

En la actualidad es conocida por su legado monumental, habiendo sido declarada, junto a Úbeda, ciudad Patrimonio de la humanidad por la UNESCO y ser una de las tres sedes de la Universidad Internacional de Andalucía.

"Nido Real de Gavilanes " que la llamó el romancero, fue un punto clave en la conquista de Al-Andalus por los reyes cristianos. Atalaya sobre el Guadalquivir, su posesión aseguró la espalda castellana y la amenaza para los reinos que estaban en la ribera izquierda del Gran Río. Tanta importancia tiene su conquista, (1227), que el rey Fernando III decide que a partir de ese momento la bandera real, que luego sería la española, tenga sobre sí el aspa o cruz de San Andrés, pues atribuye al apóstol y a su intercesión la milagrosa conquista. Y durante siglos, hasta Carlos III, será el símbolo distintivo de las banderas españolas, y aun hoy el rey Juan Carlos apoya todo su escudo en la Cruz de San Andrés, en cuya festividad, 30 de noviembre se conquista la ciudad de Baeza. Tres siglos después la reina Isabel I, temerosa de que los nobles le discutieran su poder, mandó derribar su Alcázar, del que solo veremos algún resto.

Fuente: es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baeza




Tree house
house balcony design
Image by Graela
"Home is a place you grow up wanting to leave, and grow old wanting to get back to." ~John Ed Pearce

This is the rambling tree house where I grew up. It is built into the rocky oklahoma hills. (the rocks are exposed in the lower level of the house.)
My mom and dad designed and built it the year I was born. Every spring would see a new project add something to it in Dr Suess fashion. Balconies, a guest house, a gazebo. walkways to connect them, gardens and patios appeared one by one .


Nathan Moore House
house balcony design
Image by reallyboring
Large balcony with ornate door above entry porch.

Nathan Moore House, first built as a Tudor Revival house for the wealthy lawyer in 1895. After a 1922 fire, Wright re-designed the house, giving it its present appearance.

Nice Virtual Design House photos

The pool and the house
virtual design house
Image by Elif Ayiter/Alpha Auer/..../
While I kept certain textures, such as the venetian blinds and the flexi gazebo curtains, and also reused most of the plants of version 1; version 2 is rectangular. I kept the usage areas of version 1 as well: The round beach cabin turned into a bigger structure, almost a house, although it still is made up of one living area.


Custom House Famine Memorial
virtual design house
Image by infomatique
Famine Memorial
Here you will see the Famine statues, presented to the City of Dublin in 1997.

These statues commemorate the Great Famine of the mid 19th century when Ireland lost more than one million people to famine and emigration.

The statues were designed and crafted by Dublin sculptor Rowan Gillespie.


Custom House Famine Memorial
virtual design house
Image by infomatique
Famine Memorial
Here you will see the Famine statues, presented to the City of Dublin in 1997.

These statues commemorate the Great Famine of the mid 19th century when Ireland lost more than one million people to famine and emigration.

The statues were designed and crafted by Dublin sculptor Rowan Gillespie.


Custom House Famine Memorial
virtual design house
Image by infomatique
Famine Memorial
Here you will see the Famine statues, presented to the City of Dublin in 1997.

These statues commemorate the Great Famine of the mid 19th century when Ireland lost more than one million people to famine and emigration.

The statues were designed and crafted by Dublin sculptor Rowan Gillespie.


Custom House Famine Memorial
virtual design house
Image by infomatique
Famine Memorial
Here you will see the Famine statues, presented to the City of Dublin in 1997.

These statues commemorate the Great Famine of the mid 19th century when Ireland lost more than one million people to famine and emigration.

The statues were designed and crafted by Dublin sculptor Rowan Gillespie.

Cool Modular House Design images

Plot 15: The Modular House
modular house design
Image by itmpa
'A state-of-the-art, carbon neutral living space as natural as the environment, which considers carbon reduction from every angle.

High thermal performance air tight external structure with complementary heating/ventilation system. Factory assembled long panel construction, high quality finish, quick on site assembly, minimised waste during construction.
'

www.scotlandshousingexpo.com/plot15.php

Again, one of the most interesting aspects of the Expo came to the fore here, with a contribution from a mainstream housing developer, Tulloch Homes Express. It was easily the most 'dressed' of all the properties, and in true 'Show Home' style, displayed an spectacular lack of taste in interior design! Nevertheless, very encouraging to see a developer trying something a little different - I do hope they'll take some ideas on board.

Composite image of all the properties.


Lego Modular Town House (early)
modular house design
Image by cimddwc
Frühe Designs – da war mir aber die Front zu glatt, und das Giebelfenster war nicht zentriert über den anderen...

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Early designs – but the front was too smooth and the top window not centered above the others.


Lego Modular Town House
modular house design
Image by cimddwc
Hauptsächlich mit Steinen (und Design-Ideen) vom Stadthaus 4954 und ein paar zusätzlichen gebaut.

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Built mostly with bricks (and design ideas) from Town House 4954, plus some other.


Modular living units based on honey comb structure
modular house design
Image by M.E.Genest


Modular housing concept
modular house design
Image by M.E.Genest

Cool House Front Door Design images

Arlington House - front door knocker - 2011
house front door design
Image by dctim1
Knocker on the front door at Arlington House, the Robert E. Lee Memorial, at Arlington National Cemetery.

Beginning in 2008, Arlington House began a major conservation and restoration effort. A modern HVAC system was installed to help prevent moisture and mold damage to the house and its contents, and conservation and restoration of its structural elements also occurred. The effort was due to end in 2012, but the August 2011 earthquake resulted in moderate structural damage to the house. The back wall separated from the mansion, requiring the rear passageway and conservatory to be declared off-limits. The second floor is also closed to visitors. The National Park Service says it has no idea when the house will reopen, as most NPS money is going for repairs to the Washington Monument.

Arlington House was built by George Washington Parke Custis, adopted son of George Washington, in 1803. George Hadfield, also partially designed the United States Capitol, designed the mansion. The north and south wings were completed between 1802 and 1804. but the large center section and portico were not finished until 1817.

George Washington Parke Custis died in 1857, leaving the Arlington estate and house to his eldest daughter, Mary Custis Lee -- wife of General Robert E. Lee.


Front Door with stained glass panels fitted
house front door design
Image by Ken Doerr
New front door with hand made leaded glass panels fitted to sides. The exisiting leaded light to the right of the door was the basis for the pattern and colour.
Each stained glass panel was assembled within an 8mm stainless steel angle frame, which had previously been tailored to fit the reveals and welded together. Although not mechanically rigid on their own, the frames would help produce a panel that could be manipulated without risk of damage during fitting. This also allowed the glazier to work independently on the panels to the exact size and shape required.
The finished panels were tamped into place over the existing, frosted double-glazed panels, as they were a transition fit in the reveal. A bead of black silicone was then applied for weather-proofing and final finish.
The panels were made using traditional methods by local artisan Glyn Akroyd (www.gildedsplinters.net). From a site visit, Glyn made up a number of design options that referenced the colours and patterns of the panel fitted adjacent to the door, a piece that had been reclaimed from another building. Everything asked of Glyn, including the exacting dimensional standards, was delivered in the finished product. The final pattern choice compliments the new door and sits well with the other stained glass panels in the house.




The Front Door
house front door design
Image by MissTessmacher
This is the front door, which Frank Lloyd Wright designed to be inconspicuous. Our guide told us that one reason was to discourage unwanted visitors. Those who were invited would know where to go.

View On Black

Saturday, March 30, 2013

3D Realty Handshake

3D Realty Handshake
3d house design free
Image by lumaxart
Linkware Freebie Image
use it however you like all I ask is a credit link to : thegoldguys.blogspot.com/ or www.lumaxart.com/

LuMaxArt Royalty Free Images Available for Purchase Here:
Fotolia Portfolio
Shutterstock Portfolio
Dreamstime Portfolio
Big Stock Photo Portfolio






old house
3d house design free
Image by Sascha Nonn
Hello dear visitor , if there is maybe a need of my 3d service , please feel free to contact me under Sascha.Nonn@ymail.com , thanks a lot for watching my images.


646 - Beach House Canopy - Texture
3d house design free
Image by Patrick Hoesly
This seamless texture was illustrated by Patrick Hoesly, a Kansas City based illustrator specializing in architectural illustrations and graphic design. This texture is released under the Creative Commons Attribution license. If you like this image, please mark it as a favorite and feel free to leave a comment. Thanks!

What is a Seamless Texture / Pattern?
A seamless texture is an special image, where one side of a image exactly matches the opposite side, so that the edges blend into each other when repeated. Seamless textures are used for desktop wallpaper, webpage backgrounds, video games, Photoshop fills and in 3D rendering programs.

How did you make it?
This texture was made using software specially designed to aid in seamless texture creation. Some of the programs I’ve use are Photoshop, Illustrator, Filter Forge, Genetica, Image Synth, Alien Skin, Topaz Labs, Imagelys, and a Wacom tablet.

Check out my Blog at zooboingreview.blogspot.com


Printing Things
3d house design free
Image by Theron Trowbridge
Visitors to the Fayetteville Free Library open house designed their own 3D objects using 3dtin.com or tinkercad.com and got to see them printed out on a MakerBot.


Printing Things
3d house design free
Image by Theron Trowbridge
Visitors to the Fayetteville Free Library open house designed their own 3D objects using 3dtin.com or tinkercad.com and got to see them printed out on a MakerBot.

Friday, March 29, 2013

The Queen's House, Greenwich

The Queen's House, Greenwich
summer house design
Image by Duncan~
Now a part of the National Maritime Museum, commisioned by Anne of Denmark (queen to King James I & VI) and designed by Inigo Jones in 1616, but not completed until 1635, well after Anne's death.


Gooderstone Water Gardens - gate and fence
summer house design
Image by ell brown
This is Gooderstone Water Gardens in the village of Gooderstone, Norfolk.

Billy Knights, a retired farmr began designing and creating the Water Garden in 1970 when he was 70 years old.

He worked on his garden until he died aged 93. For over 20 years the gardens have been open to the public.

By 2002 it was derelict, but was restored by his children and opened to the public again in 2003.

Gate and fence behind the Summer House.


flower power
summer house design
Image by miemo
The massive stairs in front of the colossal Finnish parliament house have been invaded by 60.000 flowers for one week as an installation by artist Kaisa Salmi.


———————————————————————————————————————
This photo is free for personal & commercial use under the Creative Commons Attribution license. If you use this photo you must accompany it with my full name, Miemo Penttinen, and a link to my personal website, miemo.net


Website: Sea Me Residence Hua-Hin
summer house design
Image by Ken_ts
Link: vacation-home.seamehuahin.com/


120. In the pink: Governor John Langdon House
summer house design
Image by InAweofGod'sCreation
Not much odor to these roses, but they were beautiful in their abundance
After Langdon's death in 1819, the house was occupied by other leading families. At the end of the 19th century, Langdon descendants purchased the house and restored it to its 18th-century glory, adding on a substantial wing designed by McKim, Mead, and White to house modern conveniences. The garden, dating from the same era, features restored perennial beds, a rose and grape arbor, and a pavilion. The house and grounds are now owned and operated as a house museum by Historic New England.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governor_John_Langdon_House

Altius Architecture - Christie Beach House Exterior

Altius Architecture - Christie Beach House Exterior
modern house exterior design
Image by altiusarchitecture
Photographer: Jonathan Savoie


kansas city modern - exterior
modern house exterior design
Image by ooh_food
(via www.apartmenttherapy.com/)



marine farmhouse plan rendering
modern house exterior design
Image by brenner_ron
House Designed by Ron Brenner of ron brenner architects

Exterior view of house plan designed by Simply Elegant Home Designs. The home features a modern open floor plan within a modernized country cottage exterior. You can view this plan online at www.simplyeleganthomedesigns.com

This image is the exclusive intellectual property of Ron Brenner Architects, LLC. It is intended for personal use only and may not be reproduced or distributed.


amsterdam modern townhouses
modern house exterior design
Image by ooh_food
(via desiretoinspire.blogspot.com/)

Nice New Design House Plans photos

Bayport Cottage house plan Animation
new design house plans
Image by brenner_ron
House Designed by Ron Brenner of ron brenner architects

This is a new house plan designed by Simply Elegant Home Designs. The home features a modern open floor plan within a modernized cottage exterior. You can view this plan at www.simplyeleganthomedesigns.com

This image is the exclusive intellectual property of Ron Brenner Architects, LLC. It is intended for personal use only and may not be reproduced or distributed.




New Postmodern Solaris Green Home
new design house plans
Image by Photo Dean
New solar-powered, energy-efficient homes in Daybreak Utah.


New kitchen - plan
new design house plans
Image by nilexuk

Cool Chicken House Design images

Croyden House Chicken Flavored Rice with Vermicelli
chicken house design
Image by afiler
Croyden House Chicken Flavored Rice with Vermicelli. On this one, Croyden House has even done us the favor of leaving us a ¢ symbol. And you've got to love the product photo.


Chickens!
chicken house design
Image by terriem
At Post Carbon Institute...they keep their compost piles within the chicken coop.

I'm debating over whether to use this design or not...I like that you could buy less feed for the chickens, but I do like a coop setup where you don't have to close the chickens in at night (you have to have sturdy fencing on all sides, including the top, to do this, but the advantage is that you can leave for a night or two without a house sitter).

The compost pile is going to attract potential predators and I don't think I'd put it in with the chickens if I were trying to keep my fencing predator-proof. I'd probably lose some chickens and be constantly fixing the fence.


The Banty House
chicken house design
Image by soapydishwater
Chicken coop designed by my father; pvc house coming together in the background


Croyden House Instant Mashed Potatoes
chicken house design
Image by afiler
Croyden House Instant Mashed Potatoes. "Golly, mom, why can't we have Croyden House Instant Mashed Potatoes again tonight? The chicken-y flavor is just swell!" Note the Jiffy font once again, and something we'd probably call Comic Sans MS these days. By the way, the "chicken-y" flavor is MSG.


棒打辣子鸡 Kung Fu Chicken - Kam Fook Doncaster AUD19
chicken house design
Image by avlxyz
棒打辣子鸡 Kung Fu Chicken AUD19

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The first impression of this Chinese restaurant is of a modern sleek design befitting the upgraded surroundings of the Westfield Doncaster shopping centre. You are greeted by Kwan-Di the God of Business and ushered by attentive wait-staff to the best tables in the house. Being a Thursday night, we got a window seat. Too bad the reflections from the glass meant that the view of Box Hill and North Balwyn weren't quite visible.

We were a bit worried when all the other tables were Caucasian, not a single Asian table. Worried that the food was aimed primarily at the entree, main, dessert crowd, we breathed a sigh of relief at the surprisingly Hongkong-Cantonese menu, and the trickle of Asian families coming late to dinner.

The food was quite good in general, if a bit on the salty side, which is typical of food in Hongkong. The serves were also surprisingly large given the prices of the average dish hovering just below the AUD20 mark. Luxurious dishes can also be had at "market prices". You could even have a AUD4200 bottle of Château Pétrus or Château Le Pin should you decide to splurge!

We also learnt that they do not take bookings for yumcha, and judging by the number of tables, they must be popular then!


金福 Kam Fook Yum Cha Restaurant
+61390051888
L2-2003, Westfield Doncaster Shopping Centre
619 Doncaster Rd
Melbourne VIC 3108
kamfook.com.au/

References:
- Raising the yum cha bar - Espresso, by Larissa Dubecki, The Age, May 19, 2009
- Kam Fook Yum Cha Restaurant - Westfield Doncaster

Cool Design A House For Free images

Starksboro Village Meeting House (1840) – pointed arch windows detail
design a house for free
Image by origamidon
Route 116, Starksboro, Vermont USA • Gothic Revival style, gable roof, 1-1/2 stories. Features: distinctive interior, entry entablature, ridge tower, pointed arch windows, stained glass, entry pilasters, pinnacles atop the belfry. It was constructed between 1838 and 1840 by the Methodist Episcopal, Free Will Baptist, and Christian congregations; and by the Town, which appropriated 0 to furnish the basement room for use as the Town Hall.

The Meeting House is located in the middle of its 82 1/2 foot wide and 132 foot deep lot on the west side of Vermont Route 116 in the center of Starksboro Village. It is the only building on the lot. The building is three bays wide and three deep. It is a one story high rectangular clapboard sided wood frame structure on a tall fieldstone basement wall. …

It is not known who designed or built the Meeting House. However, it is similar to other Gothic Revival style churches in Vermont from the same period that were designed or influenced by the work of master builder John Cain of Rutland. This indicates the building committee’s awareness of architectural trends and the newly emerging Gothic Revival style in Vermont. It is the only one of its type in the region of Starksboro and its surrounding neighbor towns that remains unchanged. …

Today, the Meeting House is cared for by an eleven person board dedicated to preserving the building and providing Starksboro with space for community activities. The building is at the center of the village and is a vital part of the unique village scape of Starksboro.
– From the website of the Meeting House.

☞ This structure is listed on the Vermont State Register of Historic Places. Source: Data excerpts from "The Historic Architecture of Addison County: including a listing of the Vermont State Register of Historic Places"; Vermont Division of Historic Preservation; Curtis B. Johnson, Editor; © 1992.

☞ On November 7, 1985, the National Park Service added this building to the National Register of Historic Places (#85002768).

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Winners Announcements – Interoperability Award, Opera House July 8th 2010

Winners Announcements – Interoperability Award, Opera House July 8th 2010
free house design software
Image by ImagineCup
The Interoperability Award is designed to recognize the software application that best leverages out-of-the-box Microsoft technologies and blends them with other technologies to connect people, data, or diverse systems in a new way. The ability to build technical bridges and blend technologies from different vendors, including free and open source software, has great value in the industry. The experience you gain by participating in this Award will help you and your teammates build important technical skills that are highly valued in the job market.


Winners Announcements – Interoperability Award, Opera House July 8th 2010
free house design software
Image by ImagineCup
The Interoperability Award is designed to recognize the software application that best leverages out-of-the-box Microsoft technologies and blends them with other technologies to connect people, data, or diverse systems in a new way. The ability to build technical bridges and blend technologies from different vendors, including free and open source software, has great value in the industry. The experience you gain by participating in this Award will help you and your teammates build important technical skills that are highly valued in the job market.


Winners Announcements – Interoperability Award, Opera House July 8th 2010
free house design software
Image by ImagineCup
The Interoperability Award is designed to recognize the software application that best leverages out-of-the-box Microsoft technologies and blends them with other technologies to connect people, data, or diverse systems in a new way. The ability to build technical bridges and blend technologies from different vendors, including free and open source software, has great value in the industry. The experience you gain by participating in this Award will help you and your teammates build important technical skills that are highly valued in the job market.


Winners Announcements – Interoperability Award, Opera House July 8th 2010
free house design software
Image by ImagineCup
The Interoperability Award is designed to recognize the software application that best leverages out-of-the-box Microsoft technologies and blends them with other technologies to connect people, data, or diverse systems in a new way. The ability to build technical bridges and blend technologies from different vendors, including free and open source software, has great value in the industry. The experience you gain by participating in this Award will help you and your teammates build important technical skills that are highly valued in the job market.


Winners Announcements – Interoperability Award, Opera House July 8th 2010
free house design software
Image by ImagineCup
The Interoperability Award is designed to recognize the software application that best leverages out-of-the-box Microsoft technologies and blends them with other technologies to connect people, data, or diverse systems in a new way. The ability to build technical bridges and blend technologies from different vendors, including free and open source software, has great value in the industry. The experience you gain by participating in this Award will help you and your teammates build important technical skills that are highly valued in the job market.

Cool Exterior House Design Ideas images

Gun Barrel Proof House, Banbury Street, Digbeth - coat of arms - Cavendo Tutus
exterior house design ideas
Image by ell brown
I'd previously been at the other end of Banbury Street earlier in the year when I took shots of the former Eagle & Tun pub. I had no idea back then that a Grade II* listed building was at the end of the road.

I checked beforehand on Heritage Gateway for any Grade II* listed buildings in Digbeth and the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House came up.

For a Sunday morning there was no one here, might also be due to it's location, other side of the railway line.

Quite regularly down here I head trains passing by loudly.

Obviously this place was built before the railway line existed (but probably after the local canal was built).

Near here is Proof House Junction (on both the railway line and canal).

Here it is, at the end of Banbury Street.

Gun Barrel Proof House is Grade II* listed.

A gun barrel proof (testing) house commissioned by the Guardians of the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House from John Horton and opened in 1813. The building was added to by Charles Edge in 1860, Bateman and Corser in 1868-70 and again in 1876, and by Jethro Cossins in 1883.
MATERIALS: The building is of red brick laid in a variety of bonds with painted stone and terracotta dressings and a slate and plain tiled roof.
PLAN: The original building of 1813 has two storeys and a basement and lies to north of the site. To its north is an entrance forecourt which has a gate screen and two-storey lodge to the west. At south is a yard which contains the single-storey proof rooms and magazine and loading rooms.
The buildings all abut each other or are joined by covered walkways, but they are described here separately for clarity.
THE ENTRANCE RANGE FROM BANBURY STREET of 1883 has a central round arch set in a shaped gable. This was raised in 1970 to accommodate larger vehicles. At either side are shaped gables, that at left belonging to the gate lodge. The diapered brick work has moulded brick dressings and there is a stone tympanum to the central arch which shows the coat of arms set in a cartouche. The south flank of the entrance lodge is of three bays, with a central two-storey porch with shaped gable.
THE PROOF HOUSE RANGE OF 1813 is joined to the entrance range and the furthest right hand bay of its north face is masked by the block to south of the arch. EXTERIOR: The 1813 front has ten bays and is of Flemish bond brick. To near-centre is the principal door, which was formerly a throughway. This has a frontispiece which has a basket arch with Tuscan pillars to either side and an entablature with blocking course. Projecting from the blocking course is a tablet supported on brackets which reads `ESTABLISHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT / FOR PUBLIC SECURITY, ANNO DOM : 1813.' Above this is a broad, shallow niche which contains an elaborate trophy of arms (attributed to William Hollins) and to the top is a segmental pediment with a circular clock face. To either side of this feature are rainwater pipes with hoppers which each have the date `1813'. To left of this are five bays, and to right are four bays, of a former eleven-bay composition. Both floors have painted stone surrounds to the windows with brackets supporting segmental pediments. Between the first and second bays at left is the Guardians' entrance which leads up to the Board Room at first floor level. This has a six-panelled door with fanlight and Tuscan doorcase with open, segmental pediment. Until 1868 there was a matching doorway at right of centre which gave access to two houses of proof house officials. The south face of this range, which fronts the yard has numerous additions. On line with the pedimented centrepiece on the north front is a single-storey, canted bay lighting the office of the Proof Master. Above is a staircase window and above that a circular clockface set in a pedimental gable. To either side at ground floor level are single-storey additions of later-C19 date which accommodate the enlarged receiving and testing rooms. These have lean-to roofs with rooflights. The first floor sash windows are all of four lights with segment heads. Extending from the right side across the yard is a covered walkway with iron columns and open sides and a pitched roof. Plans show that this existed by 1833. A wing projects at far right and this connects to the Proof Hole.
INTERIOR: The Guardians' entrance hall has a ceiling rose and an open-well staircase with wrought iron balustrade and wooden handrail. Some cornicing survives to the Receiving Room, which was formerly housing for staff of the Proof House. The first floor board room survives largely intact and has cornicing and carved wood surrounds to the doors and windows which have reeding and patera. There are paired doors to the east and west end walls and a fireplace to the south wall with a marble surround The adjacent Museum Room,which was perhaps formerly the Proof Master's Office, has similarly moulded surrounds and a large two-door wall safe.
THE PROOF HOLE OF 1860 is in a Round-arched style and of orange bricks laid in English bond, with blue brick dressings. A bomb blast in 1940 caused the demolition of the southernmost of the original four bays.
EXTERIOR: The western, yard, front has three bays with round arched openings to the lower body, all fitted with heavy metal shutters with louvred panels, above which are small oculi. The roof consists of a louvred arrangements of timbers to allow smoke to escape. The east front of the Proof Hole is blank. Close to it and flanking the canal wharf is a further, smaller, proof house with similar brickwork which is used to retry those barrels which have failed to discharge in the Proof Hole. This has a deeply splayed door surround to the south front and metal bosses to re-enforce the walls. Joined to it at its north end, and also flanking the canal wharf, is a two-storey building which has lavatories below a late-C19 magazine, which is now disused.
INTERIOR: The lower walls are lined with thick plates of iron which are heavily scarred and there are iron screens at both ends of the room. Two raised brick platforms face each other across the width of the room. That to the west side has a stone surface, grooved to hold gun barrels, which are held in place by piled sand and fired in sequence by a fuse. On the opposite side the surface is covered with piled sand to absorb the shot. The roof has a curved metal canopy to the centre to deflect shot. Above this, the roof structure is louvred to allow smoke to escape. The three arched openings in the west wall have thick iron shutters and louvres which are worked by heavy metal crank arms.
PROOF HOUSE RANGE: A further range of smaller testing rooms lies along the south side of the yard.
EXTERIOR: The range has a series of four cambered doorways with blue brick dressings and metal re-enforcement. To the south-west corner is a larger room which was also used as a proof hole for multiple firings. It has blank walling to all sides, a deeply chamfered door surround to the west face and a renewed roof. To the west side of the yard is the washing-out room for cleaning the barrels after firing which has a canted bay to the yard front and was formerly a loading room with Priming and Ramming rooms off.
INTERIOR: The series of proof rooms each consists of two chambers; an outer room in which the rifle is placed in a metal box and directed through the dividing wall to the second room which contains a sand bank. Both chambers have solid brick walls and there is thick metal cladding to the lower walls of the second rooms. Some of the dividing walls between the rooms have been removed.
THE MAGAZINE BUILDING at the centre of the yard has plain brick walling of English bond to three sides and a half-glazed door to the west gable end. Plans show the building to have an outer and inner room.
The C20 buildings to the north side of the entrance forecourt are excluded from this designation.

HISTORY: The Gun Barrel Proof House was set up as a statutory institution by an Act of Parliament of 1813 to test barrels and completed guns. The Act was requested and obtained by the Birmingham trade and the Proof House was run at its own expense. It was, and still is, governed by a Board of Guardians composed of Master Gunmakers, magistrates and councillors and run by a Proof Master. Gun barrels and complete guns are tested by inspection and are fired to ensure their soundness and marked with a die stamp if they are passed. The original building of 1813-14 was designed by John Horton of Bradford Street, Deritend. A watercolour drawing of this time shows the original treatment of the north-facing, entrance front, which had a Tuscan throughway, which led to the yard behind. To the east of this were five bays and to the west were four. At the centre of the rear yard and on line with the central arch was the original magazine, which was treated as a classical kiosk. The survey plan of 1833 by Henry Jacob shows that the four bays at west belonged to two houses for officials of the Proof House, entered from a passageway common to both. These were altered in 1868-70 by Bateman and Corser and converted into workshops and at the same time the facade was altered to make it more symmetrical with five bays to the west side of the arch. Also at this same time the throughway appears to have been filled in and a semi-oval staircase added. A new, plainer magazine was added at the centre of the yard by the same architects in 1876. Prior to this, in 1860, a new `Proof Hole', or testing house, of four bays had been built to designs of Charles Edge. The entrance range to the forecourt was added by Jethro Cossins in 1883, including an archway which was raised in height in 1970. A bomb fell in the yard in 1940 and caused the destruction of one bay of the 1860 Proof Hole and the associated range of loading rooms along the south wall.

SOURCES
Andy Foster, Pevsner Architectural Guide, Birmingham (2005), 187-9; The Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House, Services and Facilities.

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The Gun Barrel Proof House is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:
* The original range of buildings designed by John Horton and built in 1813 has distinct architectural quality and includes an impressive gateway and board room.
* The large Proof Hole of 1860 by Charles Edge suffered some damage in the Second World War but despite this is a remarkably intact example of its type with a large number of original fittings.
* The buildings were designed as an obvious, public expression of one of Birmingham's foremost industries which was pre-eminent in England throughout the C19, and the pride which it took in its reputation.
* The full complex of buildings, including proof rooms, loading rooms, inspection rooms and magazine provides a clear indication of the functioning of the Proof House.

Gun Barrel Proof House - Heritage Gateway

Coat of arms from outside on Banbury Street. The moto is Cavendo Tutus. It is in Latin - translated into English it means "safety through caution"

Gate below.


Gun Barrel Proof House, Banbury Street, Digbeth - in the court yard
exterior house design ideas
Image by ell brown
I'd previously been at the other end of Banbury Street earlier in the year when I took shots of the former Eagle & Tun pub. I had no idea back then that a Grade II* listed building was at the end of the road.

I checked beforehand on Heritage Gateway for any Grade II* listed buildings in Digbeth and the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House came up.

For a Sunday morning there was no one here, might also be due to it's location, other side of the railway line.

Quite regularly down here I head trains passing by loudly.

Obviously this place was built before the railway line existed (but probably after the local canal was built).

Near here is Proof House Junction (on both the railway line and canal).

Here it is, at the end of Banbury Street.

Gun Barrel Proof House is Grade II* listed.

A gun barrel proof (testing) house commissioned by the Guardians of the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House from John Horton and opened in 1813. The building was added to by Charles Edge in 1860, Bateman and Corser in 1868-70 and again in 1876, and by Jethro Cossins in 1883.
MATERIALS: The building is of red brick laid in a variety of bonds with painted stone and terracotta dressings and a slate and plain tiled roof.
PLAN: The original building of 1813 has two storeys and a basement and lies to north of the site. To its north is an entrance forecourt which has a gate screen and two-storey lodge to the west. At south is a yard which contains the single-storey proof rooms and magazine and loading rooms.
The buildings all abut each other or are joined by covered walkways, but they are described here separately for clarity.
THE ENTRANCE RANGE FROM BANBURY STREET of 1883 has a central round arch set in a shaped gable. This was raised in 1970 to accommodate larger vehicles. At either side are shaped gables, that at left belonging to the gate lodge. The diapered brick work has moulded brick dressings and there is a stone tympanum to the central arch which shows the coat of arms set in a cartouche. The south flank of the entrance lodge is of three bays, with a central two-storey porch with shaped gable.
THE PROOF HOUSE RANGE OF 1813 is joined to the entrance range and the furthest right hand bay of its north face is masked by the block to south of the arch. EXTERIOR: The 1813 front has ten bays and is of Flemish bond brick. To near-centre is the principal door, which was formerly a throughway. This has a frontispiece which has a basket arch with Tuscan pillars to either side and an entablature with blocking course. Projecting from the blocking course is a tablet supported on brackets which reads `ESTABLISHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT / FOR PUBLIC SECURITY, ANNO DOM : 1813.' Above this is a broad, shallow niche which contains an elaborate trophy of arms (attributed to William Hollins) and to the top is a segmental pediment with a circular clock face. To either side of this feature are rainwater pipes with hoppers which each have the date `1813'. To left of this are five bays, and to right are four bays, of a former eleven-bay composition. Both floors have painted stone surrounds to the windows with brackets supporting segmental pediments. Between the first and second bays at left is the Guardians' entrance which leads up to the Board Room at first floor level. This has a six-panelled door with fanlight and Tuscan doorcase with open, segmental pediment. Until 1868 there was a matching doorway at right of centre which gave access to two houses of proof house officials. The south face of this range, which fronts the yard has numerous additions. On line with the pedimented centrepiece on the north front is a single-storey, canted bay lighting the office of the Proof Master. Above is a staircase window and above that a circular clockface set in a pedimental gable. To either side at ground floor level are single-storey additions of later-C19 date which accommodate the enlarged receiving and testing rooms. These have lean-to roofs with rooflights. The first floor sash windows are all of four lights with segment heads. Extending from the right side across the yard is a covered walkway with iron columns and open sides and a pitched roof. Plans show that this existed by 1833. A wing projects at far right and this connects to the Proof Hole.
INTERIOR: The Guardians' entrance hall has a ceiling rose and an open-well staircase with wrought iron balustrade and wooden handrail. Some cornicing survives to the Receiving Room, which was formerly housing for staff of the Proof House. The first floor board room survives largely intact and has cornicing and carved wood surrounds to the doors and windows which have reeding and patera. There are paired doors to the east and west end walls and a fireplace to the south wall with a marble surround The adjacent Museum Room,which was perhaps formerly the Proof Master's Office, has similarly moulded surrounds and a large two-door wall safe.
THE PROOF HOLE OF 1860 is in a Round-arched style and of orange bricks laid in English bond, with blue brick dressings. A bomb blast in 1940 caused the demolition of the southernmost of the original four bays.
EXTERIOR: The western, yard, front has three bays with round arched openings to the lower body, all fitted with heavy metal shutters with louvred panels, above which are small oculi. The roof consists of a louvred arrangements of timbers to allow smoke to escape. The east front of the Proof Hole is blank. Close to it and flanking the canal wharf is a further, smaller, proof house with similar brickwork which is used to retry those barrels which have failed to discharge in the Proof Hole. This has a deeply splayed door surround to the south front and metal bosses to re-enforce the walls. Joined to it at its north end, and also flanking the canal wharf, is a two-storey building which has lavatories below a late-C19 magazine, which is now disused.
INTERIOR: The lower walls are lined with thick plates of iron which are heavily scarred and there are iron screens at both ends of the room. Two raised brick platforms face each other across the width of the room. That to the west side has a stone surface, grooved to hold gun barrels, which are held in place by piled sand and fired in sequence by a fuse. On the opposite side the surface is covered with piled sand to absorb the shot. The roof has a curved metal canopy to the centre to deflect shot. Above this, the roof structure is louvred to allow smoke to escape. The three arched openings in the west wall have thick iron shutters and louvres which are worked by heavy metal crank arms.
PROOF HOUSE RANGE: A further range of smaller testing rooms lies along the south side of the yard.
EXTERIOR: The range has a series of four cambered doorways with blue brick dressings and metal re-enforcement. To the south-west corner is a larger room which was also used as a proof hole for multiple firings. It has blank walling to all sides, a deeply chamfered door surround to the west face and a renewed roof. To the west side of the yard is the washing-out room for cleaning the barrels after firing which has a canted bay to the yard front and was formerly a loading room with Priming and Ramming rooms off.
INTERIOR: The series of proof rooms each consists of two chambers; an outer room in which the rifle is placed in a metal box and directed through the dividing wall to the second room which contains a sand bank. Both chambers have solid brick walls and there is thick metal cladding to the lower walls of the second rooms. Some of the dividing walls between the rooms have been removed.
THE MAGAZINE BUILDING at the centre of the yard has plain brick walling of English bond to three sides and a half-glazed door to the west gable end. Plans show the building to have an outer and inner room.
The C20 buildings to the north side of the entrance forecourt are excluded from this designation.

HISTORY: The Gun Barrel Proof House was set up as a statutory institution by an Act of Parliament of 1813 to test barrels and completed guns. The Act was requested and obtained by the Birmingham trade and the Proof House was run at its own expense. It was, and still is, governed by a Board of Guardians composed of Master Gunmakers, magistrates and councillors and run by a Proof Master. Gun barrels and complete guns are tested by inspection and are fired to ensure their soundness and marked with a die stamp if they are passed. The original building of 1813-14 was designed by John Horton of Bradford Street, Deritend. A watercolour drawing of this time shows the original treatment of the north-facing, entrance front, which had a Tuscan throughway, which led to the yard behind. To the east of this were five bays and to the west were four. At the centre of the rear yard and on line with the central arch was the original magazine, which was treated as a classical kiosk. The survey plan of 1833 by Henry Jacob shows that the four bays at west belonged to two houses for officials of the Proof House, entered from a passageway common to both. These were altered in 1868-70 by Bateman and Corser and converted into workshops and at the same time the facade was altered to make it more symmetrical with five bays to the west side of the arch. Also at this same time the throughway appears to have been filled in and a semi-oval staircase added. A new, plainer magazine was added at the centre of the yard by the same architects in 1876. Prior to this, in 1860, a new `Proof Hole', or testing house, of four bays had been built to designs of Charles Edge. The entrance range to the forecourt was added by Jethro Cossins in 1883, including an archway which was raised in height in 1970. A bomb fell in the yard in 1940 and caused the destruction of one bay of the 1860 Proof Hole and the associated range of loading rooms along the south wall.

SOURCES
Andy Foster, Pevsner Architectural Guide, Birmingham (2005), 187-9; The Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House, Services and Facilities.

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The Gun Barrel Proof House is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:
* The original range of buildings designed by John Horton and built in 1813 has distinct architectural quality and includes an impressive gateway and board room.
* The large Proof Hole of 1860 by Charles Edge suffered some damage in the Second World War but despite this is a remarkably intact example of its type with a large number of original fittings.
* The buildings were designed as an obvious, public expression of one of Birmingham's foremost industries which was pre-eminent in England throughout the C19, and the pride which it took in its reputation.
* The full complex of buildings, including proof rooms, loading rooms, inspection rooms and magazine provides a clear indication of the functioning of the Proof House.

Gun Barrel Proof House - Heritage Gateway

In the courtyard - taken through the gate. Warning sign - Noise Hazard when light flashing.


Gun Barrel Proof House, Banbury Street, Digbeth - 10 mph sign
exterior house design ideas
Image by ell brown
I'd previously been at the other end of Banbury Street earlier in the year when I took shots of the former Eagle & Tun pub. I had no idea back then that a Grade II* listed building was at the end of the road.

I checked beforehand on Heritage Gateway for any Grade II* listed buildings in Digbeth and the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House came up.

For a Sunday morning there was no one here, might also be due to it's location, other side of the railway line.

Quite regularly down here I head trains passing by loudly.

Obviously this place was built before the railway line existed (but probably after the local canal was built).

Near here is Proof House Junction (on both the railway line and canal).

Here it is, at the end of Banbury Street.

Gun Barrel Proof House is Grade II* listed.

A gun barrel proof (testing) house commissioned by the Guardians of the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House from John Horton and opened in 1813. The building was added to by Charles Edge in 1860, Bateman and Corser in 1868-70 and again in 1876, and by Jethro Cossins in 1883.
MATERIALS: The building is of red brick laid in a variety of bonds with painted stone and terracotta dressings and a slate and plain tiled roof.
PLAN: The original building of 1813 has two storeys and a basement and lies to north of the site. To its north is an entrance forecourt which has a gate screen and two-storey lodge to the west. At south is a yard which contains the single-storey proof rooms and magazine and loading rooms.
The buildings all abut each other or are joined by covered walkways, but they are described here separately for clarity.
THE ENTRANCE RANGE FROM BANBURY STREET of 1883 has a central round arch set in a shaped gable. This was raised in 1970 to accommodate larger vehicles. At either side are shaped gables, that at left belonging to the gate lodge. The diapered brick work has moulded brick dressings and there is a stone tympanum to the central arch which shows the coat of arms set in a cartouche. The south flank of the entrance lodge is of three bays, with a central two-storey porch with shaped gable.
THE PROOF HOUSE RANGE OF 1813 is joined to the entrance range and the furthest right hand bay of its north face is masked by the block to south of the arch. EXTERIOR: The 1813 front has ten bays and is of Flemish bond brick. To near-centre is the principal door, which was formerly a throughway. This has a frontispiece which has a basket arch with Tuscan pillars to either side and an entablature with blocking course. Projecting from the blocking course is a tablet supported on brackets which reads `ESTABLISHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT / FOR PUBLIC SECURITY, ANNO DOM : 1813.' Above this is a broad, shallow niche which contains an elaborate trophy of arms (attributed to William Hollins) and to the top is a segmental pediment with a circular clock face. To either side of this feature are rainwater pipes with hoppers which each have the date `1813'. To left of this are five bays, and to right are four bays, of a former eleven-bay composition. Both floors have painted stone surrounds to the windows with brackets supporting segmental pediments. Between the first and second bays at left is the Guardians' entrance which leads up to the Board Room at first floor level. This has a six-panelled door with fanlight and Tuscan doorcase with open, segmental pediment. Until 1868 there was a matching doorway at right of centre which gave access to two houses of proof house officials. The south face of this range, which fronts the yard has numerous additions. On line with the pedimented centrepiece on the north front is a single-storey, canted bay lighting the office of the Proof Master. Above is a staircase window and above that a circular clockface set in a pedimental gable. To either side at ground floor level are single-storey additions of later-C19 date which accommodate the enlarged receiving and testing rooms. These have lean-to roofs with rooflights. The first floor sash windows are all of four lights with segment heads. Extending from the right side across the yard is a covered walkway with iron columns and open sides and a pitched roof. Plans show that this existed by 1833. A wing projects at far right and this connects to the Proof Hole.
INTERIOR: The Guardians' entrance hall has a ceiling rose and an open-well staircase with wrought iron balustrade and wooden handrail. Some cornicing survives to the Receiving Room, which was formerly housing for staff of the Proof House. The first floor board room survives largely intact and has cornicing and carved wood surrounds to the doors and windows which have reeding and patera. There are paired doors to the east and west end walls and a fireplace to the south wall with a marble surround The adjacent Museum Room,which was perhaps formerly the Proof Master's Office, has similarly moulded surrounds and a large two-door wall safe.
THE PROOF HOLE OF 1860 is in a Round-arched style and of orange bricks laid in English bond, with blue brick dressings. A bomb blast in 1940 caused the demolition of the southernmost of the original four bays.
EXTERIOR: The western, yard, front has three bays with round arched openings to the lower body, all fitted with heavy metal shutters with louvred panels, above which are small oculi. The roof consists of a louvred arrangements of timbers to allow smoke to escape. The east front of the Proof Hole is blank. Close to it and flanking the canal wharf is a further, smaller, proof house with similar brickwork which is used to retry those barrels which have failed to discharge in the Proof Hole. This has a deeply splayed door surround to the south front and metal bosses to re-enforce the walls. Joined to it at its north end, and also flanking the canal wharf, is a two-storey building which has lavatories below a late-C19 magazine, which is now disused.
INTERIOR: The lower walls are lined with thick plates of iron which are heavily scarred and there are iron screens at both ends of the room. Two raised brick platforms face each other across the width of the room. That to the west side has a stone surface, grooved to hold gun barrels, which are held in place by piled sand and fired in sequence by a fuse. On the opposite side the surface is covered with piled sand to absorb the shot. The roof has a curved metal canopy to the centre to deflect shot. Above this, the roof structure is louvred to allow smoke to escape. The three arched openings in the west wall have thick iron shutters and louvres which are worked by heavy metal crank arms.
PROOF HOUSE RANGE: A further range of smaller testing rooms lies along the south side of the yard.
EXTERIOR: The range has a series of four cambered doorways with blue brick dressings and metal re-enforcement. To the south-west corner is a larger room which was also used as a proof hole for multiple firings. It has blank walling to all sides, a deeply chamfered door surround to the west face and a renewed roof. To the west side of the yard is the washing-out room for cleaning the barrels after firing which has a canted bay to the yard front and was formerly a loading room with Priming and Ramming rooms off.
INTERIOR: The series of proof rooms each consists of two chambers; an outer room in which the rifle is placed in a metal box and directed through the dividing wall to the second room which contains a sand bank. Both chambers have solid brick walls and there is thick metal cladding to the lower walls of the second rooms. Some of the dividing walls between the rooms have been removed.
THE MAGAZINE BUILDING at the centre of the yard has plain brick walling of English bond to three sides and a half-glazed door to the west gable end. Plans show the building to have an outer and inner room.
The C20 buildings to the north side of the entrance forecourt are excluded from this designation.

HISTORY: The Gun Barrel Proof House was set up as a statutory institution by an Act of Parliament of 1813 to test barrels and completed guns. The Act was requested and obtained by the Birmingham trade and the Proof House was run at its own expense. It was, and still is, governed by a Board of Guardians composed of Master Gunmakers, magistrates and councillors and run by a Proof Master. Gun barrels and complete guns are tested by inspection and are fired to ensure their soundness and marked with a die stamp if they are passed. The original building of 1813-14 was designed by John Horton of Bradford Street, Deritend. A watercolour drawing of this time shows the original treatment of the north-facing, entrance front, which had a Tuscan throughway, which led to the yard behind. To the east of this were five bays and to the west were four. At the centre of the rear yard and on line with the central arch was the original magazine, which was treated as a classical kiosk. The survey plan of 1833 by Henry Jacob shows that the four bays at west belonged to two houses for officials of the Proof House, entered from a passageway common to both. These were altered in 1868-70 by Bateman and Corser and converted into workshops and at the same time the facade was altered to make it more symmetrical with five bays to the west side of the arch. Also at this same time the throughway appears to have been filled in and a semi-oval staircase added. A new, plainer magazine was added at the centre of the yard by the same architects in 1876. Prior to this, in 1860, a new `Proof Hole', or testing house, of four bays had been built to designs of Charles Edge. The entrance range to the forecourt was added by Jethro Cossins in 1883, including an archway which was raised in height in 1970. A bomb fell in the yard in 1940 and caused the destruction of one bay of the 1860 Proof Hole and the associated range of loading rooms along the south wall.

SOURCES
Andy Foster, Pevsner Architectural Guide, Birmingham (2005), 187-9; The Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House, Services and Facilities.

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The Gun Barrel Proof House is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:
* The original range of buildings designed by John Horton and built in 1813 has distinct architectural quality and includes an impressive gateway and board room.
* The large Proof Hole of 1860 by Charles Edge suffered some damage in the Second World War but despite this is a remarkably intact example of its type with a large number of original fittings.
* The buildings were designed as an obvious, public expression of one of Birmingham's foremost industries which was pre-eminent in England throughout the C19, and the pride which it took in its reputation.
* The full complex of buildings, including proof rooms, loading rooms, inspection rooms and magazine provides a clear indication of the functioning of the Proof House.

Gun Barrel Proof House - Heritage Gateway

A 10 mph sign on the left.


Gun Barrel Proof House, Banbury Street, Digbeth - CCTV camera
exterior house design ideas
Image by ell brown
I'd previously been at the other end of Banbury Street earlier in the year when I took shots of the former Eagle & Tun pub. I had no idea back then that a Grade II* listed building was at the end of the road.

I checked beforehand on Heritage Gateway for any Grade II* listed buildings in Digbeth and the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House came up.

For a Sunday morning there was no one here, might also be due to it's location, other side of the railway line.

Quite regularly down here I head trains passing by loudly.

Obviously this place was built before the railway line existed (but probably after the local canal was built).

Near here is Proof House Junction (on both the railway line and canal).

Here it is, at the end of Banbury Street.

Gun Barrel Proof House is Grade II* listed.

A gun barrel proof (testing) house commissioned by the Guardians of the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House from John Horton and opened in 1813. The building was added to by Charles Edge in 1860, Bateman and Corser in 1868-70 and again in 1876, and by Jethro Cossins in 1883.
MATERIALS: The building is of red brick laid in a variety of bonds with painted stone and terracotta dressings and a slate and plain tiled roof.
PLAN: The original building of 1813 has two storeys and a basement and lies to north of the site. To its north is an entrance forecourt which has a gate screen and two-storey lodge to the west. At south is a yard which contains the single-storey proof rooms and magazine and loading rooms.
The buildings all abut each other or are joined by covered walkways, but they are described here separately for clarity.
THE ENTRANCE RANGE FROM BANBURY STREET of 1883 has a central round arch set in a shaped gable. This was raised in 1970 to accommodate larger vehicles. At either side are shaped gables, that at left belonging to the gate lodge. The diapered brick work has moulded brick dressings and there is a stone tympanum to the central arch which shows the coat of arms set in a cartouche. The south flank of the entrance lodge is of three bays, with a central two-storey porch with shaped gable.
THE PROOF HOUSE RANGE OF 1813 is joined to the entrance range and the furthest right hand bay of its north face is masked by the block to south of the arch. EXTERIOR: The 1813 front has ten bays and is of Flemish bond brick. To near-centre is the principal door, which was formerly a throughway. This has a frontispiece which has a basket arch with Tuscan pillars to either side and an entablature with blocking course. Projecting from the blocking course is a tablet supported on brackets which reads `ESTABLISHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT / FOR PUBLIC SECURITY, ANNO DOM : 1813.' Above this is a broad, shallow niche which contains an elaborate trophy of arms (attributed to William Hollins) and to the top is a segmental pediment with a circular clock face. To either side of this feature are rainwater pipes with hoppers which each have the date `1813'. To left of this are five bays, and to right are four bays, of a former eleven-bay composition. Both floors have painted stone surrounds to the windows with brackets supporting segmental pediments. Between the first and second bays at left is the Guardians' entrance which leads up to the Board Room at first floor level. This has a six-panelled door with fanlight and Tuscan doorcase with open, segmental pediment. Until 1868 there was a matching doorway at right of centre which gave access to two houses of proof house officials. The south face of this range, which fronts the yard has numerous additions. On line with the pedimented centrepiece on the north front is a single-storey, canted bay lighting the office of the Proof Master. Above is a staircase window and above that a circular clockface set in a pedimental gable. To either side at ground floor level are single-storey additions of later-C19 date which accommodate the enlarged receiving and testing rooms. These have lean-to roofs with rooflights. The first floor sash windows are all of four lights with segment heads. Extending from the right side across the yard is a covered walkway with iron columns and open sides and a pitched roof. Plans show that this existed by 1833. A wing projects at far right and this connects to the Proof Hole.
INTERIOR: The Guardians' entrance hall has a ceiling rose and an open-well staircase with wrought iron balustrade and wooden handrail. Some cornicing survives to the Receiving Room, which was formerly housing for staff of the Proof House. The first floor board room survives largely intact and has cornicing and carved wood surrounds to the doors and windows which have reeding and patera. There are paired doors to the east and west end walls and a fireplace to the south wall with a marble surround The adjacent Museum Room,which was perhaps formerly the Proof Master's Office, has similarly moulded surrounds and a large two-door wall safe.
THE PROOF HOLE OF 1860 is in a Round-arched style and of orange bricks laid in English bond, with blue brick dressings. A bomb blast in 1940 caused the demolition of the southernmost of the original four bays.
EXTERIOR: The western, yard, front has three bays with round arched openings to the lower body, all fitted with heavy metal shutters with louvred panels, above which are small oculi. The roof consists of a louvred arrangements of timbers to allow smoke to escape. The east front of the Proof Hole is blank. Close to it and flanking the canal wharf is a further, smaller, proof house with similar brickwork which is used to retry those barrels which have failed to discharge in the Proof Hole. This has a deeply splayed door surround to the south front and metal bosses to re-enforce the walls. Joined to it at its north end, and also flanking the canal wharf, is a two-storey building which has lavatories below a late-C19 magazine, which is now disused.
INTERIOR: The lower walls are lined with thick plates of iron which are heavily scarred and there are iron screens at both ends of the room. Two raised brick platforms face each other across the width of the room. That to the west side has a stone surface, grooved to hold gun barrels, which are held in place by piled sand and fired in sequence by a fuse. On the opposite side the surface is covered with piled sand to absorb the shot. The roof has a curved metal canopy to the centre to deflect shot. Above this, the roof structure is louvred to allow smoke to escape. The three arched openings in the west wall have thick iron shutters and louvres which are worked by heavy metal crank arms.
PROOF HOUSE RANGE: A further range of smaller testing rooms lies along the south side of the yard.
EXTERIOR: The range has a series of four cambered doorways with blue brick dressings and metal re-enforcement. To the south-west corner is a larger room which was also used as a proof hole for multiple firings. It has blank walling to all sides, a deeply chamfered door surround to the west face and a renewed roof. To the west side of the yard is the washing-out room for cleaning the barrels after firing which has a canted bay to the yard front and was formerly a loading room with Priming and Ramming rooms off.
INTERIOR: The series of proof rooms each consists of two chambers; an outer room in which the rifle is placed in a metal box and directed through the dividing wall to the second room which contains a sand bank. Both chambers have solid brick walls and there is thick metal cladding to the lower walls of the second rooms. Some of the dividing walls between the rooms have been removed.
THE MAGAZINE BUILDING at the centre of the yard has plain brick walling of English bond to three sides and a half-glazed door to the west gable end. Plans show the building to have an outer and inner room.
The C20 buildings to the north side of the entrance forecourt are excluded from this designation.

HISTORY: The Gun Barrel Proof House was set up as a statutory institution by an Act of Parliament of 1813 to test barrels and completed guns. The Act was requested and obtained by the Birmingham trade and the Proof House was run at its own expense. It was, and still is, governed by a Board of Guardians composed of Master Gunmakers, magistrates and councillors and run by a Proof Master. Gun barrels and complete guns are tested by inspection and are fired to ensure their soundness and marked with a die stamp if they are passed. The original building of 1813-14 was designed by John Horton of Bradford Street, Deritend. A watercolour drawing of this time shows the original treatment of the north-facing, entrance front, which had a Tuscan throughway, which led to the yard behind. To the east of this were five bays and to the west were four. At the centre of the rear yard and on line with the central arch was the original magazine, which was treated as a classical kiosk. The survey plan of 1833 by Henry Jacob shows that the four bays at west belonged to two houses for officials of the Proof House, entered from a passageway common to both. These were altered in 1868-70 by Bateman and Corser and converted into workshops and at the same time the facade was altered to make it more symmetrical with five bays to the west side of the arch. Also at this same time the throughway appears to have been filled in and a semi-oval staircase added. A new, plainer magazine was added at the centre of the yard by the same architects in 1876. Prior to this, in 1860, a new `Proof Hole', or testing house, of four bays had been built to designs of Charles Edge. The entrance range to the forecourt was added by Jethro Cossins in 1883, including an archway which was raised in height in 1970. A bomb fell in the yard in 1940 and caused the destruction of one bay of the 1860 Proof Hole and the associated range of loading rooms along the south wall.

SOURCES
Andy Foster, Pevsner Architectural Guide, Birmingham (2005), 187-9; The Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House, Services and Facilities.

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The Gun Barrel Proof House is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:
* The original range of buildings designed by John Horton and built in 1813 has distinct architectural quality and includes an impressive gateway and board room.
* The large Proof Hole of 1860 by Charles Edge suffered some damage in the Second World War but despite this is a remarkably intact example of its type with a large number of original fittings.
* The buildings were designed as an obvious, public expression of one of Birmingham's foremost industries which was pre-eminent in England throughout the C19, and the pride which it took in its reputation.
* The full complex of buildings, including proof rooms, loading rooms, inspection rooms and magazine provides a clear indication of the functioning of the Proof House.

Gun Barrel Proof House - Heritage Gateway

A CCTV camera on the building. You are being watched.


Gun Barrel Proof House, Banbury Street, Digbeth - Coat of arms
exterior house design ideas
Image by ell brown
I'd previously been at the other end of Banbury Street earlier in the year when I took shots of the former Eagle & Tun pub. I had no idea back then that a Grade II* listed building was at the end of the road.

I checked beforehand on Heritage Gateway for any Grade II* listed buildings in Digbeth and the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House came up.

For a Sunday morning there was no one here, might also be due to it's location, other side of the railway line.

Quite regularly down here I head trains passing by loudly.

Obviously this place was built before the railway line existed (but probably after the local canal was built).

Near here is Proof House Junction (on both the railway line and canal).

Here it is, at the end of Banbury Street.

Gun Barrel Proof House is Grade II* listed.

A gun barrel proof (testing) house commissioned by the Guardians of the Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House from John Horton and opened in 1813. The building was added to by Charles Edge in 1860, Bateman and Corser in 1868-70 and again in 1876, and by Jethro Cossins in 1883.
MATERIALS: The building is of red brick laid in a variety of bonds with painted stone and terracotta dressings and a slate and plain tiled roof.
PLAN: The original building of 1813 has two storeys and a basement and lies to north of the site. To its north is an entrance forecourt which has a gate screen and two-storey lodge to the west. At south is a yard which contains the single-storey proof rooms and magazine and loading rooms.
The buildings all abut each other or are joined by covered walkways, but they are described here separately for clarity.
THE ENTRANCE RANGE FROM BANBURY STREET of 1883 has a central round arch set in a shaped gable. This was raised in 1970 to accommodate larger vehicles. At either side are shaped gables, that at left belonging to the gate lodge. The diapered brick work has moulded brick dressings and there is a stone tympanum to the central arch which shows the coat of arms set in a cartouche. The south flank of the entrance lodge is of three bays, with a central two-storey porch with shaped gable.
THE PROOF HOUSE RANGE OF 1813 is joined to the entrance range and the furthest right hand bay of its north face is masked by the block to south of the arch. EXTERIOR: The 1813 front has ten bays and is of Flemish bond brick. To near-centre is the principal door, which was formerly a throughway. This has a frontispiece which has a basket arch with Tuscan pillars to either side and an entablature with blocking course. Projecting from the blocking course is a tablet supported on brackets which reads `ESTABLISHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT / FOR PUBLIC SECURITY, ANNO DOM : 1813.' Above this is a broad, shallow niche which contains an elaborate trophy of arms (attributed to William Hollins) and to the top is a segmental pediment with a circular clock face. To either side of this feature are rainwater pipes with hoppers which each have the date `1813'. To left of this are five bays, and to right are four bays, of a former eleven-bay composition. Both floors have painted stone surrounds to the windows with brackets supporting segmental pediments. Between the first and second bays at left is the Guardians' entrance which leads up to the Board Room at first floor level. This has a six-panelled door with fanlight and Tuscan doorcase with open, segmental pediment. Until 1868 there was a matching doorway at right of centre which gave access to two houses of proof house officials. The south face of this range, which fronts the yard has numerous additions. On line with the pedimented centrepiece on the north front is a single-storey, canted bay lighting the office of the Proof Master. Above is a staircase window and above that a circular clockface set in a pedimental gable. To either side at ground floor level are single-storey additions of later-C19 date which accommodate the enlarged receiving and testing rooms. These have lean-to roofs with rooflights. The first floor sash windows are all of four lights with segment heads. Extending from the right side across the yard is a covered walkway with iron columns and open sides and a pitched roof. Plans show that this existed by 1833. A wing projects at far right and this connects to the Proof Hole.
INTERIOR: The Guardians' entrance hall has a ceiling rose and an open-well staircase with wrought iron balustrade and wooden handrail. Some cornicing survives to the Receiving Room, which was formerly housing for staff of the Proof House. The first floor board room survives largely intact and has cornicing and carved wood surrounds to the doors and windows which have reeding and patera. There are paired doors to the east and west end walls and a fireplace to the south wall with a marble surround The adjacent Museum Room,which was perhaps formerly the Proof Master's Office, has similarly moulded surrounds and a large two-door wall safe.
THE PROOF HOLE OF 1860 is in a Round-arched style and of orange bricks laid in English bond, with blue brick dressings. A bomb blast in 1940 caused the demolition of the southernmost of the original four bays.
EXTERIOR: The western, yard, front has three bays with round arched openings to the lower body, all fitted with heavy metal shutters with louvred panels, above which are small oculi. The roof consists of a louvred arrangements of timbers to allow smoke to escape. The east front of the Proof Hole is blank. Close to it and flanking the canal wharf is a further, smaller, proof house with similar brickwork which is used to retry those barrels which have failed to discharge in the Proof Hole. This has a deeply splayed door surround to the south front and metal bosses to re-enforce the walls. Joined to it at its north end, and also flanking the canal wharf, is a two-storey building which has lavatories below a late-C19 magazine, which is now disused.
INTERIOR: The lower walls are lined with thick plates of iron which are heavily scarred and there are iron screens at both ends of the room. Two raised brick platforms face each other across the width of the room. That to the west side has a stone surface, grooved to hold gun barrels, which are held in place by piled sand and fired in sequence by a fuse. On the opposite side the surface is covered with piled sand to absorb the shot. The roof has a curved metal canopy to the centre to deflect shot. Above this, the roof structure is louvred to allow smoke to escape. The three arched openings in the west wall have thick iron shutters and louvres which are worked by heavy metal crank arms.
PROOF HOUSE RANGE: A further range of smaller testing rooms lies along the south side of the yard.
EXTERIOR: The range has a series of four cambered doorways with blue brick dressings and metal re-enforcement. To the south-west corner is a larger room which was also used as a proof hole for multiple firings. It has blank walling to all sides, a deeply chamfered door surround to the west face and a renewed roof. To the west side of the yard is the washing-out room for cleaning the barrels after firing which has a canted bay to the yard front and was formerly a loading room with Priming and Ramming rooms off.
INTERIOR: The series of proof rooms each consists of two chambers; an outer room in which the rifle is placed in a metal box and directed through the dividing wall to the second room which contains a sand bank. Both chambers have solid brick walls and there is thick metal cladding to the lower walls of the second rooms. Some of the dividing walls between the rooms have been removed.
THE MAGAZINE BUILDING at the centre of the yard has plain brick walling of English bond to three sides and a half-glazed door to the west gable end. Plans show the building to have an outer and inner room.
The C20 buildings to the north side of the entrance forecourt are excluded from this designation.

HISTORY: The Gun Barrel Proof House was set up as a statutory institution by an Act of Parliament of 1813 to test barrels and completed guns. The Act was requested and obtained by the Birmingham trade and the Proof House was run at its own expense. It was, and still is, governed by a Board of Guardians composed of Master Gunmakers, magistrates and councillors and run by a Proof Master. Gun barrels and complete guns are tested by inspection and are fired to ensure their soundness and marked with a die stamp if they are passed. The original building of 1813-14 was designed by John Horton of Bradford Street, Deritend. A watercolour drawing of this time shows the original treatment of the north-facing, entrance front, which had a Tuscan throughway, which led to the yard behind. To the east of this were five bays and to the west were four. At the centre of the rear yard and on line with the central arch was the original magazine, which was treated as a classical kiosk. The survey plan of 1833 by Henry Jacob shows that the four bays at west belonged to two houses for officials of the Proof House, entered from a passageway common to both. These were altered in 1868-70 by Bateman and Corser and converted into workshops and at the same time the facade was altered to make it more symmetrical with five bays to the west side of the arch. Also at this same time the throughway appears to have been filled in and a semi-oval staircase added. A new, plainer magazine was added at the centre of the yard by the same architects in 1876. Prior to this, in 1860, a new `Proof Hole', or testing house, of four bays had been built to designs of Charles Edge. The entrance range to the forecourt was added by Jethro Cossins in 1883, including an archway which was raised in height in 1970. A bomb fell in the yard in 1940 and caused the destruction of one bay of the 1860 Proof Hole and the associated range of loading rooms along the south wall.

SOURCES
Andy Foster, Pevsner Architectural Guide, Birmingham (2005), 187-9; The Birmingham Gun Barrel Proof House, Services and Facilities.

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The Gun Barrel Proof House is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:
* The original range of buildings designed by John Horton and built in 1813 has distinct architectural quality and includes an impressive gateway and board room.
* The large Proof Hole of 1860 by Charles Edge suffered some damage in the Second World War but despite this is a remarkably intact example of its type with a large number of original fittings.
* The buildings were designed as an obvious, public expression of one of Birmingham's foremost industries which was pre-eminent in England throughout the C19, and the pride which it took in its reputation.
* The full complex of buildings, including proof rooms, loading rooms, inspection rooms and magazine provides a clear indication of the functioning of the Proof House.

Gun Barrel Proof House - Heritage Gateway

Coat of arms - taken through the gate as it was locked. Never-the-less got good shots of it from here.

Block B - Bletchley Park - The Bletchley Park Story - path

Block B - Bletchley Park - The Bletchley Park Story - path
design your house exterior
Image by ell brown
These are the Blocks at Bletchley Park - the exteriors.

This is Block B. It is where you pay for your tickets, get your season pass, and can see The Bletchley Park Story. Exhibits inside.

Block B is Grade II listed.

Block B. 1942 by HM Office of Works, adapted in consultation with GCCS from a MOW Temporary Office Design.
MATERIALS: steel frame with pre-cast concrete floors and roofs. Painted Fletton brick walls, metal windows.
PLAN: attached to Block A to west. Dog-leg plan, with spurs to south, east of the
main entrance, and to the north.
EXTERIOR: two storeys and basement, with higher entrance block at west end; tall
boiler house chimney within east range. Entrance with fluted pilasters and upswept
canopy. Plain brick exteriors with regular fenestration, mainly consisting of
rectangular 12-pane metal casement windows; those along the south end of the southern spur have been altered through the later insertion of taller openings. Concrete bands at first floor and roof levels. Later single storey timber-clad extension to north of no interest.

Block B, Bletchley Park - Heritage Gateway

Path to the entrance to Block B.


Block B - Bletchley Park - The Bletchley Park Story - aerial
design your house exterior
Image by ell brown
These are the Blocks at Bletchley Park - the exteriors.

This is Block B. It is where you pay for your tickets, get your season pass, and can see The Bletchley Park Story. Exhibits inside.

Block B is Grade II listed.

Block B. 1942 by HM Office of Works, adapted in consultation with GCCS from a MOW Temporary Office Design.
MATERIALS: steel frame with pre-cast concrete floors and roofs. Painted Fletton brick walls, metal windows.
PLAN: attached to Block A to west. Dog-leg plan, with spurs to south, east of the
main entrance, and to the north.
EXTERIOR: two storeys and basement, with higher entrance block at west end; tall
boiler house chimney within east range. Entrance with fluted pilasters and upswept
canopy. Plain brick exteriors with regular fenestration, mainly consisting of
rectangular 12-pane metal casement windows; those along the south end of the southern spur have been altered through the later insertion of taller openings. Concrete bands at first floor and roof levels. Later single storey timber-clad extension to north of no interest.

Block B, Bletchley Park - Heritage Gateway

Aerial above the chimney.


Block B - Bletchley Park - The Bletchley Park Story - sign
design your house exterior
Image by ell brown
These are the Blocks at Bletchley Park - the exteriors.

This is Block B. It is where you pay for your tickets, get your season pass, and can see The Bletchley Park Story. Exhibits inside.

Block B is Grade II listed.

Block B. 1942 by HM Office of Works, adapted in consultation with GCCS from a MOW Temporary Office Design.
MATERIALS: steel frame with pre-cast concrete floors and roofs. Painted Fletton brick walls, metal windows.
PLAN: attached to Block A to west. Dog-leg plan, with spurs to south, east of the
main entrance, and to the north.
EXTERIOR: two storeys and basement, with higher entrance block at west end; tall
boiler house chimney within east range. Entrance with fluted pilasters and upswept
canopy. Plain brick exteriors with regular fenestration, mainly consisting of
rectangular 12-pane metal casement windows; those along the south end of the southern spur have been altered through the later insertion of taller openings. Concrete bands at first floor and roof levels. Later single storey timber-clad extension to north of no interest.

Block B, Bletchley Park - Heritage Gateway

Sign of Block B.


Block B - Bletchley Park - The Bletchley Park Story - chimney
design your house exterior
Image by ell brown
These are the Blocks at Bletchley Park - the exteriors.

This is Block B. It is where you pay for your tickets, get your season pass, and can see The Bletchley Park Story. Exhibits inside.

Block B is Grade II listed.

Block B. 1942 by HM Office of Works, adapted in consultation with GCCS from a MOW Temporary Office Design.
MATERIALS: steel frame with pre-cast concrete floors and roofs. Painted Fletton brick walls, metal windows.
PLAN: attached to Block A to west. Dog-leg plan, with spurs to south, east of the
main entrance, and to the north.
EXTERIOR: two storeys and basement, with higher entrance block at west end; tall
boiler house chimney within east range. Entrance with fluted pilasters and upswept
canopy. Plain brick exteriors with regular fenestration, mainly consisting of
rectangular 12-pane metal casement windows; those along the south end of the southern spur have been altered through the later insertion of taller openings. Concrete bands at first floor and roof levels. Later single storey timber-clad extension to north of no interest.

Block B, Bletchley Park - Heritage Gateway

Chimney on Block B.


Block B - Bletchley Park - The Bletchley Park Story
design your house exterior
Image by ell brown
These are the Blocks at Bletchley Park - the exteriors.

This is Block B. It is where you pay for your tickets, get your season pass, and can see The Bletchley Park Story. Exhibits inside.

Block B is Grade II listed.

Block B. 1942 by HM Office of Works, adapted in consultation with GCCS from a MOW Temporary Office Design.
MATERIALS: steel frame with pre-cast concrete floors and roofs. Painted Fletton brick walls, metal windows.
PLAN: attached to Block A to west. Dog-leg plan, with spurs to south, east of the
main entrance, and to the north.
EXTERIOR: two storeys and basement, with higher entrance block at west end; tall
boiler house chimney within east range. Entrance with fluted pilasters and upswept
canopy. Plain brick exteriors with regular fenestration, mainly consisting of
rectangular 12-pane metal casement windows; those along the south end of the southern spur have been altered through the later insertion of taller openings. Concrete bands at first floor and roof levels. Later single storey timber-clad extension to north of no interest.

Block B, Bletchley Park - Heritage Gateway