Terraced Houses: Difference between revisions

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File:CommercialRoad-Fletcher.JPG|[[Georgian Terraced Houses]] depicted in 'Commercial Road In The Snow' 2003 by Doreen Fletcher
File:CommercialRoad-Fletcher.JPG|[[Georgian Terraced Houses]] depicted in 'Commercial Road In The Snow' 2003 by Doreen Fletcher
File:FifeTerraceIslington-Gentleman.jpeg|Fife Terrace, Islington by David Gentleman. The setting for The Victorian Chaise-Longue by Marghanita Laski (1953).
File:FifeTerraceIslington-Gentleman.jpeg|Fife Terrace, Islington by David Gentleman. The setting for The Victorian Chaise-Longue by Marghanita Laski (1953).
File:GeorgianHousesNW5-SecretArtist.jpg|Georgian Houses is Islington, London by @SecretArtistNW5
File:RhesYCapel-MelvilleJones.JPG|'Rhes Y Capel' by artist Wynne Melville Jones
File:RhesYCapel-MelvilleJones.JPG|'Rhes Y Capel' by artist Wynne Melville Jones
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Revision as of 10:16, 4 February 2018

Terraced Houses Icon
Terraced Houses Icon

Category 3.0 in the Chimni Home Typology From the opening titles of Coronation Street to the Welsh Streets of Liverpool where Ringo Starr was born, the terraced Street is one of the most iconic images of British Housing. For Chimni a 'terraced house' is any home in a group of three or more houses, built in a row, with shared adjoining walls. Known also as ‘townhouses’ or ‘row houses’ this includes a wide range of homes from warmly familiar ‘Coronation Street’ style homes to the grand Georgian terraces gracing many UK cities.

Back up to the Chimni Home Typology

Background On Terraced Houses

In England, the first streets of houses with uniform fronts were built by Nicholas Barbon, the Huguenot entrepreneur during the rebuilding of London after the Great Fire of 1665. The Georgian idea of treating a row of houses as if it were a palace front, giving the central houses columned fronts under a shared pediment, appeared first in London's Grosvenor Square and in Bath's Queen Square. Speculative builders like Thomas Cubitt picked up on the theme and the classic Georgian terraced houses soon became common-place.

In 2005 the English Heritage report "Low Demand Housing and the Historic Environment" found that repairing a standard Victorian terraced house over thirty years is around sixty-percent cheaper than building and maintaining a newly-built house.

Moderrn Terrraced Housing

Notable Examples Of Terraced Houses

Terraced Houses In Art & Media

See Also In Chimni

The Chimni Home Typology

Books We Like

Other Interesting Web Sites

FlickrGroup: Modernist Houses Of The 1930s

www.createstreets.com 'CreateStreets' Campaign for More Terraced Housing

References

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