I was over in Swindon last week for a meeting and had time to do a quick sketch of this structure. It is a water tower at the end of an elegant street of workers houses built by the former Great Western Railway Company. The tower was built in 1870 and provided a high pressure water supply for fire fighting within the adjacent GWR works yard. It was conserved in 2014 and the surrounding saw mills converted to house the University Technical College Swindon. This describes itself as ‘an innovative, employer-focused, high-tech school for students aged from 14 to 19, specialising in engineering'. The structure is quite dramatic- an intrusion of 'steam punk' in an otherwise carefully designed streetscape of Tudor Gothic workers houses to one side and the stone and brick boundary wall of the works on the other. Today, the works are no longer used for repairing and constructing engines and rolling stock and its buildings have largely been converted into residential and office uses. The headquarters of the National Trust and Historic England's Archive are both located within the grounds.
Water Tower Great Western Works, Swindon.
I was over in Swindon last week for a meeting and had time to do a quick sketch of this structure. It is a water tower at the end of an elegant street of workers houses built by the former Great Western Railway Company. The tower was built in 1870 and provided a high pressure water supply for fire fighting within the adjacent GWR works yard. It was conserved in 2014 and the surrounding saw mills converted to house the University Technical College Swindon. This describes itself as ‘an innovative, employer-focused, high-tech school for students aged from 14 to 19, specialising in engineering'. The structure is quite dramatic- an intrusion of 'steam punk' in an otherwise carefully designed streetscape of Tudor Gothic workers houses to one side and the stone and brick boundary wall of the works on the other. Today, the works are no longer used for repairing and constructing engines and rolling stock and its buildings have largely been converted into residential and office uses. The headquarters of the National Trust and Historic England's Archive are both located within the grounds.
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The Ha’penny Bridge, Dublin. A great place to rest if you are a seagull. Otherwise a nice place to walk over the Liffey. Built in 1816 and officially named the Liffey Bridge its more common name refers to the toll required to cross it until 1919. The bridge was manufactured in Coalbrookdale in Shropshire, England, and it was shipped in parts to be assembled in Dublin. It was restored by Harland and Wolff of Belfast in 2001.
Vinegar Hill above Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford. Location of a major battle in the 1798 Rebellion which is well interpreted in an excellent visitor centre in the town. Now a fine viewpoint with the picturesque ruins of a windmill. This mill is depicted intact in drawings of the battle - If stones could speak An afternoon to be inside in a place like this. This is Racy Byrne’s Bar, Carlow town. Tiled floor, timber ceiling, a long bar with plenty of tall stools and with walls full of sporting memorabilia,- full of atmosphere - The footbal match? England v Sweeden in the quarter finals of the World Cup - 7 July 2018. The building? Now a long pub on Tullow Street which appears to have been once two buildings (different heights) with a very long shopfront in a traditional style linking the two. Outside, the shopfront is modern, sash windows have gone and the roof is manmade slate but the inside of the main building retains its period fittings in the main bar area. It is likely that the building dates from the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century.
Lismore Castle Co Waterford, hugely impressive overlooking the River Blackwater. Said to date from the late Twelfth century, the present appearance dates from a comprehensive and picturesque rebuilding between 1811 and 1822.
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November 2024
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