Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Heritage. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Heritage. Mostrar todas las entradas

jueves, 4 de febrero de 2016

Wrest Park

WREST PARK
History Wrest Park:
Wrest Park is an exceptional rarity – a magnificent house of the 1830s set in an outstanding restored garden landscape originating in the 17th century. The house itself is remarkable, a near unique example of 19th-century English architecture following the style of an 18th-century French chateau. Its grounds are a glorious amalgam of three centuries of English garden design, and contain one of the few remaining formal gardens of the early 18th century.
The Long Water, created in the early 1680s, is still the main axis of the gardens at Wrest Park

viernes, 20 de noviembre de 2015

AUDLEY END HOUSE AND GARDENS

HISTORY

Robert Adam created a suite of reception rooms for Sir John Griffin Griffin in the mid-1760s on the ground floor of the south wing. It represented the height of neoclassical taste, and was executed by the leading craftsmen of the day. The plasterwork was by Joseph Rose, carving and gilding by William and Robert Adair, furniture by Gordon and Tait (much of which survives in the house), and decorative painting by Biagio Rebecca.

When the principal reception rooms were moved back to the first floor by the 3rd Lord Braybrooke (see below), these rooms were adapted as the state apartment. Adam's library, the culmination of the sequence of rooms, was destroyed in order to bring the floor level of the rooms over it down to that of the remainder of the first floor.
The surviving sequence (partly restored in the 1960s) now comprises the dining parlour, the Great Drawing Room and the Little Drawing Room, the last with exquisite painted Roman decoration by Rebecca.
The Gothick chapel at the north-east corner of the house was created for Sir John in about 1768 by John Hobcraft, and survives little altered and complete with its furniture (save for the loss of the organ loft in the 1820s).[5]
In 1785, to commemorate his elevation to the peerage as Baron Howard de Walden, Sir John completed the refitting of the saloon, on the first floor of the south wing, below its Jacobean ceiling. The white and gold panelling incorporates a series of paintings adapted or created by Rebecca, illustrating Sir John’s descent from Thomas, Lord Audley, who created the first house at Audley End in the 16th century.


 OPENING TIMES 

The weekend the 10:00 -16:00

http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/audley-end-house-and-gardens



How do get there from El Vendrell:
The Vendrell a El Prat in car the Prat a London Stansted in plane the London Stansted a Cambrige in train Crosscauntry and bus 301 and wolk and Audley.

London's Hidden Bling

History

The site is now dominated by the stylish house built in 1933–6 by the architects Seely and Paget for Stephen and Virginia Courtauld. They incorporated the great hall – the most substantial survival from the medieval royal palace – into the design. Like the house, the palace’s 19 acres of gardens feature both 20th-century and medieval elements.

Photo
The main entrance to Eltham Palace




Opening Times
Open Sundays Only 10am - 4pm

Map





How do-i get there from El Vendrell


Gatwick Express-Southern.