- A hip roof, hip-roof or
hipped roof, is a type of roof
where all
sides slope downwards to the walls,
usually with a
fairly gentle slope, with variants...
- an
estate ****essed for the
stipend of the clergy, and
archaic Scottish piends. film, -s /ˈ-ɪlm, -z/
rhymes with pilm,
Scottish word for dust. The plural...
- late 18th
century the
original flat roof was
replaced with the
present piend (hipped) roof. A
major refit was
carried out in 1835–1837,
including works...
- Street.
Built of
painted whinstone rubble, it has a
piend-roofed main block, with an
extension (also
piend-roofed) in the
middle of the
north wall, resulting...
-
dated design for that time,
Edrom House is a
simple classical rectangular piend-roofed house. A
design introduced by Sir
William Bruce in the 17th century...
-
Construction is of
dressed rubble with
pinnings and
cherry ****ing
under a
piend slate roof. The roof is a
particularly fine
feature of the building, combined...
-
November to 2
January 1665 she was
under the
command of
Captain Valentine Piend. From 31
January to 27
February 1665 she was
under the
command of Captain...
- north-western
angle of the
church were
built in 1909–10, also by Chalmers.
Piend-roofed, with
mullioned and
leaded windows. In 1898–99, the
architect Peter...
-
restore the herb garden. The
house comprises a two-storey main
block with a
piend roof. To this was
added in 1737 a wing to the south, and in 1740 a larger...
-
Arthur Street building was, in Roy Pinkerton's words, "a
rather plain,
piend-roofed rectangle". It
included an
adjoining tenement and halls. In 1836...