Persimmon Homes are building houses at Newbold. The sign tells the tale. What is basically a terrace house with a parking spot sells for about £165K.
A detached house sells for about £240K upwards.
This is modern housebuilding, low energy, (double glazed, low ceilings, well insulated, built on concrete rafts). The price (paid for on a mortgage) clocks up when you start specifying kitchens, bathrooms, conservatories.
Increasingly Persimmon have been peddling a form of 3 story ersatz vernacular architecture to build up density to meet the requirements for new houses. The front of this house with it's stuck on door is a mess with windows dottted about of different sizes.
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Sunday, November 12, 2006
Buersil War memorial
Tandle Hill War memorial
An impressive and commanding obelisk with a disappointing tablet - presumably vandal proof.
Well worth a visit, stunning views as far as Jodrell Bank on a good clear day. Take a look at the Roman Catholic Copper dome on Maclure Road and the adjoining foil of the Italianate Fire Station Tower.
Your opportunity to see this dominant feature of the Rochdale landscape is limited, the crumbling Fire Station tower assualted by decades of high pressure hoses needs repair or demolition.
Guess which is cheapest ?
Remember the whole of Tandle Hill Park was given in deliverance for the memory of those who died in the First World war. The gify was so deeded that it is impossible to ever build on it.
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Rochdale Town Centre Fire Station
The Ex Two Ships Hotel
The two Ships Hotel,Hope Street, opposite the Methodist Chapel, previously of the now defunct Bury Brewery Company is now a private house. The stone carved bading bearing the pubs name and the brwery have been roughly ground off with a grinder as have some of the details on the ceramic plaque by the door.
Architectural vandalism. cf the John Willie Lees sign at the Blue Pits, Castleton
Saturday, November 04, 2006
The Commercial, Castleton
Ex- Castleton Police Station
John Willie Lees Wall Plaque
This beautiful ceramic tile display is on the south wall of the Blue Pits Inn at Castleton. The Blue Pits relates to the blue marl pits in the area from which nutrient rich clay (marl)was dug and used as an agricultural fertilizer. Marl pits date to the post-medieval period and their existence is often evident through field and place names.
J W Lees beer , although endorsed as "real ale" by CAMRA is vile stuff.
Thursday, November 02, 2006
St Chad's Vicarage (original)
Samuel Dunster, built what is now the old Vicarage, in 1726 - currently it houses the Rochdale Business Bureau, although at great cost it temporarily held the Museum, which was moved at even greater cost to the Touchstones Centre, which was th Libarray which was moved at great cost and inconvenience to the Wheatsheaf Centre where it is impossible to find.
William Hay was appointed Vicar in 1819 after he, as the Salford Hundred's principal Magistrate had sent in the Cavalry to quell what he saw as a riot in Manchester. It was afterwards called the Peterloo Massacre. This so called riot was a meeting about the lack of jobs for men. Machines had meant a reduction in the work-force and yet large numbers of men had returned from the war with Napoleon.
ST Chad's Church
St. Chad's parish Church, Rochdale with one of the gargoyles.
There was, the site indicates, a Church on Sparrow Hill long before 1194. A wall, reputedly of Saxon origin, still stands to the north of the present edifice. Legend insists that Rochdale was a town visited by St. Chad in 669 or 670 and to whom the Church has ever been dedicated. It is a legend unsupported by historical evidence, but it is not improbable: Rochdale was a town of some importance in the Middle Ages, as is evidenced by the establishment of a market in the year 1251. The local references to a Castle both in site, and in names like Castlemere and Castleton, indicate an importance for Rochdale that was not insignificant, and when the town expanded in the time of the Industrial Revolution, it remained one of the most important in this part of Lancashire.
The bottom of the Church tower together with the alternating round and octagonal pillars in the Nave date from the time of the first Vicar, Geoffrey of Whalley who was Vicar in the year 1194. He owed his appointment to the local de Lacy family, powerful representatives of the King.
The Church is known as a 'Double Apostle' building due to the number of arches, its size was doubled in the 1880's being completed in 1888 during Canon Maclure's incumbency. This had the effect of making the section alotted to the Choir slightly larger than that allotted to the congregation, the intention being to adopt the style of a Cathedral. The clerestory windows picture the Apostles.
The older parts of the church is built in millstone grit while the extension is of Yorkshire sandstone.
The Octingentenary (800 year anniversary) was marked on December 1st 1994 by a visit from Her Majesty, The Queen and His Royal Highness, The Duke of Edinburgh.
Bet Lynch was married here.
Wednesday, November 01, 2006
Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Boundary Stone
Orange Peel Fungus
The orange peel fungus (Aleuria aurantia) . Very distinctive fungus which fruits in the Autumn comprises a wavy-edged, saucer-shaped disc, whose upper surface is bright orange and smooth while the lower surface is greyish orange and rather powdery.
This example on bare ground in Queens Park Heywood, fruits in the Autumn.
The spore bearing structure is on the upper surface, unlike most mushrroms whose spore are borne on the lower surfaces.
Crimble Mill
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