This book has been considered by academicians and scholars of great significance and value to literature. This forms a part of the knowledge base for future generations. So that the book is never forgotten we have represented this book in a print format as the same form as it was originally first published. Hence any marks or annotations seen are left intentionally to preserve its true nature.
Synopsis Expand/Collapse Synopsis Nineteenth-century building advice that is eminently practical in the twenty-first century. 330 b/w illustrations
Slums of India and the areas of slum and shanty towns in India has been of great interest for the photographer ...
OCLC number: ocm04322029
Hidden behind the zinc fences of your favorite tourist destinations... Manila, Philippines Soweto, South Africa Kingston, Jamaica Dharavi slum, Mumbai São Paulo, Brazil Caracas, Venezuela Lima, Peru Kenya Jakarta, Indonesia
Shelters, Shacks, and Shanties von D. C. Beard
A thought-provoking blend of high fashion, art and culture brought to you by the creators of AnOther Magazine
Jonathan Ramsdell Photography
This city of sweat shops, shanty towns and slums is an unrecognizable New York captured as the 19th century wound to a close. Newly arrived immigrants slept 12 to a room, while street children roamed the alleys and tenement blocks of a third world downtown Manhattan.
Unavailable is a tiny portable shack for fishermen by Gartnerfuglen that has ice walls.
The series of three tiny cabins by Koto form a destination resort that plugs visitors into a pristine setting in Northumberland.
How do two design pros—each with their own expanding retail empires in NYC and London—unwind on the weekends? Year-round, Andrew Corrie and Harriet Maxwell
Perched on top of 100ft cliffs near Minehead, in Somerset, this is the dream home created by the Grand Designs TV host.
[Image: The Single Hauz by front architects].Like an inhabitable billboard, the Single Hauz – by Poland’s front architects – proposes cantilevering domestic living space from a central mast. …
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By the end of the 19th century, two-thirds of New Yorkers lived in dark, crowded tenement houses—the city’s answer to the housing needs of the working-class and poor. As bad as some tenements…