Back-to-back house
Form of terraced houses in the United Kingdom, each sharing party walls on three of their four sides.
Form of terraced houses in the United Kingdom, each sharing party walls on three of their four sides.
Grade II* listed former manor house in Rivington, Lancashire, England, the successor to a 15th-century building that was built near to the present building.
Structure close to the refectory of a monastery, providing washing facilities.
Medieval nunnery associated with the legend of the death of Robin Hood.
Privately owned statutory tolled undertaking which incorporates a public highway road length, one of the few remaining pre-motorway toll bridges in the UK.
English country house near Altrincham, in Greater Manchester, surrounded by historic formal gardens and a deer park. Built in the early 18th century by the Earls of Warrington, passing to the Earls of Stamford by inheritance, it has been owned by the National Trust since the death of the 10th and last Earl of Stamford in 1976.
Timber-framed, black-and-white Elizabethan mansion house in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, one of the very few buildings to have survived the Great Fire of Nantwich in 1583.
Blocked-up door in the north wall of a church, once believed to have been an escape route for the Devil when he left a child as a result of the sacrament of baptism.
Moated half-timbered manor house 4.5 miles (7.2 km) southwest of Congleton in Cheshire, England, the earliest parts of which date from about 1504–1508.
Pleasure pier in Southport, Merseyside, England. Opened in August 1860, it is the oldest iron pier in the country.