Page:An Encyclopædia of Cottage, Farm, and Villa Architecture and Furniture.djvu/1023

 FA'TRANCE LODGES AND GATES. 1785 91)9 to be obtained; but the expense woiilJ, in scarcely any case, be justifiable by the object iC
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]78o Ll_U 11 Ij- 1 1| 11 I IL on which it was bestowed. Fig. 1787 is an elevation of a double lodge, in the Doric style; and fig. 1788 is the ground plan, showing the same accommodation as in the last 1787 Design. There can be no objection to the Architecture of this Design, so far as it goes; but, like the preceding one, it wants chimney-tops ; and we do not see by what means iQ ii_ v--f : Mo} '0 s o ■^ft access is to be had to the bed-room ; for, even supposing the appendages cor.taining the scullery, &c., to have flat roofs, there cannot be headroom to ascend by them into the