<p><SPAN name="18"></SPAN></p>
<h2>ARTISANS' DWELLINGS, HORNSEY.</h2>
<p>The erection of artisans' dwellings is certainly a prominent
feature in the progress of building in the metropolis, and
speculative builders who work on a smaller scale would do well not
to ignore the fact. The Artisans, Laborers, and General Dwellings
Company (Limited) has been conspicuously successful in rearing
large blocks of dwellings for artisans, clerks, and others whose
means necessitates the renting of a convenient house at as low a
rental as it is possible to find it. We give an illustration of a
terrace of first-class houses built by the above company, who
deserve great praise for the spirited and liberal manner in which
they are going to work on this the third of their London
estates--the Noel Park Estate, at Hornsey. On the estates at
Shaftesbury and Queen's Parks they have already built about three
thousand houses, employing therein a capital of considerably over a
million sterling, while at Noel Park they are rapidly covering an
estate of one hundred acres, which will contain, when completed, no
less than two thousand six hundred houses, to be let at weekly
rentals varying from 6s. to 11s. 6d., rates and taxes all included.
The object has been to provide separate cottages, each in itself
complete, and in so doing they have not made any marked departure
from the ordinary type of suburban terrace plan, but adopting this
as most favorable to economy, have added many improvements,
including sanitary appliances of the latest and most approved
type.</p>
<p>The most important entrance to Noel Park is by Gladstone Avenue,
a road 60 ft. wide leading from the Green Lanes to the center of
the estate. On either side of this road the houses are set back 15
ft., in front of which, along the edge of the pavement, trees of a
suitable growth are being planted, as also on all other roads on
the estate. About the center of Gladstone Avenue an oval space has
been reserved as a site for a church, and a space of five acres in
another portion of the estate has been set apart to be laid out as
a recreation ground, should the development of the estate warrant
such an outlay. The remaining streets are from 40 ft. to 50 ft. in
width, clear of the garden space in front of the houses. Shops will
be erected as may be required.</p>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="./illustrations/3a.png"><ANTIMG src=
"./illustrations/3a_th.jpg" alt="SUGGESTIONS IN ARCHITECTURE.--A ROW OF COMFORTABLE DWELLINGS."></SPAN></p>
<p class="ctr">SUGGESTIONS IN ARCHITECTURE.--A ROW OF COMFORTABLE
DWELLINGS.</p>
<p>The drainage of the estate has been arranged on the dual system,
the surface water being kept separate from the sewage drains.
Nowhere have these drains been carried through the houses, but they
are taken directly into drains at the back, having specially
ventilated manholes and being brought through at the ends of
terraces into the road sewers; the ventilating openings in the
roads have been converted into inlet ventilators by placing upcast
shafts at short intervals, discharging above the houses. This
system of ventilation was adopted on the recommendation of Mr. W.A.
De Pape, the engineer and surveyor to the Tottenham Local
Board.</p>
<p>All the houses are constructed with a layer of concrete over the
whole area of the site, and a portion of the garden at back. Every
room is specially ventilated, and all party walls are hollow in
order to prevent the passage of sound. A constant water supply is
laid on, there being no cisterns but those to the water-waste
preventers to closets. All water pipes discharge over open trapped
gullies outside.</p>
<p>The materials used are red and yellow bricks, with terracotta
sills, the roofs being slated over the greater part, and for the
purpose of forming an agreeable relief, the end houses, and in some
cases the central houses, have red tile roofs, the roofs over
porches being similarly treated. The houses are simply but
effectively designed, and the general appearance of the finished
portion of the estate is bright and cheerful. All end houses of
terraces have been specially treated, and in some cases having
rather more accommodation than houses immediately adjoining, a
slightly increased rental is required. There are five different
classes of houses. The first class houses (which we illustrate this
week) are built on plats having 16 ft. frontage by 85 ft. depth,
and containing eight rooms, consisting of two sitting rooms,
kitchen, scullery, with washing copper, coal cellar, larder, and
water-closet on ground floor, and four bedrooms over. The
water-closet is entered from the outside, but in many first-class
houses another water-closet has been provided on the first floor,
and one room on this floor is provided with a small range, so that
if two families live in the one house they will be entirely
separated. The rental of these houses is about 11s. to 11s. 6d. per
week. Mr. Rowland Plumbe, F.R.I.B.A., of 13 Fitzroy Square, W., is
the architect.--<i>Building and Engineering Times</i>.</p>
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