utorak, 08.11.2011.
BURN HALL HOTEL HUBY - BURN HALL
BURN HALL HOTEL HUBY - KENWOOD INN SONOMA.
Burn Hall Hotel Huby
- In French contexts an hotel particulier is an urban "private house" of a grand sort. Whereas an ordinary maison was built as part of a row, sharing party walls with the houses on either side and directly fronting on a street, an hotel particulier was often free-standing, and by the eighteenth
- An establishment providing accommodations, meals, and other services for travelers and tourists
- A hotel is an establishment that provides paid lodging on a short-term basis. The provision of basic accommodation, in times past, consisting only of a room with a bed, a cupboard, a small table and a washstand has largely been replaced by rooms with modern facilities, including en-suite
- A code word representing the letter H, used in radio communication
- a building where travelers can pay for lodging and meals and other services
- Be or cause to be destroyed by fire
- (of a fire) Flame or glow while consuming a material such as coal or wood
- pain that feels hot as if it were on fire
- (of a candle or other source of light) Be alight
- shine intensely, as if with heat; "The coals were glowing in the dark"; "The candles were burning"
- destroy by fire; "They burned the house and his diaries"
- The room or space just inside the front entrance of a house or apartment
- anteroom: a large entrance or reception room or area
- An area in a building onto which rooms open; a corridor
- hallway: an interior passage or corridor onto which rooms open; "the elevators were at the end of the hall"
- a large room for gatherings or entertainment; "lecture hall"; "pool hall"
- A large room for meetings, concerts, or other events
- Huby may refer to: *Huby, Hambleton *Huby, Harrogate *Huby, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship (north-central Poland) *Huby, Lodz Voivodeship (central Poland) *Huby, Silesian Voivodeship (south Poland) *Huby, part of the Nowe Miasto district of Poznan (west Poland)
Fountains Abbey - Abbot Huby's tower
Cistercian abbeys like Fountains were originally banned from building towers. By the turn of the sixteenth century the prohibition was no longer enforced and Abbot Marmaduke Huby added a magnificent tower to the outer end of the north transept. It stands 49m (160ft) tall and would originally have been topped off with pinnacles. The Abbey was dissolved in 1539.
Even so, the Abbey sits in a valley bottom and only the very top of the tower appears above the valley sides.
G-HUBY-NCL-20-04-2010
Legacy G-HUBY at Newcastle on 20/04/2010, one of the first movements after the airport re-opened after being closed due volcanic ash
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08.11.2011. u 00:19 •
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