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July 24th, 2017: Horse Door
tywkiwdbi had this picture of a horse door.
The house door is up the steps, and the street level door on the left is the horse door. Quote:
He also mentioned the “horse door” is still active, as where the horse used to live is now occupied by people… for $16,000 a month. That ain’t hay. http://cellar.org/2015/shades.gif |
For that kinda rent, you'd think they'd fix the place up a bit...like the crumbling bricks, the messed-up stairs, and the fact that it looks like the main door is crooked...
Is this place in San Francisco with that kinda rent??? My great-grandmother's house, where she lived for 63 years, is in the University District of Seattle, and after some serious remodels on both the main house and the "carriage house" that I grew up calling "the cottage", it is available for a paltry $895,000 or so. Cottage included! Came as quite a surprise to me, as the last I'd heard shortly after she died in 1995 or '96 the family elders planned to sell it to a company that intended to level the whole place (it's on a high-traffic corner) and build a convenience store. To quote a John Cusack character, "I guess you can't go home again. But you can shop there." So glad that didn't happen! For $16,000 a month, the former stable had better have ALL the amenities alongside the history. |
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It's New York City. The Federal style columns and angle of the photograph makes the door look crooked. I'd say that 200 year old brickwork looks pretty good, and I'm sure the carriage house has all the amenities. :rolleyes:
http://cellar.org/2017/leroy.jpg |
Snakeadelic points out that the main door is crooked. If you look at the link to Neatorama the huge building (City Hall? Opera House?) at top is even crookeder.
And I think the background buildings for the bicycle graveyard were too and I saw a leaning Eiffel Tower somewhere last week. Maybe I need new glasses. The old carriage house (mews in England?) seems a pretty secure spot in the Village. |
I actually said it LOOKS crooked. My eyes don't always tell me the truth about things. :) Photographic perspective can be VERY different from in-person perspective.
The only use I've ever seen for the word "mews" is "a specifically-built housing area for a falconer's birds of prey to live in when they're not being flown." Had an acquaintance long ago in WA state who knew a falconer, and back then you had to build your own mews and have it inspected by some state official as part of the licensing process for falconry. Anyone from the UK, or who knows more about their language use than I do, got any info on other definitions of "mews"? |
mews
myo͞oz/Submit nounBRITISH a row or street of houses or apartments that have been converted from stables or built to look like former stables. a group of stables, typically with rooms above, built around a yard or along an alley |
Mews, sounds cats make. :p:
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Mews: The reporting of feline current events
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Meow cut that out.
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Don't be a pussy. :p:
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I'm a pussy, but then you are what you eat.
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O. M. G.
I'm must be Jell-O!:eek: |
Jell-O Good!!!
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