Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh | Dezeen
Belgian architects Pieterjan Gijs and Arnout Van Vaerenbergh have completed a see-through church in Limburg, Belgium. The ten metre-high church is constructed from 100 stacked layers of weathered steel plates. Gaps between these plates allow visitors to see through the walls. With its pointed spire, the building imitates the form of traditional churches in the
Zimoun installs motorised seesaws inside Austrian church
The sounds of 150 mechanical seesaws striking the floor of a former church in Austria reverberate around its nave in the latest installation by Zimoun
Tin Tabernacle. Thrupp
Corrugated iron chapel is transformed into a luxury bolthole
The prefabricated building, made from corrugated iron, was used as a chapel for more than 100 years after being erected in Muxton, Shropshire in 1894.
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Stoke Heath, Bromsgrove 1
A Laid Back DIY Wedding at The Tin Tabernacle: Jen & Michael
The East Sussex wedding of Jen & Michael had a gorgeous laid back vibe. The day started with a moving ceremony at Lewes Register Office, and ended with a rockin' reception at The Tin Tabernacle, an amazing teal green building on the outskirts of Barcombe Village. The space is a large area with high ceilings, wooden floors and white washed walls. The building was originally built as a chapel and it proved to be the perfect backdrop for this couple's quirky wedding."Our venue was so amazing!"…
Corrugated metal church building in... © Trevor Littlewood cc-by-sa/2.0
This black-painted church building beside the A470 in the small village of Ganllwyd is possibly now disused - at least as a church.
Cool holiday cottages in Shropshire – in pictures
Historic, mainly rural Shropshire has an unspoilt and uncrowded feel rare among English counties. These holiday cottages reflect its unique charm
Tin Tabernacles by Liz Induni
Tin Tabernacles by Liz Induni explores the architecture and construction of Victorian corrugated iron churches, chapels and mission halls, and discusses their conservation and repair
Iron CHurch by WyrdLight
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Langley Marsh 5
The Tin Tabernacle
about the history of the tin tabernacle at hall green
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Upton Cheyney
Stick style | Wikiwand
The Stick style was a late-19th-century American architectural style, transitional between the Carpenter Gothic style of the mid-19th century, and the Queen Anne style that it had evolved into by the 1890s.[1] It is named after its use of linear "stickwork" on the outside walls to mimic an exposed half-timbered frame.[2][3]