Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'City of Bath' has mentioned 'Wood' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
Many of the streets and squares were laid out by John Wood, the Elder, and in the 18th century the city became fashionable and the population grew. | WIKI |
[48] Architects John Wood the Elder and his son laid out the new quarters in streets and squares, the identical faxc3xa7ades of which gave an impression of palatial scale and classical decorum. | WIKI |
[50] Allen, to advertise the quality of his quarried limestone, commissioned the elder John Wood to build a country house on his Prior Park estate between the city and the mines. | WIKI |
The Circus consists of three long, curved terraces designed by the elder John Wood to form a circular space or theatre intended for civic functions and games. | WIKI |
[112] Wood never lived to see his unique example of town planning completed as he died five days after personally laying the foundation stone on 18 May 1754. | WIKI |
The most spectacular of Bath's terraces is the Royal Crescent, built between 1767 and 1774 and designed by the younger John Wood. | WIKI |
[113] Wood designed the great curved faxc3xa7ade of what appears to be about 30 houses with Ionic columns on a rusticated ground floor, but that was the extent of his input: each purchaser bought a certain length of the faxc3xa7ade, and then employed their own architect to build a house to their own specifications behind it; hence what appears to be two houses is in some cases just one. | WIKI |
The Georgian city reflects the ambitions of John Wood Senior (1704-1754), Ralph Allen (1693-1764) and Richard xe2x80x9cBeauxe2x80x9d Nash (1674-1761) to make Bath into one of the most beautiful cities in Europe, with architecture and landscape combined harmoniously for the enjoyment of the spa townxe2x80x99s cure takers. | UNESCO |
Three men xe2x80x93 architect John Wood Senior, entrepreneur and quarry owner Ralph Allen and celebrated social shaper and Master of Ceremonies Richard xe2x80x9cBeauxe2x80x9d Nash xe2x80x93 together provided the impetus to start this social, economic and physical rebirth, resulting in a city that played host to the social, political and cultural leaders of the day. | UNESCO |
This unifying of nature and city, seen throughout Bath, is perhaps best demonstrated in the Royal Crescent (John Wood Younger) and Lansdown Crescent (John Palmer). | UNESCO |