Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'New Lanark' has mentioned 'Village' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
New Lanark is a village on the River Clyde, approximately 1.4 miles (2.2 kilometres) from Lanark, in Lanarkshire, and some 25 miles (40xc2xa0km) southeast of Glasgow, Scotland.
After a period of decline, the New Lanark Conservation Trust (NLCT) was founded in 1974 (now known as the New Lanark Trust (NLT)) to prevent demolition of the village.
By 2006 most of the buildings have been restored and the village has become a major tourist attraction.
Dale sold the mills, lands and village in the early 19th century for xc2xa360,000, payable over 20 years, to a partnership that included his son-in-law Robert Owen.
A new water turbine has been installed in Mill Number Three to provide electricity for the tourist areas of the village.
He paid particular attention to the needs of the 500 or so children living in the village (one of the tenement blocks is named Nursery Buildings) and working at the mills, and opened the first infants' school in Britain in 1817, although the previous year he had completed the Institute for the Formation of Character.
Owen was able to show visitors the village's excellent housing and amenities, and the accounts showing the profitability of the mills.
The Walkers managed the village until 1881, when it was sold to Birkmyre and Sommerville and the Gourock Ropeworks (although they tried unsuccessfully to sell the mills and the town in 1851).
The town and the industrial activity had been in decline before then, but after the mills closed migration away from the village accelerated, and the buildings began to deteriorate.
In 1974 the NLCT (now the NLT) was founded to prevent demolition of the village.
[8] By 2005 most of the buildings had been restored and the village has become a major tourist attraction.
The living conditions in the village gradually improved, and by the early 20th century families would have had the use of several rooms.
From 1938 the village proprietors provided free electricity to all the homes in New Lanark, but only enough power was available for one dim bulb in each room.
It has been estimated that over 400,000 people visit the village each year.
In addition to the 21 owner-occupied properties in the village there are 45 rented properties which were let by the NLA, which was a registered housing association.
The NLA also owned other buildings in the village.
In 2009 the NLA was wound up as being financially and administratively unviable, and responsibility for the village's tenanted properties passed to the NLCT.
Considerable attention has been given to maintaining the historical authenticity of the village.
No television aerials or satellite dishes are allowed in the village, and services such as telephone, television and electricity are delivered though buried cables.
The retention of a 1924-pattern red telephone box in the village square has also been seen as inappropriate.
The mills, the hotel and most of the non-residential buildings in the village are owned and operated by the NLT through wholly owned companies.
Village Church, built 1898 xe2x80x93 now used for social purposes and named the Community Hall.
The extension is the only brick faced building in the village.
It also contains a water turbine that generates electricity for parts of the village.
Graveyard xe2x80x93 on the hill above New Lanark, between the village and the visitors' car park.
1 & 2 New Lanark Road (locally known as the twin houses) xe2x80x93 two opposing two-storey gatehouses some distance from the village.
There is a large free car park on the outskirts of the village.
Only disabled visitors may park in the village.
The walk from the car park down to the mill village provides a worthwhile panoramic view.
The village has a four-star hotel [the New Lanark Mill Hotel], holiday flats [the Waterhouses], and Wee Row which provides hostel type accommodation.
There are restaurants and shops in the village, and a visitors' centre.
The Clyde walkway long-distance footpath passes through the village[13] and the Scottish Wildlife Trust's visitor centre for the Falls of Clyde Nature reserve is based in a group of mill buildings.
New Lanark is an exceptional example of a purpose-built 18th century mill village, set in a picturesque Scottish landscape near the Falls of Clyde, where in the early years of the 19th century, the Utopian idealist Robert Owen (1771-1858) inspired a model industrial community based on textile production.
The village was founded in 1785, and the cotton mills, powered by water-wheels, were operational from 1786 to 1968.
The village offered a cultural response to the challenges presented by industrial society and was the test-bed for ideas that sought to improve the human condition around the world.
The appearance of the buildings of the village is now close to that of the early nineteenth century, during Owenxe2x80x99s management, based on the physical evidence, archaeology, graphic and written archive material available.
In restoring the village to its historic state, some later 20th century structures have been removed to focus on those elements that contributed to the propertyxe2x80x99s Outstanding Universal Value.
The village has seen little change from its heyday of cotton production in the early nineteenth century.