= Q,^^S 



KlUKI COITAGE. 



GROUND FLAX. 



arch of four centers, with trefoil spandrels, splayed jambs, and hood mold. The prin- 

 ciii.il lloor is elevated four feet above the street. Front door — pointed head, six pan- 

 elled ; three glazed with stained 

 glass ; opens into a small lobby, 

 connecting a front parlor with 

 the back living-room ; bed-room 

 on the left; closets, with pantry 

 on the right, with bath-room ad- 

 joining. Front Parlor — with bay 

 window, commanding the street, 

 and one side window looking 

 east. A closet connects with the 

 basement stairs. 



Basement. — The rear portion 

 is entirely out of ground, so that 

 the kitchen, under the dining- 

 room, and side store-rooms, are 

 light and drj'. The cellars are in 

 front, and the station for a furnace would be under the right wing. This wing, not yet 

 completed, will contain the rooms marked : the library, or office, and bath-room, half- 

 way down the stairs, from the principal floor, yet on a level with the grounds in front. 

 The guest-chamber, with oriel windows, and bed-room, half-way up, entered from a 



landing on the 

 stairs. 



The second story 

 contains the pres- 

 ent library, over 

 the dining-room, a 

 chamber in front, 

 with one large, or 

 two small bed- 

 rooms in the left 

 wing. The chimney 

 flues are brought 

 together over an 

 arch, and rise in 

 one stack. Our 

 view represents this 

 stack, topped out 

 with insulated 

 shafts of brick, or 

 terra cotta, 1 

 together at top and bottom, and they may be ornamented upon their surface. 



■MEW OF H )Nr FLU HOOM 



