riI4 



■^prK.vjtix, 



place, wc shrill firRt direct ;ittenlion to the jrunltn stfuclures. Vncse, 

 whether of the ornamental or useful kind, are executed substar'l-''ly 

 iind with great care and neatness ; while the farm buildings, 'bc'ng 

 chiefly of wood, show how great an extent of accommodation mav he: 

 obtained witiiout regularity of plan, and without incurring much ex- 

 pense. A good exercise for the young designer would be to distribute 

 the same accommodation, properly classed, along the sides of a square 



[Fig. 10. Hermit's Seat, and Classical Vase.] 



or squares, or along the sides of :i parallelogram or polygon, and elthei 

 ietached from or connected with the horticultural building.s. 



The manner in which the working-sheds are heated bv the v aste 

 heat from the furnaces, in consequence of wliich, in s->vere weather, 

 much more work will be done in them, and in a better manner, and in 

 which they are lighted, so as to serve for protecting, certain kinds of 

 plants during winter, is worthy of imitation ; as is the mode of heating 

 so many different houses from only three boilers. In no garden 

 Rtructures have we seen a more judicious use of the Penrhyn slate 



