442 



APPENDIX. 



of plan, and without incurring touch expense. A good exercise for the 

 young designer would be, to distribute the same accommodation, properly 

 classed, along the sides of a square or squares, or along the sides of a par- 

 allelogram or polygon, and either detached from, or connected with, the 

 horticultural buildings. 



The manner in which the working-sheds are heated by the waste heat 

 from the furnaces, in consequence of which, in severe 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 



[Fig. 16. Hermil'i Seal, and Clastical Vine.) 



is worthy of imitation ; as is the mode of heating so many different houses 

 from only three boilers. In no garden structures have we seen a more ju- 

 dicious use of the Penryhn slate ; paths, edgings, shelves, cisterns, boxes 

 for plants, copings, kerbs, partitions, and substitutes for dwarf walls, being 

 all made of it The order and neatness with which all the different tools, 

 utensils, &c., are kept in the horticultural and farm buildings, are most 

 exemplary, and greatly facilitate the despatch of business. 



