660 



Design for a Gardener's House, 



130 



^-rTTTTTTTTT" 

 10 5 



names where the gar- 

 deners live in sheds, 

 and therefore 1 shall 

 not do so ; but I am 

 not under the same 

 restraint with respect 

 to % the ornamental 

 lodges, and therefore 

 I shall just refer to 

 one, all show on 

 the exterior, without 

 either accommoda- 

 tion or convenient 

 arrangement within, 

 as a specimen of the 

 discreditable in ar- 

 chitecture ; it is the 

 gardener's house at 

 Eglinton Castle, and 

 I mention it the more 

 readily, because I 

 have no idea who 

 was the architect." 



The design before 

 us contains, on the 

 ground floor, a kit- 

 chen, a; parlour, b; 

 back kitchen, c ; and 

 office, d. The chamber 

 floor contains three 

 good bed-rooms, e ; 

 and a seed-room, f. 

 There are two closets, 

 g and h. 



Art. IX. Design for a Gardener's House, serving, at the same 

 time, as a Watchtoxver for the Fruit Walls of a Garden in the 

 Neighbourhood of a large City. By T. A. 



The following design, by one of our most eminent London 

 architects, was sent us for our Encyclopaedia of Cottage, Farm, 

 and Villa Architecture, as the gardener's house of an elegant 

 suburban villa, the plan of which accompanied it. Both are 

 such perfect models of their kind, and display so much in so 

 little, and at such moderate cost, that we cannot resist the 



