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Lost Aberdeen

The Outskirts

Parametri

  • 224pagine
  • 8 ore di lettura

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<i>Lost Aberdeen: The Outskirts</i> is the companion volume to the highly successful <i>Lost Aberdeen</i> which recorded the demise of many fine buildings of the city center. <i>In Lost Aberdeen: The Outskirts</i>, the lands which encircle the city, spreading seamlessly round its heart like a great fan, are explored and the losses chalked up and discussed. The journey begins at Gilcomston, the city's first suburb, once a little village of cottages and weavers' sheds, with a hidden industrial enclave and a remarkably elegant west end. Alas, Gilcomston is so lost that it is hard to find today, in spite of its proximity to the city center. The road now heads north to Berryden where the demise of the Northern Co-operative Society's imposing complex of meal and barley mills and dairies is regretted. The journey continues, with Morgan guiding the reader from faded landmarks to vanished villages through a poignant and evocative trail of the past.

Acquisto del libro

Lost Aberdeen, Diane Morgan

Lingua
Pubblicato
2007
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(In brossura),
Condizioni del libro
In ottime condizioni
Prezzo
9,99 €

Metodi di pagamento

Titolo
Lost Aberdeen
Sottotitolo
The Outskirts
Lingua
Inglese
Editore
Birlinn
Pubblicato
2007
Formato
In brossura
Pagine
224
ISBN10
1841588075
ISBN13
9781841588070
Serie
Descrizione
<i>Lost Aberdeen: The Outskirts</i> is the companion volume to the highly successful <i>Lost Aberdeen</i> which recorded the demise of many fine buildings of the city center. <i>In Lost Aberdeen: The Outskirts</i>, the lands which encircle the city, spreading seamlessly round its heart like a great fan, are explored and the losses chalked up and discussed. The journey begins at Gilcomston, the city's first suburb, once a little village of cottages and weavers' sheds, with a hidden industrial enclave and a remarkably elegant west end. Alas, Gilcomston is so lost that it is hard to find today, in spite of its proximity to the city center. The road now heads north to Berryden where the demise of the Northern Co-operative Society's imposing complex of meal and barley mills and dairies is regretted. The journey continues, with Morgan guiding the reader from faded landmarks to vanished villages through a poignant and evocative trail of the past.