Thursday, September 3, 2009

How To Build Your Gor Gocart

THE WINDOW OPEN WELCOME


The Jewish Quarter is a stronghold of traditions not only architectural, it survives even the admirable habit, until very recently widespread in much of the town, keep the doors open all day. At least when the weather permits. It seems that it costs distrust nest there, the hospitality or the desire to be open to the world, to integrate, to feel part of a community, continues to weigh more than the fear that we submit to his rule every day a little more. And that is when you wander through its streets, in effect, there seems to perceive the relations between neighbors are still closer than is usual today, more similar than they were a while.
In the Jewish Quarter almost all doors are the fees also predominated in the past at the top of Hervás (we use this designation based simply on the morphology of the people, and that access to the ghetto must descend any of their hits). There are many of them are still quite old, since few houses are inhabited not long. However, the most recent renovations have also carefully observed these fees using newly manufactured doors that replicate older models.
Needless to say, Hervás doors were made of chestnut wood resistant (and usually decorated with thick nails.) a material often be common also in the lintel and sometimes even in the jambs, which sometimes are made of stone. It was stout doors to the naked eye could be considered zealous guardians of the privacy of people from their homes. However, as we speak rather of a strong desire to promote integration and socialization, rather than zoom in and out. The most common door type consisted of a sheet one piece and another split in two, from which the upper-and often kept in the Jewish quarter is usually kept still-open. To prevent too much heat comes into the house and also to protect the entranceway looks too indiscreet, after the door leaf that used to remain partially open throughout the day he put a thick curtain, as can still be seen today in some houses in the Jewish quarter.
In some of these old doors can still see the cattery by the small fellow former Jewish Quarter residents returning to their homes.
doors can also be narrower, a blade only split in two.
The wide double doors of a piece, often very shabby, they would give way to private wineries and wineries sometimes open to the public, including the famous winery Cones today unfortunately closed. Some of these are partly buried. You can often find half-buried house with income.





























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