Owens wm750 Moulding Knife: Brand New Made in the USA Base Molding Knife http://t.co/AdGB6HKS – by icemehu (Mallory Bogisich)
Trumbull Homes from 7900; Monroe: 9900 and 9500
Main floor laundry; 2 front-to-back- living room dens with fireplaces; massive updated kitchen for entertaining; hard wood floors; lower level playroom; master bedroom with steam shower and marble floor; 3 bedroom share updated bath with skylight; …
Read more on Patch.com
London 2012: Roof fall teenager to carry torch in Stoke
The teenager fell 15ft (4.5m) through a skylight, shattering one side of his skull. His mother, Amanda Buckett, said her son was in a critical condition for two weeks and was told he would not walk again. Asked about his experiences, Mr Buckett said: …
Read more on BBC News
Norfolk International Airport to get .7M face-lift
The roof's coming off to make way for a huge skylight. Also going are the kiosks in the middle. (Rendering by Gresham, Smith and Partners | via city of Norfolk) Retail offerings and security screening will be expanded. A skylight will cover the center …
Read more on The Virginian-Pilot
once upon a time in cumbria there was a terrible storm that blew open the skylights of a small but perfectly formed barn conversion… – by onlyeverjusta (temporary measure)
KraussMaffei to make moulding machines in China
By Nina Ying Sun, Plastics News In order to meet higher demand for locally made machines, KraussMaffei has started to make injection moulding machines in its Haiyan , China , factory, which will double its production space and capabilities.
Read more on European Plastics News
Top Teh doo for the first time at the Sajam Tehnike 2012 trade fair
The 45 gramme moulded components and with shot weight of 58 gramme sets high quality requirements and demand absolute repeatability. The IntElect with its precise and sensitive drives fulfils the special requirements for zero defects production.
Read more on Packaging Europe
Solace Spa – 60 Calthorpe Road – Five Ways

Image by ell brown
This is now Solace Spa at 60 Calthorpe Road in Five Ways. Solace Spa is an approved beauty day spa in a house dating from approx 1800.
It stands a the corner of Calthorpe Road and Harborne Road on what seems like an island.
It is a Grade II listed building.
Circa 1800, a good detached town house of rectangular plan, on important
corner site straddling apex of Harborne and Calthorpe Roads at Five Ways.
Two storeys, finely pointed mellow red brick with restrained stucco dressings
and neo-classical details. Formerly had single storey wings including coach
house. Well proportioned 3 bay symmetrical front. Stucco capping to plinth
as ground floor sill course. Thin first floor sill band. Thin stucco string
as bed mould to brick frieze, broken in line with centre of outer first floor
windows, by acanthus leaf consoles which support a broad pediment advanced
from sharply profiled stucco cornice and blocking course. The tympanum contains
a stucco framed oeuil-de-boeuf. Low slate roof with coped gable ends surmounted
by corniced brick chimneys. Ground floor windows, contained in camber headed
reveals rising from plinth, have glazing bar sashes in flattened slender
column frames with entablatures. Outer windows on first floor plainly revealed
glazing bar sashes with panelled stucco heads flanked by slender console
brackets to thin cornices. The centre window is of simplified Venetian pattern,
contained in camber arched revealed, similar to ground floor but 3×4 pane
sash with 1×4 pane narrow side lights, pilaster lining to reveals and slender
columns divising entablature with thin course under arch. Blind balconette
below sill rising from roof of porch which has slender Doric columns, the
entablature with triglyphs curved out and back to pilasters against wall.
Tripartite panelled pilaster doorway with side lights, echoing the window
above. No 60 is now one of the very few surviving examples of late C18/early
C19 polite domestic architecture in central Birmingham.
60 Calthorpe Road – Heritage Gateway
This is car park now (at the back of the house) but was anything built here in the past (such as the coach house)?
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