Houses for Visiting Mathematicians

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Houses_for_Visiting_Mathematicians an entity of type: Thing

The Houses for Visiting Mathematicians (also known as the Mathematics Research Centre houses) are a set of five houses and two flats, built for academics attending mathematical conferences at the University of Warwick. The buildings are Grade II* listed and were built between 1968 and 1969 to the design of architect Bill Howell and were opened in June of that year by then Vice-Chancellor Jack Butterworth, Sir Christopher Zeeman and Bill Howell. Their construction was supported by a £50,000 grant from the Nuffield Foundation. In 1970, they received the RIBA Architecture Award. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Houses for Visiting Mathematicians
rdf:langString Houses for Visiting Mathematicians
rdf:langString Houses for Visiting Mathematicians
xsd:float 52.37542724609375
xsd:float -1.550505995750427
xsd:integer 37399909
xsd:integer 1078830016
rdf:langString Howell, Killick, Partridge and Amis
rdf:langString RIBA Architecture Award
rdf:langString One of the houses, located on Warwick University's Gibbet Hill campus
xsd:integer 1969
xsd:integer 1968
xsd:string 52.375426 -1.550506
rdf:langString The Houses for Visiting Mathematicians (also known as the Mathematics Research Centre houses) are a set of five houses and two flats, built for academics attending mathematical conferences at the University of Warwick. The buildings are Grade II* listed and were built between 1968 and 1969 to the design of architect Bill Howell and were opened in June of that year by then Vice-Chancellor Jack Butterworth, Sir Christopher Zeeman and Bill Howell. Their construction was supported by a £50,000 grant from the Nuffield Foundation. In 1970, they received the RIBA Architecture Award. The houses comprise a combined living room/kitchen and large study bedroom on the ground floor, and smaller study bedrooms and a bathroom on the first floor. The curved walls of the downstairs study are lined with blackboards, built to the specification that they should be high enough for the mathematician to work but also "low enough for small children to use the bottom bit."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5660
xsd:string 1969
xsd:string 1968
<Geometry> POINT(-1.5505059957504 52.375427246094)

data from the linked data cloud