The Corridor, Bath

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Corridor,_Bath an entity of type: Thing

The Corridor is one of the world's earliest retail arcades, designed by architect Henry Goodridge and built in 1825, in Bath, Somerset, England. The fashion for arranging shops in arcades arose in Paris in the late 18th Century. The Corridor followed the trend set by London's Burlington Arcade. The Grade II listed arcade has a glass roof. The High Street end has a Doric colonnade. Each end has marble columns. A musicians gallery, with a wrought iron balustrade and gilt lions heads and garlands, is in the centre of the arcade. Number 7 was the photographic studio of William Friese-Greene. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Corridor, Bath
rdf:langString The Corridor
rdf:langString The Corridor
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xsd:integer 1825
rdf:langString Grade II Listed Building
xsd:date 1950-06-12
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rdf:langString The Corridor
rdf:langString Bath, Somerset, England
rdf:langString Somerset
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rdf:langString The Corridor is one of the world's earliest retail arcades, designed by architect Henry Goodridge and built in 1825, in Bath, Somerset, England. The fashion for arranging shops in arcades arose in Paris in the late 18th Century. The Corridor followed the trend set by London's Burlington Arcade. The Grade II listed arcade has a glass roof. The High Street end has a Doric colonnade. Each end has marble columns. A musicians gallery, with a wrought iron balustrade and gilt lions heads and garlands, is in the centre of the arcade. Number 7 was the photographic studio of William Friese-Greene.
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