Search

You searched for ins粉丝增加(SMMFS.COM)刷浏览量,HeS

Results 101 – 110 of about 125.

Refine by:

  • Conservation Areas Advisory Committees (CAACs)

    At this time he also has access to comments provided by the CAAC and will take them into account when responding to a consultation.... The requirement for replacements may be dispensed with at the discretion of the Tree and Landscape Officer if he believes there to be good enough reason.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/heritage-conservation/conservation-areas-advisory-committees-caacs/4
  • Portsmouth Road

    Meeting local schoolchildren and residents he endorsed the the importance and benefits Kingston's Go Cycle programme will bring to the borough, and held up Portsmouth Road as a benchmark by which he would like to see Transport for London's 'Healthy Streets' transport strategy being applied across all London boroughs. 

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/go-cycle-1/portsmouth-road
  • About Story Storks

    When Dick Whittington made his famous journey to London he didn't go via Highgate Hill, he walked to Maidenhead, stopping off overnight in Kingston. 

    https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/homepage/54/story-storks
  • Kingston Museum Panorama Workshop with Click Photography

    He has given lectures at many institutions.... He grew up in Palo Alto near the Stanford Farm that sparked his interest in Muybridge.

    https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/homepage/126/san-francisco-in-kingston-muybridge-and-panoramas-inspired-events
  • List of conservation areas

    He bought 93 acres of Coombe Hill fronting George Road occupying what is now the upper section of the Coombe Hood Golf Course.... He proceeded to build three fine mansions, which were his family's homes for a few years each, before the Galsworthy family left Coombe in 1886.Coombe Harren  (now Robin Hall Cottage set in the grounds of Holy Cross Preparatory School) By 1867 the first mansion known as "Coombe Harren" and later "Coombe Court" was completed but was unfortunately demolished in 1931.... He created a series of lakes, linked by a stream fed from one of Coombe's underground springs, and enhanced by Japanese style bridges, sculptures, summerhouses and rare trees and shrubs which have matured into a creation of breathtaking beauty.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/heritage-conservation/list-conservation-areas/7
  • Creative Flow with the Curator

    The exhibition also provides an opportunity to celebrate some of the local stories that derive from these art historical moments - and so for instance the section on the Hogsmill celebrates the research of Barbara Webb, who painstakingly identified the spot on the river where Millais painted his Ophelia - but also local initiatives, such as Elliot Newton’s (the council’s bio-diversity officer) conservation of the water voles on the Hogsmill (the animal that Millais originally included in the composition and then removed from the work when his friends pointed out it could be mistaken for a rat - not quite the look he was going for).

    https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/homepage/101/creative-flow-with-the-curator
  • Want a play street? Get your skates on!

    Robin explains why he enjoys them:

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news/article/427/want-a-play-street-get-your-skates-on
  • Domestic and Sexual Violence: Information for Professionals

    In 2011, the Safer Kingston Partnership (as the local statutory Community Safety Partnership) became responsible for undertaking Domestic Homicide Reviews where the death of a person aged 16 or over has, or appears to have, resulted from violence, abuse or neglect by a relative, household member or someone with whom s/he had been in an intimate relationship.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/domestic-sexual-violence/resources-professionals-working-domestic-sexual-violence/4
  • Want a play street? Get your skates on!

    Robin explains why he enjoys them:

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news/article/427/want-a-play-street-get-your-skates-on-
  • Kingston Museum secures prestigious funding for Muybridge project

    After spending much of his life in the United States, he returned home to Kingston in later years and died in the borough in 1904.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news/article/37/kingston-museum-secures-prestigious-funding-for-muybridge-project