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Sentences with orangery

or·ange·ry
O o
  • The one exception to that is the orangery, which is where the restaurant is found.
  • It was originally constructed as an orangery for Augustus the Strong who was an avid art collector.
  • The owners have restored the property, adding an orangery at the back and a Johnny Grey-designed kitchen and laundry, as well as planting 5,000 trees.
  • The conservatory is framed by two anchor points, the entrance at the east end and the orangery to the west.
  • A new swimming pool was added and an orangery restored to its former glory.
  • The plans also include a new orangery and three town houses.
  • Prague Castle has had an orangery since the middle of the fifteenth century.
  • All this, together with the stone walls, recalls a Victorian conservatory or orangery rather than a conventional museum, and is only possible because most sculpture, unlike paintings, is not vulnerable to light.
  • Sir James and Lady Graham have recently restored the orangery and at present the attractions include beds of peonies.
  • Arthur Myers, who has worked on the estate near Sproatley for more than 40 years - and at the age of 83 still looks after the orangery - was at the opening with wife Jasmine.
  • The site featured an orangery, a pagoda, and an archway designed by the architect Sir William Chambers.
  • Conservation - minded neighbours have objected to his plans to attach an orangery to his house to make him feel more at home in this bleak heath.
  • My own veranda in Cockermouth is a larger example, as is the more ostentatious orangery at Brockhole.
  • They can also walk through the huge orangery built by the Adam brothers which has now been converted into a gallery to display the fine Lansdowne collection of paintings and sculpture.
  • Adding an orangery can increase the value of your home, as they are an attractive feature to buyers.
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