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List of Figures

Figure 1: Reconstructed kitchen at Blakesley Hall, Birmingham

Figure 2: The landscape setting at the Weald and Downland Museum

Figure 3: Location map of case study buildings (clickable)

Figure 4: Number of Reconstructions sample buildings have undergone

Figure 5: Phases of Reconstruction

Figure 6: The garden and rear of Alfriston Clergy House © NTPL/Andrew Butler. Alfriston Clergy House. The Tye, Alfriston. 01323 870001. http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk

Figure 7: Tile repair at Montacute, Somerset

Figure 8: Stoneacre with sections added from North Bore Place, Kent

Figure 9: Blocked doorway at Bishop's House, Sheffield

Figure 10: Complex stratigraphy of Sutton House displayed © LondonTown.com

Figure 11: Interventions are clearly visible at Fiddleford Manor

Figure 12: Demolished sections of Fiddleford Manor have been revealed through excavation and marked in the grass

Figure 13: Repair of the south front of Ightham Mote

Figure 14: Model for recording phases of reconstruction and relating them to contemporary patterns of reconstruction

Figure 15: Alfriston Clergy House

Figure 16: Pair of doorways between the hall and the service rooms at Alfriston Clergy House

Figure 17: Drawing of the hall at Alfriston Clergy House sent by F.W. Benyon to the SPAB showing the fireplace in situ © NTPL Alfriston Clergy House. The Tye, Alfriston. 01323 870001 http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk

Figure 18: Moulded beam with evidence of notching to support inserted first floor in the Hall at Alfriston Clergy House

Figure 19: Notched beam where joists to support first floor would have sat

Figure 20: Alfriston Clergy House during repairs c.1896 © NTPL Alfriston Clergy House. The Tye, Alfriston. 01323 870001 http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk

Figure 21: Oak leaf carving in Hall at Alfriston Clergy House

Figure 22: Interior of Alfriston Clergy House

Figure 23: Entrance to Alfriston Clergy House

Figure 24: Flowchart model for works undertaken at Alfriston Clergy House

Figure 25: Little Moreton Hall

Figure 26: Access analysis of Little Moreton Hall, showing the spatial arrangement in the late 16th century

Figure 27: Access analysis of Little Moreton Hall, showing circular routes created by opening doorways to improve visitor flow

Figure 28: The colour of new timber distinguishes it from historic material

Figure 29: Leaflet describes Little Moreton Hall as having 'changed little since the time of Elizabeth I' © NTPL/Rupert Truman. Little Moreton Hall. Congleton. 01260 272018 http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk

Figure 30: Exit doorway used to control visitor flow at Little Moreton Hall

Figure 31: Blakesley Hall

Figure 32: Interpretation centre at Blakesley Hall

Figure 33: Phases of reconstruction at Blakesley Hall

Figure 34: Ground-floor plan showing phases of reconstruction at Blakesley Hall

Figure 35: First-floor plan showing phases of reconstruction at Blakesley Hall

Figure 36: Inserted oriel window at Blakesley Hall

Figure 37: Inserted screen at Blakesley Hall

Figure 38: Modern timber used in inserted screen at Blakesley Hall

Figure 39: Inserted screen at Blakesley Hall whitewashed

Figure 40: Blocked doorway at Blakesley Hall, as seen from exterior

Figure 41: Blocked doorway at Blakesley Hall, as seen from interior before whitewashing

Figure 42: Barley Hall

Figure 43: Expanded wire mesh infill at Barley Hall

Figure 44: Plan for reconstructed Victorian shop-front proposed for the Barley Hall project © York Archaeological Trust.

Figure 45: Brick rear range of Barley Hall

Figure 46: Access analysis showing spatial distance between hall and service rooms in modern reconstruction of Barley Hall

Figure 47: Hall i' th' Wood

Figure 48: Phases of reconstruction at Hall i' th' Wood

Figure 49: Image of replaced timber

Figure 50: Winkhurst Farm

Figure 51: Photograph of the Winkhurst Farm before it was removed to its new site at the Weald and Downland Museum © English Heritage National Monuments Record

Figure 52: Double doorway entrance to Winkhurst Farm

Figure 53: Stairway inside Winkhurst Farm

Figure 54: Notched floorbeam that would have supported the staircase in its former location

Figure 55: Bayleaf Farmstead

Figure 56: Bayleaf Farmstead before it was removed to the Weald and Downland Museum © English Heritage National Monuments Record

Figure 57: Interior of Bayleaf Farmstead

Figure 58: Longport Farmhouse is a typical Kent Farmhouse dating from 1554 and is one of the 45 original rescued historic buildings set in 40 acres of rolling downland at the Weald and Downland Open Air Museum, Singleton, West Sussex © Weald and Downland Museum

Figure 59: Tudor Merchant's House, Avoncroft Museum

Figure 60: Interior of Tudor Merchant's House, Avoncroft Museum

Figure 61: Plas Cadwgan Aisled Hall from Wrexham, now at the Avoncroft Museum

Figure 62: King post roof timbers from a building not reconstructed after acquisition by the Avoncroft Museum

Figure 63: The birth room at Shakespeare's birthplace in the 1980s © Heritage House Group

Figure 64: The birth room at Shakespeare's birthplace in the 2000s © Jigsaw Design and Publishing Ltd and The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust


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