Conservatory Base Builders Ltd.
Address
10 Winston RoadStaindrop
Darlington
Durham
DL2 3DW
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Conservatory Base Builders Ltd. Details:
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Information about words in this company name or address
conservatory
1. conservatory, school
usage: the faculty and students of a school specializing in one of the fine arts
2. conservatory, conservatoire, school, schoolhouse
usage: a schoolhouse with special facilities for fine arts
3. conservatory, hothouse, indoor garden, greenhouse, nursery, glasshouse
usage: a greenhouse in which plants are arranged in a pleasing manner
A sunroom is a structure, usually constructed onto the side of a house, to allow enjoyment of the surrounding landscape while being sheltered from adverse weather conditions such as rain and wind. The concept is popular in the United States, Europe, Canada, Northern Ireland, Australia and New Zealand.
In Great Britain, it is normally described as a conservatory, although the room may not contain plants. However a British sunroom has a solid opaque roof whereas a conservatory has a transparent or semi-transparent roof.
The structure is often referred to as a patio room, solarium, conservatory, patio enclosure or Florida Room. It can be constructed of brick, breeze block, wood, glass or PVC. The brick or wood base makes up the main support for the PVC, referred to as the "knee wall", which is attached to the top of it. The glass panels are large and often clear instead of frosted. The roof may be of glass panels but is more usually of a plastic material which lets in sunlight. Some sunrooms are designed for scenic view, while others are designed to collect sunlight for warmth and light. These, usually called solariums, are found in Northern or cold locations. Solariums have walls made up of glass , often curved joining windows, and glass roofs. Sunrooms tend to have conventional roofs.
base
1. the bottom support of anything; that on which a thing stands or rests: a metal base for the table.
2. a fundamental principle or groundwork; foundation; basis: the base of needed reforms.
3. the bottom layer or coating, as of makeup or paint.
4. Archit.
a. the distinctively treated portion of a column or pier below the shaft or shafts. See diag. under column.
b. the distinctively treated lowermost portion of any construction, as a monument, exterior wall, etc.
5. Bot., Zool.
a. the part of an organ nearest its point of attachment.
b. the point of attachment.
6. the principal element or ingredient of anything, considered as its fundamental part: face cream with a lanolin base; paint with a lead base.
7. that from which a commencement, as of action or reckoning, is made; a starting point or point of departure.
8. Baseball.
a. any of the four corners of the diamond, esp. first, second, or third base. Cf. home plate.
b. a square canvas sack containing sawdust or some other light material, for marking first, second, or third base.
9. a starting line or point for runners, racing cars, etc.
10. the goal.
11. Mil.
a. a fortified or more or less protected area or place from which the operations of an army or an air force proceed.
b. a supply installation for a large military force.
12. Geom.the line or surface forming the part of a figure that is most nearly horizontal or on which it is supposed to stand.
13. Math.
a. the number that serves as a starting point for a logarithmic or other numerical system.
b. a collection of subsets of a topological space having the property that every open set in the given topology can be written as the union of sets of the collection.
c. a collection of neighborhoods of a point such that every neighborhood of the point contains one from the collection.
d. a collection of sets of a given filter such that every set in the filter is contained in some set in the collection.
1. base, alkali, compound, chemical compound
usage: any of various water-soluble compounds capable of turning litmus blue and reacting with an acid to form a salt and water; "bases include oxides and hydroxides of metals and ammonia"
2. base, base of operations, military installation
usage: installation from which a military force initiates operations; "the attack wiped out our forward bases"
3. foundation, base, fundament, foot, groundwork, substructure, understructure, support
usage: lowest support of a structure; "it was built on a base of solid rock"; "he stood at the foot of the tower"
4. base, bag, baseball equipment
usage: place that runner must touch before scoring; "he scrambled to get back to the bag"
5. base, radix, number
usage: the positive integer that is equivalent to one in the next higher counting place; "10 is the radix of the decimal system"
6. base, part, piece
usage: the bottom or lowest part; "the base of the mountain"
7. base, bottom
usage: the part of an organ nearest its point of attachment; "the base of the skull"
8. floor, base, control
usage: a lower limit; "the government established a wage floor"
9. basis, base, foundation, fundament, groundwork, cornerstone, assumption, supposition, supposal
usage: the fundamental assumptions from which something is begun or developed or calculated or explained; "the whole argument rested on a basis of conjecture"
builders
1. a person who builds.
2. a person who constructs buildings under contract or as a speculation.
3. a substance, as an abrasive or filler, added to soaps or other cleaning agents to increase their effectiveness.
darlington
Darlington is a town in the ceremonial county of County Durham, England, and the main population centre in the Borough of Darlington. Darlington has a population of 97,838 as of 1997. On 1 April 1997, the Borough of Darlington became a unitary authority area, which separated it from the non-metropolitan county of Durham for administrative purposes.
Darlington is known for its associations with the birth of railways. This is celebrated in the town at Darlington Railway Centre and Museum. The world''s first passenger rail journey was between Shildon and Stockton-on-Tees via Darlington, on the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825.
The town later became an important centre for railway manufacturing, with three significant works. The largest of these was the main line locomotive works, known as North Road Shops, opened in 1863 and closed in 1966. Another was Robert Stephenson & Co. , who moved to Darlington from Newcastle upon Tyne in 1902, became Robert Stephensons & Hawthorns in 1937, were absorbed by English Electric around 1960, and closed by 1964. The third was Faverdale Wagon Works, established in 1923 and closed in 1962, which in the 1950s was a UK pioneer in the application of mass-production techniques to the manufacture of railway goods wagons.
To commemorate the town''s contribution to the railways, David Mach''s 1997 work "Train" is located alongside the A66, close to the original Stockton-Darlington railway. It is a life-size brick sculpture of a steaming locomotive emerging from a tunnel, made from 185,000 "Accrington Nori" bricks. The work had a budget of £760,000.
The Great North Road, now known as the A1, used to run directly through the centre of Darlington. The road has since been diverted to the west of the town; the original route is now the A167 via North Road in the town centre. The £5.9 m five-mile A66 Darlington Eastern Bypass opened on November 25, 1985 and is currently undergoing major reconstruction in an effort to reduce congestion at rush hour. The Darlington Eastern Transport Corridor, linking Central Park north-east of the town centre to a new roundabout on the A66, was opened in the summer of 2008. The A1 Darlington Bypass opened in May 1965.

