Sunday, May 30, 2021

Victorian Empire Mansions Have...

Victorian Empire Mansions Have...

Lookout towers, hidden basement, sealed attic, tunnels, blowout stairwells, concrete blockade fixtures, sitting duck crossfire targets/ bait, planned neighborhoods and comfort control.

Queen Anne Victorian...
Opposite corners have "looking around" rooms with pinched inward view. Nothing can stop me means, all the way up. Towers. Round. Length views for battle compatible big yards.

Corners are built off. That is balanced impact placement of bumper room lookouts.

The entrance to the attic is sealed under the blowout stairs at an inner exterior ridge of the multi-house super mansion.

Basement, 1st floor and 2nd floor have a similar layout. Sliding walls instead of doors to control the draft.

The back of the house is tucked out of view.

The bathrooms are another outside house with a live in assassin.

The "Quarters" compliment this proclaimed "Kitchen" House.

Cathedral ceilings. 23 Stairs.

The kitchen staff lives hidden in another similar kitchen basement. Ground floor kitchen hides the indoors basement entry.

There's a basement entrance tunnel to the "Kitchens'" Inventory Blockade House.

The basement is disguised as a flat.

The porch wraps greater than one corner with concrete footings above ground.

The house weight and support balance was dispersed to the basement footing at the perameter which was at ground level for a defensive collapse if someone foolishly decided to furnish the house and make use of the second floor other than only people only dance functions at and near the looking around rooms at the opposite quarters. Don't use the back stairs doesn't mean don't use the back stairs but... When the tennants were charitable and used the residence how they were instructed their perspective shifted so the back was the front and there was a way to be able to afford to eat and prevent meningitis. The sliding walls would be open for the collateral dance functions on the second floor and they could be chalked and jacked to add tremendous support and stability until it got cold enough to wrap it up. When conducting a two spot post look around at the surround of very nearly the whole house and the viewing limits of the outside world the jacks could add a defensive structural sabotage trap at alternative opening sizes. On the first floor, instead of the looking around room tower, there may be a pony express saddle fixture below an upper half barred corner window view that springs a trap door to a basement pew manheld barracade. At the opposite corner of the house there's another pony express fixture that only aligns a low view that is limited to below the lower half of the window at the opposite end. Otherwise, inside the house, it would enable domino trap disassembly. It is almost a blade to mount and it's rounded to lick away braces with no low step or foot rest. It's hard with a low boiling point like electroplated gold with a plastic master key in the fine bottleneck of the mount. This is called the stern.

The original design had a second "looking around room" tower, all the way up with a through tunnel vision signaling view at the opposite wide corner at the tucked end of this Victor Empire House. The indestructible design of castles was eventually thought to be overkill, wasteful and the defense needed destructibility. Originally, this overlooked design featured a "comfort control tower." It was a glass convection heat house catwalk on the fiddle. It had to be broken into one way, then it also needed a key built in to the blowout stack of stairwells or the attic apartment, just to make only the attic a reasonable temperature. Serendipitously we also broke our attic entry and moved to the greatest empire in the world.

This attached photo is a Queen Ann inspired modernized design that now features seven bathrooms indoors including two double bathrooms on the second floor and two semi double kitchens. There is central AC instead of fire places and the basement has support at just about all the walls.

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