878 resultados para Historical district
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"Certain of these orders ... have been printed in Col. E. Cruikshank's Documentary history of Niagara." Created on behalf of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Toronto
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The objectives of the present study are to inquire into the financial aspects of the selected Panchayats in Ernakulam district; , to analyse the income and expenditure pattern of selected and ‘District Panchayats'16 during 1969-70 through 1983-84; , to suggest the steps to be taken by the Panchayat for the proper utilisation of resources and for increasing the availability of resources; to suggest the additional sources of revenue for the Panchayats
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The Koyukuk Mining District was one of several northern, turn of the century, gold rush regions. Miners focused their efforts in this region on the Middle Fork of the Koyukuk River and on several of its tributaries. Mining in the Koyukuk began in the 1880s and the first rush occurred in 1898. Continued mining throughout the early decades of the 1900s has resulted in an historic mining landscape consisting of structures, equipment, mining shafts, waste rock, trash scatters, and prospect pits. Modern work continues in the region alongside these historic resources. An archaeological survey was completed in 2012 as part of an Abandoned Mine Lands survey undergone with the Bureau of Land Management, Michigan Technological University, and the University of Alaska Anchorage. This thesis examines the discrepancy between the size of mining operations and their respective successes in the region while also providing an historical background on the region and reports on the historical resources present.
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Land value bears significant weight in house prices in historical town centers. An essential aim for regulating the mortgage market, particularly in the financial and property crisis that countries such as Spain are undergoing, is to have at hand objective procedures for its valuation, whatever the conditions (location, construction, planning). Of all the factors contributing to house price make-up, the land is the only one whose value does not depend on acquisition cost, but rather on the location-time binomial. That is to say, the specific circumstances at that point and at the exact moment of valuation. For this reason, the most commonly applied procedure for land valuation in town centers is the use of the residual method: once the selling price of new housing in a district is known, the other necessary costs and expenses of development are deducted, including those of building and the developer’s profit. The value left is that of the land. To apply these procedures it is vital to have figures such as building costs, technical fees, tax costs, etc. But, above all, it is essential to obtain the selling price of the new housing. This is not always feasible, on account of the lack of newbuild development in this location. This shortage of information occurs in historical town cities, where urban renewal is slight due to the heritage-protection policies, and where, nevertheless there is substantial activity in the secondary market. In these circumstances, as an alternative for land valuation in consolidated urban areas, we have the adaptation of the residual method to the particular characteristics of the secondary market. To these ends, there is the proposal for the appreciation of the dwelling which follows, in a backwards direction, the application of traditional depreciation methods proposed by the various valuation manuals and guidelines. The reliability of the results obtained is analyzed by contrasting it with published figures for newly-built properties, according to different rules applied in administrative appraisals in Spain and the incidence of an eventual correction due to conservation state.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Description based on: Apr. 19/20, 1886.
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Title entered in the District Clerk's Office, District of Massachusetts, in 1825.
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Includes Pennslyvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, District of Columbia and Virginia.
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Pencil on tracing paper; sketch with location of plantings; signed;; 108 x 99 cm; Scale: 1" = 10' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Pencil on tracing paper; location, type, amounts of plantings; buildings, depot; signed; 75 x 58 cm; Scale: 1" = 20' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Pencil on tracing paper; location, type, amounts of plantings; signed; 53 x 66 cm; Scale: 1" = 20' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Pencil on tracing paper; location, type, amounts of plantings; council ring, pool; along right edge, "Soo Line" railroad runs; notes; signed; 63 x 61 cm.; Scale: 1" = 20' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Pencil on tracing paper; location of pipes for entire park; bordered at top by Lake Ave., at left, by Keystone Ave; unsigned;; 98 x 60 cm.; No scale [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]