The island is home to different types of architecture with
the typical wooden houses that people would expect to find on a Caribbean island.
Not exact matches
The
houses of Mykonos Town, with their exuberantly colored
wooden doors, windows, and balconies, line the narrow streets forming a
typical Cycladic labyrinth town, and mixing with beautiful churches and chapels, purple bougainvillea displaying its blousy wares against the bright white walls.
When merchant Thomas Gledstanes purchased the building which now bears his name in 1617, it had a
wooden facade and a
wooden gallery above the floor — a
typical house of the 16th Century.
The environmentally friendly
wooden «Joglo» is a
typical traditional
house and built in Yogyakarta, in Java.
This old colonial
house has adobe walls and you can see the tiled roof
typical of the zone from the inside with the
wooden rafters visibly holding them up.
The
house is decorated in
typical Tuscan style with terracotta tiles and
wooden beams and well equipped.
There were children running and playing along the highway in their bare feet; locals bicycling through the village; thin and sad - looking dogs roaming around and laying in the middle of the road; lots of garbage and litter scattered along the side of the road; abandoned buildings with jungle growth creeping inside them and graffiti on the exterior; open - air handicraft markets selling
typical Mexican souvenirs and blankets in a variety of vibrant colours; empty bus stops covered in graffiti; small, open - air and simple restaurants with red Coca Cola signs on the exterior, and matching tables and chairs serving authentic cuisine; locals cooking and serving fresh meat on a barbeque along the road; a small park and square; narrow gravel roads stemming off of the highway to the remainder of the village; and tiny one - room
houses with either thatched roofs and
wooden panels on the sides or square white painted
houses with a flat roof, barred windows and always a satellite dish on top.
The
house appears to have a palapa roof and
wooden slats along the side, which is what the
typical house looks like in Tulum.
The rooms are distributed in two differnet traditional stone country
houses with slate roofing and charming
wooden interiors, built following the
typical architectural Benasque style.
Walking into Sikkema Jenkins and Co., one is immediately greeted by what might be considered a «
typical» piece by Leonardo Drew: large, imposing
wooden structures, here painted black to give them the impression of having been salvaged and then stacked after a particularly devastating
house fire.
Image Credit: Norwegian flag with
typical norwegian red
wooden house with sod roof via Shutterstock
A
wooden ladder provides access to the sole loft bedroom which is a
typical low - ceilinged tiny
house type and includes a queen - size double bed.