| Galleries / Crinkle-crankle or serpentine walls |
| Author | Message |
| tuppence Moderator |
# Posted: 8 Sep 2012 10:55:57 - Edited by: tuppence Also known as crinkum-crankum, serpentine, ribbon or wavy walls, crinkle-crankle walls are a way of economising on bricks. In spite of their sinuous shape they are stable when built just one brick thick without the need for buttresses. They are associated with East Anglia but as the map of these examples shows, their use has spread to other parts of England and Wales and even include a dry stone example. It is possible their use in Britain dates back to the mid 17th century when Dutch engineers were employed to drain the fens. In the Netherlands the design is called slange muur (snaking wall). Thomas Jefferson used this form in the grounds of the University of Virginia having appreciated both its aesthetic value and economy. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
| tuppence Moderator |
# Posted: 8 Sep 2012 11:00:05![]() |
| robinstott Moderator |
# Posted: 8 Sep 2012 20:56:52![]() |
| tuppence Moderator |
# Posted: 27 Sep 2013 19:20:04 ![]() Easton, Suffolk |
| tuppence Moderator |
# Posted: 10 Sep 2014 12:30:51 Difficult to see the curves of this wall for the shrubbery ![]() Newark Park, Ozleworth, Gloucestershire |
| tuppence Moderator |
# Posted: 18 Sep 2014 11:13:35 Hopton Hall, Derbyshire |
| tuppence Moderator |
# Posted: 18 Sep 2014 11:41:30 - Edited by: tuppence Lymington, Hampshire Winterbourne garden, Edgbaston |
| tuppence Moderator |
# Posted: 2 Jun 2017 13:34:09 ![]() |
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