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The main house is built like a three-leaf clover with the main rooms being circular. A short staircase in the center accounts for the different heights created by the rock on which the house sits. The main floor contains the living room with a large fireplace, the master bedroom, and a kitchen
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bottles, which would have otherwise been discarded as waste. Built with a single layer of bottles laid with the short neck towards the inside, strips of wood were wired between the necks and reinforced with cement. The strips of wood then support the inner walls formed of cedar boards.
36:. Construction started in 1952 in order to, according to a quote left by Mr. Brown, "indulge a whim of a peculiar nature". Intended to be the Browns' home, the unusual construction and fantasy-castle appearance attracted traffic from the adjacent
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overlooking a terrace. A second bedroom resides upstairs, off-limits to visitors, and brings the total square footage to 1200 (approximately 111 square metres). Additional structures include a
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Off the Beaten Path
British Columbia: A Guide to Unique Places - Tricia Timmermans - Google Books
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109:"Cities - British Columbia - Boswell - The Glass House - International Selkirk Loop"
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44:). The resulting loss of privacy led to the Browns' establishment of a
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32:in British Columbia near the rural locality of
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42:International Selkirk Loop
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48:in the summer months.
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148:49.4050°N 116.7416°W
20:Glass house entrance
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117:. Retrieved
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139:116°44′30″W
26:Glass House
166:Categories
136:49°24′18″N
119:2011-02-13
84:References
78:waterwheel
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24:The
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