Industries Exhibition: The exhibition galleries will show detailed case studies of London housing projects from the pioneering Murray Grove through to new schemes for apartments and family homes in all parts of London.
The exhibition will also explain modern construction methods such as modules and panels in concrete, steel and timber.
An accompanying seminar and lecture series will bring together professionals from the architecture, construction and manufacturing Industries exhibition to encourage debate on the future of modern housing in the city.
The exhibition can be viewed until 18 March 2006.
Also in the lower town are the industrial areas at the mouth of the St. Charles River and extending for three miles upstream. Leading Industries exhibition are Textiles and clothing, leather products, pulp and paper, printing, shipbuilding and transportation, foods and beverages, tobacco, cigars and cigarettes, and chemical and mineral products. Also south of the St. Charles are such commercial arteries as Charest Boulevard, and St. Joseph and St. Vallier streets. Other points of interest are the Exhibition Grounds (site of the annual Provincial Exhibition in September), north of the St.
Three of the most eagerly sought, all in London, are: The Ideal Home Exhibition, in March, lasting about 4 weeks; the British Industries exhibition Fair, in early May (this also simultaneously in Birmingham); the International Motor Show, in late October. London's Olympia, an exhibition hall of vast size, is the setting for most big events of the sort, but the Motor Show is in the Earl's Court Exhibition Grounds.
4. Britain's Artistic Heritage The museums and galleries of London could keep the earnest browser intelligently busy for weeks on end, but if you lack the necessary weeks you'll probably concentrate on three or four.
The British Museum takes all civilization, especially in early and earliest times, for its field and has a thousand wonders to show. It is generally considered to be quite without rival anywhere else in the world.
The National Gallery, on Trafalgar Square, contains a very rich collection of Old Masters of Italian, Dutch, Flemish, German, Spanish, French and British schools.
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