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| Product | Description |
| 35 King Street
| This magnificent example of Bristol Byzantine architecture in King Street is now owned by Bristol City Council and is a well known business design centre providing office space for small companies.
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| Albion Dockyard marina
| Albion Dockyard marina
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| Albion Dockyard marina
| Albion Dockyard marina
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| Albion Dockyard marina
| Albion Dockyard marina
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| Albion Dockyard marina
| Albion Dockyard marina
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| Albion Dockyard marina
| Albion Dockyard marina
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| Albion Dockyard marina
| Albion Dockyard marina
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| Albion Dockyard marina
| Albion Dockyard marina
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| All Saints Church
| All Saints Church, Corn Street, is of Norman origins with the tower and cupola completed in 1807. The church is now mainly used as an urban studies centre.
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| All Saints Church, Clifton
| All Saints Church, Clifton
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| Ashton Court Estate
| Ashton Court Estate
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| Ashton Court Estate
| Ashton Court Estate
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| Ashton Court Estate
| Ashton Court Estate
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| Ashton Court Estate 1
| Deer at Ashton Court Estate. Deer have been in the park since the 14th-century and were reintroduced in 1970.
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| Ashton Court Estate 2
| The deer park at Ashton Court Estate in the snow.
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| Ashton Court Estate 3
| Battle re-enactment at Ashton Court Estate.
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| Ashton Court Estate 4
| Bluebells in woodland at Ashton Court Estate.
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| Ashton Court Mansion
| Ashton Court Mansion
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| Ashton Court Mansion
| Ashton Court Mansion
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| Ashton Court Mansion 1
| Ashton Court Mansion, now owned by Bristol City Council. Is still undergoing restoration. The estate is open to the public and there is a visitor centre in the old stables.
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| Ashton Court Mansion 2
| Ashton Court Mansion at night. The mansion is a now popular venue for wedding receptions, conferences, lunches and banquets.
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| Avenue of lime trees – Castle Park
| Avenue of lime trees – Castle Park
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| Avenue of lime trees – Castle Park
| Avenue of lime trees – Castle Park
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| Bathurst Basin 1
| Bathurst Basin was built on the site of a former millpond, this once busy commercial dock still retains an example of nineteenth-century Bristol Byzantine-style warehousing, together with a group of early nineteenth-century cottages which have been restored and incorporated into an attractive new quayside housing development.
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| Bathurst Basin 2
| Bathurst Basin was built on the site of a former millpond, this once busy commercial dock still retains an example of nineteenth-century Bristol Byzantine-style warehousing together with a group of early nineteenth-century cottages which have been restored and incorporated into an attractive new quayside housing development.
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| Blaise Hamlet
| Blaise Hamlet was designed by John Nash and completed in 1812. The nine cottages were built for retired servants from Blaise Castle House.
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| Boer War Memorial
| Boer War Memorial with the Royal West of England Academy behind. The Academy was opened in 1858 and today still presents a wide range of exhibitions of painting and sculpture by members and non-members
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| Brandon Hill
| Brandon Hill with the Cabot Tower in the snow.
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| Brick relief on the Bristol Dental Hospital
| Part of the carved brick relief on the Bristol Eye Hospital.
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| Bristol Box Kite in the City Museum and Art Gallery
| A working replica of the Bristol Box Kite of 1910 hangs above the entrance hall of the City Museum and Art Gallery.
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| Bristol Bridge
| Bristol Bridge was originally built of timber and the only crossing over the Avon. The green trees of Castle Park can be seen beyond.
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| Bristol Bridge
| Bristol Bridge
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| Bristol Bridge
| Bristol Bridge
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| Bristol Bridge and Welsh Back
| Bristol Bridge stands on the site of the very first bridge into the Saxon settlement at the junction of the rivers Avon and Frome. For many years this remained the main access point to the well-defended burgh inside the encircling rivers. The present bridge dates from 1768 with additional cast iron balustrading added in Victorian times to support the wider road.
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| Bristol Cathedral 1
| Bristol Cathedral and College Green at night.
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| Bristol Cathedral 2
| Eastern Lady Chapel of Bristol Cathedral. The east window contains some of England's finest medieval heraldic glass.
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| Bristol Cathedral 3
| The Norman Chapter House of Bristol Cathedral.
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| Bristol Cathedral and At-Bristol.
| Bristol Cathedral viewed through the structure of At-Bristol.
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| Bristol Cathedral and the Abbey Gateway
| Bristol Cathedral and the Abbey Gateway
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| Bristol Cathedral and the Abbey Gateway
| Bristol Cathedral and the Abbey Gateway
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| Bristol Industrial Museum 1
| Bristol Industrial Museum houses over 700 exhibits relating to Bristol's long and varied industrial past ranging from aircraft, trains and buses to ships and printing. The latest exhibit tells the history of the slave trade from it's beginnings through to abolition.
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| Bristol Industrial Museum 2
| Bristol Industrial Museum is housed in former dockside transit sheds on the harbourside at Prince's Wharf. Four cranes dating from 1951 are preserved on the quayside.
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| Bristol Marina 1
| Bristol Marina now is the focus of many small related businesses such as sailmaking chandlery and boatbuilding.
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| Bristol Marina 2
| The marina is on the site of a former shipyard from which the last commercial vessel to be built in Bristol, the 'Miranda Guiness', was launched in 1976.
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| Bristol Marina 3
| The derelict former shipyard was bought by the city council and developed into a thriving 150-berth marina and boatyard.
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| Bristol Marina 4
| The thriving Bristol Marina with the terraces of Clifton Wood on the hillside behind.
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| Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
| Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
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| Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
| Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
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| Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
| Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
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