Watch it rebuild itself, then walk through what no longer exists.
A self-contained demonstration of the reconstruction montage. The layers below are illustrative, not a real record.
A reconstruction is one informed reading of the evidence, assembled for interpretation. It is not a claim about the original's exact appearance.
In a live reconstruction this is where the "Walk through it" button takes you into the walkable 3D twin. No walkable space exists on this site yet, so the button is unavailable in this demonstration.
Show the rebuild stages as a list
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c. 1905Site survey: the footprint that remainsFaint ruin outline traced from the surviving foundations and a measured ground plan.
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c. 1912Walls raised from the evidenceWall lines reconstructed from the footprint, archival elevations and comparable structures of the period.
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c. 1920Openings and the upper storeyDoors, windows and the second storey placed from photographs and the surveyed wall heights.
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c. 1928Roof and structureThe roofline and structural frame inferred from period building practice and one surviving gable photograph.
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1931Archival photograph: the building in useA dated archival-style frame showing the structure as it stood, used to check the reconstruction.
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ReconstructionFull interpretive renderThe completed virtual reconstruction, ready to walk through. One informed reading of the evidence.