Friends, for your information - The collection of the Imanja Oblins Museum is made up of arts and household objects held in the summer house jointly built by Imanja Oblins and his wife, Ausma Odonne-Kantan. . So this time, I, the most important object of the summer house and museum stock, bear Andrey Upite, will tell you about this nod. U. It's really a very special edifice that opens to visitors today during the museum's active season from June to October.
In the summer of 1969, the exiled writer Velta Tomas and Oblins have welcomed foreign guests and led to Sigulda to celebrate Janus. . The next morning, on their way back to Riga, everyone thought to stop in Murjans at the time of the Writers' Union Board secretary, Albert Jansons, who took visitors to the wonderful place. U. With the beauty of the night and place, the weirds have fallen in love with this fir-filled cliff—and later, after a late meeting, Imantine and Ausma have decided, Muryans are the right place for their own home.
It must be said here that the stories are different: “When Ausma and Imanius try to remember how the idea of building Murjans' headquarters was born, Mr. Berkis tells the story in the book From the Justices to the Murians, their statements do not go into the article.” Imanius says this has happened in the madness of the Yenan night: the brewers have roared, “Oh, you have to build a house here!”
— If I had come another time, I might have seen that the summer house was not in place. . The earth is not good, the rock started in the depths of the spade s. My house is actually built on a rock, and it's as impossible to grow the carrots here. . So now he [Imands Ziedonis] sak a. [..]
Ausma says something quite different: it really happened on the morning of the Christmas Day after the night, but the place was chosen by Imanius precisely because there were large pines and a good breath for his sick lungs. . (“Good microclimate,” she says.) It's never happened, it's been very long and long afterwards. "[1] as it was, it was not remembered by anyone, but this wonderful place was found and the house of dreams could have started.
Table Name Test name amazement life cheerfully perplexed
At first, Ausma had been excited where, in general terms of shortages, to obtain materials for home construction, the advantage itself had not been so great. . Imanius had been a confidant of confidence s. In this case, the poet's idea was that one needed only two things, Grim and Providence, to realise a man's intention. . Perhaps it was a coincidence, but in the fall of the same year there was a major storm that had dumped so many trees in the Muryan neighborhood that anyone who was willing to pick them up and use them had been brought up.
In parallel to his long reconciliation work, Imanius and Ausma cherished the visual image of his future home. . Together they have plotted, wondered, dreamed in the mornings, in the evenings, and in all other possible moments s. I quite like this commitment: if Ausma and Imanius build a house, it must be one that no one has! It was perfectly clear. . He said, “It must not look like a city. a. It must be a wooden house with a steep double-slip roof. . Double-slip roofs look prettier I. The flat isn't a roof at all. . The roof is what Jumis is, the roof of the two is drowned down. "[2] Engineers alone changed their heads and said that a long-lasting building with such a steep part of the roof could not be constructed because the walls of the building would not withstand the pressure of such a large floor roof. U. The intention of the building has not been in line with the regulations laid down by the Soviet authorities for the construction of summer houses, which stipulated that the residential area of the summer house must not exceed 30 square metres, but Imanium has been stubbornly opposed to saying, “How will it be, it will be!” Hold on! “” [3] And indeed — hold on still!
, unfortunately, the summer houses in Russian times had even the height of the ceiling, and whatever it was, there were limitations imposed by the laws of physics. . She had heard nothing about anyone or the other, and the poet had never heard of him. K. Imanius asked architect Gunar Janson for advice, the top wooden sleeping specialist of the time.