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                <text>View of St Johnâ€™s Lutheran Church in Perth, Western Australia. Built in 1936, St Johnâ€™s was the first Lutheran Church in Perth. It was designed by architect Richard Spanney and is an example of Inter-War Gothic architecture. The church is constructed from Darlington laterite stone and uses a combination of both semi-circular and pointed arch forms. Other features typical of medieval church architecture are the square tower, the solid buttresses, the decorative crenellations along the roofline and the window tracery.</text>
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                <text>A view of a flying buttress at the Basilica of St Patrickâ€™s in Fremantle, Western Australia. Flying buttresses were one of the most notable developments of gothic architecture in the medieval period. By means of a flying buttress, weight from a load bearing wall could be transferred to a non-adjacent buttress by means of a segmental or quadrant arch. Because this alleviated the need for a large stone buttress to directly adjoin the part of the building requiring support, flying buttresses meant that building design could become less bulky. They were often used, as in this case, to support the high or vaulted ceilings of churches where the addition of aisles with lower ceilings had moved buttresses outwards and created a gap between them and the central core of the building.&#13;
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About St Patrickâ€™s Basilica:&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>A view of St Albanâ€™s Anglican Church, Highgate. St Albanâ€™s is a small limestone parish church located in Highgate, Western Australia. Built in 1889 (with enlargements in 1898) in a Victorian Romanesque style, it is one of the earliest buildings designed by well-known WA architect Sir J. J. Talbot-Hobbs (1864-1938). Its characteristically romanesque features include the semi-circular arches, the traditional load-bearing masonry of the buttresses and solid walling, and the small window and door openings in relation to the overall wall area. The window of the nave contains stained three stained glass images of St Alban, St George and St Michael. The latter two were originally purchased for St Georgeâ€™s Cathedral, but upon arrival were discovered to be the wrong shape and were donated to St Albanâ€™s. Other windows depict St Luke, Christ and the Disciples and The Virgin Mary and Child. A bell was also donated by St Georgeâ€™s Cathedral. The St Albanâ€™s church Hall was used briefly as a preparatory school by The Sisters of the Church of England between 1907 and 1915.</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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