parameters of working so we know the defined areas of Stamford and how much we're likely to see. Um, then I'll do a very detailed photographic one house at a time um, and mark up what has to be done on each house. Then we'll calculate how long we'll need to do that work on it, how many specialists we'll need to bring up and get those, those times slotted in to the schedule. I mean the main difficulty with something like Stamford was the covering of the road which is always a difficulty. Um, the houses have a fairly standard treatment, they, none of them are true to period, they all have to have new doors, new colours. They have to have false glazing boards. They have to have telephone cables hidden. They have to have, there are all sorts of new things, letter boxes, bells, Xpelairs, aerials, they're a vast amount on each house, but they're kind of negative things, nobody ever notices you're done but they would notice if you hadn't. Then we add things. There are the things that we add, we built shops, we built the portico to the White Hart. We put signs everywhere to make it much more of a busy street rather than a slightly residential area and then we covered the road in a road surface, which had to answer alot of questions I mean it was mainly difficult and it's practical ramifications because it was a tarmac road

Additional notes in pen and pencil:

Annotation 1: In pen, there are lines surrounding the text from Um, then I'll' on the second line to 'road surface' on the twenty second line. To the top right of the surrounded text, the number '12' is written and circled.

Annotation 2: On the left-hand side of the surrounded text, the words 'from p.11' is hand-written. The words 'Part 4' is also written below this, both in pen.

Annotation 3: A pen dashed line separates the sentence ending in 'new colours' from the next one on twelfth line. To the right of this text, a question mark is drawn.

Annotation 4: In pencil, on the left hand-side of the text, there is a line that stops after the first 4 lines. The number '3.' Is written to the left of this line. In the word 'photographic', the last two letters are crossed out, and above it the words 'of' are written.

Annotation 5: There is a pencil line going vertically downwards in the left margin of the text, from the eighth line to the twenty-second line. The letter '4' is written to the left of this line. The word 'Stamford' is hand-written to the left of the eleventh line. The word 'road' is hand-written to the left of the twentieth line.

Annotation 6: Throughout the text, there are a number of sentences underlined in pencil: