nedjelja, 06.11.2011.
PATENT LAWYER REQUIREMENTS : PATENT LAWYER
PATENT LAWYER REQUIREMENTS : LEGAL HUMAN RIGHTS.
Patent Lawyer Requirements
- Less formal term for “patent attorney”
- A patent attorney is an attorney who has the specialized qualifications necessary for representing clients in obtaining patents and acting in all matters and procedures relating to patent law and practice, such as filing an opposition.
- A thing that is needed or wanted
- A thing that is compulsory; a necessary condition
- necessitate: require as useful, just, or proper; "It takes nerve to do what she did"; "success usually requires hard work"; "This job asks a lot of patience and skill"; "This position demands a lot of personal sacrifice"; "This dinner calls for a spectacular dessert"; "This intervention does not
- (require) command: make someone do something
- (require) ask: consider obligatory; request and expect; "We require our secretary to be on time"; "Aren't we asking too much of these children?"; "I expect my students to arrive in time for their lessons"
Bedford Square: East Side
Lord Chancellor Eldon lived here from 1804 to 1816 it now houses New York University's London Academic Facility.
This is one of the four Palladian style, stucco centre pieces in Bedford Square. They were originally painted to look like stone ( The stuccoed centrepieces were originally finished in four or five coats of Liardet's stucco, painted, incised and colour-washed to imitate real stone. The stucco was made to a recipe patented by a Swiss clergyman in the 1773 and much used, and indeed heavily promoted, by the Adam brothers, who became partners in the company. Unfortunately for the Adams, Liardet's product proved highly unreliable, and was soon falling off houses all over London. It is likely that the Bedford Square centrepieces were, in common with much of the capital, refaced in one of the more stable stuccoes that came onto the market after 1797) but like most Georgian building now they've been painted white. Why? All of Regent's Park houses are painted cream and look so much better. The entire square is Grade I listed.
Bedford Square is one of the finest and best preserved Georgian squares in London it was named after Bedford House, the ancestral home of the 5th Duke of Bedford. This was auctioned off and demolished in 1800. (Bedford Place was built in it's place) The square was built between 1775 and 1783 four houses were designed by Thomas Leverton, it would seem that the remainder was not designed by a major architect. The design of the terrace fronts and the schemes for internal planning were probably devised by the surveyor Robert Palmer, who had recently worked with James Adam. It seems, however, that Palmer worked closely with the builders William Scott and Robert Grews, who were effectively responsible for overall supervision of the site after Palmer died in 1776. All of the square's houses were built by individual builders, each of whom had a separate contract with the Bedford Estate. The absence of a professionally-trained architect as the scheme's principal guide is underlined by the form of stucco centrepieces on the north and south sides, which commit the architectural solecism of including a five-pilastered portico. Bedford Square, along with other large-scale developments of the time, was built according to the speculative practices established after London's Great Fire of 1666. The freeholder--in this case the Bedford Estate--would lease out each plot to a builder-speculator. The latter would be permitted to erect the carcase of a building at a minimal, peppercorn rent, levied for a predetermined period, and be responsible for arranging the first commercial let. (In Bedford Square's case, the first lets usually lasted 80 or 99 years.) The house would then be finished internally to the first lessee's requirements, and on occupation the lessee would be charged the full rental. The fact that most of the Bedford Square leases were assigned by the mid-1780s suggests that the square was immediately popular, the initial leaseholders generally being lawyers, doctors or merchants. By the end of the century the square was being hailed as one of the most fashionable addresses in London for 'the aristocracy of the City and the Inns of Court. British Listed Buildings
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