Double glazing is made up of two layers of glass, with a layer of argon gas in between. This type of glass can be used in Aluminium windows. The gas is a poor insulator, helping heat to stay in your home and making your windows more efficient. As well as trapping the argon gas, the second layer of glass reduces the amount of noise that enters your property, and helps to make your windows stronger and more secure.
Watlington
Watlington is a market community and civil parish concerning 7 miles (11 km) south of Thame in Oxfordshire, near the region's eastern side as well as less than 2 miles (3 kilometres) from its boundary with Buckinghamshire. The church consists of the hamlets of Christmas Common, Greenfield and also Howe Hillside, all of which remain in the Chiltern Hills. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 2,727. The Watlington area is most likely to have been settled at an early day, motivated by the distance of the Icknield Way. The toponym implies "settlement of Waecel's people" and also indicates line of work from around the sixth century. A 9th-century charter by Æthelred of Mercia records eight 'manses' or significant residences in Watlington. The Domesday Book of 1086 identified the location as a farming community valued at £ 610. Medieval papers indicate that the modern street plan was in presence in the 14th century, as Cochynes-lane (Couching Street), as well as Brook Street are recorded. There are records of inns in Watlington because the 15th century. In 1722 the community's market was provided as being hung on a Saturday. By the end of the 18th century the town had 6 inns, every one of which were bought up in the next few years by a regional developing household, the Haywards. The number of certified premises increased until late in the 19th century when George Wilkinson, a Methodist acquired 6 of them and closed them down. Today Watlington has 3 public houses: the Carriers Arms, The Chequers and The Fat Fox Inn. Parliamentarian soldiers were billeted at Watlington throughout the English Civil War. It is believed that John Hampden remained in the town the evening prior to the Battle of Chalgrove Field. In 1664-- 65 the City center was built at the expense of Thomas Stonor. Its upper room was enhanced by Stonor as a grammar school for children, as well as in 1731 Dame Alice Tipping of Ewelme gave an additional endowment to raise the number of pupils. In 1842 the community Vestry developed a National School, which shared the exact same areas in the City center. In 1843 a National College for girls was constructed next to St Leonard's church. In 1872 the boys' as well as girls' schools were taken in into a new Board school, which like its precursors was affiliated to the National Society for Promoting Religious Education. In 1927 the college was separated into separate junior and elderly institutions. In 1956 a new high school-- the Icknield School-- opened for elderly students and the primary school took control of the old premises. The Icknield School is now Icknield Community College. By 1895 the Town Hall, no longer made use of as a school, remained in disrepair. In 1907 it was brought back by public subscription. It is a site at the meeting point of 3 roadways in the centre of the community. Because 1990 Watlington has been twinned with the community of Mansle in the Poitou-Charentes region of France. The Watlington Hoard, a collection of silver things dating back to the moment of Alfred the Great in the 9th century, was uncovered in Watlington by James Mather, an amateur metal-detectorist, in 2015. The stockpile was ultimately dug deep into, and eventually purchased by the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford for £ 1.35 m.