When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: 16x12 sheds built on site

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cardington Airfield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardington_Airfield

    The site started life as a private venture when aircraft manufacturing company Short Brothers bought land there to build airships for the Admiralty.It constructed a 700-foot-long (210 m) Airship hangar (the No. 1 Shed) in 1915 to enable it to build two rigid airships, the R-31 and the R-32.

  3. Airship hangar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airship_hangar

    Exterior view of hangar at the former Brand-Briesen Airfield, built for Cargolifter. After the Second World War worldwide only one big airship shed had been built: The one in Brand south of Berlin for the construction of the Cargolifter AG airship. With a length of 360 metres (1,180 ft), a width of 210 metres (690 ft) and a height of 107 metres ...

  4. Manufactured housing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manufactured_housing

    Some modern modular homes, once fully assembled, are indistinguishable from site-built homes. In addition, modular homes: must conform to the same local, state and regional building codes as homes built on-site; are treated the same by banks as homes built on-site. They are easily refinanced, for example; must be structurally approved by ...

  5. Shed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shed

    Sheds used on farms or in the industry can be large structures. The main types of shed construction are metal sheathing over a metal frame, plastic sheathing and frame, all-wood construction (the roof may be asphalt shingled or sheathed in tin), and vinyl-sided sheds built over a wooden frame.

  6. Nissen hut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissen_hut

    Nissen huts, Cultybraggan Camp, close to Comrie, in west Perthshire A Nissen hut is a prefabricated steel structure originally for military use, especially as barracks, made from a 210° portion of a cylindrical skin of corrugated iron.

  7. Murtoa Stick Shed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murtoa_Stick_Shed

    It was a 'temporary' grain shed, 270m long and 60m wide, built in late 1941 and early 1942, using 560 unmilled mountain ash tree trunks. [Australian heritage site: Murtoa No 1 Grain Store A second and much larger Stick Shed, with double the capacity, was erected in 1942/43 at Murtoa using poles largely supplied from forests at East Gippsland ...

  1. Ad

    related to: 16x12 sheds built on site