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  2. Step street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_street

    A step street is a thoroughfare fitted with steps for pedestrian traffic rather than paved or tracked for motor vehicles. It is a practical way of providing access up and down a slope that is too steep for automobiles. Step streets consist of a staircase of stone or concrete steps, often with a handrail on posts down the center, and sometimes ...

  3. Stepped gable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stepped_gable

    A stepped gable, crow-stepped gable, or corbie step [1] is a stairstep type of design at the top of the triangular gable-end of a building. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The top of the parapet wall projects above the roofline and the top of the brick or stone wall is stacked in a step pattern above the roof as a decoration and as a convenient way to finish the ...

  4. Stoop (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoop_(architecture)

    Similarly, it was the place that children would congregate to play street games such as stoop ball. Urbanites lacking yards often hold stoop sales instead of yard sales . In her pivotal book The Death and Life of Great American Cities , Jane Jacobs includes the stoop as part of her model of the self-regulating urban street.

  5. Stairs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stairs

    The tread depth of a step is measured from the edge of the nosing to the vertical riser; if the steps have no nosing, it is the same as the going; otherwise it is the going plus the extent of one nosing. The going of a step is measured from the edge of the nosing to the edge of nosing in plan view. A person using the stairs would move this ...

  6. Terrace (building) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrace_(building)

    Agricultural terracing can be traced back to prehistoric times, but architectural terracing is equally ancient. Examples of early architectural terracing in the Middle East have been found at Nahal Oren (a Natufian cultural site occupied between 13000 and 9834 BCE), at Tel Yarmut (2700 to 2200 BCE), and at Tel el-'Umeiri (600 BCE). [4]

  7. 50 Hilariously Bad Houses, As Spotted By This Belgian Guy ...

    www.aol.com/80-hilariously-bad-houses-spotted...

    Image credits: uglybelgianhouses But Ugly Belgian Houses, the project started by freelance digital creative Hannes Coudenys in 2012, has nothing to do with medieval architecture like that of Bruges.

  8. Setback (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Setback_(architecture)

    Step-backs lower the building's center of mass, making it more stable. A setback as a minimum one-bay indent across all stories is called a recessed bay or recess and is the more common exterior form of an alcove. Upper stories forming a step-back may form a belvedere – and in residential use are considered the penthouse.

  9. $2.7 million meant to build homeless housing ended up with L ...

    www.aol.com/news/2-7-million-meant-build...

    Step Up on Second, a homeless housing and services provider, received $2.7 million in future "profit" from the developer of seven state-funded Project Homekey motel conversions, court records say.