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  2. Central oil storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Oil_Storage

    The book Introduction to Architectural Science states about liquid fuel storage tanks, "often in a housing development a central storage tank is installed (usually underground) which will be filled by an oil company", and that a supply of liquid fuel is piped to individual apartments or houses from the central storage tank. [2]

  3. Mechanical floor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_floor

    The resulting visible "dark bands" can disrupt the overall facade design, especially if it is fully glass-clad. Different architectural styles approach this challenge in different ways. In the Modern and International styles of the 1960s and 1970s where form follows function , the vents' presence is not seen as undesirable.

  4. Central heating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_heating

    65–97% for gas-fired heating; 80–89% for oil-fired and; 45–60% for coal-fired heating. [26] Oil storage tanks, especially underground storage tanks, can also impact the environment. Even if a building's heating system was converted from oil long ago, oil may still be impacting the environment by contaminating soil and groundwater.

  5. External floating roof tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_floating_roof_tank

    An external floating roof tank is a storage tank commonly used to store large quantities of petroleum products such as crude oil or condensate. It consists of an open- topped cylindrical steel shell equipped with a roof that floats on the surface of the stored liquid. The roof rises and falls with the liquid level in the tank. [1]

  6. Underground storage tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underground_storage_tank

    Steel/aluminum tanks, made by manufacturers in most states and conforming to standards set by the Steel Tank Institute. Composite overwrapped, a metal tank (aluminum/steel) with filament windings like glass fiber/aramid or carbon fiber or a plastic compound around the metal cylinder for corrosion protection and to form an interstitial space.

  7. Basement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basement

    The buried portion is often used for storage, laundry room, hot water tanks, and HVAC. Daylight basement homes typically appraise higher than standard-basement homes, since they include more viable living spaces. In some parts of the US, however, the appraisal for daylight basement space is half that of ground and above ground level square footage.