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  2. Awning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awning

    An awning or overhang is a secondary covering attached to the exterior wall ... Because awnings prevent the sun from shining through windows and sliding glass doors ...

  3. Croydon railway station, Sydney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croydon_railway_station...

    It is a single room, rectangular building with stretcher bond brickwork, chamfered corners and a flat roof with cantilevered awnings. The window openings are original with concrete sills, steel frames and three paned fixed glass sashes. Two original entrances into the waiting room which are positioned directly opposite each other consist of ...

  4. Valley Heights railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valley_Heights_railway_station

    Distinctive features are red face brickwork with rendered and moulded two rows of string courses to both rail elevations, timber framed windows and doors with contrasting decorative rendered trims and sills, standard iron brackets over decorative corbels supporting ample platform awnings, fretted timber work to both ends of awnings and gable ...

  5. Gable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gable

    The gable end roof is a poor design for hurricane or tornado-prone regions. Winds blowing against the gable end can exert tremendous pressure, both on the gable and on the roof edges where they overhang it, causing the roof to peel off and the gable to cave in. [4] [5]

  6. Newtown railway station, Sydney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newtown_railway_station...

    The 1920s "initial island" platform building is a typical but altered example of this type of station building, as the replacement of its original roof with a new roof with a gentler pitch has resulted in a single gable roof without the typical integrated awnings. [3]

  7. Pediment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pediment

    Open pediments on windows at the Palazzo Farnese, Rome, by Antonio da Sangallo the Younger, begun 1534. A variant is the "segmental" or "arch" pediment, where the normal angular slopes of the cornice are replaced by one in the form of a segment of a circle, in the manner of a depressed arch. [10]