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  2. 20 Gazebo Ideas for the Prettiest Backyard of All Time - AOL

    www.aol.com/20-gazebo-ideas-prettiest-backyard...

    Victorian-Style Gazebo. If gingerbread is more your flavor, take inspiration from the Victorians. This cheery painted gazebo, in Halifax Public Gardens in Nova Scotia, creates a cool oasis amid ...

  3. Canopy (architecture) - Wikipedia

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

    Canopy over a doorway in Fergana, Uzbekistan Canopied entrance to the New York City Subway at the 14th Street–Union Square station. A canopy is a type of overhead roof or else a structure over which a fabric or metal covering is attached, able to provide shade or shelter from weather conditions such as sun, hail, snow and rain. [1]

  4. Gazebo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gazebo

    A gazebo is a pavilion structure, sometimes octagonal or turret-shaped, often built in a park, garden, or spacious public area. [1] Some are used on occasions as bandstands . The name is also now used for a tent like canopy structure with open sides used as partial shelter from sun and rain at outdoor events.

  5. Palapa (structure) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palapa_(structure)

    Bohío, Caribbean dwelling with palm thatched roof once commonly found in Puerto Rico, Cuba and Hispaniola. Chickee, the Creek/Seminole word to describe an open dwelling with a palm thatched roof frequently constructed by Florida's Native Americans. Manila Galleons, Spanish Colonial Mexico and Spanish East Indies trade/cultural exchange route.

  6. Butterfly roof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly_roof

    The modern butterfly roof is commonly credited to be the creation of William Krisel and Dan Palmer in the late 1950s in Palm Springs, California.It has been estimated that starting in 1957, they created nearly 2,000 houses in a series of developments that were popularly known as the Alexander Tract, which has been described by historian Alan Hess as "the largest Modernist housing subdivision ...

  7. Bubble canopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubble_canopy

    The purpose of a bubble canopy is to give a pilot a much wider field-of-view than flush, framed "greenhouse" canopies used on early World War II aircraft, such as those seen on early models of the F4U, P-51, the Soviet Yak-1 and earlier, "razorback" P-47 fighters, all with dorsal "turtledecks" integral to their fuselage lines, which left a blind spot behind the pilot that enemy pilots could ...