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  2. Stair tread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stair_tread

    A stair tread is the horizontal portion of a set of stairs on which a person walks. The tread can be composed of wood, metal, plastic, or other materials. In residential settings, treads can be covered in carpeting. Stair treads can come in non-slip varieties, particularly in commercial or industrial locations. [1]

  3. Stairs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stairs

    It is often not simply the sum of the individual tread lengths due to the nosing overlapping between treads. If there are N steps, the total run equals N-1 times the going: the tread of the first step is part of a landing. The total rise of the stairs is the height between floors (or landings) that the flight of stairs is spanning.

  4. Step street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_street

    Step street at West 229th Street, Bronx, New York. 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 automobi

  5. Steps of Cincinnati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steps_of_Cincinnati

    An additional 65 steps start at the base of Mt. Adams, with a pedestrian bridge over Columbia Parkway connecting the two paths. [6] The steps were originally made of wood, but in 1911, the City of Cincinnati helped the church build concrete steps. [7] In 1958 and 2009, the city again rebuilt the now 96 steps leading to the church. [8]

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  7. Escalator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escalator

    The model shown here, retrofitted with metal steps in the 1990s, is among the oldest of the store's 40 escalators. Otis "L-type" escalators with distinctive wood treads (not shown) have operated in the store since 1927. Wooden treads on a 1930s Otis escalator, formerly at Wynyard railway station, Sydney, Australia