Elevators and Escalators
Some people needs buildings because they want other people to work & then people are changing/constructing building but before that it was a coastal area for example. They're turning AGRiCULTURAL AREAS to SUBDiViSiONS or BUiLDiNGS or ROADS.
The Quit website and also the Quit Smoking website both have inspirational stories of people who have managed to quit smoking. The Health Promotion Board (HPB) also have stories from ex-smokers that can encourage others to kick the habit.
A residential building is a building that people live in. Commercial buildings are for businesses only.
Because they think they don't get enough attention.
People could identify with the stories of everyday life.
The first people known to build apartments were the Romans.They put up multi-family buildings about four stories high. These buildings were called insulae, which means islands.
You can transport 42 People.
Yes, electronic cigarettes are allowed and safe to be used even in public buildings and other places. It is because unlike with a real cigarette smoke, they do not pose threat to other people and the environment. They also do not contribute to waste as they are devices that can be used repeatedly.
since buildings are made so high and they do not have any support .due to this people are afraid of buildings
While the Twin Towers could have held many thousand more, a limited number worked there. About 50,000 people have jobs there before 2001.
what is the name of the large community with many buildings and people
cuz its easier to transport, and local stone was made and has been suited in the local conditions. why people want sustainble rock beats me tho...
There are no 'houses' in the classic sense on the Antarctic continent. There are work buildings, dorm buildings, service buildings, mess buildings and out buildings.
Because they knock buildings down. People are bothered when buildings fall onto them.
"Eskaleytor" in Tagalog refers to an escalator, which is a moving staircase commonly found in buildings such as malls, airports, and train stations to transport people between floors.
Rail transport, ships, road transport, air transport.
Shakespeare did not "make stories". He borrowed other people's stories and made plays out of them. Sometimes he got his stories from books of stories, sometimes from history books, sometimes from poems, sometimes even from other people's plays. He liked love stories that turn out well (as well as a few that don't), stories about people grasping for political power, stories of revenge, and stories about people who collapse under pressure.