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Facade. The word comes from the French "frontage" or "face," since the facade faces the street. Many facades are historic architectural elements, and are subject to strict regulations.
You presumably mean the Florence Cathedral. The building itself was finished in 1446 with the completion of the dome. The facade was completed in 1887.
Formatted pieces of content stored in galleries is called the Building Block.
Annexe
A Dutch building with sails is commonly called a windmill.
A Facadehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facade
facade
1. The facade of the building is made of wood. 2.Everything she does is a facade.
The word facade (French façade) means a building front, or face. It is used metaphorically to mean an image presented that is not the true one, such as "a facade of innocence" or "his generosity was only a facade to cover his larcenous activities."
You may have to get past john's facade to see the real person. or: The building's facade was illuminated with lights and signs.
I believe that you call it a curtain facade wall or just facade wall.
Facade. The word comes from the French "frontage" or "face," since the facade faces the street. Many facades are historic architectural elements, and are subject to strict regulations.
If you mean 'facade' it is the front of a building, particularly if the building is a decorated or imposing
No, it is not. Facade is a noun (fuh-SAHD, from French) meaning a building front, or a false appearance (front).
The word facade (French façade) means a building front, or face. It is used metaphorically to mean an image presented that is not the true one, such as "a facade of innocence" or "his generosity was only a facade to cover his larcenous activities."
FACADE - a building front, or deliberately false impression or image
his name is Trip and he is married to Grace