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Corridor

Architecture Corporate modernCottage

corridor - an enclosed passageway; rooms usually open onto it
6.
gallery - narrow recessed balcony area along an upper floor on the interior of a building; usually marked by a colonnade ...

 


Dead end corridor: A corridor which was situated on the inside of a fortifications gateway, which ended in dead ends, ...

Greenhouse Corridors
- long glass covered walks forming an indoor arbour, predominantly used for growing climbing plants and creepers.

Long, echoey corridors lead through Boldt Castle in the Thousand Islands
Photo by Jackie Craven
More Images (2) ...

constructed to be used as a dwelling for separate families the floors of lobbies, corridors, passages, landings, and also the flights of stairs, shall be of fire-resisting materials.

Corridor - A passage way
Cottage - A space permanently open to the sky enclosed fully or partially by buildings and may be at ground level or any other level within or adjacent to the building.

The double file kitchen (also known as galley or corridor) has two rows of cabinets at opposite walls, one containing the stove and the sink, the other the refrigerator. This is the classical work kitchen.

Slab blockA multi-storey block with flats approached from corridors or galleries from service cores at intervals or towers at the ends (plan also used for offices, hotels etc.)Slate-hangingCovering of overlapping slates on a wall, ...

The mosque consists of a large internal courtyard surrounded by a corridor, and a huge prayer hall, with a wooden roof supported by ninety rectangular piers.

A long narrow room or corridor that is notable for its scale and decorative treatment. Galleries were popular in medieval architecture as the place where people could congregate in a large building.
Château d'- Amboise - France (1500) ...

In this huge building, there were numerous entrances, broad corridors, stairways, carefully planned passages of access, and six tiers of seats where the audience could watch comfortably.

Gallery: Covered corridor in an upper story overlooking the nave. A traverse gallery crosses both sides of the church and a tribune gallery is the elevated part of a gallery which contains seats.

5) Side Aisle- one of the corridors running parallel to the nave of a church and separated from it by an arcade or colonnade.
6) Crossing- the area in a church where the transept and the nave intersect.

Aisle
A passage or corridor parallel to the nave of a church or an ancient basilica and separated from it by columns or piers. Image courtesy of Gayle Goudy Kochanski ...

Early mediaeval circular or polygonal corridor crypt surrounding the apse of a church and often used with chambers for relics and the pilgrims visiting these.
(DEC) Decorated Period ...

Interior view of chapter house
Interior view of cloister corridor
Interior view of crossing
Interior view of dormitory
Interior view #1 of forge
Interior view #2 of forge
Interior view of nave
Interior view of Salle des Moines ...

Gallery. A long room or corridor, usually on the upper floor and extending the full length of a building. In church architecture, an open upper storey over an aisle.

White, plain stucco walls
Arched openings, especially on ground level
Long arcaded corridors
Low pitched tile roofs
Scalloped, parapeted gable ends
Small balconies
Deeply shaded porches
Dark interiors, suited for warmer climates ...

Loggia - The name given to an architectural feature, originally of Italian design, which is often a gallery or corridor generally on the ground level, or sometimes higher, on the facade of a building and open to the air on one side, ...

a passageway flanking a central area (e.g., the corridors flanking the nave of a basilica or cathedral).
Alabaster ...

Rooms on the upper floors are commonly accessed by balcony-type corridors overlooking the atrium.

See also: Architecture, House, Ground, Arches, Floor

Architecture Corporate modernCottage

 
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