Definition & Betydelse | Engelska ordet MANSARD


MANSARD

Definition av MANSARD

  1. vindsrum, loft; mansardvåning

Antal bokstäver

7

Är palindrom

Nej

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Exempel på hur man kan använda MANSARD i en mening

  • The Morgan County Courthouse in Versailles, which has also been listed on the NRHP, was designed with French-style details, such as a mansard roof, in keeping with the origin of the town's name.
  • A mansard or mansard roof (also called French roof or curb roof) is a multi-sided gambrel-style hip roof characterised by two slopes on each of its sides, with the lower slope at a steeper angle than the upper, and often punctured by dormer windows.
  • "Brazier" locations, with expanded food menus and second floors for storage, are recognizable by their red mansard roofs.
  • Bancroft Hall was designed in the Beaux-Arts style with its mansard roof and dormer windows by architect Ernest Flagg and its central rotunda and first two wings were built in 1901–06.
  • Dormer windows were popularised by French architect François Mansart, who used dormers extensively in the mansard roofs he designed for 17th-century Paris.
  • While not so large there is a resemblance, but other continental influences appear to have crept in: classical pediments jut from mansard roofs, spires and gables jostle for attention, and the whole is surmounted by a cupola.
  • The sixth story is directly above it, while the seventh story consists of a red-slate mansard roof with dormer windows and copper cresting.
  • Collingwood also had a strong temperance movement, with two "coffee palaces" springing up in the 1870s, including the large and grand Collingwood Coffee Palace (now the facade of Woolworths – minus original classical pediment and mansard).
  • The building's steeply pitched mansard roof, open verandas, long and narrow and frequently paired windows, and bracketed eaves give this house an irreplaceable design.
  • Built in the Romanesque Revival style with exterior walls of irregularly coursed split-faced stone and mansard roof clad in seamed copper, this beautiful edifice is a major landmark on Renfrew's main throughfare.
  • Surrounded by extensive, well-kept gardens, it was characterized by mansard roof, broad lanais, from which lofty flights of steps led down into the gardens, and a large drawing-room upon the ceiling of which was emblazoned the Hawaiian coat of arms.
  • These stories contain terracotta veneers that harmonize with the marble facade below it and the mansard roof above.
  • The building was designed in the Second Empire style, and features a mansard roof with dormers and decorative cornices, limestone cladding, and stone chimneys.
  • Mansart, as he is generally known, popularized the mansard roof, a four-sided, double slope gambrel roof punctuated with windows on the steeper lower slope, which created additional habitable space in the garrets.
  • Naumann had designed a plain triple-wing complex with a cour d'honneur centered around an avant-corps and crowned by a mansard roof.
  • The cross-section of a gambrel roof is similar to that of a mansard roof, but a gambrel has vertical gable ends instead of being hipped at the four corners of the building.
  • Town wall – remnants of the Roman castrum, possibly after 364 until 375, Roman tower; mediaeval town fortifications, first expansion of the Roman castrum about the Friesenviertel ("Frisian Quarter"), 12th century, after 1327 until the mid-14th century wall building about Oberstadt ("Upper Town") and Niederstadt ("Lower Town"); Sandtor ("Sand Gate") or Eisbrechertor ("Cutwater Gate"), gate tower with so-called Nikolauskanzel ("Saint Nicholas’s Pulpit") and tomb slabs; remnants of the Bingertor ("Bingen Gate"); south wall preserved in almost original height; Burgplatz 1 and 3 see below; Säuerlingsturm (roughly "Mineral Water Tower"), in 1906–1908 partly torn down and reconstructed; Ebertor ("Boar Gate"), hipped mansard roof, about 1750; tomb slab 1595, coat of arms stone, third fourth of the 17th century; corner of Rheinallee/Bahnhofstraße 2 (see below) 15 m long piece of wall; Hospitaltor ("Hospital Gate"), originally three-floor gate tower, remodelled in the mid 18th century with mansard roof; Kronentor ("Crown Gate"), gate tower, two twinned windows, 17th century; second upper floor timber-frame, 18th century; three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, essentially from the 17th century, remodelled in the 18th century; Lilientor ("Lily Gate"), marked 1857 (reconstruction) with Late Historicist oriel construction, 1896.
  • At Kurfürstenstraße 34 – spa parlour with pumproom and taproom, complex of plastered buildings with nine-axis, originally open pumproom, two-floor spa parlour with Baroque Revival mansard roof, 1927/1928.
  • Evangelical Philip's Church (Philippskirche) and Kaisersaal ("Emperor’s Hall"), Kreuzstraße 7 – Baroque quarrystone building, 1737–1741, 1901 conversion into inn, 1905 addition of Baroque Revival Kaisersaal, architect Friedrich Otto, Kirn; belonging to the area a building with mansard roof no.
  • Moselstraße 27 – villa; Late Historicist quarrystone building, hipped mansard roof, about 1900; whole complex with garden.


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