- University of Bath Opus
... Fig. 4. Plan of rooms XXXII and XXXIII showing offset doorways, the staircase and well with possible passageway between rooms. Note the cramped nature of room XXXIII if restored with stairs and well. ............................ 27 Fig. 5. (a) section, (b) upper and (c) lower floor plan of South Sto ...
... Fig. 4. Plan of rooms XXXII and XXXIII showing offset doorways, the staircase and well with possible passageway between rooms. Note the cramped nature of room XXXIII if restored with stairs and well. ............................ 27 Fig. 5. (a) section, (b) upper and (c) lower floor plan of South Sto ...
RESEARCH PROPOSAL
... This method entail personal visitation to the site or areas where necessary information can be obtained for the purpose of the study. Verbal approach, conversation or interviews with anybody is not required for this purpose. The researcher is expected to watch the happenings at the area of study and ...
... This method entail personal visitation to the site or areas where necessary information can be obtained for the purpose of the study. Verbal approach, conversation or interviews with anybody is not required for this purpose. The researcher is expected to watch the happenings at the area of study and ...
fhbro heritage character statement
... useful illustration of federal government expansion in the 1960s and of the need for government training facilities following the passage of the Official Languages Act, which made bilingualism a requirement for federal public servants beginning in the 1970s. As the first secondary school in Hull, no ...
... useful illustration of federal government expansion in the 1960s and of the need for government training facilities following the passage of the Official Languages Act, which made bilingualism a requirement for federal public servants beginning in the 1970s. As the first secondary school in Hull, no ...
Tactile paving
Tactile paving (also called truncated domes, detectable warnings, Tactile Ground Surface Indicators, detectable warning surfaces, ""intersection nipples"") is a system of textured ground surface indicators found on many footpaths, stairs and train station platforms to assist pedestrians who are blind or visually impaired.Tactile warnings provide a distinctive surface pattern of ""truncated domes"" or cones (which are small domes or cones that have had their tops cut off, or truncated) or ""truncated bars"" detectable by long cane or underfoot which are used to alert people with visual impairments of their approach to streets and hazardous drop-offs. People who are blind or visually impaired are alerted of impending danger from vehicle impact or a grade change. There is a disagreement in the design community and the community of users if the interior use of these bars represents a tripping hazard.Originally instituted at pedestrian crossings and other hazardous vehicular ways by countries like Japan, the United Kingdom and Australia, among others, the United States picked up the standard in the early 1990s, after passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Canada started incorporating the use in transportation first in the 1990s then added them to the built environment in early 2000s.