front of the house or building.
front of a building or structure, perhaps elaborate decorated, as with the Khazneh
the front of face or a building, emphasized architecturally
The facade of a building is generally the front, and it implies a certain amount of design and decorative features.
The face of a building, especially the front face. Back to the Top
The exterior wall of a building. -- View Real Estate Listings
The main exterior face of a building, sometimes distinguished from the other faces by elaboration of architectural or ornamental details.
The decorated front of a building.
In architecture, the front exterior of a building or other exterior sides when they are emphasized.
The front elevation of a structure
The architectural front of a building.
The face of a building, especially the principal face or front.
The principal front or face of a structure. The main view. It may also refer to the front of an architecturally designed piece of furniture.
the face or elevation of a building, usually the front.
An architectural term for the side of a building. VisualDOE uses this term to refer to a particular floor and a side.
The front of the cathedral (fig.1). During the Gothic era, the west façade at the entranceway was noted for its three sculptured portals, and crowning rose window flanked by two towers. Starting with Saint-Denis, this became a feature of Gothic cathedrals.
The primary elevation of a building, the side of the building viewed as the entrance.
The architectural "face" of a building; usually refers to the front.
The front or proscenium of a fairground or dance organ, usually detachable for tuning, servicing, and shipping. Ornate facades include many carvings, carved figures, a bandleader; some include lighting effects, etc.
The major portion of the building that addresses the principal street frontage on the site upon which the building is located
The front face of a house.
Main face or side of a building
(English) The front face of a building, usually with the structure's principal entrance.
One of the exterior faces (walls) of a building.
The main face or elevation of a building. From the French word meaning "front" or "face."
The whole exterior side of a building that can be seen in one view. - usually the front.
The main face or front elevation of a building.
Any vertical, exterior face or wall of a building, often distinguished from other faces by architectural details.
The front or face of a building.
the front side of the building; the façade faces the street.
The exterior front wall of a building.
In its most general sense, a facade is an elevation of a building: what you see when standing before one side of the building. Under this usage, a house may have two or more facades: a front facade facing the street, a garden facade facing the back yard, etc. The front facade or principal elevation of a building is sometimes referred to as "the facade." !-- google_ad_client = "pub-8826792545718317"; google_ad_width = 468; google_ad_height = 60; google_ad_format = "468x60_as"; google_ad_channel ="0630871714"; google_page_url = document.location; google_color_border = "CC00FF"; google_color_bg = "FFFFF7"; google_color_link = "000000"; google_color_url = "CC00FF"; google_color_text = "000000"; //-- Fanlight A fanlight is a fixed (non-opening), ornamental window of semicircular or segmental shape.
The exterior face of a building which is the architectural front
Generally the face or front of a building. Facade can also be used to describe any exterior side of a building (e.g. The east facade or the northern facade).
The front of a building. A façade can be made out of a number of materials, such as granite, glass, marble, limestone, etc.
An exterior wall of a building or house.
The public, exterior, front or front elevation of a building. Derived from the same root as face: the doors and windows of many buildings are arranged in patterns that recall the eyes, nose, and mouth of the human face.
The front of a building or its sides facing a public way or space, especially one distinguished by its architectural treatment.
The front exposure of any building. Often used to describe an artificial or false front which is not consistent with the construction of the rest of the building.
The external elevation of a building, and especially its front elevation.
The front or principal entrance of a building.
An elevation or ‘face' of a building, from ground level to roofline.
A false front of a building; e.g., sloped mansard, vertical fascia, canted soffit.
The front of a building. Frequently, in architectural terms an artificial or decorative effort.
Any face of a building given special architectural treatment
An artificial or deceptive appearance or the front or public facing side of a building.
The part of a building facing the street or a courtyard.
Usually, the front of a building; also the other sides when they are emphasized architecturally.
Front or principal face of a building, any side of a building that faces a street or other open space.
the face of a building juxtapose to place side by side
the main or front face of a building.
The exterior walls of a building that can be seen by the public.
The decorative front side of a building
The part of a building facing a street or courtyard.
The face or principal front of a building
An exterior face of a building.
Literally, the 'Face' of a building – the walls, primarily designed for aesthetic purposes.
This is the front of a building. The facade can consist of any number of building elements, such as limestone, brownstone, cement, glass, granite, marble, and or any combination of the aforementioned.
The outside front of a building. The Cathedral’s façade tells the story of creation.
The front of a building; also applied to the front of cabinets.
The front part of a building or structure.
exterior face on front of building.
An architectural treatment, partially covering a wall, usually concealing the eave and/or the rake of the building.
In furniture parlance, the front of a cabinet.
The front outside wall of a building.
External front of a building that faces the street or courtyard and is usually used to describe bigger, elegant buildings. Façade materials include wood, brick, glass, masonry, aluminum, etc.
Any important face of a building, usually the principal front with the main entrance.
A facade (or façade) is generally one side of the exterior of a building, especially the front, but also sometimes the sides and rear. The word comes from the French language, literally meaning "frontage" or "face".