The end, upper, triangular area of a home, beneath the roof
The triangular portion of wall beneath the end of a gabled roof.
The triangle of brickwork that forms the roof, usually found on the end of a house.
upper, triangular shaped part of an end wall.
Triangular wall enclosed by the sloping ends of a ridged roof and the top wall plate. The entire section, including wall, roof and space enclosed is referred to in that manner.
As in gable end, is the triangular part of a wall under a roof end.
the triangular upper portion of a wall at the end of a pitched roof corresponding to a pediment in classical architecture
The upper portion of an end wall formed by the slope of a roof.
The triangular section of a wall of a house having a pitched roof.
The angled top section of an end wall, formed by the ends of the roof.
A sidewall, typically triangular, that is formed by two sloping roof planes.
The triangular upper part of a wall between the sides of a pitched roof.
The ends of a home, house, residence, structure, or building as different from the front or rear side. Also the triangular end of an exterior wall from the level of the eaves to the top of a double sloped roof.
triangular, vertical portion of a wall at the end of a pitched roof, popular in classical architecture
A more or less triangular-shaped piece of a wall closing the end of a double pitched or gabled roof.
The triangular part of a wall under the edge of a sloping roof.
The triangular portion of an end wall from the ridge board to the end of the Gable Roof: A roof which slopes up from two opposite sides and meets at equal angles to the Galvanized: Coated with zinc to prevent oxidation (rusting) of iron or steele.
the vertical, pyramidal, or triangular-shaped wall segment enclosed by the ends of a ridged roof.
triangular top portion of an end wall where there is a sloping roof
The highest point of a roof from the eaves. This may be located in the center of a multi-plex unit or running the center ridge on a single unit. C Cottage truss.
The triangular end of an exterior wall in a building with a ridged roof.
The walls (often triangular) at the ends of a building from the level of the eaves to directly under the sloping roof planes.
That part of the wall immediately under the end of a pitched roof, cut into a triangular shape by the sloping sides of the roof
On a peaked roof system, the triangular end piece above the eaveline.
Triangular peaks at either end of the house above the eaves. A ridged roof ending abruptly at both ends is called a gable roof.
Wall covering end of roof ridge.
the vertical triangular wall between the sloping ends of gable roof
a double pitched roof that forms a triangle
Triangular area left between the sides of a pitched roof
The finished edge of the thatch over hanging the gable end of a property.
The triangular part of a building's end wall which extends up to meet the two slopes of a roof. Home units A grouping of residential dwellings. They share common areas (e.g. gardens, storerooms) and are commonly registered under Strata Title.
The triangular portion of an end wail formed by a sloping roof
Triangular portion of a wall fronting the enclosing lines of a sloping roof, which often contains sculptures (fig.3, A).
The roof ends and walls that form an inverted "V".
The triangular section of the end wall of a gable roof.
The external wall between the line of the eaves and the planes of the roof.
The pitched portion of the home located above the eave section.
The triangular upper portion of a wall to carry a pitched roof.
The triangular upper wall at the end of a pitched roof, sometimes with a decorated bargeboard or roughcast.
The triangular shaped wall at the end of a roof.
The portion, above eave level, of an end wall of a building with a pitched or gambrel roof. In the case of a pitched roof this takes the form of a triangle. The term is also used sometimes to refer to the whole end wall.
The triangular end wall of a house that has sloping roofs.
The gable is the triangular section that is formed at the end of the roof, where the roof is of a symmetrical two-sided pitch. This section is often referred to as the gable end.
The vertical wall at the end of a roof made up of nothing but Common Rafters.
The triangular, vertical portion of a wall at the end of a ridged roof.
The triangular end of an exterior wall from the level of the eaves to the ridge of a double-sloped roof. French (Pignon)
A triangular area of an exterior wall formed by two sloping roofs.
A peaked vertical roof-end.
Carport attached to main within the same roof line
The triangular upper part of a wall closing the end of a ridged roof
The exterior, usually triangular, wall segment under a ridged roof.
in a church, this specifically refers to a triangular, ornamental architectural section above the main porch, as often seen in 'Flamboyant' (i.e. Late Gothic) churches
The triangular wall beneath the end of a gable roof.
1) The triangular area framed by the cornice or eaves of a building and the sloping sides of a pitched roof. In classical architecture, it is called a pediment. 2) A decorative element of similar shape, such as the triangular structures above the portals of a Gothic church and sometimes at the top of a Gothic picture frame.
The upper triangular part of an external wall at the end of a double-pitched roof
Upper section of a wall, usually triangular in shape, at either end of a ridged roof. Also known as a pike.
The upper, triangular portion of a façade, usually flanked by sloping roofs.
Upper section of a wall, usually triangular in shape, at either end of a ridged roof. – Gable end.
The portion of the roof above the eave line of a double sloped (triangle shaped) roof.
The triangular section atop the side exterior walls, between the sloping roofs or eaves.
Steep triangular roof shape in which rafters are attached from ridge board to double top plate. A house with a gable roof usually has a spacious attic.
roof: where a roof meets to form a
The triangular portion of the wall, between the enclosing lines of a sloping roof
The triangular shape formed by the two slopes of a roof.
Portion of the end wall above the eave line of a double sloped roof.
The vertical, triangular portion of a roof, extending from the eaves up the ridge of the roof.
the enclosing lines of a sloping roof (like an upside down "V").
The triangular portion of the endwall from the level of the eave to the ridge of the roof.
the vertical triangular portion of the end of a building having a double-sloping roof, from the level of the eaves to the ridge of the roof.
triangular upper portion of a wall at the end of a pitched roof. Typically has straight sides, but there are many variations.
The triangular part of a wall, enclosed between the angles of a sloping roof. On a façade, the gable forms the pediment.
The triangular end of a building with a sloping roof on each side.
The triangular area of the endwall above the level of the eave to the ridge of the roof.
The triangular portion at the end walls of a gable-roof structure; gable roofs consist of two equal pitches that form a peak at the building centerline.
A sidewall that comes to a point at its intersection with the ridge of two sloping roof planes set at the same length and angle.
The triangular end wall of a building that extends from the eaves to the peak of the roof.
The end wall of a home that extends from the eaves to the peak of the roof, normally it is triangular in shape.
A triangular portion of the endwall of a building directly under the sloping roof and above the eave line.
(1) The upper portion of a sidewall that comes to a triangular point at the ridge of a sloping roof; (2) A triangular portion of the end wall of a building directly under the slope roof and above the eave line.
In house construction, the portion of the roof above the eave line of a double-sloped roof.
Building style, which usually includes one peak with the roof sloping at each side.
A triangular wall enclosed by the sloping ends of a ridged roof or a triangular decorative feature.
Uppermost portion of the end wall of a building that comes to a triangular point under a sloping roof.
The triangular section of wall at the end of a pitched roof, occupying the space between the two slopes of the roof.
THE TRIANGULAR SECTION OF WALL UNDER THE INVERTED "V" OF THE ROOF LINE.
the triangular end of a wall above the eaves with a peak roof. (IMAGE)
Triangular area on an end wall of the building that has sloping roofs.
the triangular portion of an exterior wall that is formed by the slanted pitch of a ridged roof. A gable roof has a ridge line from which the two sides of the roof extend; the gables are at each end.
The triangular portion at the top of a wall enclosed by the roof at the ends of the house.
Triangular end part of a ridged roof
The wall section at the ends of a sloping roof bounded by the two roof slopes and the ridgepole location. Typical gable types in Pella include the beak, bell, neck and stepped gables.
The vertical portion of a roof (usually covered with siding) found at the end of a double sided triangular roof.
An inverted V or triangular shaped portion of extending to the roof line
A vertical triangular wall between two sloping roof sections.
A gable is the generally triangular portion of a wall between the lines of a sloping roof. The shape of the gable and how it is detailed depends on the structural system being used (which is often related to climate and availability of materials) and aesthetic concerns. Thus the type of roof enclosing the volume dictates the shape of the gable.