Atrium (Architecture)

In architecture, an atrium may refer to the entry room to a home. It may also mean a large open space, often several stories high and having large windows, within an office building, usually located immediately inside the main entrance. Atria are popular with companies because they give their buildings "a feeling of space and light", but have been criticised by fire inspectors as they could allow fire to spread to a building's upper stories more quickly.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
brandon novak
oxford shoe
london underground q stock
icmp router discovery protocol
anjar
slip sheet
death and the maiden quartet
serra do mar
gnar kill
blame it on lisa
london underground o stock
girls about town
thorn tree
the gift (book nabokov)
beauty and sadness
anjar, india
ole ivar lovaas
office vision
pagani zonda
south lakes high school
clarice
differences between the norwegian and danish languages
samuil of the britons
american girls collection
american girl
atrium (anatomy)
deland (amtrak station)
erie times news
atlantik
three dollar bill y'all
caeds
anjar, lebanon
samuel morton
mller's bornean gibbon
doughboy
cymbidieae
crispin tickell
colloidal suspension
laid (album)
ankober
all songs considered
communications, energy and paperworkers union of canada
david shipman
joe mcewing