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Sentences with frontage

front·age
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  • The restaurant has a river frontage.
  • A frontage on the river
  • The property has a narrow frontage to Lees Lane.
  • He decided to retain the two-storey Classical frontage of the existing building, restoring it faithfully and reconstructing the entrance hall.
  • Most retailers want lots of street frontage to showcase their wares, while second floor space usually goes to offices.He chose the location because he knew the Main Street frontage would attract customers.A store’s frontage is its outside walls and windows that can seen from the street or as you approach the entrance.
  • A frontage of 200 feet.
  • Also, retail or service establishments were required to occupy at least half of the building frontage along the space.
  • Except for Memorial Hall, with its frontage carrying engraved names of the local heroes of the Second World War, the place was most suited for the carnival.
  • The house has an ocean frontage.
  • He was willing to pay the higher cost of a lake frontage.
  • The junior school was built in 1882 and many people would like to see the building or its frontage saved.
  • The land has 560 metres frontage to the Tullaroan Road and is within 1,250 metres of the city centre.
  • He complained that the new sidewalk would decrease his frontage.
  • We will be able to widen the frontage to provide a better road through, to improve the situation considerably, and the road will possibly be made up as part of the scheme.
  • The flats would be several blocks, creating a new frontage to the River Wandle, rising to 12 storeys.
  • Planning officers have recommended approval providing the attractive frontage of the building is safeguarded.
  • The regular shaped site has 25 metres frontage to Ravensdale Road and there is only a two-storey administration office block and a garage on the site.
  • It has been very noticeable in Morecambe, particularly at those pubs that front on to the promenade and have tables on their frontage to accommodate drinkers, that several things are happening.
  • Although the couple own the frontage to their 500-year-old home, there are highways rights over it, council lawyers have told them.
  • The inquiry heard yesterday that planners aim to allow only 35 per cent of a shopping street frontage to be used for non-retail purposes.
  • The land will include some frontage to Alresford Road so that access can be improved.
  • The same two bidders were engaged in battle for the smaller one-acre site with extensive frontage to Claremont Road.
  • In August last year, the poor state of the frontage of the building was brought under scrutiny again when a piece of the wood and plaster fascia fell off, narrowly missing a pedestrian.
  • The restaurant is not difficult to find, being almost opposite the Pattaya Driving Range on Third Road, and is painted a bright red colour with a well illuminated frontage on the building.
  • The site forms the last plot in the building frontage and adjoins open country and the Green Belt.
  • Curtains draped along the glass frontage keep out the vestiges of daylight, a pre-requisite of all good clubs.
  • Livingstone residents and other stakeholders recently expressed concern at the dangers of the massive investment in the park on the wildlife and heritage sites in the river frontage and the park.
  • Chester has a railway station to the North East of the city centre, designed by Francis Thompson with an impressive Italianate frontage dating from 1848.
  • The agents are quoting a guide price of €5 million for a 0.37 acre development site with frontage to Townsend Street.
  • A new modern frontage and entrance hall were incorporated along the Suffolk Street end to help reinvigorate the district's shopping appeal.
  • Entrance will be through the listed building frontage on Burgh Quay.
  • We have 200 feet of frontage on Main Street.
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