Street Clause Samples

POPULAR SAMPLE Copied 2 times
Street. A general term denoting a public way for purposes of vehicular travel including the entire area within the Right of Way; the entire Right of Way reserved for use in constructing or maintaining the Roadway and its appurtenances.
Street. Any street, alley, avenue, lane, public place, square, or highway within the corporate city limits of the city.
Street. A public way for pedestrian and vehicular traffic, whether designated as a street, highway, thoroughfare, parkway, throughway, road, avenue, boulevard, lane, place, or however otherwise designated.
Street. This will confirm our understanding during the course of our Agreement which expires May that should British Airways transfer any or all of its current operations, then those classifications covered under the terms of our Agreement effective June will continue to be covered under the terms and life of this Agreement. LETTER OF UNDERSTANDING NO.
Street. A public or private way set aside as a permanent right-of-way for the movement of vehicular traffic, to provide access to abutting property, and to provide utility service.
Street highway - defined
Street. Inspection to determine that alignment and grade of the street conforms to the improvement plans of record.
Street. The surface of and the space above and below any public street, road, highway, freeway, lane, path, Public Way, alley, court, sidewalk, boulevard, parkway, drive or any easement or right-of-way now or hereafter held by City, and dedicated for use by the City, use by the general public, or use compatible with the Cable System operations.‌
Street. The buildings are marked with black dots, each corresponding to a case of tuberculosis reported to the Board of Health in the previous five years. ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and Veiller pointed out that typically only half of the cases of tuberculosis were generally even reported.47 The map shows that buildings with the dumbbell floor plan generally have fewer cases of tuberculosis than those with the railroad floor plan, but there are still dots present. Another way in which the Tenement House Committee convinced the New York State government to create housing reform was by providing shocking, first hand accounts of the conditions of tuberculosis victims. In his book, Consumption, Its Relation to Man and His Civilization, Its Prevention and Cure, published in the year 1906, ▇▇. ▇.▇. ▇▇▇▇▇ described in detail how the tenement architecture facilitated tuberculosis. In Chapter IV he told the story of a young Romainian Jew and described how “with every breath I felt the heavy, foul odor from poverty, ignorance, filth disease” in a room that was only ten feet by ten feet.48 He stated, “six people lay on the floor packed close, rubbing the heavy sleep from tired eyes, and staring at us dumbly.” The infected man said “Breath -- breath -- give me breath… or kill me; O kill me.” ▇▇▇▇▇ detailed how the man’s “wasted body” was “too feeble to rise; too choked, too tortured to lie down.”49 In addition, ▇▇▇▇▇ described another tenement nicknamed the “ink pot” due to the absolute filth within. He wrote that, “rooms were held death ready and waiting for years.”50 He described a family in which the father, who was initially infected, passed tuberculosis on to his daughter, wife and son -- who all died within two years. The next person to rent the family’s 47 ▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇. ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇, The Tenement House Problem, (London, ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and Co., Ltd. 1903), 12.
Street. 1.10.1.1 Engineer will provide horizontal and vertical layout according to street section criteria for ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇ and the intersecting streets described in 1.3.2.4. 1.10.1.2 Engineer will evaluate sidewalk, driveways, etc. with regard to the selected horizontal and vertical layouts and typical sections and ADA compliance.