enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sidewalk chalk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidewalk_chalk

    Chalk art by kids in the Czech Republic. On September 16–17, 2006, a global event was held to promote peace through sidewalk chalk drawings. [5] Chalk4Peace was a project planned by an artist from Arlington, Virginia named John Aaron, who asked children and teens from the age of eight to age eighteen to participate in groups across the world to draw chalk drawings that would illustrate peace ...

  3. Street painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_painting

    Street painting, also known as screeving, pavement art, street art, and sidewalk art, is the performance art of rendering artistic designs on pavement such as streets, sidewalks, and town squares with impermanent and semi-permanent materials such as chalk.

  4. Curb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curb

    Stone curbs and raised sidewalks on both sides of a 2000-year-old paved road in Pompeii, Italy A curb with the street name on the sidewalk in New Orleans. A curb (American English) or kerb (British English) is the edge where a raised sidewalk or road median/central reservation meets a street/other roadway.

  5. How To Build an Epic Snowman With Just a Few Simple Steps - AOL

    www.aol.com/build-epic-snowman-just-few...

    When the middle becomes the optimal size, pick it up and place it on top of your base. Once the middle is set, pack a little snow around where the two meet, smoothing it out with your hands.

  6. Why salt melts ice — and how to use it on your sidewalk - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/chemists-told-us-why-salt...

    Salt grains, used for melting ice and snow, seen on an icy sidewalk. (Getty Images) ... Still, the dye used to color the salt does absorb complementary colors from sunlight. “Red or pink salts ...

  7. Road verge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_verge

    Parkways, the area between the outside edge of the sidewalk and the inside edge of the curb which are a component of the Public Right of Way (PROW) – that the landscaping should require little or no irrigation and the area produce no runoff. [4]

  8. Tactile paving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tactile_paving

    A set of yellow truncated domes on the down-ramp in a parking lot. Tactile paving (also called tenji blocks, truncated domes, detectable warnings, tactile tiles, tactile ground surface indicators, tactile walking surface indicators, or detectable warning surfaces) is a system of textured ground surface indicators found at roadsides (such as at curb cuts), by and on stairs, and on railway ...

  9. Curb extension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curb_extension

    A curb extension (or also neckdown, kerb extension, bulb-out, bump-out, kerb build-out, nib, elephant ear, curb bulge, curb bulb, or blister) is a traffic calming measure which widens the sidewalk for a short distance. This reduces the crossing distance and allows pedestrians and drivers to see each other when parked vehicles would otherwise ...