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| Kuvvaci ![]() Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Istanbul
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| Hello guys , I have some questions to you. Details of the cities are always important to me. so I will ask you some questions. Do you have some stnadarts in Israeli cities? For example: standart side walks (as hight, material and shape) out side of the building standarts (are advertisment or store boards allowed on the buildings, and are there specific building colors?) Standart kiosks, benches, ect. | |||||||||||
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| SkyScraperLife | ||
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| | #2 | |||||||||||
| Yes Im source :) ![]() Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Israel
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| minimum for pavements is 1.10 m and for large streets 2.20 m some towns have standards for how to put store signs, most dont but theres regulations that from a certain size you can face tax or municipal demands to take it off. benches, lights etc - every city chooses what it likes in some historic areas you must follow what the city chooses for outside building colours or only specific signs and design to have unity. In jerusalem and safed it has to be stone covered. tel aviv municipality doesnt allow anymore to use simple paint finishes and plaster because of humidity and heat that crack it. In new cities like modiin and new suburbs theres now better general building codes and styles, not everything you like can be built. huge advertising on roofs isnt allowed. you can have a logo of the company or building. you can make an entire facade into huge advertising space only with special permits - tel aviv, ramat gan has lots, jerusalem and haifa have very few. theres now also moves to stop tv-adverts in streets on tv screens because people say it can cause accidents. Last edited by Livni; 27th October 2006 at 13:21.. | |||||||||||
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| | #3 | |||||||||||
| Premium Member ![]() Join Date: Oct 2006
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| out door signs and adds must get apermit from the local municipality, which approves its location and size, then one have to pay each month or ayear afee to the municipality per board sign and size. | |||||||||||
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| | #4 | |||||||||||
| Kuvvaci ![]() Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Istanbul
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| can you show examples with photos... | |||||||||||
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| | #5 | |||||||||||
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Toronto, Canada | Israel
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| I don't really know about official standards, but most sidewalks in Israel (that is actually often not true of Tel Aviv I think) are made of bricks, usually arranged in a pattern. For example, in the small city where I lived, pretty much 100% of the old asphalt sidewalks which were originally built were replaced by these bricks in the late 1990s. Unfortunately, because of limited space and (in many places) difficult topography, sidewalks in Israel tend to be narrow. In my original town, there are several high-speed main roads with very narrow sidewalks (in some places less than 1m in width). I guess I am just used to the giant sidewalks in Canada, where space is abundant plates and grass, with an overall span sometimes being nearly 10m (around 3-4m is almost standard). Last edited by TheCat; 28th October 2006 at 03:04.. | |||||||||||
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