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Pilastrade
A series of pilasters or flat representation of classical columns, equivalent to a colonnade.
Pile
Row of rooms. The most common use of the term is in
double pile
, describing a building, especially a house, that is two rooms deep.
Pillar
Free-standing upright member of any section, not conforming to one of the
classical
orders.
Pillar piscina
In a church or chapel, a free-standing basin (
piscina
) for washing Mass vessels.
Pilotis
(French): 20th-century term for pillars or stilts that support a building above an open ground floor.
Pinnacle
A small spike- or turret-like termination of a buttress, parapet etc., especially in
Gothic
architecture.
Pins or pinning
(Scots): Lines of tiny stones used decoratively in the mortar joints.
Pis
Walling material of clay mixed with straw. Also called
cob
.
Piscina
In a church or chapel, a basin for washing Mass vessels, provided with a drain, usually set in or against the wall to the south of an altar.
Pitchback water wheel
One with water fed on to the wheel on the top but falling backwards. Compare
breastshot
,
overshot
and
undershot
.
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Last updated: Thursday, 11th April 2013
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