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On the west side there is a single-pane window under a pent roof next to the porch.
From the fourth story until the ninth, there are only pent roofs and no balconies.
Both the porch and the salient have tiled pent roofs.
Distinguishable from the similar rōmon for having a pent roof between stories.
Because the hisashi is covered by a pent roof of its own, the butsuden seems to have two stories, but in fact has only one.
Both gables have small shingled pent roofs between the eaves.
Nijūmon - A two-storied gate with a pent roof between the two stories.
On the third story, above a pent roof, there is imbrication and a finely detailed Palladian window.
A pent roof, or a pentice, over the doors offered some protection from inclement weather.
It has a two-story, pent roof rear addition.
A pent roof runs around three sides of the house, and the gable ends were covered in vertical sheathing.
Vestibule and bhandar have a combined three-tiered pent roof with pyramid canopy.
It is a single-story structure covered with white stucco and with a red tile pent roof.
The main stone section is one and one half stories, five bays wide with a central entrance, and pent roof.
A pent roof with wooden knee braces, below another rectangular ceramic panel, shelters the main entrance.
Unlike the similar tahōtō (see section below) it has no enclosed pent roof (mokoshi) around its circular core.
It features a Portico with a pent roof supported by two square Doric order columns.
It has a pent roof across the front with a pedimented entrance hood supported by paired Doric order columns.
The end walls are capped by pent roofs and decorative brick panels framed by stucco.
The pent roofs, constructed by Ursinus College when the house was being remodeled for a dormitory, will also be removed.
The entrance features a transom and sidelights with a pent roof and balustraded porch.
A portico, with ten square wood columns, Tuscan capitals, a pent roof and slate-tiled floor shelters the main entrance.
The East Pagoda has just three stories, but seems to have six because of the presence of inter-storey pent roofs (mokoshi).
Built at the end of the Kamakura period in Zen style, its lowest roof is a mokoshi pent roof enclosure.