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Free video about Atrium lobby. This free video was created for you by http://epsos.de and can be used for free under the creative commons license with the attribution of epSos.de as the original author of this Atrium lobby video. Thank you for supporting the creative commons movement !! A lobby is a welcome corridor of a large building, such as a hotel or office. Often working people who can give that building more information. The lobby is sometimes decorated with luxurious furnishings. In this hall are sometimes receptions. A foyer is a French loan word that literally fire means, and by extension, t (e) house, heated room. In eg theaters and cinemas is a lobby area which is usually located between the entrance and the actual theater or cinema. The foyer is used for rest during the break, but also before and after the performance. Sometimes the foyer is used for lectures, as an "introduction to the show" or for a debriefing and likelihood of contact with the artists. The foyer is therefore usually equipped with limited catering options for a snack and a drink. If the foyer is located before the ticket check they can also serve as a catering facility itself. Even hotels and some motels often have a lobby where people can wait and drink. Through the English, the word lobby nicknamed crush-room. A foyer is also a special way of living. French knows lobby as le foyer est le logement d'une ou plusieurs personnes. For some time the term is also used to denote like that already existed in Britain. A way of living in Since this form since the mid-nineties meant to offer young adults, where in addition they receive counseling to become independent. Relatively short term temporary housing Working and learning are goals towards which. The English call the projects also lobbies and their trade association called lobby federation. The atrium was created as a part of the Italian house. Possibly has an Etruscan origin. It is generally agreed that at least in BC. 3rd century were atrium houses. Whether there is already an atrium houses were not yet well known. Especially from Pompeii are many atrium houses known, behind the atrium often a peristyle was like a second central space of the house. In the Roman house ( domus ) they came into the atrium from the front door ( Ianua ) via a short corridor ( fauces ). At the atrium bordered different rooms, and rear left and right were usually two open spaces, wings ( alae called). The atrium served as living room, and they also received the guests there. In the atrium often found himself lararium (sanctuary laces for household gods). Vitruvius ( De Architectura VI, 3) identified five species, one without impluvium (rain water basin): the atrium testudinatum was that completely covered. The other four species do have a impluvium whose atrium displuviatum (draining atrium) a sloping roof that rainwater outwards let expire. The other three types of roof tapers inwards, so that the rainwater from the compluvium enters the impluvium. The atrium tuscaninum (Tuscisch atrium) has no columns, the atrium tetrastylum (tetrastyle atrium) has four columns, and the atrium corinthium (Corinthian atrium) has more columns. According to the Roman writer Varro ( De lingua Latina V, 161), the name of the Etruscan atrium place Atria (modern Atri ), where the use of the atrium would have spread. Give some other writers stating that atrium is derived from the Latin ater (black), because there was a fire and there was black smoke. In the early Christian period it used the word atrium or narthex to the court of a basilica. This outdoor court was usually surrounded on all sides by columns. An early example of a church with such atrium is the original St. Peter's Basilica. A vestibule is an area or part of the body and may have a variety of meanings. The word derives from the Latin word vestibule. In Roman architecture the vestibule was partially closed area between the house and the street. It was part of the open hosts, house guests and visitors. One theory is accepted by most historians, the atrium was in early Rome a courtyard surrounded by buildings, before the living space of the householder. If the atrium tuscanicum already has a compluvium and a catchment area to collect rainwater, it is not found or reproduced in the ceilings of tombs atriums, while the vaults burial chambers simulate the two slopes of the roof and ridge beam to the inside. Thank you for supporting the creative commons movement !!