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> Thomas de Groot wrote:
>
>> This shows the latest version.
>>
>> Thomas
>
> You may want to avoid too small differences between floor heights, as in the
> bottom left corner of the town
>
In real life, you can have cases when you have prety small elevation
differences between roofs or floors, especialy when they belong to
different buildings.
I have seen case with a difference of about 0.5 to 5 cm.
In some cases, it's a mather of the ground under one of the buildings
been slightly less hard or compact. This can appen when the later
building is built a few years later over a former court yard.
The former building had time to settle down, then, the newer building,
built flush with the older one, get to settle down. It can also cause
some serious cracking and bending of the walls and floors...
Alain
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