A seawall had been erected with a broad flagged walk in front and a row of seats extending the length of the promenade. |
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At Galveston, at the storm's northern edge, waves smashed over the 17-foot seawall that guards the city from the gulf. |
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The ports themselves aren't much more than quiet seawall tie-ups, and signage leading to a short stroll to town. |
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In recent reports, the Army Corps of Engineers has determined that the seawall is between 150 and 200 feet too far seaward. |
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The pilot reported that he used his remaining airspeed to get over a seawall, stalled the airplane, and pancaked onto the runway. |
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A seawall at Herrington was broached by the surge, destroying large sections of docks. |
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A seawall comprising coquina faced with granite to the high water mark protected the eastern fort walls from the tides of Matanzas Bay. |
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We have built a seawall to protect the property from surf and storm surges. |
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The project involves building a breakwater, a sort of vertical seawall that will protect the waters of the port and the shore infrastructures. |
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The second phase of the operation was launched in December to complete the seawall in Port-Vendres. |
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The city also built an extensive seawall to act as a buffer against future storms. |
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A seawall has failed to stop the flooding of Ioanne's home, so they've built their remaining rooms on stilts. |
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The decision for the reopening of the seawall to pedestrians, when the works are completed, has not yet been decided. |
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A programme of social events is now being planned over the next eight months to pay for Victorian-style lamps to be installed along the seawall footpaths. |
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Sandstone exposed in cliffs along the seawall formed as layers of sand on the floor of an ancient river. |
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Of the remaining 27, 15 made it across the seawall between the beach and the boardwalk, as it was not very high in places. |
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This beach is divided by a seawall, at the end of which there are some benches for you to sit on and look out to sea. |
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That prompted the harbour commissioners to order a seawall built to prevent ice damage and flooding. |
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By the end of 2005, the outer seawall of the Port of Bilbao should be equipped with 35 wind-power generators. |
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Once they crossed the seawall, they were confronted by a series of tank obstacles that prevented their entry into the town. |
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At Sandwich, Kent the Seabee seawall is buried at the back of the beach under the shingle with crest level at road kerb level. |
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Then, 15 years or so ago, the seawall was breached, allowing seawater to penetrate a brackish pond used to farm milkfish. |
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When the company built a seawall in 1905 to protect its mineworkings, it established a new lighthouse on the wall and abandoned the old one. |
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The structural alternative involves constructing a seawall, revetment, groyne or breakwater. |
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For example, on 18 November 1421, a seawall at the Zuiderzee dike broke, which flooded 72 villages and killed about 10,000 people. |
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Also found in the same area are remains of public baths built by the emperor Justinian, a seawall, quays and a bridge. |
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Engineering protection and stabilization strategies such as breakwaters, seawall and concrete structures to prevent coastal areas from washing away. |
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They didn't run because they thought the seawall would protect them. |
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The revitalized area was officially opened in 1977 with the inauguration of its seawall and was an immediate success, with more than 10 million visitors a year by the early 21st century. |
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During the storm, water from the Hudson River overtopped the seawall protecting Hoboken and flooded much of the city, isolating an estimated 20,000 residents in their homes. |
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Mr. Speaker, in December, Vancouver's Stanley Park was devastated by a vicious storm that damaged 98 acres of forest, along with portions of the seawall and shoreline. |
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Some tried to reach the seawall bordering the beach, hoping to find shelter. They were to be made prisoner after a few hours of useless resistance. |
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A beach positioned between the mouth of the river Vindopo and the seawall at playa Lisa, which will prove very useful if you're a fishing enthusiast. |
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Therefore, a seawall is built to avoid this loss of the area. |
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In 50 years the coastline will draw back as predicted in 1b, but the erosion is stopped behind the seawall and increased in updrift direction of the seawall. |
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A severe winter storm caused significant damage to the seawall and deck of the wharf as well as the two wave breaks that protect berthed vessels from easterly winds. |
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Narrow streets are lined with houses, a large domed mosque and a red-roofed modern school dominate the skyline, and a concrete seawall surrounds the island. |
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The popular seawall walk is a great place to observe the park's geology. |
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At Neston he saw the caterpillars of oak eggar and drinker moths, while newly emerged cinnabar moths were on the seawall at Leasowe. |
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As soon as they reached the shore, the Canadians found themselves pinned against the seawall, unable to advance. |
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Unable to clear the obstacles and scale the seawall, they suffered heavy losses. |
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The work of the seawall and the military port in Cherbourg led many soldiers and engineers, for whom this step was often an important moment in their career. |
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I decided to walk westwards along West Vancouver's Seawall, a much quieter version than that of Stanley Park. |
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Staff from CELSA Manufacturing UK joined representatives from Cardiff Council, Protea Services and Keep Wales Tidy to clean up Seawall Road. |
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The PS5m Littlehaven Promenade and Seawall project in South Shields has been shortlisted for a further three awards. |
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