Arcade (architecture)
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An arcade is a passage or walkway covered over by a succession of arches or vaults supported by columns.
In cities, buildings along their street-level fronts, the interior faces of city walls, and bridges covered by arcades all became popular locations for small shops and stalls. They were protected from sun and weather and attracted considerable, guaranteed foot traffic. Over time, the term "arcade" came to be used specifically for streets lined with small vendors. (Roofed-over arcades, known in Italy as gallerias, later developed into shopping malls.)
The term was also adopted by carnivals and amusement parks, where the row of shops selling food and other goods were joined by those offering games of various sorts and were called "amusement arcades" or "midways". Amusement arcades were later opened as permanent establishments called penny arcades. The games came to be known as arcade games, and since the explosion of electronic games in the 1970s these establishments became known as video arcades.
[edit] Notable arcades
- Burlington Arcade, London
- Cardiff city arcades. Cardiff
- Cleveland Arcade, Cleveland, Ohio
- Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, Milan
- Galleria Subalpina, Turin
- Galleria Umberto I, Naples
- Westminster Arcade, Providence, Rhode Island
- Real Monasterio de Nuestra Senora de Rueda, Aragon Province, Spain
- The Arcade, Redhill, Surrey, England
- Nickles Arcade, Ann Arbor, Michigan
- Royal Arcade, Melbourne, Australia
- Block Arcade, Melbourne, Australia
- Paddock Arcade, Watertown, New York