In the United States, the bench or stand is raised, a row of multilevel stools found on the sports field and other spectator events. The stairs provide access to horizontal seat rows, often with every other step of getting access to a row of stools.
Benches range from simple to complex boards with backsides. Plenty of open benches to the ground below so there are only boards to sit and walk. Some benches have vertical panels under the bench, either partially or completely blocking the way to the ground.
Video Bleacher
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The term "bleachers" used in this sense can be traced back to at least 1889. The Dickson Baseball Dictionary states that the open seating area is called "bleaching board," as early as 1877. The Dickson list as secondary definition of the fans sitting in it. In the early 1900s, the term "bench" was used both for the seating area and its occupants.
In modern usage, the term "bench" almost always refers only to the seating area, and those sitting there may be called "bleach fans," or "bleach." Terms like "bleacher bums" Chicago or Bleacher Creatures belonging to Yankee Stadium are also used.
Maps Bleacher
Type
The bleach structure varies depending on location, but most modern outdoor stools have aluminum tubes or understructured steel structures (known as model-type benches) or I-beam steel blocks (known as I-beam bleach). Most of the smaller seats are the model benches and the biggest benches are the I-Beam benches. The range of hunters in the size of a small, modular, aluminum stand that can be moved around a soccer field or hockey to a large permanent structure flanking each side of an American football pitch. Some benches have a locker room underneath. In the indoor gym, benches can be built in so that they slide on tracks or on wheels and fold by way of accordion-like, piling up. These types of benches are known as telescoping benches.
Baseball
At the baseball stadium, the benches are usually located outside the field fence. However, the center bench is located in the dough's line of sight, and the presence of the fans makes it difficult for the dough to pick the ball. As a result, most of the stadium has a blank area or a black background where the seat. This is known as "Backdrop" or the Batter's eye. The old Yankee stadium features black painted benches, dubbed black by baseball fans.
Although many stadiums offer only bleaching seats, on those who offer chairs and benches, benches are usually in less desirable locations and/or have lower ticket prices, giving the term "bench" the connotation of lower-class seats.
American Football
The popularity of American football has made seating on the outdoor soccer field and indoors a must. Professional football, academy, high school, and even high school have a bleach system prepared to accommodate their fans. They vary in size from 10 feet wide which sits 25 up to a full stadium that can hold thousands and wrap the whole field. Not infrequently see football benches towering up to hundreds of feet into the air. American Football bleachers are generally made of concrete or aluminum with a concrete or superstructure foundation underneath.
See also
- All-seater
- Cellular bleach
- Grandstand
- Terrace (stadium)
- Dewa (theatrical)
- Nosebleeds
References
External links
Source of the article : Wikipedia