street furniture definition

street furniture. ’ means public facilities and structures which are not intended primarily for advertising and includes but is not limited to seating benches, planters, bins, pole mounted bins, bus shelters, sidewalk clocks, drinking fountains, Telkom boxes, traffic signal controllers, electricity boxes, post boxes and telephone booths, but excludes road traffic signs, traffic signals, street lights or any other road-related structures;
street furniture means public facilities and structures which are not intended primarily for advertising and includes seating benches, planters, sidewalk litter bins, pole mounted bins, bus shelters, sidewalk clocks and drinking fountains, but excludes road signs, traffic lights, street lights or any other road-related structures.
street furniture means any furniture installed by the Council on the street for public use;

More Definitions of street furniture

street furniture means Street Cabinet or Street Lamp Post (or other street furniture as may be agreed by BT on a case by case basis);
street furniture means public facilities and structures which are not intended primarily for advertising, but which are provided for pedestrians and commuters, and includes seating benches, planters, pavement litter bins, pole-mounted bins, bus shelters, pavement clocks, telephone booths, traffic signal control boxes, and drinking fountains;
street furniture means the functional elements of the streetscape or other open space, including, but not limited to, benches, trash receptacles, planters, kiosks, sign posts, streetlights and bollards.
street furniture means any furniture installed by the municipality on the street for public use; “street trader” means any person carrying on business, whether as principal, employee or agent, by selling, supplying or offering any goods or the supplying or offering to supply any service for reward, in or from a public road or public place in the municipality, but excludes a newspaper vendor;
street furniture means all street related amenities and includes benches, kiosks, telephone booths, newspaper boxes, mail boxes, clocks, street lighting, transit shelters, litter containers, clothing recycling collection boxes, bicycle racks, tree guards, planters and other similar privately or publicly owned features;
street furniture means Street Cabinet or Street Lamp Post;
street furniture means poles, traffic control devices, waste receptacles, benches, bus enclosures, trees, utilities, planters, bicycle racks, newspaper box racks (U-bars), and any other similar property located within the MROW.