Hy and hello everyone,
somewhen in 2013 I started to rebuild a real building close to Berlin, just because I love it and am there many times per year, I am talking about:
As you can see with almost every picture you get from the internet, there is a terraced vineyard on the south slope of the hills. I of course rebuilt that too, so that everyone can enjoy the entire atmosphere as if he/she would have a stroll from Potsdam city up to the palace.
This is, how my version looks like:
Every of the bend terraces is as walkable as the entire stairs are, they are all made of collidable set court floors along the method from Sifu Peter. Absolutely no visitor, I had there so far had any problems with walking or skating up- or downwards, any visitor had so far a problem with walking or skating on each of the six terraces from west to east or reverse way. So much for that.
Ah, yes, the time it took me: the raw construction of the terraces and stairs including the needed floor at palace level as well as the floor on fountain level about 5 hours.
A few days ago I had to built stairs in another place of me. From bottom to top over a platform, where the stairs lead further in a right angle. These stairs took me just an hour, because I had to built everything including the upper platform on the hill, where benches and more are now to leave some nice point of view over the entire property. I didn't need the tool anymore, since I got pretty much used to the method, which happens to work simply reliable.
I don't mind anyone working with another method on stairs, as matter of fact, I don't care about, everyone as desired. I know what leads me to accomplished missions and this happens to be collidable set court floors and the method of SiFu Peter. I have to add, the dimensions of the courtfloos used as ramp have never ever been any problem to me, not even in Sanssouci palace, where the stair's and floor's space take roughly 20000 units.
Kind regards, divingA
He who does not submit to the laws, must leave the area where they apply. (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)