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North Dakota
It's idea for your businesses like a hotel, restaurant or any other business with a large outdoor space. Commercial Awnings and Commercial Canopies can be handy in that case, also a retractable skylight.
What is the Retractable Roof?
The retractable roof is a covering system which allows you to cover your area but it the same time you are able to open it as you please thanks to the sliding roof sistem.
If your customers say that is too cold or too warm is definitely time to do something. We introduce you a revolutionary system that is able too control both. The retractable roof system (a sliding roof with 1/3 fixed part and 2/3 movable roof). This way on the hot days you can provide shade on your terrace, in moderate days you can let the sun come in an also your customers can see the beauty of the sky. In the cold days you can completely enclose your area with our lateral panels (they also include a sliding door system).
Climate
North Dakota's climate is typical of a continental climate with cold winters and hot summers. The state's location in the Upper Midwest allows it to experience some of the widest variety of weather in the United States, and each of the four seasons has its own distinct characteristics. The eastern half of the state has a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfb) with warm to hot, somewhat humid summers and cold, windy winters and the western half has a semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification BSk) with less precipitation and less humidity but similar temperature profiles. North Dakota's highest recorded temperature is 121 °F (49 °C) at Steele on July 6, 1936 and the lowest recorded temperature is −60 °F (−51 °C) at Parshall on February 15, 1936. North Dakota is 1 of only 2 states to record their highest and lowest temperatures in the same year (the other is Utah in 1985).
Meteorological events can include rain, snow, hail, blizzards, polar fronts, tornadoes, thunderstorms, and high-velocity straight-line winds. Depending on location, average annual precipitation ranges from 14 to 22 in (360 to 560 mm).
Springtime flooding is a relatively common event in the Red River Valley, because of the river flowing north into Canada, creating ice jams. The spring melt and the eventual runoff typically begins earlier in the southern part of the valley than in the northern part. The most destructive flooding in eastern North Dakota occurred in 1997.
North Dakota is largely semi-arid; however the low temperatures and snowpack prevents the state from having a xeric character.
The American Lung Association in its 2009 "State of the Air" report ranked Fargo, North Dakota as the cleanest city in the United States, and gave the balance of the state 11 "A" ratings on air quality.
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COUNTIES: Bismarck , Devils Lake , Dickinson , Fargo , Grand Forks , Jamestown , Mandan , Minot AFB , Minot , Valley City , Wahpeton , West Fargo , Williston
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COUNTIES: Adams, Barnes, Benson, Billings, Bottineau, Bowman, Burke, Burleigh, Cass, Cavalier, Dickey, Divide, Dunn, Eddy, Emmons, Foster, Golden Valley, Grand Forks, Grant, Griggs, Hettinger, Kidder, La Moure, Logan, McHenry, McIntosh, McKenzie, McLean, Mercer, Morton, Mountrail, Nelson, Oliver, Pembina, Pierce, Ramsey, Ransom, Renville, Richland, Rolette, Sargent, Sheridan, Sioux, Slope, Stark, Steele, Stutsman, Towner, Traill, Walsh, Ward, Wells, Williams
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