document.writeln("<table><tr><!-- Culture Story INTRO --><td align=left valign=top width=25%><a href=http://www.ArchitectureWeek.com/2004/0303/culture_1-1.html><img src=http://www.ArchitectureWeek.com/2004/0303/images/12384_image_1.150.jpg width=150 height=150 border=0 alt='ArchWeek Image'></a></td><td align=left valign=top width=75%><p style='text-align: left'><a href=http://www.ArchitectureWeek.com/2004/0303/culture_1-1.html><font size=+0 face=Helvetica,Arial color=#000000>POSTCARD FROM ROME</font></a></p><p style='text-align: left'>Dear ArchitectureWeek,</p><p style='text-align: left'>Rome is an intensively occupied, definitively urban city. After thousands of years of concentrated human development and redevelopment, there is much hardscape, where the stony facade of one building is connected to the brick wall of the next by more stone, in the form of cobbled streets and other pavements.</p><p style='text-align: right'><a href=http://www.ArchitectureWeek.com/2004/0303/culture_1-1.html><img src=http://www.ArchitectureWeek.com/images/continue.gif width=96 height=22 border=0 alt=Continue...></a></p></td></tr></table>");
