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"planned additions" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to any additions that were planned in advance, such as upgrades or renovations to a property. For example: "The apartment building has several planned additions including a pool and a play area."
Exact(15)
The center is funding the planned additions, which next face a development review process and additional council approvals.
Despite the dark news of the proposed budget, Mr. Lattis tends to talk cheerily, in future tense, about planned additions for new birds, maybe even a big cat like a leopard in the Prospect Park Zoo.
The offer was accepted, and for the next 18 years he remained in Milan, where he executed a number of paintings and innumerable drawings, worked on a never-completed equestrian monument to the Sforza dynasty, planned additions to the canal systems of the city, designed costumes for ducal entertainments, and wrote extensively.
With the planned additions, then College Station city manager North Bardell said it was expected to generate $1 million in annual sales tax revenue, nearly equal to what the city collected in the previous fiscal year from all other sales.
For the next release, planned additions include (i) incorporating models in CellML model repository and Reactome [ 19] pathways into PathCase-SB, and (iii) rewriting various interfaces for increased response time.
Planned additions include topics like hacking, machine learning, R, Raspberry Pi and Terminal, for example.
Similar(45)
The planned addition, designed by Renzo Piano, has aroused considerable opposition among neighborhood residents.
Enrique Norten's planned addition to the Brooklyn Public Library, for example, will do more than enlarge the architectural prospects for New York's future.
At the Jamaica Health Center, Jamaica Avenue and Parsons Boulevard, compliance was triggered by the planned addition of a third-floor tuberculosis clinic atop a 52-year-old, two-story building.
For anyone wishing to make a high-level splash, London's latest planned addition to the skyline could be just the thing.
The economist Charles Komanoff has developed a computer model that estimates the impact of the planned addition of about 2,000 taxicabs (all of them wheelchair accessible) to Manhattan streets.
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