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Post by potet on Apr 17, 2021 17:45:56 GMT
The previous address was: 627 Davis Drive, Suite 300, Morrisville, NC 27560, USA On the shipment summary of a book received today (2021-04-17), it is:
700 Park Offices Drive Suite 250 27409 Research Triangle USA
Apparently still in North Carolina, but without "NC" before the new code 27409.
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Post by Retread-Retired-Cameron on Apr 17, 2021 18:06:09 GMT
It should read:
700 Park Offices Drive, Suite 250 Research Triangle, NC 27409 USA
NC stands for North Carolina
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Post by Ken on Apr 17, 2021 18:16:17 GMT
A well-known landmark in downtown Raleigh, the former N.C. Equipment building with its familiar yellow tractor on the roof, is the new corporate office of Lulu.com. The exterior of the historic building remains largely the same as it has on Hillsborough Street since the 1940s. A new glass-enclosed entry was added to create a prominent street presence and connect the existing building to a planned Phase 2 addition. The interior is an open space with tall windows and exposed existing materials, including brick walls, steel columns, and wood framed ceilings. The result is a modern workspace with employees grouped by task that fills both floors and all waiting to solve your problems.
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Post by potet on Apr 17, 2021 22:02:59 GMT
It should read: 700 Park Offices Drive, Suite 250 Research Triangle, NC 27409 USA NC stands for North Carolina Yes. Thanks for the correction: NC = North Carolina.
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Post by Retread-Retired-Cameron on Apr 18, 2021 0:13:26 GMT
With US mailing N is North, S is South, E is East, and W is West.
With numbering even numbered addresses are normally supposed to be on the north and west sides of streets / roads with odd numbers on the south and east sides. We live on the north side of our road and have an odd numbered address, so what's normal and what's reality are two different things.
As long as the mail gets where it needs to get it's all good.
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Post by Ken on Apr 19, 2021 9:20:37 GMT
In the UK it is normal to have even numbers on one side of the road and odd on the other. Although it’s not laid down in statute. In some rural areas houses only have names and not numbers. It is also most unusual to have house numbers in excess of two figures but in one or two towns it may rise to several hundred.
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