| CORNICE | As an architectural feature, gosh it's pretty! (7) |
| GARGOYLE | Grotesque face as an architectural feature (8) |
| ARCHWAY | Why a car crashed into an architectural feature (7) |
| PROTOME | Bust used as an architectural adornment |
| PERIGEE | Endless danger? Gosh - it's where something is as close as possible! |
| QUIDSIN | Daughter wrong on question one -- sitting pretty! (5,2) |
| FLOWERS | They're so blooming pretty! |
| BRACKET | From "codpiece" or "breeches", an architectural support, such as a corbel, supposedly named for its resemblance to the aforesaid pouch; or, either of a pair of parentheses ( ) [ ] { } for enclosing wo |
| ACROTER | Nonsense about tree? Contrarily, it's an architectural piece |
| AGREEABLE | An architectural feature always being held up as delightful |
| ATLAS | Word for a book of maps that takes its name from the Greek Titan depicted on title pages of early such volumes; or, a figure of a man serving as an architectural column (5) |
| BASE | The lower portion of either a heraldic shield or an architectural feature such as a column; or, the chief ingredient of a recipe (4) |
| ASPIRE | Long to have an architectural feature (6) |
| BOWWINDOW | Dog kennels in Germany, an architectural feature (3,6) |
| FRIEZE | Heavy fabric that can be used for an architectural feature |
| KNOSP | From German, a flower's unopened bud or an architectural feature resembling it |
| SOFFIT | Underside of an architectural feature |
| MOULDING | Forming an architectural feature (8) |
| DOME | Call it an architectural feature should door meet oddly |
| BLUEPRINT | Technical drawing such as an architectural or engineering plan; or, the magazine for Oxford University staff (9) |