Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
multi-storey
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a multi-storey block (=having many levels)
▪ Many shops and offices have been rebuilt in high multi-storey blocks.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
car
▪ The report claims, however, that she dislikes using public transport, multi-storey car parks and driving on motorways.
▪ The traders who trade around it can do nothing but benefit from the new multi-storey car park with 1,600 spaces.
▪ According to figures from Thames Valley police crime in multi-storey car parks is on on increase.
▪ The hotel has no private parking space but has arranged concessionary access to a municipal multi-storey car park nearby off Southgate Street.
▪ The most historical thing in Chelmsford is probably the multi-storey car park constructed about 1973.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A modern multi-storey office block is a very simple design.
▪ As they often occupy cramped sites, London Board schools are usually multi-storey buildings.
▪ It is enslaved to the motor car, surrounded by great road ramps, and dominated by an unpleasant multi-storey car-park.
▪ On the outskirts of Tabor there were long rows of multi-storey apartment blocks of an extraordinary ugliness; many flats looked empty.
▪ Only those displaying offensive materials in the windows of multi-storey apartment buildings would seem to be safe from conviction. 3.
▪ The report claims, however, that she dislikes using public transport, multi-storey car parks and driving on motorways.
▪ This is probably due to the large preponderance of low-rise multi-storey council housing.
Wiktionary
multi-storey
a. (context of a building English) Having more than one storey. n. A building with more than one storey.
Usage examples of "multi-storey".
From the roof of the multi-storey car-park next to the airfreight building I waited for Vaughan to appear.