View allAll Photos Tagged 16484
Op de Werrabahn van Eisenach naar Meiningen organiseerde Team LoRie (Henry Riedel en Stephan Lohr) van 30 oktober tot en met 1 november 2008 het Plandampfevenement ‘Dampf trifft Kies’. Ingezet werden de loc’s 52 8075 van IG Werrabahn (uit Eisenach), 52 8079 van Dampfplus (uit Dresden), 52 8154 van het Eisenbahn Museum zum Bayerischen Bahnhof (uit Leipzig) en 03 1010 van DB Museum (uit Halle). Op 2 november werd herdacht dat de Werrabahn 150 jaar bestond. Daartoe reden er extra treinen tussen Eisenach en Eisfeld, getrokken door de loc’s 41 1144 van IG Werrabahn en 50 3501 van het Dampflokwerk Meiningen. In de latere namiddag van 1 november 2008 rijden de locs 52 8154 + 52 8075 ter hoogte van Tiefenort (Unterrohn-Oberrohn) met trein WEG 45 (voorheen 60564 'Kies') van Immelborn naar Eisenach, met loc 52 8079 als duwloc.
Auf der Werrabahn von Eisenach nach Meiningen organisierte Team LoRie (Henry Riedel und Stephan Lohr) vom 30. Oktober bis zum einschliesslich den 1. November 2008 die Plandampfveranstaltung ‘Dampf trifft Kies’. Eingesetzt wurden die Lokomotiven 52 8075 der IG Werrabahn (aus Eisenach), 52 8079 der Dampfplus (aus Dresden), 52 8154 des Eisenbahn Museums zum Bayerischen Bahnhof (aus Leipzig) und 03 1010 vom DB Museum (aus Halle). Am 2. November wurde den 150-Jahrestag der Werrabahn gefeiert. Dazu fuhren Sonderzüge zwischen Eisenach und Eisfeld, gezogen von den Lokomotiven 41 1144 der IG Werrabahn und 50 3501 des Dampflokwerkes Meiningen. Im spateren Nachmittag des 1. November 2008 fahren die Lokomotiven 52 8154 + 52 8075 in der Nähe von Tiefenort (Unterrohn-Oberrohn) mit dem Zug WEG 45 (ehemals 60564 'Kies') von Immelburg nach Eisenach, mit der Lok 52 8079 als Schiebelok.
Photo André Knoerr, Genève. Reproduction autorisée avec mention de la source.
Utilisation commerciale soumise à autorisation spéciale préalable.
La motrice historique KTM1 355 effectue une course spéciale.
16484
ARRIVA Kent & Surrey 6237 YJ57 BKD is seen on Linton Road, Linton Corner whilst working route 5. Thursday 3rd July 2014.
DAF DB250 - East Lancs Lowlander
IMG_16484
Stagecoach Yorkshire 16484 N134AET a 1995 Volvo Olympian YN2RC Alexander H47/32F at Matlock on service 17 from Chesterfield on 11 June 2010.
Originally Grimsby Cleethorpes 134.
In Blankenburg staat loc 251 012 van de DR (een zogenaamde 'Rübelandbahnloc' voor 25 Kv 50 Hz) voor vertrek gereed met trein P 16484 naar Elbingrode, 27 mei 1984.
In Blankenburg steht Lok 251 012 der DR (eine sogenannte 'Rübelandbahnlok' für 25 Kv 50 Hz) zur Ausfahrt mit dem Zug P 16484 nach Elbingrode, 27. Mai 1984.
Alabama - area 51,998 sq. miles of which 719 sw. miles is water; 28th state in size; admitted to the Union in 1819. State flower - Goldenrod. Capital - Montgomery. Cotton is the principal crop, corn the second. Mining and manufacturing iron and steel products, are important industries.
E.C. Kropp Co.
16484-CM21
CAPA-000601
Elite Volvo Olympian/Alexander RL 515VTB on the M60 Eastbound at Stockport on the 3rd February 2015. ( Ex Stagecoach 16484.N134AET then Hulme Hall, Cheadle Hulme)
Elite Services Volvo Olympian/Alexander RL 515VTB with a free Marks and Spencer and Tesco Handforth Dean Service in Poynton, Cheshire on the 23rd September 2016. (Ex Stagecoach 16484 and the Hulme Hall, Cheadle Hulme)
Seen in the yard of the former bus operator, Hulme Hall and the colours that it was painted in after acquisition by them is an Alexander RL bodied Volvo Olympian. Since reregistered by Elite, who acquired it when Hulme Hall ceased trading, it was originally N134AET and was new to the Grimsby Cleethorpes operation. It was subsequently painted base white by Elite who also acquired sister vehicle N144AET from the same source.
Seen with the engine cover open revealing the beast with in the Ex Stagecoach Warwichshire 16484 (N124AET).
Ex (N134AET) Stagecoach Warwickshire 16484. The registration this vehicle is currently wearing was first worn by Lancashire united Transports Guy Arab 75, it then made its way on to a Charterplan Setra, then to (E574UHS) and A Dennis Javerlin Plaxton premier before its final place back on the front and rear of a double decker.
KGP WDM-3A#16484R led 12847 Up Howrah Digha Duronto Express coming out of bridge over Rupnarain at Kolaghat in HWH KGP section of SER.
In 2011 Warwickshire received a small batch of N-AET Olympain's arrived at Leamington depot, one such example was 16489, N139AET seen here in Leamington with a service U1 for Warwick Uni, although the blind appears to have been unable to be programmed and stuck on Stagecoach in Derbyshire. There was also 16484, N134AET running around with Stagecoach in Chesterfield.
(Hulme hall now a division of the elite group) Seen here wearing the old Hulme hall livery. Ex Stagecoach in warwickshire(16484)
[Six images are in this set on Yates Tavern] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
Yates Tavern just south of Gretna, Pittsylvania County, Virginia has an uncertain date, possibly built circa 1750. It served as both a residence and a tavern/inn. It’s a weatherboarded two-story frame building, 16 feet by 24 feet, the first floor containing two rooms, one large and one small. On one side of the gable roof is an exterior chimney made of rubble; the stack is brick and has a corbelled cap. Fenestration is limited with a single 4/4 window on both the front and rear facades. The loft has limited lighting, two fixed 4-light windows in the gable show in the photo; I assume a similar placement of windows exists in the other gable end. It has an English basement with 2-foot thick rock walls; this area served as the kitchen. Access to the floor above was by ladder to a trap door. The most unusual feature is a 10-inch jetty on the long sides of the second floor, ostensibly to provide more space in this area. This structural device was used in medieval and Elizabethan English architecture. The protrusions are possibly not an original feature but a result of later remodeling and enlarging of an existing structure. It has been deemed a blockhouse because of the jetties and is apparently unique in the state of Virginia. Yates Tavern was placed on National Register of Historic Places December 19, 1974 with reference number 74002143.
Old photos of the building (as part of the Historic American Buildings Survey [HABS] ) are at the Library of Congress site:
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16484...
The nomination form to the NRHP is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources website—for a pdf file click Yates Tavern at www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/register_Pittsylv...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
Photo: © all rights reserved by Ervanofoto (Günther)
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Tijdens een wandeling stop ik zeer regelmatig om me even om te draaien en een blik te werpen in de richting waarvan ik kom. En dikwijls loont het de moeite, wan niet zelden ziet de tegenovergestelde richting er toch weer net iets anders uit.
Rechts in beeld de helling van de Totengrund.
Extra links:
DSCN0421_16484
Johnston, Frances Benjamin,, 1864-1952,, photographer.
[Villa Lante, Bagnaia, Lazio, Italy. Fountain of the Giants]
[1925 summer]
1 photograph : glass lantern slide, hand-colored ; 3.25 x 4 in.
Notes:
Site History. House Architecture: Giacomo (Jacopo) Barozzi da Vignola, 1568-1600. Landscape: Giacomo (Jacopo) Barozzi da Vignola and Carlo Maderno, 1568-1600. Also, Tomaso Ghinucci, fontaniere. Associated Name: Giovanni Francesco Gambara, 16th century. Today: Public site.
On slide: Yellow-gold star sticker.
On slide (printed): "Edward Van Altena" and "29 W. 38th St., N.Y.C." (slide manufacturer).
Slide for lecturing on "Old World Gardens."
Title, date, and subject information provided by Sam Watters, 2011.
Forms part of: Garden and historic house lecture series in the Frances Benjamin Johnston Collection (Library of Congress).
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.16484
Call Number: LC-J717-X104- 28
[Six images are in this set on Yates Tavern] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
Yates Tavern just south of Gretna, Pittsylvania County, Virginia has an uncertain date, possibly built circa 1750. It served as both a residence and a tavern/inn. It’s a weatherboarded two-story frame building, 16 feet by 24 feet, the first floor containing two rooms, one large and one small. On one side of the gable roof is an exterior chimney made of rubble; the stack is brick and has a corbelled cap. Fenestration is limited with a single 4/4 window on both the front and rear facades. The loft has limited lighting, two fixed 4-light windows in the gable show in the photo; I assume a similar placement of windows exists in the other gable end. It has an English basement with 2-foot thick rock walls; this area served as the kitchen. Access to the floor above was by ladder to a trap door. The most unusual feature is a 10-inch jetty on the long sides of the second floor, ostensibly to provide more space in this area. This structural device was used in medieval and Elizabethan English architecture. The protrusions are possibly not an original feature but a result of later remodeling and enlarging of an existing structure. It has been deemed a blockhouse because of the jetties and is apparently unique in the state of Virginia. Yates Tavern was placed on National Register of Historic Places December 19, 1974 with reference number 74002143.
Old photos of the building (as part of the Historic American Buildings Survey [HABS] ) are at the Library of Congress site:
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16484...
The nomination form to the NRHP is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources website—for a pdf file click Yates Tavern at www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/register_Pittsylv...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
...Left to right (SIL1893) Ex Rutherfords Scania K113 Irizar Century, Withdrawn (DHZ3261) Scania K113 irizar Intercentury, (515VTB) Ex Stagecoach Warwickshire 16484, Alexander Bodied Volvo Olympian, (L423XVV) ex Glenvale Transport 7206, ex Stagecoach united Counties 423, Volvo B6 Alexander Dash.
[Six images are in this set on Yates Tavern] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
Yates Tavern just south of Gretna, Pittsylvania County, Virginia has an uncertain date, possibly built circa 1750. It served as both a residence and a tavern/inn. It’s a weatherboarded two-story frame building, 16 feet by 24 feet, the first floor containing two rooms, one large and one small. On one side of the gable roof is an exterior chimney made of rubble; the stack is brick and has a corbelled cap. Fenestration is limited with a single 4/4 window on both the front and rear facades. The loft has limited lighting, two fixed 4-light windows in the gable show in the photo; I assume a similar placement of windows exists in the other gable end. It has an English basement with 2-foot thick rock walls; this area served as the kitchen. Access to the floor above was by ladder to a trap door. The most unusual feature is a 10-inch jetty on the long sides of the second floor, ostensibly to provide more space in this area. This structural device was used in medieval and Elizabethan English architecture. The protrusions are possibly not an original feature but a result of later remodeling and enlarging of an existing structure. It has been deemed a blockhouse because of the jetties and is apparently unique in the state of Virginia. Yates Tavern was placed on National Register of Historic Places December 19, 1974 with reference number 74002143.
Old photos of the building (as part of the Historic American Buildings Survey [HABS] ) are at the Library of Congress site:
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16484...
The nomination form to the NRHP is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources website—for a pdf file click Yates Tavern at www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/register_Pittsylv...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
South of Cyprus looking north. Taken during the Sesqui-centennial in 1926. Google Maps.
© Original photo from scrapbook
One of the more useful acquisitions of the Ralph Bullock fleet was this NCME bodied Volvo Olympian, seen in Piccadilly on student cattle truck duties in 2009.
Convolvulaceae (morning glory family) » Evolvulus alsinoides
ee-VOLV-yoo-lus -- unrolled, non-twining
¿ al-sin-OY-deez ? -- resembling features of the genus Alsine
commonly known as: dwarf morning glory • Gujarati: કાળીશંખ વલ્લી kalisankha vali • Hindi: शंखपुष्पी shankhapushpi, विष्णुक्रान्त vishnukranta • Kannada: ಶನ್ಕ್ಹಪುಷ್ಪಿ shankhapushpi, ವಿಷ್ಣುಕ್ರಾಮ್ತ vishnukraamta • Marathi: शंखवेल shankhavel, विष्णुक्रांत vishnukranta • Nepalese: शंख पुश्पि shankh pushpi • Punjabi: ਸੰਖ ਪੁਸ਼ਪੀ sankh pushpi • Sanskrit: शङ्खपुष्पी shankhapushpi, विष्णुगन्धि vishnugandhi, विष्णुक्रान्ता vishnukranta • Tamil: விட்டுணுக்கிராந்தி vittunu-k-kiranti • Telugu: విష్ణుక్రాంత vishnu-kranta
Native to: tropical Americas; widely naturalized elsewhere
References: Flowers of India • eFlora • ENVIS - FRLHT • NPGS / GRIN • Flowers of Sahyadri by Shrikant Ingalhalikar
[Six images are in this set on Yates Tavern] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
Yates Tavern just south of Gretna, Pittsylvania County, Virginia has an uncertain date, possibly built circa 1750. It served as both a residence and a tavern/inn. It’s a weatherboarded two-story frame building, 16 feet by 24 feet, the first floor containing two rooms, one large and one small. On one side of the gable roof is an exterior chimney made of rubble; the stack is brick and has a corbelled cap. Fenestration is limited with a single 4/4 window on both the front and rear facades. The loft has limited lighting, two fixed 4-light windows in the gable show in the photo; I assume a similar placement of windows exists in the other gable end. It has an English basement with 2-foot thick rock walls; this area served as the kitchen. Access to the floor above was by ladder to a trap door. The most unusual feature is a 10-inch jetty on the long sides of the second floor, ostensibly to provide more space in this area. This structural device was used in medieval and Elizabethan English architecture. The protrusions are possibly not an original feature but a result of later remodeling and enlarging of an existing structure. It has been deemed a blockhouse because of the jetties and is apparently unique in the state of Virginia. Yates Tavern was placed on National Register of Historic Places December 19, 1974 with reference number 74002143.
Old photos of the building (as part of the Historic American Buildings Survey [HABS] ) are at the Library of Congress site:
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16484...
The nomination form to the NRHP is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources website—for a pdf file click Yates Tavern at www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/register_Pittsylv...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
[Six images are in this set on Yates Tavern] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
Yates Tavern just south of Gretna, Pittsylvania County, Virginia has an uncertain date, possibly built circa 1750. It served as both a residence and a tavern/inn. It’s a weatherboarded two-story frame building, 16 feet by 24 feet, the first floor containing two rooms, one large and one small. On one side of the gable roof is an exterior chimney made of rubble; the stack is brick and has a corbelled cap. Fenestration is limited with a single 4/4 window on both the front and rear facades. The loft has limited lighting, two fixed 4-light windows in the gable show in the photo; I assume a similar placement of windows exists in the other gable end. It has an English basement with 2-foot thick rock walls; this area served as the kitchen. Access to the floor above was by ladder to a trap door. The most unusual feature is a 10-inch jetty on the long sides of the second floor, ostensibly to provide more space in this area. This structural device was used in medieval and Elizabethan English architecture. The protrusions are possibly not an original feature but a result of later remodeling and enlarging of an existing structure. It has been deemed a blockhouse because of the jetties and is apparently unique in the state of Virginia. Yates Tavern was placed on National Register of Historic Places December 19, 1974 with reference number 74002143.
Old photos of the building (as part of the Historic American Buildings Survey [HABS] ) are at the Library of Congress site:
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16483...
memory.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/va/va0800/va0824/photos/16484...
The nomination form to the NRHP is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources website—for a pdf file click Yates Tavern at www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/register_Pittsylv...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
This field in Eridanus contains several interesting galaxies:
NGC 1721 (PGC 16484 and others) is the right (west) spiral in the group of three and is located approximately 197 million light-years away.
NGC 1725 (PGC 16488 and others) is the center galaxy of the three. This one appears to be approximately 173 million light-years away.
NGC 1728 (PGC 16495 and others) is the galaxy at the left of the three.
NGC 1723 (PGC 16493 and others) is the wild-looking spiral above the other three. This one is located at about the same distance of NGC 1725 and 1728.
Luminance – 24x600s – 240 minutes – binned 1x1
RGB – 10:10:8x300s – 50:50:40 minutes each – binned 2x2
380 minutes total exposure – 6 hours 20 minutes
Imaged November 1st, 4th, 7th and 8th, 2024 from Dark Sky New Mexico at Rancho Hidalgo (Animas, New Mexico) with a SBIG STF-8300M on an Astro-Tech AT12RCT at f/8 2432mm.
Convolvulaceae (morning glory family) » Evolvulus alsinoides
ee-VOLV-yoo-lus -- unrolled, non-twining
¿ al-sigh-NOY-deez ? --
commonly known as: dwarf morning glory • Gujarati: કાળીશંખ વલ્લી kalisankha vali • Hindi: शंखपुष्पी shankhapushpi, विष्णुक्रान्त vishnukranta • Kannada: ಶನ್ಕ್ಹಪುಷ್ಪಿ shankhapushpi, ವಿಷ್ಣುಕ್ರಾಮ್ತ vishnukraamta • Marathi: शंखवेल shankhavel, विष्णुक्रांत vishnukranta • Nepalese: शंख पुश्पि shankh pushpi • Sanskrit: शङ्खपुष्पी shankhapushpi, विष्णुगन्धि vishnugandhi, विष्णुक्रान्ता vishnukranta • Tamil: விட்டுணுக்கிராந்தி vittunu-k-kiranti • Telugu: విష్ణుక్రాంత vishnu-kranta
Native to: tropical Americas; widely naturalized elsewhere
References: Flowers of India • eFlora • ENVIS - FRLHT • NPGS / GRIN
CAGLIARI - Cagliari respira 2014 - 7° mezza maratona Città di Cagliari (Domenica 7 dicembre 2014 - presso lo stadio di atletica Ex Coni - All rights reserved © 2014)
Museo de Bellas Artes “MUSEU DE BELLES ARTS”
Av. de los Hermanos Bou y calle Prim, Castellón
Arquitectos: MANSILLA + TUÑON Emilio Tuñón y Luis Moreno Mansilla Proyecto 1997 Obras: 1998-2000
El programa se estructura en cuatro grandes bloques de acuerdo con su accesibilidad: espacios públicos, semipúblicos, de trabajo y de almacenamiento, organizados en tres edificaciones diferenciadas:
Edificio central, (en torno al claustro ajardinado del antiguo colegio de Serra Espadá), se ubican las dependencias del museo a puerta cerrada y las oficinas (área semipública).
Adosado a este un edificio cúbico de nueva planta donde se localizan las salas de exposición de la colección permanente (área pública). Este edificio es el resultado de la superposición de plantas de iguales dimensiones, en las que un espacio a doble altura se va desplazando y convierte a cada planta en un lugar diferente. Construido siguiendo una retícula de 5 x 4 módulos, los cinco niveles se ven surcados por una cascada de salas en doble altura que permite una visión diagonal atravesando todo el edificio, hasta el patio del semisótano. Un mecanismo de sección que permite una gran compacidad espacial, relacionar las diferentes plantas entre sí y con el conjunto, de tal forma que un visitante, al recorrer una planta, se encuentra con una sucesión de espacios que hacen referencia a tres escalas diferentes, la de las salas entre forjados, de las salas de doble altura, y la que produce la visión diagonal que recorre la totalidad del edificio. Todo ello permite el control de la luz desde la cubierta hasta los niveles inferiores.
En el lado oeste del solar y separado del edificio existente, una nueva edificación longitudinal alberga las dependencias de restauración. Y, bajo el pabellón de restauración, los depósitos de fondos conectando las áreas de trabajo y el edificio de exposición.
El cerramiento exterior está formado por un muro ventilado, con un acabado metálico a base de unos paneles de fundición de aluminio reciclado en las que se graba su destino, MUSEU DE BELLES ARTS, recordando los antiguos ladrillos romanos que conserva el museo.