View allAll Photos Tagged @Marketplace
Food Lion #2219 (49,702 square feet)
7300 Market Place Drive, Quinton, VA
Opened in winter 2012, renovated in summer 2017; originally Winn-Dixie Marketplace (September 1996-February 24th, 2005), later Bloom (December 2008-winter 2012)
Henrietta, NY. September 2022.
If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media (such as newspaper or article) please send me a Flickr mail or an e-mail at natehenderson6@gmail.com.
June 1, 2025: Walk around Janss Marketplace in Thousand Oaks with hipstamatic app on random shuffle. Emilo Lens, Kool Soup film. CV25-154
Marketplace in Kamienna Góra, Lower Silesia, Poland. Baroque houses, north-western frontage from 18th century.
Rynek w Kamiennej Górze z barokowymi kamienicami (XVIII wiek) w pierzei północno-zachodniej.
Henrietta, NY. September 2022.
If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media (such as newspaper or article) please send me a Flickr mail or an e-mail at natehenderson6@gmail.com.
Jinotepe Marketplace, Nicaragua.
This lovely woman allowed me to take her photo after I took this first photo of her.
© Mark V. Krajnak 2009 | All Rights Reserved
Title : Bagh-e Fin
Other title : Bagh-i Fin; Fin Garden
Date : 1571-1629 (construction) 1797-1834 (reconstruction)
Current location : Kashan, Esfahan, Iran
Description of work : The Bagh-e Fin was developed during the reign of the Safavid ruler Shah Abbas I (1571-1629) on the route to his new capital at Isfahan. Contained within massive enclosure walls and laid out on a series of low terraces, the garden follows a quadripartite chahar bagh scheme divided by the crossing of two watercourses which also line the perimeter of the garden. The crossing is marked by a two-story pavilion, while garden spaces and pathways fill the space. An additional watercourse, running adjacent to the central one, emanates from a small, but elaborately painted, pool house. The paintings date to the reign of the Qajar ruler Fath Ali Shah (1797-1834), who also replaced most of the earlier buildings. The water is delivered by a qanat (underground irrigation canal) and is forced through numerous fountains by gravity. Various hammams (bathhouses), residences, and a museum line the sides. It was declared a national monument in 1935 and has since undergone extensive repairs. (Sources: Hobhouse, Penelope. Gardens of Persia. Kales Press, 2004; Faghih, Nasrine and Amin Sadeghy. "Persian Gardens and Landscapes" Architectural Design 82.3, 2012, pp. 38-51.)
Description of view : View of tourists examining a vendor's stall at the eastern corner of the garden. One of the corner-towers of the enclosure wall rises above to the right.
Work type : Architecture and Landscape
Style of work : Safavid; Qajar
Culture : Iranian (Islamic)
Materials/Techniques : Stone
Brick
Masonry
Source : Movahedi-Lankarani, Stephanie Jakle (copyright Stephanie Jakle Movahedi-Lankarani)
Date photographed : June 2009
Resource type : Image
File format : JPEG
Image size : 4000H X 3000W pixels
Permitted uses : This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightsarch.htm
Collection : Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures
Filename : WB2016-0062 Fin.jpg
Record ID : WB2016-0062
Sub collection : gardens
historic sites
marketplaces
Copyright holder : Copyright Stephanie Jakle Movahedi-Lankarani