View allAll Photos Tagged APARTMENT

Mietshaus, Berlin

 

Berliner Luft (2017) - Gustavo Dudamel (on violin) & Berliner Philharmoniker - Waldbühne, Berlin

www.youtube.com/watch?v=peIEFBlJAy4

From the balcony of my apartment I can visualize the horizon, I can see the people that transit the street, I can register a lot of movement around me.

I wish you a happy Friday and a great weekend.

 

I'm grateful for visit, favs and comments of my photo.

Taken just before the blue hour kicked in along a stretch of canal in my home city of Nottingham. These apartments are mostly privately owned but can you believe some students live here? It's a far cry from the squalor I lived in during my degree days that's for sure. The guys I lived with were complete slobs too.

 

Anyway as I'm sure you'll agree it's not a bad place to live :)

In the Xi Tauri (Ushakaron) Star System, a mere 210 light years away from the McDonalds in my town, there is a planet that orbits Aldebaran. Scientists and all there fancy, highfalutin astronomy gear have long figured its existence but, have never been able to confirm it. Well, I know a thing or two about outer space and I can tell you that it does exist and it is known by the inhabitants as Blort. Indeed, I know this for sure because... I've been there! Yes! See that apartment balcony, third row from the left, eight from the ground? My good friend, Keegzat, lives there and we often trade secret strategies for dominoes; long, contemplative discussions on the benefits of a secure bitcoin wallet and the tender mercies of preconceived naughtiness when no one is suspecting the neither - a fine trick when nothing is working but the fanbelt.

 

For the Alien Worlds challenge over at the Worlds of Thrylium group.

 

Seemed rather appropriate for the new challenge at Award Tree: Back from the Future

 

*OF NOTE: It appears many Flickr folks know or knew of someone who is/has resided in this particular Apartment Block. Who knew the universe could be so small and interconnected, huh? Please feel free to leave a note (now that Flickr has brought them back) as to which unit it is/was/shall ever be, so help be the lord!

This is where I live in Makati City, Philippines

Captured in the Russellville neighborhood for Saturday for Stairs. Edited using Deep Dream Generator. HSfS everyone!

A Lego apartment block in brutalist style.

Paris Haussman Apartment Skybox by Milk Motion available at the Mainstore

 

Bookcase by Apple Fall

 

Coffee Table is from the Fulwood Collection by Apple Fall

 

Oxford Wingback Chairs by Apple Fall

 

Rug by Fancy Decor

Former industrial site in Pittsburgh

Apartment Tour: Travis' Side of the Bedroom. There is already another picture in my photostream of my side of the bedroom

Alternative view in colour

Marina City, affectionately known as "the corn cob", is a mixed-use residential-commercial building complex in Chicago, Illinois, United States, North America, designed by architect Bertrand Goldberg. The multi-building complex opened between 1963 and 1967 and occupies almost an entire city block on State Street on the north bank of the Chicago River on the Near North Side, directly across from the Loop. Portions of the complex were designated a Chicago Landmark in 2016.

 

The complex consists of two 587-foot (179 m), 65-story apartment towers, opened in 1963, which include physical plant penthouses. It also includes a 10-story office building (now a hotel) opened in 1964, and a saddle-shaped auditorium building originally used as a cinema. The four buildings, access driveways, and a small plaza that originally included an ice rink are built on a raised platform next to the Chicago River. Beneath the platform, at river level, is a small marina for pleasure craft, giving the structures their name.

A colourful mural adorns the side of a building.

An abandoned building from Bakırköy

Den Haag, The Netherlands

Minolta SRT-101

Ilford HP5

Rokkor 58mm

 

Every time I am at the intersection of Stockton and Bush in San Francisco I can't resist taking an image of this apartment building. I can't explain it, but it speaks to me. And each image with each camera, lens, and film choice brings out something new in it.

This is the back side view of a business on Main Street. The upper floor is being renovated for an apartment. All of the brick work looks suspect to me? The building that was attached to it on the left is the one that fell down except for the front wall in a previous photo.

 

Clifton, Arizona, USA. Once a booming copper mining town but now mostly declining or already in decay and the majority of people and business have moved just up the road to Morenci. The Freeport McMoRan copper mine located in Morenci is one of the largest in the world

 

Cliff dwellings along the San Francisco and Gila Rivers are evidence of an advanced civilization that existed long before Caesar ruled Rome. Many specimens of pottery and stone implements are still to be found in these ancient dwelling places. In the mid-1500s, both Fray Marcos de Niza and Francisco Vasquez de Coronado passed through the area, following the San Pedro north to the Gila River. Geronimo was born in 1829 near the confluence of Eagle Creek and the San Francisco and Gila Rivers.

 

In 1856 the first mineral discoveries of the Morenci/Clifton area were found by California volunteers pursuing Apaches, and conflicts between the Apaches and advancing Anglo settlers touched off a 26-year-long war. Mining for gold and silver began in 1864, followed by copper in 1872, and the mine at Morenci quickly grew to become the largest copper producer in North America. Clifton's population ballooned from 600 in 1880 to 5000 by 1910, and it quickly earned its reputation as the wildest of the "Wild West" boomtowns. Neighboring Morenci was swallowed up by an open pit mine in the 1960s, but Clifton was preserved, and today Chase Creek Street is still graced with lovely Victorian-era buildings from the town's halcyon days as the place to quickly make and lose a fortune.

 

In 1983, Clifton survived two nearly fatal blows, first a nearly three-year-long strike that began on June 30, 1983. Then later that same year, on October 2, 1983, Tropical Storm Octave sent 90,900 cubic feet of water per second into the San Francisco River, which burst its banks, destroying 700 homes and heavily damaging 86 of the town's 126 businesses.

Tower block in Split, Croatia.

2012

アパート 2024.11.30

Apartment Playfair Street Ottawa red sunshine lights blue balconies morning sky windows

Herning, Denmark

Canon 300, Fuji Pro 400

Tetenal C-41

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80