View allAll Photos Tagged APARTMENTS
A view of a block of apartments in Glenelg in South Australia.
I processed the image in Silver Efex Pro 2
Bratislava apartments built during the Soviet occupation. Once a dull, base concrete color, most have now been painted a brighter gray with splashes of color added. We were lucky enough to do some home visits and found that the buildings are well constructed, with rooms that were larger and brighter than I expected.
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Leica iif + Leica Elmar 5cm f3.5 ltm + Kodak Double-X 5222 (bulk loaded)
Guessed exposure / Focus looks off so I must have messed up.
1:3 Xtol, 2.5ml Rodinal, 24 degrees, 12min30, 2Iv, Epson v800 scan
(tones as scanned)
On a run Gdansk, Poland .. I like how the cranes go on as far as the eyes can see. Wanted to capture scenes like this on film before it is all replaced by modern apartments and service centres.. like everywhere else!
2000 R Ave, Anacortes.
Development plans for the MJB Partnership project on 28 acres of former industrial land on Fidalgo Bay include condos, townhouses, senior living apartments, hotel, event center, retail stores, restaurants & esplanade.
Guildford Castle was built by William the Conqueror after the battle of Hastings and was originally a Norman motte and bailey castle.
Early in the 12th century the wooden defenses were replaced by a stone castle. A polygonal shell keep, a further two story square flanking keep and an outer bailey were all added in the 1130s and the keep became both a jail and the headquarters for the county sheriff.
During the 13th century Henry III ordered improvements to be made. The great hall was decorated with paintings and colored glass windows, his apartments were painted green with gold and silver stars, he added a garden with marble columns and the bailey was extended with a set of rooms being built for his son Edward.
The castle was never involved in any battles or sieges and from the 14th century started to fall into disrepair, by 1379 everything but the Kings chamber and the keep had fallen down. The keep continued to be used as a jail until 1544 when it relocated and the gardener John Daborne was left in charge.
In 1611 King James I granted the castle to Francis Carter who removed the roof and rented out parts of the grounds for farming. In 1885 the current owner Lord Grantley sold the site to the Guildford Corporation who restored the walls and tower and opened it to the public.
In 2003 a conservation and restoration project was started on the keep which revealed the original crenellations; a new floor and roof were also constructed.
The previously disused gas holders in King's Cross, London now contain apartments and a park rather than gas-containing drums
These apartment buildings were across the street from the hotel we were staying in in San Francisco, near Union Square. It was taken through our hotel window, using my favorite lens, the Olympus 17mm f1.8 on my OMD EM-1. I was struck by the texture of the buildings, the graphic quality of the fire escapes and the interesting windows. I thought it came out pretty well, having been shot through two panes of dirty glass. Hope you enjoy it!
This waterfall is located just west of Lauterbrunnen in the Bernese Highlands, south of Interlaken. The waterfall drops 297m from a hanging valley that ends in overhanging cliffs above the Weisse Lütschine.
The stream, on reaching the verge of the rocky walls of the valley, forms a cascade so high that it is almost lost in spray before it reaches the level of the valley. After rain, and early in the season (as seen above) when fed by melting snow, Staubbach Falls is very striking. The force of the stream above the fall at such times is sufficient to carry the water clear of the precipice, and the whole mass descends in a condition of liquid dust, between spray and cloud, that sways to-and-fro with the gentlest breeze. In a dry summer, when the supply of water is much reduced, the effect is comparatively insignificant.
The building in the foreground, in the village of Lauterbrunnen, would appear to be apartments. I cannot find it on that the street view element of that well-known online mapping tool - replaced in the 30+ years since then...?
This is a view of the upper floors from the back of the Dahlquist Building (1905) in Bellingham, WA. There are businesses on the bottom floor but the top floors have apparently been mostly empty since a fire in the 1970s. The old fire escape was removed only in the last few years. You can still see the outline.
The Marlboro Apartments are in the historic Jefferson-Chalmers section of the city. This section of the city is one of the longest surviving business districts. This 3-1/2 story five bay apartment building constructed in 1927 contains 19 apartments. It is a yellow brick, Elizabethan-inspired structure with a protruding front entrance and symmetrical window arrangement. Not quite sure, but with the dumpster there, it looks like these are being saved.