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Unfortunately it was getting dark when I visited this complex my photographs contain a lot of noise.
The current complex is described as follows: "Clancy Quay is a high quality multifamily community in Dublin, Ireland. Kennedy Wilson expects to add over 400 units to the existing 423 units including the conservation and refurbishment of nine historic army barracks and the construction of four new blocks."
Clancy Quay was originally named Clancy Barracks which featured a fourteen-bay two-storey camp stores and ordnance depot built in 1899-1900 on the site of a riding school.
Truth be told, these places are actually separated by False Creek.
This particular photo was shot at Granville Island, in Vancouver, B.C.
Sickla Udde in Stockholm, Sweden. This is a typical apartment complex. Notice the park behind. Folks in Stockholm are always close to the water, a park, and a bus or subway stop.
Photo I took on a walk with my wife in our neighborhood. A beautiful day with temperatures in the lower 80's.
Even though Functionalist Moderne buildings, like "Tuffnell Lodge" a block of clinker brick flats in Garden Avenue East Melbourne, often featured horizontal emphasis, there was still a certain focus on the vertical as well, as this wonderful bank of stairwell windows shows.
www.rameshwaramarts.co.in/marble_inlay.php
Rameshwaram Arts & Crafts provide beautiful designer marble to the customer. We are offering printed marble with latest design and patterns. We are the leading supplier of marble items and all marble items are made by excellent inlay work and hard work. We make Inlay marble in different size, shapes and colors and uniquely designed by our expert team.
"Eww la la," we chortled as we rudely mocked the pastel building and took pictures in the parking lot. "Haha we're falling into a [stormdrain] depression haha."
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In Columbus, Ohio, on November 26th, 2017, outside the Continent Apartments, built in 1974 according to the website of the Franklin County Auditor, on the west side of Boulevard Victor Hugo, north of Boulevard Lafayette.
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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:
• Columbus (7013645)
• Franklin (county) (1002386)
Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:
• apartment houses (300005707)
• parking lots (300007826)
• pastel (color attribute) (300311039)
• pastiches (objects) (300049945)
Wikidata items:
• 26 November 2017 (Q37788107)
• 1970s architecture (Q7160121)
• Buildings and structures completed in 1974 (Q8318761)
• Downtown Columbus (Q5303399)
• November 26 (Q3019)
• November 2017 (Q21706740)
Library of Congress Subject Headings:
• Color in architecture (sh85028595)
A new office and apartment complex across from the olympic green. It is still under construction.
新建的大楼。在奥运村对面。
I have begun to realize (too late!) that I haven't got enough pictures of apartment complexes' parking lots in my collection, as it turns out.
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In Ann Arbor, Michigan, on December 13th, 2012, the "Crossings of Ann Arbor" condominiums on the north side of Longshore Drive, west of Wright Street.
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Library of Congress classification ideas:
TH4960 Carports—Pictorial works.
TL175 Parking lots—United States—Pictorial works.
TP988 Sealing compounds—Pictorial works.
TE250 Pavements—Cracking—Pictorial works.
TE250 Pavements—Maintenance and repair—Pictorial works.
F574.A6 Ann Arbor (Mich.)—Pictorial works.
Wonderful community amenities are available to residents here at The Point at Silver Spring, including the fire pit - now open for use!
Not the best way to prop up a dumpster. It actually needed support on the other side. This is life at our apartment complex.
October 30, 2022 - The former Wonder Bread factory in Columbus has been redeveloped in the Wonder Breads Lofts located at 727 N 4th Street.
"According to Ohio History Connection, Italian Village at the turn of the century was a melting pot of Italian, Irish, and African immigrants who worked, lived, shopped, and worshipped in this early suburb of Columbus. This neighborhood was defined by its industrial warehouses, spotted with Italian Catholic churches, a few retail buildings, and a mix of single- and multi-family residential properties.
Architecturally, the styles of Italian Village are different from its neighboring community Victorian Village. Most of the buildings in Italian Village were built in the Italianate and Queen Anne style, using masonry (brick, block, and stone), and wood. These architectural styles reigned throughout the United States during this time period, and were not unique to Columbus. Nonetheless, we should be proud that these historic buildings still stand today.
Italian Village: An Industrious Neighborhood that Needed a Way to Feed its Workers
At the turn of the century (more specifically, between 1890 and 1930), many residents of Italian Village worked for the Clark Grave Vault/Clark Auto Equipment Company, the Smith Brothers Hardware Company, Berry Bolt Works, the Radio Cab Company, and the Columbus Burlap Bag Company. But the largest employer in Italian Village at the time was the Jeffery Mining Company, which employed 2,500 people at its peak. Thousands and thousands of workers reported to work every day to help build coal mining machinery, and Jeffery Mining Company needed a way to feed all those employees, hard at work.
That’s why, in 1916, they built a bread factory across the street. All those Jeffery Mining employees were working up large appetites, and the company needed a way to keep everyone going.
This bakery site produced baked goods for the Jeffery Mining Company and its company cafeteria. It also provided baked goods for the company’s cooperative employee store. At its peak, the bread factory produced up to 5,000 loaves per day, according to The Ohio History Connection.
A Century of Change for Columbus’ Bread Factory
Throughout the years, this bread factory changed names — and owners — many times. In 1920, it was known as “The Columbus Bread Company”, and just three years later it changed hands to the “Holland Bread Company”. In 1929, it became the “Ward Brothers Company”, and finally, in 1934, Wonder Bakeries were handed the keys, which is when this building first became home to the Wonder Bread name we know and love today.
At Wonder Bread’s peak, this facility churned out no fewer than several thousand loaves per minute! This huge volume of bread was then quickly shipped across the United States.
In 2009, the Wonder Bread Factory stopped baking. Wonder Bread’s parent company, Interstate Bakeries Corporation, closed the Columbus factory, along with a sister factory in Missouri, according to The Columbus Dispatch.
During this time, the American bread industry saw a drop in bread purchases, as Americans became more health conscious (and afraid of carbs.) Since the Columbus factory didn’t have the ability to bake Wonder Bread’s new all-natural bread line, they had no choice but to close their doors.
This building was a bread factory for over a hundred years until a stand still in 1999, until the Lykens Company bought it in 2009, after Wonder Bakeries decided to vacate the premises. (In 2009, America wasn’t sure how we felt about bread anymore, and Wonder Bakeries couldn’t justify keeping their Columbus factory open.)
Wonderland: What would have been a community arts space
When our very own Kevin Lykens purchased this unique property in 2009, he had a dream. He, along with a group of innovative entrepreneurs, had plans to turn the old Wonder Bread Factory into a multi-use arts center.
According to The Columbus Dispatch, this group of local movers and shakers dreamed of converting the old bread factory into artist studios, shared office spaces, band rehearsal and recording facilities, venue and performance spaces, and galleries, all under one roof. It would be called “Wonderland”, and it would be an invaluable resource for local artists, musicians, and entrepreneurs to achieve success and establish Columbus as a true art city.
But unfortunately, the dream of Wonderland was not meant to be. The team faced multiple roadblocks from the Internal Revenue Service that made leasing terms difficult, so Kevin Lykens decided to instead turn the historic bread factory into a unique, luxury living space for Columbus residents who wanted to live in the heart of Ohio’s capital city. " Previous description: www.lykenscompanies.com/blog/the-fascinating-history-of-w...