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Link to my flickr skyline album: My Skyline album
Link to my flickr explore album: My Explore album
Link to my flickr 1,000+ favorite album: My 1,000+ Favorite album
Link to my flickr 500+ favorite album: My 500+ Favorite album
I moved to Boston!
I thought I would post road trip photos first, but as it turns out there are a lot to sort out and my internet access is still pretty iffy. So instead, here's my first photo of the Boston skyline seen from the Tufts Tisch Library roof. I'll be very busy the first couple months so don't expect much photography at first (I'll probably continue posting the rest of my leftover chicago and road trip photos instead), but after that I hope to do some exploring.
Morning in South Boston finds an MBTA/Keolis OCS starting onto the Amtrak Dorchester Branch at the Fort Point Channel. Powered by "Cranberry scheme" heritage GP40MC 1129 and B&M heritage F40 1030, the train continued south onto the Franklin Branch at Readville, then to the Framingham Secondary at Walpole, then the Northeast Corridor frm Mansfield to Davisville where it was wyed and run back to Boston on the Corridor.
Another behind the scenes shot at the Boston portrait meet. Had a great time with all these photographers!
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The Boston Terrier is a lively little companion recognized by his tight tuxedo jacket, sporty but compact body, and the friendly glow in his big, round eyes. His impeccable manners have earned him the nickname 'The American Gentleman.'
From Wikipedia - Boston City Hall "It is a controversial and prominent example of Brutalist architecture, part of the modernist movement. It was designed by the architecture firms Kallmann McKinnell & Knowles and Campbell, Aldrich & Nulty, with LeMessurier Consultants as engineers.
The building has been subject to widespread public condemnation and is sometimes called one of the world's ugliest buildings. Calls for the structure to be demolished have been regularly made even before construction was finished. Architects and critics considered it to be excellent work, with one poll from 1976 finding that professional architects describe Boston City Hall as one of the ten proudest achievements of American architecture. The building is a designated Boston Landmark.