View allAll Photos Tagged Complex.
Barton Community College Women's Soccer second half photos vs Hutchinson Community College on 10-03-18 at the Cougar Soccer/Track Complex on the campus of Barton Community College in Great Bend, KS.
Photos by Todd Moore, Barton Sports Information Department.
Museu da Cia.Paulista de Estradas de Ferro.
Local: pátio do Complexo Cultural Fepasa.
Jundiai/SP-Brasil
"A healthy mind is the reflection of a healthy body.
SIRT Bhopal believes in the holistic development and better facilities for students ever."
In this sequence, SIRT Bhopal is proud to announce that a
"Modern, Well-Equipped AC Sports Complex" will be inaugurated in SIRT campus on 19 July, 2018
Mr.Rahul Jain, Director T&CP, Bhopal will be the Chief Guest of this great occasion.
Mr.Jallaludin, former Indian Hockey Player Guest of Honor.
Er Sanjeev Agrawal, CMD The SAGE Group, Bhopal has consented to shower his blessings by his gracious presence.
We solicit your gracious presence on this momentous occasion.
Time -11:00 a.m | Venue - Sports Complex, SIRT.
An Intra college Table-tennis tournament is scheduled soon after the inauguration...
#BestEngineeringCollegeinMP #SIRT #SGI
#TheSAGE
Our normally quiet, gentle mare doesn't like the new weanling for some reason. Other weanlings in the paddock playing around her, leaning on her, nuzzling (and being nuzzled). This little guy just gets chased away, and reminded to keep his distance with icy stares. Sad...
I derived this title from "Ghost In The Shell: StandAlone Complex". The idea behind the show is that, in a cyberized world, a true individual is known as a "standalone complex". The apple in the picture is standing out from the crowd.
Het was een tijdje terug, maar ik en mijn vader hadden een rondleiding bij het befaamde nieuwe trainings complex van vitesse, foto's gemaakt, maar vooral veel gefilmd, dat komt ooit nog samen tot een nieuwe Arnhem Report.
Built in 1910 by the Great Northern Railway, the Belton Chalet complex was the first lodging built in the region for tourists traveling through the newly-established Glacier National Park. Belton Chalet was designed with much more direct inspiration in its detailing from the Swiss Chalet style than later hotels built by the Great Northern Railway, with features including extensive finished wooden brackets, rustic stone bases, a clipped gable or jerkinhead roof on the lodge building, sawn balustrades, broad overhanging eaves, a three-story exterior staircase on the dining hall building, and an asymmetrical “ski jump” front-gable roof on the dining hall building. The hotel, though the first built in the area by the Great Northern Railway to serve guests traveling to and from nearby Glacier National Park, was located relatively far from the park’s major attractions, and the opening of additional hotels in and around the park led to its importance being diminished. By the 1920s, the hotel was no longer operating at its original full capacity, and only saw occasional usage as a hotel by the 1930s. In 1946, the hotel was sold by the Great Northern Railway to a private owner, and it remained largely disused for half a century. During this time, the dining hall building was home to multiple bars and restaurants, some of which had very notorious reputations for the antics of the patrons. The Belton Chalets were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, at which time they were in a state of neglect. In 1997, the hotel was sold to a couple whom spent over $1 million dollars restoring the hotel and dining hall back to its original grandeur, reopening the property in its full capacity for the first time since the 1920s, with the hotel fully reopening for the 1998 summer season, winning multiple awards for the massive undertaking that rescued the historically significant structure from decades of severe neglect. In 2000, the chalet was included with other Great Northern Railway buildings around Glacier National Park in being designated as a National Historic Landmark.
A lot of work goes on behind the scenes to keep the campus operating and looking great. Photo by Ross Mulhausen.
These photos are from early sessions in our Wild training complex phase. We start with exercise bands perfecting movement technique and improving core strength and then move on to sandbags and kettlebells.
At MBU's new 47,000 square foot Carl and Deloris Petty Sports and Recreation Complex. October, 2011.
Here's a poor shot of the home at which we stayed in Anhui. On the left is the gate to the courtyard. The two-story house is where we stayed, Ben on the second floor. The kitchen and main room are downstairs. Across the courtyard to the right is the toilet. Another gate by the toilet leads out to the chicken yard. We were told it is very beautiful in the summer when all the trees have leaves (and the sun appears). I believe it.
Founded in 1970, Arcosanti is an arcology designed in the Brutalist style by Paolo Soleri to serve as a self-sufficient community on a desert mesa near Cordes Lakes, Arizona. The buildings that comprise the complex, despite being a work-in-progress, were mostly built between 1971 and 1980, with more sporadic work on a few portions of the complex being completed as recently as 2008. The complex is the result of the design philosophy of Soleri, being an example of his theory of an arcology, combining ecology with architecture, making a dense, self-sufficient community that works with the natural landscape, and an alternative to urban sprawl and more conventional development patterns. Soleri guided the project until his death at the age of 92 in 2013, with further phases of construction being planned. However, Arcosanti has struggled to grow beyond a commune of 150 people, taking on a form and size comparable to a traditional pre-industrial rural village, rather than a town or city with thousands of residents as envisioned by Soleri. Most residents of Arcosanti are like-minded, which is required for the community’s ability to function and operate, and consist primarily of artists, environmentalists, farmers, and sustainability advocates, whom each contribute their skills to the community. In addition to the permanent residents, temporary residents whom spend five weeks attending workshops at the site. Despite its shortcomings, Arcosanti’s relationship to the surrounding environment, radical approach in design, philosophical background, and self-sufficiency are key points that are valuable to consider when designing buildings for sustainability and environmental consciousness, along with being an excellent example of Brutalism, which harmonizes nicely with the surrounding desert landscape.
The buildings at Arcosanti include the boxy, rectilinear Visitor Center, which appears like a medieval tower rising from the edge of the Mesa, with an open pier foundation that provides shelter to visitors entering and exiting the Visitor Trail, the half-domes for the Ceramics Studio and Metallurgy Foundry, various resident apartments, which demonstrate varying exterior characteristics, a barrel vaulted canopy over the central plaza, known as the vaults, a laboratory that houses a greenhouse and woodshed, allowing for food to be grown more efficiently and for items to be crafted by residents, the East Crescent, which contains resident housing and surrounds a central amphitheater. The site also features a swimming pool, gardens, resident cabins, which mostly date to the first stages of construction in the early 1970s, a self-contained wastewater management system, and guest rooms for visitors. The main complex of buildings are arranged at the edge of a mesa, overlooking a canyon, with smaller buildings located further down into the canyon and in the bottomlands along the Agua Fria River.
Arcosanti provides a counterpoint to the modern development pattern, one that is more sensitive and respectful to the landscape and the natural environment, and a design that fosters a strong sense of community, all of which are lacking from most new development being built today. Residents are able to quickly walk to work and to amenities within the community, reducing the dependency on cars and mechanized transportation. Additionally, buildings are designed to be energy efficient, incorporating passive strategies for thermal regulation and lighting. The complex, owned by the Cosanti foundation, remains a work in progress, with only ten percent of the proposed buildings being complete, and cover a very small area of the larger property owned by the foundation, with most of the land being left in its natural state or utilized for agriculture. Tours are available for visitors, along with overnight stays in the guest rooms at the complex, and the complex continues to house and foster a tight-knit, vibrant community.