View allAll Photos Tagged Containers
KENYA, Mombasa: Photograph taken by the Kenyan Ministry of East African Affairs, Commerce and Tourism (MEAACT) 31 July shows a general view of containers onboard a ship inside Mombasa Port on Kenya's Indian Ocean coast. MANDATORY CREDIT: MEAACT PHOTO / STUART PRICE.
ShelterKraft Cargo Cottage
by ShelterKraft Werks, Inc.
located at Greenhome Solutions
1210 W Nickerson St | Seattle 98119
Single Family, ADU, Cottage Home from all steel, reclaimed shipping container for on-grid, semi- or fully off the grid living. Dual-flush toilets, On-demand water heater, All electric house, Salvaged/reused materials, Recycled-content materials, Locally-sourced materials
Seattle Green Homes Tour www.ecobuilding.org/guild-chapters/seattle/green-home-tour
For more than 15 years, Staten Island based artist, Victoria Munro has exhibited her photographic and sculptural works internationally, working between Auckland, New Zealand and the U.S. In the installation called Container Series, Munro focuses intently on color bringing vibrant colors to the Grand Staircase Plaza at Staten Island’s St. George Ferry Terminal.
The aluminum strips, affixed securely to the vertical elevations of the stairs leading up to the Plaza, are meant to mirror the shapes and colors of the shipping containers that pass through the NY waterways. Munro believes color is inextricably linked to structures and materials and her work seeks to highlight this relationship. Container Series broadens this investigation to include an exploration of geometric form and function. The artist goes on to describe that “the context and histories of transporting cargo create shifting meaning in the work, suggesting models of other ways of being, cultural blending, and future possibilities and destinations, which are yet to be discovered.”
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners
Container Series by Victoria Munro
Presented with Council on the Arts and Humanities for Staten Island
Grand Staircase Plaza, St. George Ferry Terminal, Staten Island
A container ship travels along the Kill Van Kull channel between Staten Island, N.Y. and Bayonne, N.J. To accommodate the safe passage of larger ships the Kill Van Kull channel is being deepened by the U.S. Army Corps through dredging.
Since the final third of the 20th century, the Kill Van Kull has provided the principal access for ocean-going container ships to Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal, N.J. the busiest port facility in the eastern United States, and Howland Hook Marine Terminal, Staten Island, N.Y. (Photo: Vince Elias)
Container ship Sajiir heading for Port Said. Looks Full so that's 14,500 20' Containers! 13/08/19
Pilot boat alongside ( under the C )
Challenge Friday #cf14
Theme: Container
Photo 2 of 3
Lovely new soft foot containers for my poor old feet :)
For more than 15 years, Staten Island based artist, Victoria Munro has exhibited her photographic and sculptural works internationally, working between Auckland, New Zealand and the U.S. In the installation called Container Series, Munro focuses intently on color bringing vibrant colors to the Grand Staircase Plaza at Staten Island’s St. George Ferry Terminal.
The aluminum strips, affixed securely to the vertical elevations of the stairs leading up to the Plaza, are meant to mirror the shapes and colors of the shipping containers that pass through the NY waterways. Munro believes color is inextricably linked to structures and materials and her work seeks to highlight this relationship. Container Series broadens this investigation to include an exploration of geometric form and function. The artist goes on to describe that “the context and histories of transporting cargo create shifting meaning in the work, suggesting models of other ways of being, cultural blending, and future possibilities and destinations, which are yet to be discovered.”
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners
Container Series by Victoria Munro
Presented with Council on the Arts and Humanities for Staten Island
Grand Staircase Plaza, St. George Ferry Terminal, Staten Island
GE CM20EMP(CC 206) diesel locomotive leading the container freight train from Jakarta to Surabaya was leaving Semarang Poncol station.