View allAll Photos Tagged CooperS

For the Birds.

 

he is in the flight cage due to a broken wrist on his right wing.

   

Cooper Creek at Burke Waterhole near Innaminka, South Australia. July 2023.

Black and White photograph of the Cooper River Bridge in Charleston, South Carolina.

Cooper's Hawk photographed at MacMillan Pier in Provincetown, MA on 2 January 2016.

This cute little guy is COOPER, a 3 month old Lab/Hound mix puppy who’s playful and friendly. Though he can be a little bit shy at first, he warms up quickly with kind handling, and when food treats are on offer!Cooper will be a sweet family pet.

 

Cooper lives in Kennel 9.

For more information contact doginfo@apsofdurham.org.

Cooper's Hawk (Accipiter cooperii) at Fort Steilacoom Park

Cooper Chapman of Australia advances to round two after placing first in round one heat 15 ​of the 2018 Hawaiian Pro at Haleiwa, Oahu, Hawaii, USA.

 

This young Cooper's Hawk has been hunting the yard for a couple weeks now.....Fairmont, WV....November 2018.

He walked into the net while hunting... cuz a Kinglet and a chunk of Red Squirrel just wasn't enough! We interfered with his hunting for a bit, so he was pretty angry with us :P.

Clearwater, Florida

August 9, 2012

In Busey Woods, Urbana, Illinois, USA

Richard Cooper at Mastermind Talks 2014 in Toronto, Ontario.

 

©2014 Mark Adams

www.MarkAdamsPhoto.com

my boyfriend's family's dog

1 week old baby

DSC_1322

Viennese Band Agent Cooper shot with Kolor film

Cooper Power Plant

Jim Slaughter Photography Collection

Morphosis_Cooper Union Building

Juvenile Cooper's Hawk above a feeder at the visitor center, Bosque del Apache NWR, New Mexico. November 13, 2019.

2011 Alice Cooper - Atlanta, GA

 

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Juvenile Cooper's Hawk by Bill Bolton/WikimediaCommons

Cooper's Hawk

State Line Lookout

Cooper Inn in Cooperstown

Cooper Arms is a twelve-story steel-reinforced concrete building[2] with exterior walls of brick finished with stucco. Located on Ocean Boulevard (at the corner of Linden Avenue) in the East Village near downtown Long Beach, the structure was designed by Los Angeles architects Curlett & Beelman.[3] The design of the L-shaped apartment building has been described as Renaissance Revival and "Adam Revival" with neo-classical and neo-Egyptian ornamentation.[2]

Cooper Arms was originally developed as a housing cooperative with 159 apartments (and 406 rooms) which were offered for sale on "the own-your-own apartment plan,"[3][2] an idea that was promoted by Canadian born real estate developer Lionel Vincent Mayell (who also served as secretary of the Cooper Arms Building Company).

With a construction budget of $1,350,000, the Cooper Arms was the most expensive development in Long Beach history to that time. The construction was handled by Scofield Engineering and Construction Company,[4] the same company that built the Los Angeles Biltmore.[3] Demand for the new apartments was brisk, and in the six months before construction began, more than $1,250,000 in apartments had already been sold.[3]

The building's 12th floor solarium and ballroom, occupying a major portion of the top floor, were among its most notable features. The ballroom included a domed ceiling and ornate moldings and lanterns.[2] Another popular feature was the ground-level garden along Ocean Boulevard which opened onto a Spanish loggia extending through the structure to Linden Avenue.[5]

A promotional brochure published in 1922 noted that the Cooper Arms would have the latest amenities, including steam heating, high-speed elevators, "instantaneous hot water at all times," "Iceless Frigidors," "Disappearing beds," and "Dustless roller screens."[5] The Cooper Arms property was developed by Larkin Cooper. It was built on a portion of Ocean Boulevard that had previously been "given over to fine homes."[3] There were originally eight houses on the site, all owned by Cooper. Cooper came to Long Beach from Emporia, Kansas, where he had been in the feed and grain business.[6]

In April 1922, the Long Beach Daily Telegram announced the plan to build a luxury apartment building on the site. The planned development was billed as follows: "Long Beach to Have Finest Apartments in Whole Southland."[2]

The building was constructed from 1923-1924 when Long Beach was undergoing a building and population boom. When construction started in March 1923, the Los Angeles Times published a drawing of the Cooper Arms and described it as "an apartment-house which when completed, will be one of the most imposing structures of its kind west of Chicago."[3] At the time, Long Beach's skyline lacked other skyscrapers, and the Times predicted that "this magnificent building will become a landmark that may be seen from ocean vessels miles away."[3] In 1933, the Cooper Arms survived the Long Beach earthquake without major damage. One long-time resident recalled standing on the roof of the building when the earthquake struck:

I was tinkering with an old radio when the earthquake hit. It knocked me flat on my face. I watched the old Edgewater Building topple down. This building [Cooper Arms] is built out of steel and concrete. It just swayed from east to west — but it held together. We heard there was going to be a tidal wave after the earthquake, so I gathered my camping gear and fishing pole, got into my Franklin automobile and drove to Lake Henshaw to do a little fishing until the excitement died down.[6]

In 1974, the building celebrated its 50th anniversary with three of the original occupants still in residence. At the time, the Long Beach Independent Press-Telegram wrote that some of the excitement and luster had faded: "Party days at the Cooper Arms, along with the festive zest which once was the order of the day, have waned with the passage of years. The downtown lounge, with its plush oriental carpeting and ornate baroque ceilings, is now quiet and empty . The building is currently operated as condominiums by the Cooper Arms Homeowners Association. In 1980, the Long Beach Cultural Heritage Committee designated Cooper Arms a Long Beach Historic Landmark. It was among the first group of seven structures to receive the designation. The other structures included in the first group were Villa Riviera, First Congregational Church, Rancho Los Cerritos, Rancho Los Alamitos, Jergins Trust Building and the Pacific Coast Club.[8]

Cooper Arms was also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in October 2000.

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