View allAll Photos Tagged Demolished
This was either the former McDonalds or the former liquor store, razed for eventual redevelopment.
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Built in 1988, this Modern interpretation of a Prairie-style building was designed by Glaser, Myers and Associates to house the Russell C. Myers Alumni Center. The building featured a low-pitch hipped roof with wide overhanging eaves, a red brick exterior, clustered casement windows, and a courtyard between it and the adjacent Faculty Center. The building and the adjacent Faculty Center were demolished in 2017 to make way for the new Lindner Hall, home to the Lindner College of Business.
Built in 1969, this Modern interpretation of a Prairie-style building was designed by Cellarius and Hilmer to serve as the Faculty Center for the University of Cincinnati. The building featured a red brick exterior, low-pitch hipped roof with wide overhanging eaves, a courtyard between it and the very similar Russell Myers Alumni Center to the east, a second-story terrace wrapping the east wing, which featured a large window wall overlooking the courtyard, and a tall curtain wall on the south facade around the front entrance. The building and the adjacent Myers Alumni Center were demolished in 2017 to make way for the new Lindner Hall, home to the Lindner College of Business.
#Occupation army #demolished four #houses and #agricultural facilities of families in the #Palestinians village of "#Ramon" east of #Ramallah, the center of the occupied West Bank under the pretext of building without a permit.
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#Freepalestine #palestinian #issamalrimawi #heritage #live #photo #photographer #comfort #natural #تصويري #palestine #Jerusalem #Occupation #Blockade #demonstration #iof #WestBank #Ramallah #uae #me #qatar #Turkey #picoftheday #photooftheday #bestoftheday
Glasgow Tigers demolish Redcar Bears 61-32 in a match they had to win after a string of devastating injuries on 5 June 2011, Picture: Al Goold
This piece of land located on the edge of the Everglades where housing companies can legally build was originally a swampy grassland. Years ago an invasive species known as the paper-bark tree was introduced in the hope of soaking up all the water to produce dry land but instead it destroyed all everglades life and created a desolate wasteland. Now, a new emerging social order of people who live near the area take pride in their (weekly obliteration of anything beautiful) 4-wheeling, dirt-biking further destruction of this land. in 2015 the geographic limit of which home building companies are allowed to build to will be pushed further into the eastern side of the everglades. this means that in just a few years this land will house more wasteful suburbans who will pollute the Everglades more with their well meaning fishing, boating and hiking trips. And the 4-wheelers will have to find more untouched land to destroy.
One week after car bomb at the underground parking lot in Hat Yai district, my town. All destroyed 195 cars were pulled up.
The 6 innocent people killed and up to 350 injured in this situation.
.....REST IN PEACE.....
Built in 1864, this was the second Baptist church on this site. In use until 1972, it was demolished in August 1983 and replaced with housing.
Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire.
Copied from a Perutz 64 transparency.
This chimney is all that remained of the old Mansion known as Forest Hill, built in the 1880s by judge D. D. Davies for his family. The Queen Anne-style Mansion was the largest and most significant residence in this portion of the county, and is a building I built a model of, based on old photographs. The house was the home of the Davies family, whom were Welsh in ancestry, with the patriarch of the family himself being from Wales. The St. David’s-in-The-Valley Episcopal Church, located on the opposite side of the Cullowhee Valley from the Mansion, was built with funding from the Davies family in 1888, and was named after the church Judge Davies attended as a child in Wales. The house remained standing into the 20th Century, but at some point suffered a fire, evidenced by charred wood embedded in the bricks of the chimney, that destroyed it, with the ruins of the house remaining hidden in a grove of trees for decades until earlier this year, when construction began on a new housing complex for the growing student population at the adjacent Western Carolina University. The chimney became visible from the road, which drew my attention, but was knocked down in late September, with these photographs and some measurements I took being the only record of these remains before they were removed. Today, no trace remains of the Mansion, but the name lives on in the name of the surrounding subdivision and municipality, Forest Hills, and the legacy of Judge Davies, who helped fund the fledgling institution that became Western Carolina University, as well as the St. David’s Episcopal Church, which remains standing across the valley, and was recently restored.