View allAll Photos Tagged ECO
When you want to do something completely different and enjoyable, we find places like this.
DC Eco Coffee, Gardulla is a small but nice place with a minimalist concept right in the middle of the urban chaos.
Come and enjoy a quiet atmosphere, where you will only hear the noise of nature and in the meantime you can take a beautiful picture while enjoying a coffee.
Thank you Toni Moana for recommending this beautiful place
Otro encuadre de la ermita, para sacar la VL. A más de 100km, la CL que se ve es la de Guadalajara, corredor del henares, Madrid, etc...
11mm - f2.8 - 25seg - ISO3200
Con Carmen Moraleda, Mar A Vedí, Eugenio Rodriguez Cortés, Ana Marin , Emilio y Pilar
Saw this beautiful old Citröen van today, decaying on the edge of Standish Woods, near the Cotswold Way, Gloucestershire.
Handheld iPhone 8 Plus, tweaked in Snapped on iPhone
Truenos, sonidos que se oyen al quebrarse el Glaciar constantemente. Parque Nacional los Glaciares. Santa Cruz. Patagonia Argentina.
"Credo che avere la terra e non rovinarla sia la più bella forma d’arte che si possa desiderare"- Andy Warhol
Un fazzoletto di terra toscana alle prime luci, anzi, alle prime ombre del giorno. Foto di archivio, buona giornata "eco-logica" se possibile :)
The Sacra of San Michele is a fascinating abbey located on Mount Pirchiriano in front of the city of Turin. It was founded between 983 and 987. It became an important Benedectine monasticism in the Middle Age. There are several legends connected to this beautiful and unique place. It is believed that Umberto Eco was inspired by this building for his famous novel "The name of the rose".
Although it is not in the city of Turin, the abbey is considered in the metropolitan area of the city. So I took the liberty to add it to the project
"Turin in monochrome"
www.flickr.com/photos/mborgare/albums/72177720315271078
La Sacra di San Michele e' un'abbazia medioevale costruita sulla cima del monte Pirchiriano che domina la citta' di Torino. Fu costruita tra il 983 e il 987 e divenne un importante centro culturale dei Benedettini. Ci sono diverse leggende che circondano questa affascinante struttura. Si pensa che Umberto Eco si sia inspirato a questa struttura per il suo romanzo "Il nome della rosa".
Sebbene non sia nella municipalita' di Torino, l'abbazia e' considerata facente parte dell'area metropolitana della citta' e per questo motivo l'ho inserita nel progetto "Turin in monochrome"
Perquè
hi ha un eco de silenci
després de la pluja
que entra i surt com un ocell
per la finestra,
a casa.
Del poema «Quatre respostes a la pluja», #Nectari, Edicions del Buc, 2016 > porcar.net/nectari/
(Tècnica: fotomuntatge)
Still making up their train at Dayton's Bluff, H-16 (the Shakopee) is led by two clean SD30C-ECOs. I shoot all clean CP units since in a year or two, they will look a lot less photoworthy
A Canadian Pacific GP20C-ECO rebuild is paired with a CSX SD40-2 on the point of K861, an empty phosphate train that has just come off the Garrett Sub at Deshler and is now pointed south on the Toledo Sub. I can't say much about these ECO rebuilds other than "ugly."
Bicycles, Haarlemmersluis and Round Lutheran Church
Did you see the butterflies?
:-)
The Haarlemmersluis is a 17th-century lock in the center of Amsterdam. The lock is located at the eastern end of the Brouwersgracht, where the Singel flows into the IJ.
The Ronde Lutherse Kerk (round Lutheran church) or Koepelkerk (cupola church) is a former Lutheran church in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on the Singel canal. The church can be easily seen from the Singel, identified by its copper dome.
The church was designed by Adriaan Dortsman (ca. 1636-1682) and was opened in 1671.[1] In 1822 the church was nearly destroyed; it was rebuilt in 1826.
In 1935 the Lutherans left the building and it became a concert hall. The neighboring Renaissance Amsterdam Hotel (formerly the Sonesta Hotel) rents the church building from the Lutheran Church. In 1975 a tunnel was built by the hotel to access the church.[2] In 1983 the church was closed for restoration, but in 1993 the dome caught fire,[1] and the church was again restored.[1]
The church is not open to the public, but interested persons may request to view it at the Renaissance Hotel. A security guard accompanies visitors through the tunnel to the church, where the ground floor of the consistory has been converted to bathrooms and the upper floor to a meeting room. Of the main hall, the impressive columns, galleries, organ and pulpit can still be seen.
A pair of CPKC SD30C-ECOs pull into Minnesota Commercial's Midway Yard with the J15 (CPBN) job on a quiet Sunday morning. This was my first time seeing these unique rebuilds, of which only CPKC and CSX roster.
Yo toda emocionada pues daba por perdidas estas fotografías... Ni se imaginan la alegría que sentí cuando, casualmente, descubrí donde se encontraban...
Eco Pond Everglades.
No post-processing done to photo, only cropped. Nikon NEF (RAW) files available. NPP Straight Photography at noPhotoShopping.com
For my video; youtu.be/wod2ZYxO5k8?si=m4a9Rm1XcGMLSTPk
Century gardens, Deer lake park,
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
They’re different from topiary–another gardening art–where a single plant is pruned into a shape. Instead, Eco-sculptures start with a metal frame that's packed with soil. Plants are selected for their colours and textures. A design is created and the structure is mapped to show where each type of plant goes. As the they grow, the design fills in, creating a imaginative living sculpture.
Eco-sculpture,
Only in Burnaby.
Water daily,
For my video; youtu.be/Y-xdghEuugU
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
One of 13 owl Eco-sculptures. Each owl is a different species, and represents one of Canada's 13 provinces and territories.
Burnaby has a wide selection of owl species - including the barn owl, barred owl and great horned owl. The sculptures call attention to the declining number of owls and remind us of the community's important role to help conserve owl populations,
Willingdon Linear Park