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六堆客家文化園區

Air intake structures are provided for the ventilation of the building.

 

Daniel Libeskind's "Kö-Bogen" Project: office and retail center in downtown Duesseldorf

VOGELSAND Utility Vessel, 2001

CONTIN外景日

錄影的時候

旁邊剛好有一群來做晨間運動的婆婆媽媽

雖然看起來比較像晨間八掛放送電台

本來還擔心會不會他們聊太嗨

結果把他們的聲音給錄進去

一度還有很魔性的尖銳笑聲出現

沒想到開錄之後好像就沒有聲音了耶

原來是婆婆媽媽躲旁邊在偷看我們在錄什麼東西啦

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#婆婆媽媽的音量不是蓋的

#那個笑聲那麼大肺活量一定也很大

#喔呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵

Vista de Madrid desde el Parque de la Cuña Verde una tarde de primavera con muchas nubes.

M3 with EF-M22mm f/2 STM

notice:

1. Taken with beta model (prototype).

2. Image has been resized. (80%)

3. It was taken at the bloggers meeting in Japan.

"Hamburg Airport (IATA: HAM, ICAO: EDDH), known in German as 'Flughafen Hamburg', is the international airport of Hamburg, the second-largest city in Germany. It is located 8.5 km (5.3 mi) north of the city center in the Fuhlsbüttel quarter and serves as a base for Germanwings, Condor and easyJet. Hamburg Airport is the fifth-busiest of Germany's commercial airports measured by the number of passengers and counted 15,610,072 passengers and 158,398 aircraft movements in 2015 and is named after Helmut Schmidt."

 

Source: wikipedia.org

Processed with VSCOcam with a7 preset

In cooperation with the Heitsch Gallery in Munich, the Golf & Countryclub is hosting "Skulpturale Krefeld 01", a large sculpture exhibition featuring works by renowned international artists. The impressive sculptures by Albert Paley (USA), Herbert Mehler (Germany) or Julio Nieto (Spain), for example, can be seen in the area around the clubhouse from 27 May to 31 October 2018.

 

Information about the mill (wikipedia.de):

 

The mill, which is the largest in the Krefeld city area, is a tower windmill which stands on a brick base ring.

 

The mill was built in 1823 by Benjamin Schmitz. It was used as a mill until the 1930s and then remained inoperative for some time. With financial means of the city Krefeld the mill was repaired, however it was used for only a short time until 1941. During the Second World War, the surrounding area of the mill was hit several times during Allied air raids and the building was severely damaged. The wing movement was completely destroyed and only renewed in 1969 and another time in 1982. Today the mill is in a functional condition, but is not operated, but used as a clubhouse of a golf club and it accommodates a restaurant.

"The Hohenzollern Bridge (German: Hohenzollernbrücke) is a bridge crossing the river Rhine in the German city of Cologne (German Köln). It crosses the Rhine at kilometre 688.5. Originally, the bridge was both a railway and street bridge, however, after its destruction in 1945 and its subsequent reconstruction, it was only accessible to rail and pedestrian traffic.

 

It is the most heavily used railway bridge in Germany with more than 1200 trains daily, connecting the Köln Hauptbahnhof and Köln Messe/Deutz stations.

 

The bridge was constructed between 1907 and 1911 after the old bridge, the Cathedral Bridge (Dombrücke), was demolished. The Cathedral Bridge was unable to handle the increasing traffic in Cologne. It was named after the House of Hohenzollern."

 

Source: wikipedia.org

"Rheinbrücke Uerdingen", built in 1933-1936

 

The suspension bridge was opened as the "Adolf Hitler Rhine Bridge" in 1936; it replaced the ferry that had connected the opposite banks of the River Rhine before. In 1945 the bridge was destroyed by the German Army to keep the Allied Troops (WWII) from crossing the River Rhine. The reconstruction started in 1948 and ended in 1950. Restoration work on the bridge took place from 1984 to 1993 and in the year 2014.

 

一際苔に覆われた幹がありました。まるで髭が生えているようです。

There was a trunk covered with moss. It's like having a beard.

EOS M3 with EF-M18-55mm F3.5-5.6 IS STM

Horticultural Exhibition

いい天気になりそうです

It's going to be nice weather

Temple Gardens

 

The Center for Japanese Culture, the EKŌ-House, has been in existence since 1993. The center consists of the only Japanese (Buddhist) temple in Europe, a Japanese garden, exhibition and lecture rooms and, since 1999, an additional building that houses a library and an international kindergarten. Cultural exchange is very important here.

 

"There is a Japanese community in Düsseldorf, Germany. In 2008 the Consulate-General of Japan in Düsseldorf (German: Japanisches Generalkonsulat Düsseldorf, Japanese: 在デュッセルドルフ日本国総領事館) stated that about 11,000 Japanese, including both permanent and temporary residents and German-born citizens of Japanese ancestry live in Düsseldorf. Since the 1950s Düsseldorf has hosted over 500 Japanese companies.

 

In 1985 the general manager of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Düsseldorf, Akira Arikawa, stated that of all of the cities in the world outside Japan, Düsseldorf had the highest concentration of Japanese residents."

 

Source: wikipedia.org

"The Market Hall (Dutch: Markthal or Koopboog) is a residential and office building with a market hall underneath, located in Rotterdam. The building was opened on October 1, 2014, by Queen Máxima of the Netherlands. Besides the large market hall, the complex houses 228 apartments, 4600 m² retail space, 1600 m² horeca and an underground 4-storey parking garage with a capacity of 1200+ cars.

 

The Market Hall was designed by architectural firm MVRDV. The grey nature stone building has an archwise structure like a horseshoe. The building has a glass facade on both sides, these are made up of smaller glass windows. The smaller windows are mostly squared and around 1485 millimeters wide. All of these are hung around a structure of steel cables, 34 metres high and 42 metres wide, which makes it the largest glass-window cable structure in Europe. Each facade has 26 vertical and 22 horizontal cables.

 

The inside of the building is adorned with an 11.000 m² artwork by Arno Coenen, named Hoorn des Overvloeds (Horn of Plenty). The artwork shows strongly enlarged fruits, vegetables, seeds, fish, flowers and insects.

 

The artwork of Coenen was selected out of 9 international candidates. The work was made using digital 3D-techniques. This enormous file of 1,47 terabytes needed special servers, these are also used by Pixar Studios for making animated movies. The digital 3D-animation was separated in 4000 pieces and then printed on perforated aluminum panels. The 4000 aluminum panels are now on the inside of the hall. Right after the opening in 2014, the artwork got a lot of attention from around the world. Some called it The largest artwork in the world or The Sistine Chapel of Rotterdam."

 

Source: wikipedia.org

"Cube houses (Dutch: Kubuswoningen) are a set of innovative houses built in Rotterdam and Helmond in the Netherlands, designed by architect Piet Blom and based on the concept of "living as an urban roof": high density housing with sufficient space on the ground level. Blom tilted the cube of a conventional house 45 degrees, and rested it upon a hexagon-shaped pylon. His design represents a village within a city, where each house represents a tree, and all the houses together, a forest.

 

The houses in Rotterdam were designed in 1977 in a plan of 55, of which 39 were built.

 

The houses in Rotterdam are located on Overblaak Street, right above the Blaak Subway Station. There are 38 small cubes and two so called 'super-cubes', all attached to each other.

 

As residents are disturbed so often by curious passers-by, one owner decided to open a "show cube", which is furnished as a normal house, and is making a living out of offering tours to visitors.

 

The walls and windows are angled at 54.7 degrees. The total area of the apartment is around 100 square meters, but around a quarter of the space is unusable because of the walls that are under the angled ceilings.

 

In 2006, a museum of chess pieces was opened under the houses.

 

In 2009, the larger cubes were converted by Personal Architecture into a hostel run by Dutch hostel chain Stayokay."

 

Source: wikipedia.org

Destruction of the old airport buildings from 1949.

 

"Düsseldorf Airport, also referred to as Rhein-Ruhr Airport, is located eight kilometres (5.0 miles) from the city centre and can easily be reached by train or the S-Bahn urban railway. There is a long-distance train station served by regional and national services, which is linked to the airport by the SkyTrain, an automatic people mover. Another station situated under the terminal building carries the S-Bahn line (S11) to Düsseldorf Central Station, and to Cologne as well as a few selected night services. After Frankfurt and Munich, Düsseldorf International is Germany's third largest commercial airport, with 18.6 million passengers annually. The airport offers 180 destinations on 4 continents, and is served by 70 airlines. The airport buildings were partly destroyed by a devastating fire caused by welding works in 1996, killing 17 people. It was completely rebuilt and the Skytrain installed."

 

Source: wikipedia.org

 

More Information:

www.dus.com/en

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%BCsseldorf_Airport

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