View allAll Photos Tagged Embankment
I have no idea or justification for why I took this. A momentary madness. Or perhaps just a little present for Dan Bovenzi :-)
Built 1932 by the Sassoons.
Top 3 floors where adder later (end of 1970s?).
Views from the Jinmao Building
Shanghai 2013
Embankment «Northern Tushino»
Набережная «Северное Тушино»
Тест объектива-крышки Olympus 15mm f/8.0 Body Cap Lens
London's Air Ambulance (HEMS) at Victoria Embankment, attending an incident.
London's Air Ambulance is a charity which relies on the support of the general public and sponsorship to keep this great life saving service in the air.
For more information check out the HEMS website at www.londonsairambulance.com
This approach embankment to a new highway bridge is under construction. There is erosion and instability of the slide slopes dues to water ponding in a coarse soil layer that will form the sub-base of the new road.
We walked back from Faraday House to Osmosoft towers. A minute earlier it was bucketing with rain. Then the sun came out. And Jeremy's phone rang.
Tsunami went over it to destroy a huge embankment.
Taro, MIyako City, Pref. Iwate, Japan.
"Visit to tsunami stricken areas."
www.flickr.com/photos/yusho/sets/72157629449533233/
Biogon T*2.8/28 ZM
The embankment of the fort is clearly visible in the lush green thick vegetation surrounding it.
Clicked enroute to Bala Quila. Awesome drive, very quiet and one is literally in the lap of nature.
Bazalgette lamp on the Chelsea Embankment. Designed by the engineer Joseph Bazalgette, comprising a base of bent lion’s legs and paws.
Chelsea Embankment is part of the Thames Embankment, a road and walkway along the north bank of the River Thames in central London.
The western end of Chelsea Embankment, including a stretch of Cheyne Walk, is in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea; the eastern end, including Grosvenor Road and Millbank, is in the City of Westminster. Beneath the road lies the main low-level interceptor sewer taking waste water from west London eastwards towards Beckton.
The embankment was completed to a design by Joseph Bazalgette and was part of the Metropolitan Board of Works' grand scheme to provide London with a modern sewage system. It was opened on 9 May 1874 by Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh.
This embankment was created to help with the return of laden wagons of copper to the pier outside Bonmahon onto boats to Swansea in South Wales