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in training. He loves cause and effect machines. I splurged when the shelter in place order was handed down and bought a classroom set for him. There is much frustration paired with great satisfaction and excitement.

The engineer's view of ICRR GP 11 No. 8733, now at the Monticello Railway Museum

Engineer Pass: At 12,800 feet, you'll find amazing views of the San Juan Mountains, including nearby peaks Uncompaghre and Sneffels.

 

The Street Shaft - Rosso coffee shaft float with homemade Baileys ice cream

 

Photo by Penny Breedon

Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.

 

(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)

The Angel of the Lee Valley, a giant transient land art work, spanned an area the size of a football pitch, on Leyton Marshes, East London, UK 1999 / 2000.

 

The large chalk drawing engineered by Wyllie was inspired by ancient images cut into the English chalk hillside. The angel’s pose came from observing winged deities from many different cultures plus Raphael and Superwoman. The angel holds a labyrinth encircled with symbols from seven different faiths of the local London community.

 

‘I didn’t want this guardian spirit hovering above in the air, but close by us on the ground. It was created to be viewed from one of four hot air balloons, so that we could exchange places with angels. I designed this piece of land art to fade away and leave no marks on the landscape but to plant the experience of the work in people’s memory’- Denise Wyllie.

 

Central to this commission for Lee Valley Regional Parks Authority were lead-in art workshops. Women’s groups from different faiths developed their own response to the theme inspired by many cultures throughout history. Resulting from these workshops the artist developed the concept of the original brief.

The Lee Valley Angel reflects the diverse cultural make-up of the community by incorporating winged deities and abstract patterns from the workshops into the angel’s gown and showing seven symbols representing some of the many religions, around the perimeter of the labyrinth she holds.

 

The finished art work became a catalyst for environmental task workshops with project partners. Many people enjoyed taking part in the creative process that crossed many boundaries, such as Caribbean senior women, young Moslem women and even the grounds men who offered their expertise to help transfer the image onto the grass.

 

Copyright - wyllie O hagan

engineer tests cockpit system of this Bangkok Airways A319 after its arrival in Bangkok

Selected photos of 41st Brigade Engineer Battalion Soldiers from the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division 18-08 Joint Readiness Training Center rotation, at Fort Polk, Louisiana.

Engineer in Chair Suit from the Prometheus line by NECA c. 2012

A soldier assigned to the 50th Engineer Company, 1st Platoon, Camp Laguardia, Republic of Korea, ducks as a pontoon bridge section unloaded from an M945 Bridge Transporter, splashes into the Imjin River, ROK, during a bridge building training exercise on Oct. 22, 1998. Many of the participants in todays exercise are officers participating in accordance with the U.S. Army Officer Professional Development Program, a program designed to improve team building and soldiery. (U.S. Air Force photo by Technical Sergeant James Mossman) (Released)

Engineer Mobility Days, Coimbra, 21-22 May

新作を使った、春のカジュアルコーディネートです。見えづらいですが、インナーは小花柄の総柄シャツを入れました。

 

■tops

オリジナル/カットショールカラージャケット

\9,975-

 

ENGINEERED GARMENTS/TACOIIAR SH-FLPR

\22,050-

 

■bottom

TELLASON/14,75oz SLIM STR

\23,100-

 

■shoes

New Balance /CM1700

\17,850-

 

Engineers assigned to the 116th Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 116th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, cross the finish line of the Sapper Stakes Competition on Fort Pickett, Va., May 7, 2016. The 37th Brigade Engineer Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, alongside their Army Total Force partners, the 116th BSTB, have been training at Fort Pickett for several weeks to maintain contingency response mission skills and culminated the exercise with a daylong competition to single out the best engineer squad. (82nd Airborne Division photo by Staff Sgt. Jason Hull/Released)

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore District, places shell for oyster reef restoration in the Chesapeake Bay tributary of Harris Creek, April 2, 2015. The shell comes from processing plants in the mid-Atlantic region and is permitted to be imported and placed in the river. (U.S. Army Photo by Sean Fritzges)

All quiet now, but it was a busy place once.

This was the backing for the previous photo of Adelaide c1920,s. Not sure of any connection. There was a Major E J Shalless. Again not sure of any connection.

The only good photo I took in Vermont this weekend. Shot jpg all weekend like a lazy bear.

These series of images captures how the excurison turns around with engine leading back into the station to conclude the trip. The is another WYE in the yard that accomplishs this procedure.

see set as slideshow from start to

finish

The destruction of the Yorkshire landmarks did not go to plan, however, when roughly a third of the North Tower was left standing after the explosion at 3am. It was not fully demolished until 5.20am.

 

A section of the M1 was also closed for structural engineers to ensure it was not damaged by the operation.

 

The 250ft high Tinsley Towers stood just yards from the southbound carriageway of the motorway as it crosses the double-decker Tinsley Viaduct near Sheffield, South Yorkshire.

 

E.ON spokeswoman Emily Highmore said: "The towers are completely down now and the demolition has been carried out as planned. The site is now completely safe.

 

"One tower came down completely as expected and then there was about one third of the other one left standing, but angled away from the viaduct, as the demolition experts designed it to.

 

"People were looking at it saying are we supposed to be able to see it, but the demolition crew went to the site and manipulated what remained so that it has now completely come down."

 

Thousands of onlookers stayed through the night to watch the 70-year-old towers destroyed from nearby Kimberworth Hill.

 

Once part of a nearby power station, the towers remained standing in the 1970s when the rest of the site was dismantled because of their proximity to the M1.

 

For many Sheffield people they were eyesores, but for others the "salt and pepper pots" were a regional icon.

 

Two years ago, when E.ON announced they were finally to be demolished, a campaign was launched to save them.

 

Ideas for their future use were suggested such as turning them into works of public art, or turning them into a concert venue.

 

Many people have hit out at the demolition. Attercliffe MP Clive Betts condemned the destruction as "an act of historical vandalism."

 

E.ON has said they are funding a souvenir book of the life of the power station and money raised from its sale would be donated to the Rotherham Hospice and Neurocare at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital in Sheffield.

 

The Highways Agency said the affected M1 junctions were expected to re-open at 7.30pm.

 

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Landmark Yorkshire cooling towers demolished

Soldiers assigned to the 50th Engineer Company, 1st Platoon, Camp Laguardia, Republic of Korea, and elements of the 2-9 Infantry, Camp Casey, ROK, prepare to cross the Imjin River, ROK, during a simulated river crossing assault on Oct. 22, 1998. Many of the rafts crew members are officers participating in accordance with the U.S. Army Officer Professional Development Program, a program designed to improve team building and soldiery. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Technical Sergeant James Mossman) (Released)

PFC James C Whitaker killed at Saipan in a jeep wreck. Remembered as "a good friend" who had thick, curly hair and loved to gamble to pass the down time. Whitaker James C Born 09/20/1916 died 02/22/1945, Tec 5 Co A 1341st Grp C E, Plot: B 1383 Bur: 01/11/1949

Engineer Dale Jones surveys the July 4, 2004 fire scene from Monticello's Engine 3 -- a 2004 E-One pumper on a Freightliner chassis.

07/09/2014. Gibraltar. Thorn Indra LED lantern on an aluminium column.

 

43163 & 43295 | Aberdeen | 2W42 10:10 Aberdeen to Perth & 1E15 09:52 Aberdeen to Edinburgh

Maryland Army National Guard Soldiers from the 253rd Engineer Company (Sapper) hitched a ride with the New Hampshire Air Guard to Puerto Rico this year for annual training. Nearly 50 Citizen Soldiers from the La Plata, Md., based unit along with eight soldiers from Bosnia and Herzegovina flew to Camp Santiago Joint Maneuver Training Center July 13-27. While there, they trained side-by-side with the 1013th Engineer Company (Sapper) and the 232nd Dive Team from Puerto Rico. The Maryland and Puerto Rican Citizen Soldiers shared best practices, experiences, and lessons learned with each other during the two-week AT.

A legion that the 101st works close with, they are a well respected legion in the GAR.

Students built and raced potential energy vehicles.

Staff Sgt. Joshua Haugen, a Crary, N.D., Soldier who works with the 164th Regional Training Institute, Devils Lake, N.D., right, is portraying a possible terrorist March 6 during a night-time training scenario at Camp Grafton Training Center, Devils Lake, N.D. He is an instructor involved with the Combat Engineer Advanced Leaders Course at Camp Grafton. The exercise is part of an all-night situational training exercise (STX) incorporating weapons capable of firing paintballs that culminates training that student Soldiers from across the country receive at the North Dakota National Guard's 164th Regional Training Institute. (DoD photo by Senior Master Sgt. David H. Lipp)

Engineers from the 1221st Engineering Company from Graniteville, S.C., along with support from the 125th Multi Role Bridge Company from Abbeville, S.C., work to replace a washed out culvert on a Lexington County road in Gilbert, S.C. Oct. 24, 2015. Soldiers with the S.C. Army National Guard continue to provide direct support for flood recovery and emergency road repairs as a result of the recent floods. The South Carolina National Guard partnered with federal, state and local emergency management agencies and first responders. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Brian Calhoun/Released)

The Big Bang @ Parliament, part of Tomorrow's Engineers Week, highlighted some of the great projects that young people are doing in science and engineering. The event featured a number of MPs including Nick Boles, Andrew Miller, Liam Byrne and Chi Onwurah.

 

Engineer Business card

My little engineer keeps an eye on things as "Thomas" and his assisting ex-CNW F unit start their run at the Illinois Railway Museum.

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