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These two foals, both colts, were greeting each other nicely on the pasture and seemed to start a conversation which I sadly wasn't able to understand. The one on the left is younger and still has his baby coat which the one on the right has already shed.
Tunbridge Wells Corn Exchange
Built in 1802 as a Theatre by Dancer & flamboyant personality Sarah Baker, it later became the Corn Exchange and still has the Goddess of the Harvest standing atop the building
Photography © Jez
Corn Exchange Leeds
The very decorative Corn Exchange in Leeds
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Leeds Corn Exchange roof detail.
The Corn exchange was designed by Cuthbert Brodrick, a Hull architect best known for Leeds Town Hall, and built between 1861 and 1863.[1] The dome design was based on that of the Bourse de commerce of Paris by François-Joseph Bélanger and François Brunet, completed in 1811.[2] In the late 1980s Speciality Shops plc restored it and converted it into a retail facility.[3]
After a further restoration in 2007, the Corn Exchange re-opened in November 2008 as a boutique shopping centre for independent retailers. The 13,200-square-foot (1,230 m2) ground level was occupied by Piazza by Anthony until its sudden closure in June 2013.[4]
In 2017 the Corn Exchange was acquired by property company Rushbond.[5]
As of 2019 the Corn Exchange contains about 30 independent retailers and food outlets.[6] It is described as "one of only three remaining Corn Exchanges still functioning as a centre for trade in Britain", albeit no longer functioning as a corn exchange.[5].
Potted history, courtesy of Wikipedia.
This is a photograph of The Royal Exchange in London first built in the 16th century as a centre of commerce for the City of London. Both Cornhill and Threadneedle Street, flank the building which is located at Bank junction in the heart London.
It has twice been destroyed by fire and subsequently rebuilt. The site was occupied by the Lloyd's insurance market for nearly 150 years. Today the Royal Exchange contains offices, luxury shops, and restaurants. On Getty Images
Recent Liverpool interest on my site has prompted me to dig out these of Exchange Station. On 9/4/77 it was still operational as seen here. Closed 3 weeks later.
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A Least Tern food exchange with one of its' babies in the very early morning along Florida's east coast.
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© Joshua Clark, All Rights Reserved.
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33108 sits in Bedenham exchange sidings having reversed its train in from Eastleigh East yard on the 6T57 trip. The industrial shunter based here was waiting to trip the return load but as usual was awaiting a path across the busy main road to Gosport where an open level crossing existed. Friday 23 June 1989
The Hop Exchange is a Grade II listed building at No. 24 Southwark Street, London, in the Bankside area of the London Borough of Southwark. Opened in 1867 and designed by R.H. Moore it served as the centre for hop trading for the brewing industry.
A glass roof allowed business on the trading floor of the Great Hall to be conducted under natural light, but wartime bombing, fires, redevelopment and modernisation have left the Hop Exchange the only one still standing. However, a fire in 1920 led to the top two storeys being removed, and the Hop Exchange was then converted into offices.
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In-phone panorama capture outside The Exchange TRX. The skyscraper in the background is the Exchange 106 Tower.
This high-end shopping mall is part of the corruption tainted TRX (Tun Razak Exchange) project associated with former prime minister Najib Razak and 1MDB (1Malaysia Development Berhad).
There is a also a rooftop garden, TRX City Park.
Kuala Lumpur; March 2024
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CameraNikon D700
Exposure0.025 sec (1/40)
Aperturef/9.0
Focal Length28 mm
ISO Speed200
Exposure Bias+3 EV
© Lucas Tatagiba
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