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But in those days, after that tribulation, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars of heaven shall fall, and the powers that are in heaven shall be shaken. And then shall they see the Son of man [Jesus] coming in the clouds with great power and glory.

(Mark 13:24-26)

Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the works of thine hands: They shall perish; but thou remainest; and they all shall wax old as doth a garment; And as a vesture shalt thou fold them up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall not fail.

(Hebrews 1:10-12)

Plymouth, Devon, England

Cattedown, Plymouth, Devon

Market Lane, Winchester

Plymouth, Devon, England

Warburton Street, Hackney

Plymouth, Devon, England

Green folding doors on an aircraft hangar at IWM Duxford, UK.

Bonhill Street, Shoreditch

Clifton Street, Shoreditch

Goulston Street, Aldgate

a7riv + Sony FE 4/12-24 G

 

U-bahn station Olympia-Einkaufszentrum (U1) 2004

Betz Architekten München

 

www.wikiwand.com/de/articles/U-Bahnhof_Olympia-Einkaufsze...

Valentine Road, Hackney

Originally a Victorian building with what looks like WW2 bomb damage repair as the old railway yards were once situated 100yds away were bombed on several occasions.

 

Not the UV fade on the wooden signs, the left hand one dating from the 1980's.

 

LR4067

a7riv + Sony FE 4/12-24 G

 

U-bahn station Olympia-Einkaufszentrum (U1) 2004

Betz Architekten München

 

www.wikiwand.com/de/articles/U-Bahnhof_Olympia-Einkaufsze...

Prigs aren't welcome here

York Row Estate car park, Hackney

Old meets new in this commercial space in Parnell.

around Phu Nhuan market

Gin Distillery, Barbican, Plymouth

Working Route 'B' to London and I think just arriving here at Victoria Coach Station.

An old photo in my collection that Ive tried to improve to get this image.

Bristol RELH6G

ECW with BiFold Doors

New to Lincolnshire February 1964

WFE415

 

Fate of the vehicle unknown.

 

The interior of the Zhu Family Garden and Mansion is filled with interesting parallel juxtapositioned courtyards and pavilions with lovely carved folding doors that lead from the courtyards into formal rooms and out to a parallel courtyard and then another pavilion. The mansions and gardens, built by Zhu Weiqing over a 30 year period (1871-1903), is a notable example of a Qing Dynasty residential house. It is located in Jianshui Ancient Town (Lin'an Fu), one of the famous cultural towns of China, with a history dating back 1200 years.

26/03/16 www.allenfotowild.com

Bocking Street, Hackney

Polychrome stucco relief - a mix of dimensional stucco relief and fresco.

 

The stucco reliefs underline the architectural elements and the offerors. In the central aedicula Dionysus is supported by Satyrs; in the left panel there are Hylas and a Nymph, in the right one Diana and Atteone; in the middle one there are Cupid hunters. In the lower left, a man carrying a situla peers around a folding shuttered door; the wooden door is painted yellow, with orange insets.

 

Pompeii, House of Meleagro, VI 9, 2-13, tablinum 8.

62-79 CE

 

MANN (Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli - National Archeological Museum of Naples) inv. 9596

LFE144H a Bristol RELH6G ECW was new to Lincolnshire in June 1970 and is to Dual Purpose specification with folding doors.

 

No date or location for this photo but looks like St Marks garage in Lincoln.

 

The coach carried white National Livery until at least 1977.

No other details available.

Fate of the vehicle unknown.

This folding door, and its companion on the right, divide The sanctuary of St Mary's church from the church hall. Today, the hall is being used as a polling station for local council elections.

I actually took a pic in work as photo of the day but then realised that it was almost identical to one I'd taken in 2013!

 

I was late in work as it was Sixth Form open night, but I still had time to catch the late showing of 'Steve Jobs'.

 

It was from the same writer as 'The Social Network', and also featured a dislikeable tech giant. I felt that 'Steve Jobs' was possibly the more human of the two - if only because it only had one arsehole and was thus more anatomically correct. ;) Well made, but I'm not surprised that it tanked at the box office.

 

Here I am on my way outside the cinema after the film.

Folding concertina wooden doors on an aircraft hangar at Imperial War Museum Duxford

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