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I am lucky to have a proper entrance hallway in my small condo ... so many condos today aren't designed with a proper foyer, so you end up standing in the middle of someone's kitchen or living room as soon as you step inside.
I made it into a mini gallery of photos I've taken during vacations to Barcelona and Rome. One of these days I will switch up the photos and add newer ones of Tokyo and Kyoto.
I spent a few days in Phoenix, Arizona and opted not to take my beloved Canon EOS Rebel XT because I wouldn't be able to use it most of the time and didn't want to worry about it. So I took my daughter's little point and shoot digital camera. When it stopped working on the one and only day we had available to explore the area I knew I had to buy myself something. I've been wanting to get a pocket sized, take-anywhere second camera anyway and I found a little Nikon Coolpix L3 in my price range. I didn't have time to read the manual, so I explored the different modes on the fly. This particular shot was taken on the museum mode. This hallway was yellow, but not quite this yellow. However, I like the way this accident turned out.
Hallway in my apartment building. Stylistically it is a mix of Stalin era Soviet block flats and futuristic prison. Shot with a Lomo LC-A on Fuji Superia 400.
Hallway at Sai Ying Pun Community Complex (西營盤社區綜合大樓).
© 2012 Jens Schott Knudsen | blog.pamhule.com | Twitter: @jensschott
This is the command bunker of the Latvian Soviet Command, comrades Voss and Pugo, purpousely built to withstand nuclear war for (up to) 3 months.
Construction finished after a whole 12 years in the early eighties. It was never used, so it's pretty much intact with machinery and all.
The construction had to be kept secret, so they draftet crew randomly from all over Latvia and rotated them for short 5 day shifts, the idea was that this would prevent the workers from knowing what they were working on. Some parts are constructed by KGB specialist crews.
This construction was a huge moneydrain for the Latvian Soviet economy, and thankfully a complete waste of money, as the tense decades of cold cold war after the Cuban Missile crisis eased into Glasnost in the nineties.
The bunker was still in use intil the early nineties. Much of the interior is intact, with furnishing and equpment mostly as was.
A very good guided tour takes you through the complex in about an hour, and you really get that 80s feeling, as well as a good account of the Latvian Soviet history.
Bring something warm to wear as the bunker lies convenienty 9m underground from the Communist Party's Recreation Resort in the Beautiful forest of Ligatne.
This resort is now housing a rehabilitation hospital.
This hotel was somewhat a sketchy place to stay mainly because it was located out in the middle of the desert off of a freeway. Between the state line and Las Vegas. Not to mention it was ran down, and dirty too.
I had an eerie feeling of walking down this hallway especially when the room we stayed in was located far away from the exit, I did manage to get an artistic viewing shot of the hallway when no one was around.
One of many, many, many hallways that seem to take no end in the Beelitz Heilstätten.
Part of the Beelitz Heilstätten set.
How much more indoors can you get - a large space with no natural light.
2011/03/29 • Make a photograph that illustrates being inside today.
my hallway is now Enchanted rather than Screaming Blue. I like the lavender, and how it occupies a space in the middle between the grey bedroom and the more-warm, darker lavender of my bedroom. The hallway looks a lot bigger and more open in the lighter color. I'm looking forward to returning the art to the hallway, too.
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