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Eindhoven (NL) 27-10-2017

Innovation Powerhouse

  

Een blik naar boven in het "Innovation Powerhouse",

gevestigd in de voormalige warmtekrachtcentrale van Philips.

 

A look upward in the "Innovation Powerhouse",

located in the former Philips cogeneration plant.

 

Ein Blick nach oben im "Innovation Powerhouse", daß sich im ehemalingen Wärmekraftwerk der Philipswerke befindet.

 

Un regard vers le haut du "Innovation Powerhouse",

situé dans l'ancienne usine de cogénération de Philips.

 

Una mirada hacia arriba del "Innovaion Powerhouse",

ubicado en la antigua planta de cogeneración de Philips.

 

Uno sguardo in alto del "Innovation Powerhouse",

situato nell'ex impianto di cogenerazione di Philips.

 

Um olhar para cima do "Innovation Powerhouse",

localizado na antiga planta de cogeração da Philips.

  

-101859BD-

  

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Harlow Innovation Park, Essex, still under construction.

 

www.facebook.com/nigadwphotography

One cannot be forever innovating. I want to create classics. -Coco Chanel.

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'I'm hoping that we get along.

It's time for innovation,

It's time for us to make a change.

It's time for a Chinese new year,

It's time for me to make a way.'

 

Soundtrack: 'Chinese New Year' by Sales - www.youtube.com/watch?v=gykWYPrArbY

 

Taken at Friendship Grove: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Nabi/205/208/111

Lifecycle of Innovation

The bulk carrier Ultra Innovation aided by the tugs Svitzer Sun and Forth enters the Tyne.

Housing in Zwolle, The Netherlands. in between two hail storms. At first glimpse, I thought there were solar panels attached to create the rhythm in the facade.

 

Design: H. Mastenbroek and J.H. de Herder (1951).

To view more of my images, of Waddesdon Manor, inside and out, including some of the most beautiful artwork, and furniture, please click "here" !

 

From the Achieves, reprocessed using Photoshop CC 2025,

 

I would be most grateful if you would refrain from inserting your own images, and/or group invites; thank you!

 

Waddesdon Manor is a country house in the village of Waddesdon, in Buckinghamshire, England. The house was built in the Neo-Renaissance style of a French château between 1874 and 1889 for Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild (1839–1898). Since this was the preferred style of the Rothschild's it became also known as the Goût Rothschild. The house, set in formal gardens and an English landscape park, was built on a barren hilltop overlooking Waddesdon village. The last member of the Rothschild family to own Waddesdon was James de Rothschild. He bequeathed the house and its contents to the National Trust in 1957. Today, following an extensive restoration, it is administered by a Rothschild charitable trust that is overseen by Jacob Rothschild, 4th Baron Rothschild. In 2007–08 it was the National Trust's second most visited paid-entry property, with 386,544 visitors. The Baron wanted a house in the style of the great Renaissance châteaux of the Loire Valley. The Baron, a member of the Viennese branch of the Rothschild banking dynasty, chose as his architect Gabriel-Hippolyte Destailleur. Destailleur was already experienced in working in this style, having overseen the restoration of many châteaux in that region, in particular that of the Château de Mouchy. Through Destailleur's vision, Waddesdon embodied an eclectic style based on the châteaux so admired by his patron, Baron Ferdinand. The towers at Waddesdon were based on those of the Château de Maintenon, and the twin staircase towers, on the north facade, were inspired by the staircase tower at the Château de Chambord. However, following the theme of unparalleled luxury at Waddesdon, the windows of the towers at Waddesdon were glazed, unlike those of the staircase at Chambord. They are also far more ornate. The structural design of Waddesdon, however, was not all retrospective. Hidden from view were the most modern innovations of the late 19th century including a steel frame, which took the strain of walls on the upper floors, which consequently permitted the layout of these floors to differ completely from the lower floors. The house also had hot and cold running water in its bathrooms, central heating, and an electric bell system to summon the numerous servants. The building contractor was Edward Conder & Son. The towers were modelled on the staircase towers of Château de Chambord. One of the twin staircase-towers inspired by those at the Château de Maintenon. Once his château was complete, Baron Ferdinand installed his extensive collections of French 18th-century tapestries, boiseries, furniture and ceramics, English and Dutch paintings and Renaissance works of art. Extensive landscaping was carried out and the gardens enhanced with statuary, pavilions and an aviary. The Proserpina fountain was brought to the manor at the end of the 19th Century from the Palace of the Dukes of Parma in northern Italy: the Ducal Palace of Colorno. The gardens and landscape park were laid out by the French landscape architect Elie Lainé. An attempt was made to transplant full-grown trees by chloroforming their roots, to limit the shock. While this novel idea was unsuccessful, many very large trees were successfully transplanted, causing the grounds to be such a wonder of their day that, in 1890, Queen Victoria invited herself to view them. The Queen was, however, more impressed by the electric lighting in the house than the wonders of the park. Fascinated by the invention she had not seen before, she is reported to have spent ten minutes switching a newly electrified 18th-century chandelier on and off. When Baron Ferdinand died in 1898, the house passed to his sister Alice de Rothschild, who further developed the collections. Baron Ferdinand's collection of Renaissance works and a collection of arms were both bequeathed to the British Museum as the "Waddesdon Bequest". During World War II, children under the age of five were evacuated from London and lived at Waddesdon Manor. Following Alice de Rothschild's death in 1922, the property and collections passed to her great-nephew James A. "Jimmy" de Rothschild of the French branch of the family, who further enriched it with objects from the collections of his late father Baron Edmond James de Rothschild of Paris. When James de Rothschild died in 1957, he bequeathed Waddesdon Manor, 200 acres (0.81 km2) of grounds and its contents to the National Trust, to be preserved for posterity. The Trust also received their largest ever endowment from him: £750,000 (£15,310,270 as of 2014).

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Der Container-Riese ONE Innovation bei der Fahrt die Elbe hoch in Richtung Hamburg bei regnerischem Wetter, schlechter Sicht und dichten Wolken. Für einen Moment schien die Sonne hindurch. Das Foto entstand vom Schiffsanleger Willkomm Höft Wedel.

Innovations.

 

الهيمنة النفسية رحلات الخيال تهزم تفسيرات مصاصي الدماء تمزيق الأساليب غير المسموعة والوحشية غيرت المسارات,

idées comiques amusement visuel déficiences étranges menaçant rapports exposés conditions spécifiques cochons cinématographiques humour non traditionnel,

investigadores liberais produções profundamente fundadas concurso peças endividadas foco devorado eventos aventuras fabulosas façanhas inexplicáveis,

exemplificări cursuri numeroși studenți evadări înalte condiții de vogă figuri tragice ditirambe belicose rezultate insuportabile,

cogaí aisiompaithe tobann iomaíocht eachtraigh luas dochreidte buansholáthar díbhinní flúirseach aird smaointeoireacht uathúil cruthú seatanna,

決意ドラマ架空の茶番劇旗を振る不確かな問題は、驚くべき軽快な言葉を演奏することで出現する興味に取って代わりました証書を取得するおなじみの仲間劇的なサスペンス詩人はすべてを驚かせる.

Steve.D.Hammond.

ONE Innovation inbound Port of Hamburg for the first time

CMS Innovation Water Injection Dredger

 

Year of built ~ 1998

Rebuilt ~ 2013

Upgraded ~ 2016

Port of Registry ~ Cardiff

 

Seen working in Bristol docks

 

Taken with a Nikon D7000

Looks like Zeiss AG has completed the new campus for its innovation center in our area during COVID. If I am apply a job there, would I get employee discount??

Candidate ‘green’ satellite propellants within a temperature-controlled incubator, undergoing heating as a way to simulate the speeding up of time.

 

Today hydrazine is the most common propellant employed by thrusters aboard satellites: it is highly energetic in nature but also toxic and corrosive, as well as dangerous to handle and store. ESA initiated a study with European Astrotech Ltd in the UK to look into greener propellants and propulsion systems, to provide comparable performance with reduced toxicity and handling costs.

 

The testing investigated the compatibility between a variety of current and future materials and weld combinations with two propellant candidates in detail while checking others as well. By using materials already present in propulsion systems, the aim is to help to reduce any necessary modifications needed, shrinking costs and development times.

 

An eight-month test cycle became the equivalent of 5.33 years on-orbit by elevating temperature, hunting out for any degradation in the welds, materials and propellants – such as broken welds, material mass loss or etching.

 

Two green propellants called LMP-103S – flight-tested on Sweden’s Prisma formation flying mission – and HTP – high-test peroxide, previously used in past UK rockets – were shown to have compatibility with up to ten welded materials (while HTP was incompatible with titanium).

 

The project was supported through ESA’s Technology Development Element, investigating promising innovations for space.

 

It comes in response to the European Commission’s Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemical Substances (REACH) regulation, that seeks to limit industry’s use of chemical substances that may be hazardous to human health or the environment.

 

Credits: European Astrotech Ltd

The geometric shapes and patterns were interesting in morning light at the Bioinnovation building at Utah State University in Logan, Utah.

 

View the entire - Shapes and Forms Set.

View the entire Cache Valley - Northern Utah Set

View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr

Schubverband bei Km 418 auf dem Rhein

Das Schwerlast-Kranhubschiff "Innovation" besitzt einen hochleistungsfähigen 1.500-Tonnen-Kran und eine Ladekapazität von bis zu 8.000 Tonnen.

~

The "Innovation" has a high-performance 1,500-ton crane and a cargo capacity of up to 8,000 tons.

~

Visit me on Facebook:

www.facebook.com/TanjaArnoldPhotography

Who would have thought that when I got that spectrum nearly 30 odd years ago we would be in the place we are now with iPads/Phones etc. What is going to happen in the next 30 or will innovation slow down... I hope not.

Barrington Court is a Tudor manor house begun c. 1538 and completed in the late 1550s, with a vernacular seventeenth-century stable court (1675), situated in Barrington, near Ilminster, Somerset, England. It was the first house acquired by the National Trust, in 1907, on the recommendation of the antiquarian Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley.

 

Barrington Court, once dated 1514 and considered an early example of a symmetrical front, was completed in the late 1550s for William Clifton, a London merchant who had been assembling a Somerset estate. Its central entry porch leads into a screens passage with the Hall on the left and, an innovation, a service passage leading to the kitchen wing that occupies the right wing. A symmetrically sited gatehouse (rebuilt) was set far forward of the house, to permit a full view of its symmetrical facade.

 

The interior of the house suffered from its demotion to a tenant farm, and from a fire in the early nineteenth century; after being almost derelict it was repaired under the supervision of Alfred Hoare Powell. Barrington Court was acquired by the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty in 1907 and was leased to Col. Lyle of Tate & Lyle in the 1920s. He and his wife turned the house around and refurbished the court house and renovated Strode House (built by William Strode in the 1600s) which was originally a stable and coach block. It was at this time that the Lyles contracted Gertrude Jekyll to design the three formal gardens on the property that are kept in beautiful condition by the head gardener.

 

Texture by pareeerica:

 

Grunge Chocolate:

www.flickr.com/photos/8078381@N03/3173423766/

 

Explored 23.07.09 - #177

Das Schwerlast-Kranhubschiff "Innovation" besitzt einen hochleistungsfähigen 1.500-Tonnen-Kran und eine Ladekapazität von bis zu 8.000 Tonnen.

~

The "Innovation" has a high-performance 1,500-ton crane and a cargo capacity of up to 8,000 tons.

~

Visit me on Facebook:

www.facebook.com/TanjaArnoldPhotography

Netwerk dag van Piet Sinke van Maasmond Maritiem aan boord van de ELBE , vanuit Maassluis via de Rozenburgsluis naar de Maasvlakte 2

Lille

 

Not sure about this. Never seen such a kitt on a Hyundai before. Perhaps it called Galloper just like in the Netherlands. But only a badge with a horse was at the car.

Europoort 15-4-2019 gezien vanaf DE NIEUWE PRINS

If there are "drive-throughs" for cars these young horsemen are probably right to expect "Ride-throughs" for them as they line up for their burgers and chips at the horse fair!

Innovation is the key to success. At least thats what I taught on Blogussion. What do you think?

Life is on, Schneider Innovation Summit, April 1st, 2016

Porte de Versailles, Paris

www.schneider-electric.com/b2b/en/campaign/innovation/ove...

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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