View allAll Photos Tagged InterConnect
Here is one of the interconnect buses that are on loan to hull for hull fair, and yea, it is the last day of the fair loans till next year. This one is skeggy tastic Serving hull (my local city) very well. This one is an ex Newcastle Enviro 400 trident with the interconnect livery. This is Skegness based
Stagecoach 19208 NK57 DWP, A 2007 ADL Enviro 400 was seen on the 3 to orchard park. This was new to Stagecoach north east in 2007 and It’s family 19194-19211 transferred down to Skegness, Lincoln and Gainsborough then most it’s brothers join Grimsby depot with 19194 stayed with Scunthorpe and 19208 stayed with Skegness. 19211 stayed in the local livery for hull.
Stagecoach East Midlands Volvo B7RLE/Wright Eclipse-Urban 21274 (DK09 GYJ), is seen in Grimsby Riverhead Exchange on 13th October 2018.
Working an 'Interconnect' 53 service to Market Rasen (where it would connect with a Lincoln vehicle onwards due to roadworks).
New to First Chester & Wirral, as their 69498, in 2009.
"When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe."
- John Muir, My First Summer in the Sierra, Houghton Mifflin, 1911, Chapter 6
www.sierraclub.org/john_Muir_exhibit/writings/misquotes.html
Various interconnect solutions designed to tie together my JrX radiopoppers with my Nikon speedlights. Alienbees interconnect comes standard =)
Strobist: Ringflash from above
Seen in Spalding town centre bus station Stagecoach East Midlands Scaina E400 15653 FX10AFO on service 505 in the latest interconnect purple livery.
ex Stagecoach East busway.
Stagecoach Interconnect Mablethorpe 9 Skegness to Mablethorpe service on the A52 at Farmer Brown's Huttoft.
Neil Forrest uses various systems of interconnecting nodes that spread in a matrix. These are generated as dimensional field ornament that corresponds to the distinctive curved space produced by arabesque and muqarna of Islam. Forrest’s work presents a detached ceramic ornament in response to the changing typographies within contemporary architecture - expanding systems intended to modify the psyche of space that is distinguished by lightness and openness. Forrest’s architectural ceramics are porcelain scaffolds, resembling coral environments and truss-like vertebrae.
Working from Gottfried Semper’s analysis that the dressing or decorative surface perform the spatial essence of the wall, and emphasizing the architectural significance of the ‘joint’, Forrest presents a tectonic and nomadic ceramic ornament. The project of ‘colonizing architecture’ is a theory of connectedness enabling close independence, which embraces the principle of non-hierarchical pattern behaviors that largely underpin the decorative arts.
Here ornament is understood as the libido for contemporary architecture, and can be tasked as having increasing utility to the organism of architecture, ready to engage an elegantly engineered world.
Neil Forrest has exhibited and lectured in North America, UK, Europe and Asia, and is currently Professor of Ceramics at NSCAD University. His most recent exhibitions were Wurzelwerk, Scaffs and Thicket. His ceramics have been published in books, craft magazines and architectural journals. Forrest studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art, Alfred University and Sheridan College of Crafts and is involved in several research collaborations that examine ceramics for architecture.
Edmonton's new control tower, to me it looks like a series of interconnecting waterslides.
Architect: DIALOG
Completed: 2003
The Interconnecting Family Room of the Kassandra Bay Hotel in Skiathos. Beds and connecting corridor. Visit www.kassandrabay.com/interconnecting-family-rooms-skiathos for more information.
Following the InterConnect themed upload I did not too long ago that featured a couple of Scania E400s in the 2023 livery version, here comes another, with one of the old IC100 batch so treated. 15809 arrives into Lincoln at the end of its long journey from Skegness, down Pelham Street, on 21.4.24
FX12 BBN
Seen in Spalding town centre bus station Stagecoach East Midlands Scaina
E400 15616 OU10BGO on service 505 to King's Lynn in the latest interconnect purple livery.
Stagecoach East Midlands Scania N230UD/ADL Enviro 400 15507 (FX09 DAO), is seen arriving into Lincoln Tentercroft Street Bus Station on 11th November 2017.
Operated out of Gainsborough depot - working an 'Interconnect' 100 service from Scunthorpe.
New to Stagecoach East Midlands (Gainsborough) in 2009.
This is set to be replaced by a new fleet of E400 MMCs in the next few weeks.
Stagecoach Lincolnshire InterConnect Volvo B7TL Wright Gemini 16939 FX06AOA seen on route 7 entering Skegness interchange
Risers and interconnects at one of Xcel Energy's solar farms... it will be interesting to see how many more of these solar installations they will need to build if they remain on track to retire their last two coal-fired plants (Sherco and Black Dog).
Neil Forrest uses various systems of interconnecting nodes that spread in a matrix. These are generated as dimensional field ornament that corresponds to the distinctive curved space produced by arabesque and muqarna of Islam. Forrest’s work presents a detached ceramic ornament in response to the changing typographies within contemporary architecture - expanding systems intended to modify the psyche of space that is distinguished by lightness and openness. Forrest’s architectural ceramics are porcelain scaffolds, resembling coral environments and truss-like vertebrae.
Working from Gottfried Semper’s analysis that the dressing or decorative surface perform the spatial essence of the wall, and emphasizing the architectural significance of the ‘joint’, Forrest presents a tectonic and nomadic ceramic ornament. The project of ‘colonizing architecture’ is a theory of connectedness enabling close independence, which embraces the principle of non-hierarchical pattern behaviors that largely underpin the decorative arts.
Here ornament is understood as the libido for contemporary architecture, and can be tasked as having increasing utility to the organism of architecture, ready to engage an elegantly engineered world.
Neil Forrest has exhibited and lectured in North America, UK, Europe and Asia, and is currently Professor of Ceramics at NSCAD University. His most recent exhibitions were Wurzelwerk, Scaffs and Thicket. His ceramics have been published in books, craft magazines and architectural journals. Forrest studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art, Alfred University and Sheridan College of Crafts and is involved in several research collaborations that examine ceramics for architecture.
Still wearing Interconnect livery, Volvo B7TL / East Lancs Vyking 16915 (FX54 AOE) is pictured in Richmond Drive, Skegness, having just left the bus station en route to Ingoldmells.
FX12BBN Stagecoach Lincolnshire 15809. Scania N230UD/enviro 400.
Route branded inter connect 6 Skegness to Lincoln.
9 exposures
4 shifted down and 4 shifted up, one strobed with the 580 zoomed on the shadows in the far room
4 exposures = 3 exposures fused, 1 exposure with a 580 CR off camera by cord trigering a 430 CL through a soft box and another 430 FCL bounced
roughly 50:50 flash to fused layer
shot with a Canon 5d mkII, 24mm TS mkII
Neil Forrest uses various systems of interconnecting nodes that spread in a matrix. These are generated as dimensional field ornament that corresponds to the distinctive curved space produced by arabesque and muqarna of Islam. Forrest’s work presents a detached ceramic ornament in response to the changing typographies within contemporary architecture - expanding systems intended to modify the psyche of space that is distinguished by lightness and openness. Forrest’s architectural ceramics are porcelain scaffolds, resembling coral environments and truss-like vertebrae.
Working from Gottfried Semper’s analysis that the dressing or decorative surface perform the spatial essence of the wall, and emphasizing the architectural significance of the ‘joint’, Forrest presents a tectonic and nomadic ceramic ornament. The project of ‘colonizing architecture’ is a theory of connectedness enabling close independence, which embraces the principle of non-hierarchical pattern behaviors that largely underpin the decorative arts.
Here ornament is understood as the libido for contemporary architecture, and can be tasked as having increasing utility to the organism of architecture, ready to engage an elegantly engineered world.
Neil Forrest has exhibited and lectured in North America, UK, Europe and Asia, and is currently Professor of Ceramics at NSCAD University. His most recent exhibitions were Wurzelwerk, Scaffs and Thicket. His ceramics have been published in books, craft magazines and architectural journals. Forrest studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art, Alfred University and Sheridan College of Crafts and is involved in several research collaborations that examine ceramics for architecture.
Repaints of all six of Gainsborough's InterConnect E400 MMCs, still work in progress but now with an individual repaint and identity for each vehicle. Hopefully will be done in time for Gainsborough Phase 3 coming out.
with so many rare appearances in Skegness, one of the 6's we're used on the 1a that time.
no. FX12 BBV
This Dennis Trident with Enviro 400 bodywork was purchased brand new in April 2007 by Stagecoach Lincolnshire specifically for the high profile InterConnect 1, linking Grantham and Lincoln. I thought it fitting to upload this today as it's just been repainted into Tilling green and cream i'm assuming for 85 years of LRCC?! It's pictured on a lovely sunny day in May 2007 when barely a month old leaving the village of Syston with the beautiful Lincolnshire countryside in the background.