View allAll Photos Tagged Interior"
Para Gaudí un elemento clave en su forma de concebir la estructura era el arco parabólico o catenario, también llamado funicular de fuerzas, que utilizó como elemento más adecuado para soportar las presiones. Mediante la simulación de distintos polifuniculares experimentales determinó la forma óptima de la estructura para soportar las presiones de los arcos y las bóvedas, primero en la cripta de la Colonia Güell y después en la Sagrada Familia. Desarrolló un modelo a escala de cordeles entretejidos de los que suspendían pequeños sacos de perdigones que simulaban los pesos; así determinaba el funicular de fuerzas y la forma de la estructura. Por tanto, a partir del estado de cargas, simulados con los saquitos de perdigones, determinó experimentalmente la forma idónea de la estructura —que él llamó «estereostática»—, que reproducía la estructura óptima para trabajar a tracción y que, invirtiéndola, se obtenía la estructura idónea para trabajar a compresión.
Gaudí concibió el interior de la Sagrada Familia como si fuese la estructura de un bosque, con un conjunto de columnas arborescentes divididas en diversas ramas para sustentar una estructura de bóvedas de hiperboloides entrelazados. Las columnas las inclinó para recibir mejor las presiones perpendiculares a su sección; además, les dio forma helicoidal de doble giro (dextrógiro y levógiro), como en las ramas y troncos de los árboles. Por el conjunto de elementos aplicados en las columnas —inclinación, forma helicoidal, ramificación en varias columnas más pequeñas— consiguió una sencilla forma de soportar el peso de las bóvedas sin necesidad de contrafuertes exteriores.
Zooms (1,500 square feet)
7077 George Washington Memorial Highway, Shoppes at Gloucester, Gloucester, VA
Originally 1995-built BP
Holiday Lights at Cheekwood Gardens, Nashville, Tennessee
This is a blend of two 18-image stacks, handheld. The area around the chandelier is the stack maximum, and the rest is the stack median. Stacking effectively removed people wandering around inside, and reduced background noise.
Borders (21,017 square feet)
12300 Jefferson Avenue, Patrick Henry Mall, Newport News, VA
Opened November 26th, 2005
Little Caesars (2,614 square feet)
4007 Mechanicsville Turnpike, Richmond, VA
Opened in 2006; originally Bojangles' (1982-2005)
Interior of one of the common rooms for the use of guests at the Terrapuri Heritage Village in Terengganu, Malaysia. The owner's collection of Malay cultural artefacts are displayed in these rooms. Note the cradle on the front left where magazines are placed now. In the past, people would just sit on floor mats, there were no lounge sets or chairs.
The station is a metro, S-train and main line railway station in Copenhagen. The station opened in 1897 as the southern terminus of the Coast Line from Copenhagen to Helsingør. When the station was connected with Copenhagen Central Station in 1917, the terminus moved to the Central Station. In 1934, the station started serving S-trains.
The station was designed by Danish architect Heinrich Wenck, who was head architect of the Danish State Railways from 1894 to 1921. The station is designed in National Romantic style, a Nordic architectural style that was part of the National Romantic movement during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and which is often considered to be a form of Art Nouveau.
This is a newly constructed villa that I shot for the real estate company marketing it. The view straight out through the window only showed sliding doors and the sea view, so I thought this perspective offered more information. It's a shift lens panorama made up of two frames. Four flash pops altogether. I lit the interior of the walk-in closet, provided some fill on the right, and threw some light into the bathroom from the terrace. The final pop was for the window pull. Composite using one Profoto B1.
CC very welcome.
Basilica de Santa Maria la Mayor, Morella, Spain
The basilica of St. Mary in Morella was built in the gothic style (13th-14th century)
home again!