View allAll Photos Tagged Modules
In 2007 the L&DMR entered into a partnership with the City of Kawartha Lakes to assist with the preservation of the City-owned large railway artifacts now on display at Memorial Park in Lindsay.
At that time, the L&DMR proposed the building of a Railway Heritage Centre in the park which would function as a railway history interpretation centre, to be developed and promoted as a City wide tourist attraction.
The L&DMR has at its disposal a series of “heritage modules” that are faithful 1:87 (HO scale) working replicas of the former Victoria County’s railway history which were offered to be placed on display, and maintained, at the proposed Railway Heritage Centre for the benefit of the public and as a tourist
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On the moon of Cephalus IV, a small lunar outpost stands alone amidst strange landscape…
I built this for an @connlug quarterly build challenge. I built it as a modular section, so ideally I can connect it with other modules to create a larger base. Hope you enjoy! Comments & criticism welcome
やっと商品でけました。
Modulorブランドのほうではほぼ1年ぶりかもしれません。
春を先取りした感じの商品で、カーディガンとワンピを組合わせて着ることができます。1年前に作って放置していたティペットもあわせて販売します。
お気に召していただけると幸いです。
photo by nyanchi eel
SLOW, SLOW (136, 138, 20) - Moderate
Explored 2/23/23
Thanks for the Favs and Comments! As a photo enthusiast it's a pleasure to be recognized by my peers. :-)
iPhone's camera + iPod touch / brushes+trigraphy+scratchcam fx+decim8+dxp+vsco+deco sketch+touchretouch+phototoaster
Der Modulor ist ein von Le Corbusier entwickeltes Maßsystem und stellt einen Versuch dar, in der Architektur ausschließlich am menschlichen Körper vorkommende Längen-Maße zu verwenden.
Olympus XA
Zuiko 35mm/2,8
Lomography CN 800
The rim of a large crater, with some smaller craters within. I originally planned to have this rim be at one end of my base, with the entire base inside the crater. But now I'm thinking of building parts of it outside, e.g. I have a few Windtraps that would make sense to have on the rim, to pick up the maximum amount of wind. Also, I have a force field barrier, that would make more sense to have on the outside than on the inside of the crater...
Nasa Visitor Center, Greenbelt, MD
"This is a model of the Apollo Command Module, which carried a total of 27 astronauts to lunar orbit aboard nine missions between 1968 and 1972. Launched by a Saturn V rocket, the largest and most powerful rocket ever built, the Command Module was the only part of the spacecraft recovered at the end of a mission."
NASA
Hitches rides on to interstellar asteroids, studying both the asteroid as well as surrounding space.
Quickie build.
Coronado Beach — the lifeguard towers there remind me a little of the Apollo Lunar Module.
Shot early morning, just before sunrise.
Alright Gentlemen, you know what we are here for. Recover that ACS module, and if you have to, shoot anyone who stands in our way.
A great deal of little variations in the same architectural scheme: windows open, close; doors and so on.
Vitrine mécanique,petite serre de métal et de verre,illustration des cabinets de curiosités du 19e siècle.
Conçue par François Delarozière pour le bicentenaire du muséum
D’histoire naturelle de Nantes
Plantes carnivores dans la petite cage à côté
An ungainly but popular older open-topped model from the previous century, this 6-wheeler ( with independent electric drivetrains) transports standard 2 x 2 x 3m modules. Here, the rear cargo doors have swung back to deposit a temporary environmental/tracking lab.
With the expanded workspace, the three modules can now be merged as one and an additional module will complete the facility...
The 20th and final module,
also the biggest of them all.
At last I have my Island.
Before I start building my Fort and sea town I may refine some bits of the landscape first.
The next Deadline is November for another exhibition event.
By then I should have finalized the landscape and added lots of trees and other greenery.
Ce serait mon fond d’écran, si je ne l’avais pas sous les yeux tous les jours :) ! Ces images ont été prises lors de l’amarrage du Cygnus NG-16 le mois dernier et montrent quelques belles pièces de technologie spatiale. En haut sur la photo c’est le module gonflable BEAM, connecté au Node-3 où on trouve également la Cupola - dont les volets de protection étaient ouverts pour suivre de visu la capture du Cygnus. On me dit que le module cylindrique qui fait face à BEAM s’appelle Leonardo, mais franchement dans le métier je n’ai jamais entendu personne l’appeler autrement que PMM. Son ancêtre était utilisé comme soute à fret pour la navette spatiale (on l’arrimait à la station pour ensuite ouvrir le sas et décharger-recharger). Il s’est transformé en partie permanente de l’ISS depuis, on s’en sert pour stocker du matériel… et nos poubelles. En bas pour les observateurs : le module JEM / Kibo de la JAXA avec son autocollant « Japan ». Il possède une plateforme extérieure pour les expériences exposées au vide de l’espace, et même son propre bras robotique !
My kind of phone background! These images were taken during Cygnus NG-16 docking last month. What you are looking at are beautiful pieces of astounding and reliable space technology, the best humans have to offer! On the first image from the top you can see the Bigelow Expandable Air Module (yes, inflatable) connected to Node-3 that has Cupola on it (with the shutters open, for Cygnus docking robotic operations). The smoother cylinder is PMM (Leonardo) a now-permanent storage space that used to fly up and down with the Space Shuttle. In the background we have JEM, or Kibo as some call it, neatly branded with the JAPAN sticker, JAXA :) The part sticking out of JEM is the exterior platform that researchers can access through its mini-airlock.
Credits: ESA/NASA–T. Pesquet
549G0270
As their soldiers walked across the battlegrounds, we were ready to strike on top of an abandoned building roof. There was no hope for them now!
For the Annual Military Build Contest. Are there any other requirements I have to fill to enter this?
I made some minor modifications to my road module and build a second piece with some arrows, because in a future where cars drive themselves, you really seem to need arrows on the road according to my research.
I had forgotten to make a picture of one of the modules, now I covered all 20 of them.
Must be sure to not forget any of them when I'm exhibiting.
Toujours des formes étranges mais bien plus proches de nous cette fois-ci : ce sont les panneaux solaires du côté Russe de la Station spatiale, à 400 km au-dessus de vos têtes, quasiment à portée de main pour nous...
Stranges shapes but not #CropArt: sometimes beauty is closer than 400 km below, as illustrated by the Russian service module’s solar panels in close-up.
Credits: ESA/NASA–T. Pesquet
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