View allAll Photos Tagged Orbit
Anish Kapoor's rather crumpled rollercoaster-looking "Orbit" in front of the Olympic Stadium.
I hope you all have enjoyed London and the games as much as I have these past two weeks!
Please vote for my five photos over at the NME/Nikon photo competition 2012. Thanks!
Check out the set here.
360° Panorama at the Olympic Park, featuring the Orbit, the Olympic Stadium, the Water Polo Arena and the Aquatics Centre.
am Freitag, 13. Juni 2008 eine Anzeige für die Orbit-iEX die vom 20. bis am 23. Mai dauert(e). Hier noch Blah: blog.namics.com/2008/06/da_hat_einer_au.html
bluedot Festival, Jodrell Bank, Cheshire 7-9 July 2017, Day 2
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thrifted! PERFECT, my size! and ONLY $10 i couldn't believe it! I had seen these in the stores and wanted them but I never spend a lot of money.
CEG Orbit general cargo vessel in Birkenhead Docks
IMO: 8906224
Vessel Type - Detailed: General Cargo
MMSI: 275502000
Call Sign: YLPM
Flag: Latvia
Gross Tonnage: 852
Summer DWT: 1260 t
Length Overall x Breadth Extreme: 64.2 x 10.5 m
Year Built: 10 Oct 1989
Registered owner: CEG ORBIT GMBH & CO KG
Ship manager/Commercial manager & ISM: FEHN SHIP MANAGEMENT
Builder: Bijlsma, Wartena, Netherlands
Yard Number: 651
Main Engine: x1 4 stroke 8 cyl Caterpillar 3508 @1600 RPM
Total Power kW & HP: 597 kW & 811 HP
x1 hold x1 hatch
The ArcelorMittal Orbit is the tallest sculpture in the UK at 114m high – but if it were a vertical tower (with all the loops flattened out) it would be 560 metres, higher than the Eiffel Tower
The design was the winning entry in a competition to design and produce a sculpture that would be an iconic centre-piece for Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park and act as an accessible work of public art
The ArcelorMittal Orbit was generously funded by steel company ArcelorMittal
Use of these images in any form without permission is illegal. If you wish to use or license any images please contact mel@mudkissphotography.co.uk
All work copyright Melanie Smith/ Mudkiss Photography All Rights Reserved
A giraffe!! I drew this in a Cafe today :) For a reason, mind you - this chap is collecting 1 million Giraffes, help him out!
the youngest of my pack, somewhere in Florida; roadarch.blog/2020/11/26/day-19-more-florida-leesburg-to-...
First image of another object which the same image has two adjustments in photoshop this image is traditionally what i do, bringing up or down brightness or contrast however the next image i tried a VGA tweek which seems to get rid of that light fog around these objects
Circle is massive body, lines (which are very small) are acceleration. Acceleration is proportional to the inverse square of the distance between the cursor and the body - just like gravity. This is an accurate rendering of an elliptical orbit.
The ArcelorMittal Orbit is 115m sculpture and observation tower in the Olympic Park in Stratford, London. It is Britain's largest piece of public art, and will be a legacy of London's hosting of the 2012 Summer Olympics. Sited between the Olympic Stadium and the Aquatics Centre, it allows visitors to view the whole Olympic Park from two indoor viewing platforms on two levels, with each level having the capacity for 150 people. It is expected to cope with 700 visitors per hour. The tower also includes a dining area.
Orbit was designed by Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond. Expected to cost £19.1 million, with £16 million coming from Britain's richest man, the steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, the balance from the London Development Agency. The name "ArcelorMittal Orbit" combines the name of Mittal's company, as chief sponsor, with "Orbit", the original working title for Kapoor and Balmond's design.
The Orbit represents a radical advance in the architectural field of combining sculpture and structural engineering, and that it combines both stability and instability in a work that visitors can engage with and experience via an incorporated spiral walkway. It symbolised a continuous journey, a creative representation of the "extraordinary physical and emotional effort" that Olympians undertake in their continuous drive to do better.
Materials: sterling silver, titanium, 22K
Dimensions: (HxWxD) 1.5 x 1.1 x 0.2 "
Price: $390
Piece Notes: "Measure Sky Mechanics" has evolved a bit - it started out as small Sun Moon Disk, which never quite read right to me. It just wasn't there, and I couldn't figure out why. Finally, I rebuilt it a bit, and knew almost immediately that this is what it wanted. It's very very seldom I remake work; this time I'm glad I did.