View allAll Photos Tagged PHARMACY

Chandni Chowk, Delhi, India

Gloucester Pharmacy (closed) [5,600 square feet]

7453 Hargett Boulevard, Walter Reed Plaza, Gloucester, VA

 

This pharmacy opened on September 1st, 1998 and closed on April 19th, 2021. The portion it occupies on the end was originally the No. 1 Chinese restaurant, which opened in January 1998 and relocated here on October 30th, 2008.

Here is the pharmacy and, next door, the dairy store, Eskimo, where you can buy bag milk and icecream.

CVS Pharmacy #1525 (11,945 square feet)

6400 Iron Bridge Road, Richmond, VA

 

This location was built and opened in 2010; it was originally located here.

A 16-wide Modular Chinese Pharmacy built for my expanding Chinatown district.

 

I removed the side and rear walls together with the steps to show the interior details. There's plenty of cabinet drawers for herbs and spices. And a giant potted plant in the corner.

 

To Four Great Years

 

Loren - The Reefer Man

pharmacy college at University of Iowa

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Photo submitted by Ellen Rudnick

 

This photograph is being made available only for use by Montefiore and/or for personal use/printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in any media, commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, or promotions.

CVS Pharmacy, by Mike Mozart, AKA MiMo on Instagram instagram.com/MikeMozart

CVS Pharmacy #3508 (13,013 square feet)

760 East Church Street, Martinsville, VA

 

This location was built and opened in 2004. It was built on site of an old Revco, which was built in the early 1980s and closed in 1997.

Target CVS Pharmacy, 4/2015, pics by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

This is the CVS/pharmacy drugstore located at 1128 Park Avenue SW in Norton, VA. It originally opened in 1979 alongside the rest of the Norton Square shopping center as an Eckerd drug store, and it became a Revco drug store in 1994 when Eckerd had decided to exit the Tri-Cities area that year (that deal included a small number of western Virginia stores as well). It later became a CVS store in 1998, after CVS bought Revco. This store then moved in 2009, being the last remaining tenant in the Norton Square to leave.

The Pharmacy had to move as their building as badly damaged in the earthquake.

 

Monday April 9, 2012 on my frist visit to Lyttelton since the Feb 22 2011 earthquake. It was say to see so many buildings gone or about to go.

 

Lyttelton (Māori: Ōhinehou) is a port town on the north shore of Lyttelton Harbour close to Banks Peninsula, a suburb of Christchurch on the eastern coast of the South Island of New Zealand.

 

The 2010 Canterbury earthquake damaged some of Lyttelton's historic buildings, including the Timeball Station. There was some damage to the town's infrastructure, but the port facilities and tunnel quickly returned to operation. The overall quake damage was less significant than in Christchurch itself, due to the dampening effects of the solid rock that the town rests on and its moderate distance from the epicentre.

 

On 22 February 2011 a magnitude 6.3 aftershock caused much more widespread damage in Lyttelton than its predecessor due to its proximity to Lyttelton and a shallow depth of 5 kilometres (3.1 mi). Some walls of the Timeball Station collapsed and there was extensive damage to residential and commercial property, leading to the demolition of a number of high profile heritage buildings such as the Harbour Light Theatre and the Empire Hotel. Many other unreinforced masonry buildings were severely damaged.

 

Following the February earthquake it was suggested that the Timeball Station be dismantled for safety reasons. Bruce Chapman, chief executive of the New Zealand Historic Places Trust (NZHPT) said there was a possibility that it may be reconstructed. "If we can find a way to dismantle the Timeball Station that allows us to retain as much of the building's materials as possible, we will do so." However on Monday 13 June 2011 a further 6.3 ML aftershock brought down the tower and remaining walls while workmen were preparing to dismantle it.

 

Much of Lyttelton's architectural heritage was lost as a result of the earthquakes, as damage was deemed too extensive for reconstruction. By June 2011, six buildings in London Street in Lyttelton had been demolished, along with another four on Norwich Quay. The town's oldest churches have collapsed, including Canterbury's oldest stone church, the Holy Trinity.

 

History of Lyttelton:

Due to its establishment as a landing point for Christchurch-bound seafarers, Lyttelton has historically been regarded as the "Gateway to Canterbury" for colonial settlers. The port remains a regular destination for cruise liners and is the South Island's principal goods transport terminal, handling 34% of exports and 61% of imports by value.

 

In 2009 Lyttelton was awarded Category I Historic Area status by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust (NZHPT) defined as "an area of special or outstanding historical or cultural heritage significance or value".

 

A home for Māori for about 700 years, Lyttelton Harbour was discovered by European settlers on 16 February 1770 during the Endeavour's first voyage to New Zealand.

 

In August 1849 it was officially proclaimed a port.

 

Lyttelton was formerly called Port Cooper and Port Victoria. It was the original settlement in the district (1850). The name Lyttelton was given to it in honour of George William Lyttelton of the Canterbury Association, which had led the colonisation of the area.

 

In 1862, the first telegraph transmission in New Zealand was made from Lyttelton Post Office.

 

On 1 January 1908, the Nimrod Expedition, headed by Ernest Shackleton to explore Antarctica left from the harbour here.

(From Wikipedia)

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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com.

A modular pharmacy.

 

Some first timers for me. First time to design a model with Studio and not LDD. Moreover first time to build a modular with 4 instead of 3 floors.

 

The lowest level features a pharmacy where minifigs can get everything for their well-being.

 

One level above a shrink has his office. Apparently the guy from the casino who lost a lots of hard earned studs is here to do something against his gambling addiction. As soon as he lays down he can no longer hold himself back. The shrink however only looks at the clock above him to ensure maximum profit.

 

The shrinks profit goes into the two upper level where he turned the old apartment into a fancy looking one including an island kitchen and a jacuzzi.

 

Statistics:

Parts: 6127

Design time: About 100h

Build time: About 10h

 

Building instructions are available! Please check: www.ebay.de/sch/paul_faul/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_...

Modular Pharmacy, detail: The old pharmacist lets his mind drift back to happier days when he was in charge of business. Nowadays, his young apprentice runs everything.

Pharmacy - Ha, yeah, bet it is. Entrance round the back, speak to "Eddie", code word "Espresso".

@ pharmacy in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Walgreen's Pharmacy Wethersfield, CT, 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

Phenomenal pharmacy in Normandy

CVS Pharmacy now at Target. 6/2016, pics by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

CVS Pharmacy #1798 (13,225 square feet)

2537 Weir Road, Chester, VA

 

This location opened in summer 2008; it was originally located here.

Modular Pharmacy, detail: First floor with spiral staircase and a couch design shamelessly stolen from Brickshelf user 'sheep'.

CVS Pharmacy on Texas Avenue in Bryan, Texas.

 

Former Eckerd.

I was talking with a representative of the devil the other today. We were in line at the pharmacy. She had on a nice gray business suit, and her hair was done up in a ponytail. (One of the problems with cell phones is that when women are driving and stop at traffic lights they’re busy holding their cell phone in place rather than adjusting their ponytail, so that we male drivers behind don’t have the spectacle of a woman adjusting her ponytail to entertain us in traffic.) This woman seemed like a nice person, even though she was a pharmaceutical rep. We read some over-the-counter labels together; she was advising me on the best way to deal with a cold. She also complained about her company’s policy that required her to talk with pharmacists who were prevented by their company’s policy from talking with her. It was clear that Kafka had been at work again. I wanted to compliment her on her ponytail, but there’s a certain decorum you have to maintain in the pharmacy. And she was just trying to make a living, my better self kept telling me.

 

[My wonderful-photographer friend Kitty (not her name) said to me after looking at this photo: “Roger (not my name), your incompetence is not confined to the camera itself. I’m pleased to know that it extends to the software designed to enhance the photos. You’ve managed to use this software in a way that makes your pictures even worse than they naturally are.” Kitty is right, of course. I started just trying to erase the license plate on the car and soon things got out-of-hand. And as I tried to repair my mistakes, things went downhill rapidly until I had what you see above. If I spent more time thinking about photography rather than ponytails, I’d take better pictures. But then I sometimes think there might be an upside to despair.]

 

CVS Pharmacy, Avon, CT. 7/2014. Pics by Mike Mozart , AKA Street Artist MiMo on Instagram instagram.com/MikeMozart

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