View allAll Photos Tagged ParkingStructure
The new parking structure for Accident Fund Insurance's new headquarters in the redeveloped Ottawa Street Station.
"Right now this town is for the taking
We'll bring neon to its knees
Our time to shine
Lay on the pavement
We've got everything we need
So turn the music up
Gonna carry more than sound
Right now this town is for the taking
And it's all we'll ever need"
-the city is contagious, the cab
unedited.
downtown michigan avenue.
where i spend half of my days at.
Both sides of a soon-to-be $2 million view. You can sit out on your lanai and breathe in the perfumed air of Ala Moana Boulevard, or look out your back window at shopping center rooftops.
Couldn't choose between this photo and the other. So here are both of them. Played around with the editing in all of these
Project: Samsung American Headquarters Parking Garage Facade
Location: San Jose, California
Architect: NBBJ
GKD Metal Fabrics: Omega 1520
Project Type: Commercial
Description: Global architecture firm NBBJ recently completed the energy-efficient headquarters for technology powerhouse, Samsung. The building features a 10-story tower, pavilion and parking garage structure, creating a collaborative design for both employees and the community. Located in tech-hub, Silicon Valley, the headquarters houses the company’s 2,000 employees, which are divided into R&D and their sales department. Throughout the design, the architects utilized the brand’s image as inspiration.
Blog Post: Architects Design Custom Screen Printed GKD Metal Mesh for Samsung Headquarters
A parking structure of peculiar ugli-tude. So ugly, in fact, that I find it almost elegant.
We Are the Cat (forthcoming August 29, 2006) » book | blog
You Are a Dog » book | blog
flickr sundries » You Are a Dog People | We Are the Cat People | Adoptable Pets | of books | LightPainting | food pr0n
See how the little blinker-reflectors have all got flattened tops: All you construction workers on this website, would you chime in in comments and tell us which problem was solved by that design innovation, thanks. Was it to make them more easily stackable.
-----------------------
In downtown Ann Arbor, Michigan, on March 26th, 2012, at the northeast corner of South 5th Avenue and East William Street. There's the "Fourth and William Parking Structure" at yonder left.
-----------------------
Library of Congress classification ideas:
HE336.R63 Road work zones—United States—Pictorial works.
TE220 Streets—Maintenance and repair—Equipment and supplies—Pictorial works.
QK495.R78 Callery pear—Pictorial works.
SB435.5 Trees in cities—United States—Pictorial works.
QK477 Flowering trees—Pictorial works.
F574.A6 Ann Arbor (Mich.)—Pictorial works.
I kind of like this, but shouldn't there be a way to make a parking structure architecturally interesting without placing a facade on it?

