View allAll Photos Tagged Propertydevelopment

Nederland, Noord-Holland, Amsterdam, 12–06-2023; Kop van de Zuidas met ring A10 en Rozenoordbrug over de Amstel en zicht op begraafplaats Zorgvlied.

 

luchtfoto (speciaal tarief);

aerial photo (additional fee required)

copyright © 2023 foto/photo Siebe Swart

View of the Luxury kitchen design at Marina Residences by Sunland Group. These gracefully tapered five storey towers are connected by a central entry foyer, strikingly cylindrical in shape and featuring fluted exterior walls reminiscent of a Corinthian column. Inspired by the ceremonial beauty of classic architecture, two wings of just 84 low-rise residential buildings sit elegantly on the landscape. This collection of homes is now available. Photography by Peter Sexty. View more at Marina Residences by Sunland Group

2 and 3 Bedroom homes + study at Marina Residences by Sunland Group. These gracefully tapered five storey towers are connected by a central entry foyer, strikingly cylindrical in shape and featuring fluted exterior walls reminiscent of a Corinthian column. Inspired by the ceremonial beauty of classic architecture, two wings of just 84 low-rise residential buildings sit elegantly on the landscape. This collection of homes is now available. Photography by Peter Sexty. View more at Marina Residences by Sunland Group

Highlights reduced in Lightroom, and sharpened slightly. Flash to the left at 1/4, then to the right at 1/16. I didn't bring back the view because it wasn't the best of views...

Absolute luxury unites with golfing passion at Royal Pines Resort, a golf and lifestyle haven that’s truly complete in itself. The undulating terrain and sweeping fairways of the region’s only championship 27 hole composite course are the permanent home of the ANZ Ladies Masters and many other notable tournaments. Photography by Peter Sexty. View more at Marina Residences | Royal Pines Resort

 

Marina Residences at The Concourse by Sunland Group. These gracefully tapered five storey towers are connected by a central entry foyer, strikingly cylindrical in shape and featuring fluted exterior walls reminiscent of a Corinthian column. Photography by Peter Sexty. View more at Marina Residences by Sunland Group

Nederland, Noord-Holland, Amsterdam, 12–06-2023; centrum van de Zuidas met Zuidasdok. Links en rechts de rijbanen van de Ring A10 welke ik de toekomt in een tunnel zullen lopen. Links van het midden Station Zuid (Station Zuid WTC), rechts het GVB metrostation met bouwactiviteiten.

 

luchtfoto (speciaal tarief);

aerial photo (additional fee required)

copyright © 2023 foto/photo Siebe Swart

Nederland, Noord-Brabant, Eindhoven, 23-08-2016; stadsdeel Strijp. Philips Stadion van PSV gezien naar Strijp-S, voormalig bedrijventerrein van Philips. Linksonder Philipsdorp.

Philips PSV Stadium with Strijp-S, former business of Philips in the background. Bottom left Philips village.

luchtfoto (toeslag op standard tarieven);

aerial photo (additional fee required);

copyright foto/photo Siebe Swart

3D rendering of a detached house I did in my spare time. The model was built using CAD program.

 

Hi res materials, textures, lighting and other miscellaneous elements were added to the model in SketchUp.

 

Final render generated using SU Podium, a third party plug in for SketchUp. Retouched using GIMP.

Taylor Wimpey's Lindfield Meadows development in Haywards Heath was one of the early adopters of our new facias & facades offering. This bold exterior signage lets you know you're in the right place. Internally, we provided our usual stunning interior decoration - keeping everything on brand and on point. © Octink.

 

www.octink.com

Nederland, Amsterdam, IJburg, 25-05-2010. Haveneiland met strand Blijburg, IJmeer met links Pampus, gezien naar Almere (aan de horizon). Er zijn plannen om Almere verder uit te breiden en in het IJmeer te gaan bouwen. Ook aanleg van een IJmeerverbinding (IJmeerbrug) wordt overwogen.

Harbour Island with beach Blijburg, IJmeer with Pampusm(l), Almere on the horizon. IJmeer (IJsselmeer) seen to Almere (at the horizon). There are plans to further expand Almere in the IJmeer. Also the construction of a 'IJ-connexion' (bridge) is considered.

luchtfoto (toeslag), aerial photo (additional fee required)

foto/photo Siebe Swart

One exposure, no fusion or HDR. Highights reduced, and yellows. Then sharpened.

Col. Richard Siefert's controversial Centre Point building nearing completion in 1964, seen from Oxford Street.

I seem to remember that planning permission for the building was granted as part of a scheme to construct a new roundabout which would have resulted in the destruction of the area around St Giles Circus. Eventually the roundabout was shelved and a one-way system was substituted. Once it had been completed, Centre Point's owner, the tycoon Harry Hyams, allowed it to stand empty for many years, rapidly increasing in value in the 1960s property boom. Also, as long as it remained unlet, Hyams didn't have to pay rates on the building. His cynicism earned him a great deal of opprobrium ...a common fate of people who get rich quick while their accusers don't. Eventually he went on a charm offensive, placing full-page advertisements in the national newspapers in an attempt to paint his motives in a favourable light. In the advertisements Centre Point was described as "this very wonderful building". This was pounced upon by Private Eye and the phrase "very wonderful" became part of its vocabulary.

Compared to most 1960s office buildings, Centre Point strikes me as slender, nicely fenestrated and not unattractive. From a distance it has a certain grandeur, but no modern architect seems capable of designing a building that is attractive close-up at ground level.

Hoardings along Rodney St announce Phase 1 of the regeneration of the Heygate Estate in Southwark - re-branded as Trafalgar Place by its developers Lend Lease.

An international company of Australian origin Lend Lease developed the athletes villages for both the Sydney (2000) and the London (2012) Olympics. Their approach to the redevelopment of the Heygate Estate has not been without controversy - see:

www.newstatesman.com/2013/11/heygate-estates-death-repres...

Nederland, Zuid-Holland, Rotterdam-Zuid, 28-09-2014; Kop van Zuid en Wilhelminakade, met o.a. Erasmusbrug, Hotel New York en de torens van Montevideo, het World Port Center (Havenbedrijf Rotterdam), New Orleans en De Rotterdam.

Newly developed cultural center Kop van Zuid, urban renewal and modern architecture, high rise in a former harbour area.

luchtfoto (toeslag op standard tarieven);

aerial photo (additional fee required);

copyright foto/photo Siebe Swart.

The disciplined modernist columns of the sculpture garden, in visual harmony with the tapered residential façade.

A pool and adjacent pavilion, set by the marina, are reserved for the pleasure of residents, their families and friends. Drawing on the same classic architectural influences, the pavilion’s undercover space includes barbeque facilities, comfortable dining seating and stylish lounge furniture. From this peaceful vantage point there are enchanting views to enjoy up and down the river.

Photography by Peter Sexty. View more at Marina Residences | Sculpture Garden

Property - Photographs of developments that included entranceways, administration block, swimming pool, painting, resurfacing, murals, library, playgrounds and other projects - Photographs taken over the period 2000 to 2002. These photos were used in the first edition of the Newtown School website www.newtown.school.nz/

Just in case you didn't understand the comment on the previous pic - the brick building in that one is now on the left and we're looking north across Southwark St. towards the Bankside 4 development - now re-branded and marketed as "Neo-Bankside", a luxury housing development (designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour) with apartments selling at £1m - £6.5m.

When Tate Modern (see its tower is peeping behind the street sign on the right) opened in the year 2000 the land on which this development stands was mainly run-down commercial and industrial buildings dating from the C19 and the building on the extreme right (the Blue Fin Building) was still a 1950s office block housing the Ministry of Transport. Over the succeeding 13 years, thanks primarily to the impact of Tate Modern and the Jubilee line extension which runs nearby, the area has been transformed - but not without cost.

 

When planning permission was first granted for this development in 2007 the developer agreed to provide over 8,000 sq.m of affordable housing "off-site" (ie. in other parts of Southwark) and 34 affordable "shared equity" units within the development itself. Construction began in Jan. 2009 months after the Lehman Bros collapse and the takeover of HBOS (the funding bank for the development) by Lloyds. However development and marketing of the site has continued throughout the subsequent recession and the development is now in its final stages. Block E (under construction on the left) is the final phase of the development.

 

However in late 2011 the developer returned to Southwark Council and the GLA with a proposal to vary the terms of the original planning permission. He requested that the requirement for 34 affordable housing units on site be dropped because it was unlikely that they could make them affordable by any sensible definition of the term. Southwark Council agreed to this, with the proviso that the developer offered funding for at least the equivelent number of units to be provided off site. The sum final agreed for this was £9m, which the local authority hopes will fund the provision of 44 housing units. But up to now the developer himself has only managed to find sites to build half the amount of off site affordable housing required in the original planning permission. In addition the developer sought and was granted permission to change the use of Block E from residential to office use.

 

It's not surprising that local community groups now wonder if it will ever be possible for local residents doing ordinary jobs (or having no jobs at all) to afford to live in these areas in future.

Property - Photographs of developments that included entranceways, administration block, swimming pool, painting, resurfacing, murals, library, playgrounds and other projects - Photographs taken over the period 2000 to 2002. These photos were used in the first edition of the Newtown School website www.newtown.school.nz/

1 2 3 5 7 ••• 64 65