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Metelkova is one of the weirdest places to see in Ljubljana, Slovenia’s capital. Formerly, the site was the Slovenian headquarter of the Yugoslav National Army. The buildings have been squatted since September 1993 in a declared illegal way, mainly by artists, activists and young students. In 2005, Metelkova was declared a national cultural heritage site and the European Cultural Fund attributes financial support. If you like graffiti, weird art, and quirky sculptures then this is the place to head to.

 

1061 W. Jackson built 2015.

 

Previous structure (b.1958) sold on 7/30/13 for $2,150,000 and subsequently razed.

Another road trip, another "find"....

Mamiya RB67

Expired 1978 Kodak 120 Plus-X Pan Professional.

Shot at 100 asa

Developed in Promicrol for 15 minutes

Epson V700

• RAZE •

 

— Legacy, Maitreya, and eBody Reborn fitted.

— Comes in 8 shades, all MOD.

— Fatpack allows Suit and Straps to be any color separately.

 

LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Mainframe/171/108/25

 

MAINFRAME EVENT JANUARY 2022 RELEASE

Open Date: January 20th, 2022

le mont Batur, qui s'élève à 1 717 mètres d'altitude est au centre de la caldeira du volcan Batur.

La première éruption historique de ce stratovolcan est datée à 1804. Depuis, 24 autres sont survenues, dont la dernière du 15 mars 1999 à juin 2000.

Une violente éruption du volcan en 1917 fait des milliers de morts et détruit plus de 60 000 maisons et 2 000 temples. Le village de Batur, situé au fond de la caldeira, est rayé de la carte mais la lave s'arrêta à l'entrée du temple du village. Croyant à un signe, les habitants reconstruisent le village. De nouveau rasé au cours d'une éruption qui épargne elle-aussi le temple. L'administration coloniale néerlandaise ayant anticipé l'évènement, il y eut très peu de morts. Le village est depuis situé sur le rebord extérieur de la caldeira et le temple (pura Ulun Danu) a été déplacé non loin de là.

 

Formé il y a plus de 30 000 ans, le mont Batur est le résultat de l'éruption de plusieurs volcans, créant ainsi une caldeira spectaculaire de 13 kilomètres de diamètre. Cette caldeira abrite le lac Batur On peut aisément voir l'étendue sur Google Map : maps.app.goo.gl/dJPh4zM7hrjswJBs8

  

Mount Batur, which rises to 1,717 meters above sea level, is at the center of the Batur volcano caldera.

The first historical eruption of this stratovolcano was dated to 1804. Since then, 24 others have occurred, including the last from March 15, 1999 to June 2000.

A violent eruption of the volcano in 1917 caused thousands of deaths and destroyed more than 60,000 homes and 2,000 temples. The village of Batur, located at the bottom of the caldera, was wiped off the map but the lava stopped at the entrance to the village temple. Believing it was a sign, the inhabitants rebuilt the village. Again razed during an eruption that also spared the temple. The Dutch colonial administration having anticipated the event, there were very few deaths. The village has since been located on the outer rim of the caldera and the temple (pura Ulun Danu) has been moved nearby.

 

Formed over 30,000 years ago, Mount Batur is the result of the eruption of several volcanoes, creating a spectacular caldera 13 kilometers in diameter. This caldera is home to Lake Batur. The extent can be easily seen on Google Map : maps.app.goo.gl/dJPh4zM7hrjswJBs8

Construction - Center City Philadelphia

Razer Phone _ GCAM _ Lr app

Vertical aerial view of the results of a hot bushfire that had razed the forest days earlier, cool colours though. A few miles inland from the southern ocean, Cape Otway, Victoria

Galland Henning Nopac of West Milwuakee being razed, their new location, Franklin, WI

Dawn Razer is coming to Ostara's Altar. Comes in sheer and solid for the Maitreya, Slink and Belleza Mesh bodies. Eight colors in one hud.

For Macro Monday ..............'Sharp as a Tack'

HMM!

late last spring (may 2012) the property was sold and the new owner pledges he will not raze the art deco structure....greyhound will lease the building while they find a new location...

san jose area 95

And edit of the first Raze shot, cropped. Thank to Ted and Lynn for the advice! I think it does look better now.

Foley Hall (razed), Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana.

3d graffiti design based on the Brand Razer - love their stuff.

Flamingo Motel located at 1124 Aurora Ave. N (Hwy. 99) in Seattle,WA. The property which opened in 1957 was razed in late 2021 after sitting abandoned since 2009. Note the motel was renamed (likely in the 1970s) Black Angus Motor Inn.

My keyboard setup for my PC games. I have an external keyboard on my left hand and my mouse has 12 numerical buttons on the side. I thought it would be fun to get a picture of my setup in the dark, i had a mini flashlight light up my hand through the exposure.

 

F 4.8

6 "

ISO 100

À la fin du XVIIIe siècle, sous le régime révolutionnaire français, l’église gothique de la fin du Moyen Âge qui avait remplacé l'église primitive est rasée. À son emplacement, la Ville de Bruxelles aménage une place publique au centre de laquelle est installée une fontaine, surmontée d’un obélisque datant de 1767, récupérée de la cour de l’abbaye de Grimbergen.

Œuvre de l’architecte Adolphe Vanderheggen, le bâtiment est inauguré en 1882. Le bâtiment de style néorenaissance flamande est un remarquable exemple architectural de la conception de halles. L’intérieur, qui inclut l’ancienne fontaine, comportait quatre rangées de doubles étals de pierre bleue. La structure de l’édifice est métallique.

Malgré un classement du bâtiment en 1987 et plusieurs tentatives de réaffectation commerciales ou culturelles sans lendemain, il faut plus de vingt ans pour que les halles bénéficient d’une réhabilitation définitive.

Depuis 1999 les Halles Saint-Géry sont occupées par un centre d’information consacré au patrimoine bruxellois et à la qualité de vie de ses habitants. De nombreuses expositions et différents évènements y sont organisés.

Le quartier Saint-Géry revitalisé, est aujourd’hui un des endroits de la capitale où le nombre de tables en terrasse au mètre carré est le plus élevé. L'ambiance détendue du quartier en fait un des lieux les plus fréquentés et les plus agréables de la capitale.

 

At the end of the eighteenth century, under the French revolutionary regime, the Gothic church of the late Middle Ages that had replaced the original church was razed. At the location, the City of Brussels landscape a public square in the center of which is installed a fountain topped by an obelisk dating from 1767, recovered from the courtyard of the Abbey of Grimbergen. Designed by architect Adolf Vanderheggen, the building was inaugurated in 1882. The Flemish Renaissance Revival style building is a remarkable architectural example of the design of halls. The interior, which includes the old fountain had four rows of double stalls blue stone. The structure of the building is metal.

Despite a ranking of the building in 1987 and several commercial or cultural reassignment attempts without a future, more than twenty years it takes for the halls have a final rehabilitation. Since 1999 the Halles Saint-Gery is occupied by a dedicated information center in Brussels heritage and quality of life of its inhabitants. Many exhibitions and various events are organized. The Saint-Gery neighborhood revitalized, today is one of the places in the capital where the number of square meter terrace tables is highest. The relaxed atmosphere of the neighborhood makes it one of the busiest places and the most pleasant of the capital.

Short eared owl.

Hibou des marais

Equipment:

Canon EOS 40D

Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM

Cullmann Primax 180 aluminum tripod

 

Check out my Facebook page!

www.facebook.com/JonathanWongPhotography

 

Motel 6 located at 101 Academy Rd. in Vallejo,CA. The 108 room motel was razed in 2014 to make way for an overflow parking lot for the neighboring California State University Maritime Academy Athletic Facility. Note after dropping the Motel 6 name the property was branded as a Rodeway Inn and in its final years standing operated under the name Vallejo Inn.

Image taken 18.09.2021 by David Moth . At White Waltham Airfield Nr Maidenhead , Berkshire

Name: Madame Raze, full name unknown

Age: Presumably late 50s to early 60s

Aliases: Madame Raze, Madame/Madam R, Boss Lady, the Head,

Nationality: British, naturalised American

 

Profile: The woman who would become Madame Raze was born into a sosphicated and wealthy aristocrat family in Newcastle upon Tyne. Being born privileged, she received the highest forms of education, and soon decided to pursue a life of her own. Around 30, she was one of the world’s wealthiest billionaires, while deciding to join her mother’s secret agency—-as part of her training when she was much younger and her dedication to the cause (the organisation Raze’s mother formed is very much independent). Eventually, she worked up her way and eventually became the highest ranking member, which was also the same time that her mother eventually passed away from cancer.

 

Not much is known about Raze’s life, despite a bit of her introduction and family background, though there could be a lot more secrets—Raze is a extremely vague, cryptic and mysterious person who seems to be good at hiding lots of things. It is rumoured that she is actually the true founder of the company—that it was an elaborate plot and lie, she had killed her mother beforehand, and beneath it the agency is actually evil. (Rumoured theory/story, still unconfirmed.)

  

Powers and abilities: Raze is a highly intelligent woman since birth, and one of the most sosphicated minds on earth. This is her only confirmed power—intelligence, though it is possible that she hides the fact being a telepath and with lots of mind powers (unconfirmed as well)

As the head of the agency, she keeps it running and managing it daily, and has eyes and ears everywhere. Money aside, she has the most protective bodyguards and aides, with a snap they could immediately appear and protect her. Raze is also highly intelligible in almost everything.

 

Equipment: Raze possesses a suit of armour (coloured blue) and has her own set of protective clothing that she wears beneath it. It can generate energy blasts and can adapt and redirect powers back. She is also virtually rich, and has access to a lot of technology, equipment, housing and etc.

 

Personality: Usually seen as cold, emotionless, enigmatic and humourless, with people describing able to send shivers down their spines in the room.

Brussels, Belgium

Titsey Place is an English country house near Oxted in Surrey, England. It was successively the seat of the Gresham and Leveson-Gower families and is now preserved by a charitable trust for the nation.

 

The house has its origins in a 16th-century house, which was built by Sir John Gresham (1495–1556) on the site of an earlier dwelling. The mostly Tudor house was demolished and rebuilt in the 18th century, before being refronted in 1826. Finally a tower was added in 1856.

 

History

In the Middle Ages, Titsey was owned by the Uvedale family.[1] It was then an important house in the area, and its Uvedale owners were High Sheriffs of Surrey several times between 1393 and 1464, and also several times High Sheriffs of Hampshire between 1388 and 1493.

  

Sir John Gresham (1495–1556)

The Gresham family reached the peak of its power and wealth in the sixteenth century, and Sir John Gresham, a rich City of London merchant, acquired Titsey from the heirs of John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners, to whom it had been granted by Henry VIII. Gresham built a new house there near to the parish church, on the site of an older house. He was Lord Mayor of London in 1547.

 

Sir John Gresham's heir was William Gresham, whose son was Sir Thomas Gresham (died 1630), whose son and heir was Sir Edward Gresham. The house and estate passed through several generations of the Gresham family, who were created Baronets by Charles II at the time of his Restoration in 1660. The successive baronets were Sir Marmaduke Gresham, 1st Baronet (1627-1696), Sir Edward Gresham, 2nd Baronet (1649-1709), Sir Charles Gresham, 3rd Baronet (1660-1718), Sir Marmaduke Gresham, 4th Baronet (1700-1742), Sir Charles Gresham, 5th Baronet (died 1750), and Sir John Gresham, 6th and last Baronet (1735-1801). Through the marriage of the heiress of the last Gresham, the house passed to the Leveson-Gowers, a branch of the family of the Dukes of Sutherland.[2]

 

A Tudor house on the site was demolished and rebuilt by the last Gresham baronet in the 18th century, then in 1826 was given new fronts designed by William Atkinson. A tower by Philip Charles Hardwick was added in 1856.[3]

 

John Preston Neale's Views of the Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen, in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland (1821) notes that "The Mansion... stands in a beautiful dell formed by a range of lofty chalk hills sheltering it from the north."[4] A Topographical History of Surrey (1844) says of the house -

 

Titsey-Place, the residence of William Leveson Gower, esq., is a modern structure, pleasantly situated at an angle of the road from Limpsfield to Croydon, through Warlingham, and opposite to the present church. The ancient manor house was razed to the ground by Sir John Gresham, the last baronet, who erected the new mansion on its site. It has been greatly improved by its present owner, and has now, from the extensive plantations by which it is surrounded, a very handsome appearance. In the library is a very fine portrait of Sir Thomas Gresham, founder of the Royal Exchange, painted by Sir Antonio More...[5]

  

Portrait of Thomas Gresham

by More, c. 1554

Many of the Uvedales are buried in the garden of Titsey Place, which contains the former parish graveyard. The last Gresham of Titsey pulled down the ancient parish church in 1776 and incorporated its site into his park. In 1865, a large yew-tree marked the location of the former church.[1]

 

Sir Henry Gresham Leveson Gower (1873–1954), who was born at Titsey Place, was England cricket captain in 1909-1910.[6] Frederick Leveson-Gower (1871–1946) also played first-class cricket.

 

The Leveson Gowers remained at Titsey until Thomas Leveson Gower died in 1992. By his Will, a charitable trust was established to preserve the house and gardens for the benefit of the public.[2] The remainder of the estate was left to his heir, David Innes, who was also appointed governor of the charitable trust. Wikipedia

yeah well, let's play some CS:GO

My son's Razer mouse

 

#FlickrFriday

#Numbers

 

The Historic City of Ayutthaya, founded in 1350, was the second capital of the Siamese Kingdom. It flourished from the 14th to the 18th centuries, during which time it grew to be one of the world’s largest and most cosmopolitan urban areas and a center of global diplomacy and commerce.

Ayutthaya was strategically located on an island surrounded by three rivers connecting the city to the sea. This site was chosen because it was located above the tidal bore of the Gulf of Siam as it existed at that time, thus preventing attack of the city by the sea-going warships of other nations. The location also helped to protect the city from seasonal flooding.

The city was attacked and razed by the Burmese army in 1767 who burned the city to the ground and forced the inhabitants to abandon the city. The city was never rebuilt in the same location and remains known today as an extensive archaeological site.

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