View allAll Photos Tagged Reception
The homily of the priest in the church service was loooong (eight points: "marriage is H.A.R.D.W.O.R.K. ..."), we arrived at the reception late, missed the sunset but got this. Taken at the Coconut Palace.
© 2006 Bong Manayon | FB: Bong Manayon Photography
Pentax *ist DS + SMCP FA 28-90/3.5-5.6
Lenbachhaus Reception Rooms
Center painting:
Franz von Lenbach, Franz von Lenbach mit Frau und Töchtern, 1903
On display in the Lenbachhaus Museum in Munich, which is famous for owning the largest collection of The Blue Reiter (Der Blaue Reiter) artworks including paintings, prints, drawings, and small sculptures.
2021.01.11 - Presumably a reception Hall although there's no sign to indicate that. I guess during Covid this place is pretty quiet. However there is a pediatrist in there so I dunno.. maybe they're renting out to businesses until covid blows over.
Reception of the Guardian newspaper's new offices at Kings Place London by Bennett Interior Design. Shown on Explore.
In den Prunkräumen der ALBERTINA www.albertina.at/sammlungen/prunkraeume/
In the Habsburg State Rooms at the ALBERTINA Museum www.albertina.at/en/collections/state-rooms/
70 St Mary Axe Tower - City of London
Don't think I would have the nerve to take this photo on a weekday [lens right up to the window] but on a Saturday in January, I have.
BR Blue 08587 pushes steel empties past what was the Reception Sidings at Tinsley on 7th April 1999.
A reception for Oberlin College’s Class of 2022 was held at the residence of President Carmen Twillie Ambar.
Photo by Mike Crupi
Selsdon Park passed through several private owners until 1924 when Allan Doble Sanderson bought the house and the accompanying 200 acres (0.81 km2) of land for £13,000.[1] In 1924 the Victorian country residence was converted into a 24-bedroom hotel which opened in 1925, and the first lift (elevator) was installed. Between 1927 and 1930, the East Wing was built and in 1935 the West Wing was added. At the same time, the whole of the building was covered in brick to give a Neo-Jacobean appearance. In 1929, the golf course was added. It was designed by J.H. Taylor, five-time British Open champion.
In 1960, Basil Sanderson took over the running of the hotel from his parents, where upon he employed a young and up and coming hotel manager called John Aust. John Aust was instrumental in turning the hotel into one of the best hotels in the country. Improvements and additional rooms were added to the hotel, and in 1985 the leisure complex was completed at a cost of £1.5 million. The latest addition to the building, the Cambridge Wing, was finished in 1988 and has 25 bedrooms and a conference suite. On 13 March 1997, Principal Hotel Company purchased the De Vere Selsdon Estate and have since have undertaken a £2.5 million refurbishment, including a new reception area, additional conference and banquet facilities and a business centre. Furthermore in 2020 the hotel undertook a further £1.00 million refurbishment to complete the hotel bedrooms and further meeting rooms to complete the multi-million pound refurbishment, having all of the hotel refurbishment between 2018 - 2020 including all public areas, meeting rooms and all 150 bedrooms.
The hotel has a minor role in British political history as it was the venue for a meeting of the Conservative Party Shadow Cabinet before the 1970 parliamentary elections. At that meeting the party agreed on an election manifesto that was notably more ideologically free market than at any previous election after world war II. It gave rise to the expression Selsdon man. The Conservative Party under Heath won the election, however, Heath failed to follow his election promises, eventually leading to his replacement by Margaret Thatcher.
De Vere Selsdon Estate possesses 205 acres (0.83 km2) of parkland. It has 26 conference rooms and a leisure centre including indoor swimming pool. Dining facilities include the Cedar restaurant, Phoenix grill and bar, and a terrace. The grounds include an 18-hole golf course, two grass tennis courts, two all-weather tennis courts, a jogging trail, a boules pitch, a croquet lawn, and a putting green. wikipedia
Modern reception building with, I believe, Computer Labs on floors 1 and 2, built c.2004 (poss. Sheppard Robson). An attractive addition to what is a Grade 1 listed Palladian-style villa of 1760, designed by Sir William Chambers. Now part of Whitelands College, University of Roehampton, London Borough of Wandsworth.
(CC BY-NC-ND - credit: Images George Rex)