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Ho Chi Min City today reflects its very mixed heritage: it is the most populous metropolitan area in Vietnam, and the county’s fast-growing economic centre. But, it still looks to the past, with magnificent French architecture rubbing shoulders with Asian street food and traditional temples, and reminders of the terrible legacy of the Vietnam War share space with tributes to “Reunification” under the current regime.

 

The Saigon Central Post Office is the most celebrated example of Renaissance architecture in Vietnam.

 

For the story and pictures, please visit: www.ursulasweeklywanders.com/travel/a-day-in-ho-chi-minh-...

In this order from left to right: Toby Todd, Maureen & Hinley

 

So many hounds could care less who they share their space with. As long as they get to be on the softest spot in the house!

A fence post, an old seeder, and a bluebird nest box share space along the edge of a pasture in Highland County, Ohio.

Taken during the assessment visit of Elwick Road / West Street, Ashford, UK, as part of the 2015 Great Street Award.

Red-headed woodpecker at feeder with sparrows.

 

June 27, 2023

 

IMG_7921 en

January 30: Presenter Candice Hopkins discusses Transportable Models for Shared Spaces

821 Broadway Desk Space

 

16 desks available for $990 each in shared space with three conference rooms, one large (12 people), two small (4/5 people). There is also a front foyer where guests can wait and a kitchen and bathroom. The floor has enough open space to host gatherings of around 20-25 people after work for meetups and such.One of the most exciting location for an office in NYC. 821 Broadway is at 12th and Broadway and is in the heart of the prime TAMI area.

 

More details:

deskzone.com/properties/821-broadway-desk-space/

 

For additional information or inquiries, DeskZone can be reached via email or by phone: 212-608-7081.

 

Those who want to arrange a showing or get access to our available spaces can visit DeskZone online at www.DeskZone.com.

 

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Closing reception at SFMOMA, Tides' Momentum 2008. Photo: Francisco Martinez.

Small moth and tiny spider, sharing space on a tickseed flower. I think the moth is Pyrausta tyralis and the spider is anyone's guess. Maybe Misumenops?

An old barn (nearly to ruins), an abandonned tree, growing side by side.

They just seemed in a dialogue,

probably reminiscing the old days when they were young, fresh and visited by many...

 

I hope, when I get there, it's good stories, I'll have. No, I am positive...

SHARED SPACE: Thayer's new building — shown here as a conceptual image rather than a final design — will architecturally express the spatial and programmatic intermixing of engineering, computer science, design, and entrepreneurship, with open vistas, shared facilities, and thematic rather than departmental groupings.

 

Image by Wilson Architects.

 

This image appeared in the Spring 2018 issue of Dartmouth Engineer magazine.

 

engineering.dartmouth.edu

Taken during the assessment visit of Elwick Road / West Street, Ashford, UK, as part of the 2015 Great Street Award.

The beetle was a welcome surprise.

Perfect Shots of Imperfection

60 photos

These are snapshots.

Many of which are compositionally contrived.

They are snapshots.

"Essential (essential for the subjects in it to remember and reminisce over)", "obligatory-social-shots", "spur-of-the-moment captures".

 

Some of them i think i will never forget.

Some of them i already stopped liking.

Some pictures are the only pictures i have with them.

 

So I went through an editing process with these photographs/ snapshots.

I cropped them, made them grayscale, adjusted the contrast levels and burned in on required areas.

All these to turn an "imperfect" snapshot into a "perfect" photograph.

 

Each photograph is an attempt to remember, to capture a moment of the time spent together and the relationship shared between.

 

One person i dated,

A couple i had a crush on,

Very few i have absolutely no clue why we took a picture together,

Six are family,

Some i had a connection with,

Many are really good friends,

All, i spent a moment or moments with.

 

The snapshots-photographs are very telling in many ways.

There is almost always a reason for the way they are composed, for the number of times they are taken and why they are taken.

However, the exact opposite is true as well.

The snapshots-photographs have a way of lying.

At a glance, it is not easily discernible which person i share the closest relationship with. Some friend of friend of a friend in a moment of dare and/or drunken-high, gave me a kiss, an act so physically intimate that is beyond the cultural confines of the asian family. Three people "closer" to me than any of the people in these photographs yet i have no picture taken with them during this period.

And the ultimate lie is, unlike what is suggested, all these snapshots were taken moments before a goodbye.

Some moments have yet to come, some moments are soon to arrive, but many have already passed.

Regardless, "a goodbye", "a farewell", "a departure", whichever way you would like to term it, is a phenomenon not usually greeted with smiles and laughters.

Yet in every picture without fail, notions of happiness are portrayed, not a tinge of sorrow.

Why?

 

Why do we throw parties to celebrate someone's leaving?

Is it really such a happy occasion?

Or are we celebrating something else?

 

Why do we bother showing each other so much affection and spending so much time with each other knowing all these emotional investments will reap no returns?

Are these actions superficial gestures?

Or are these actions beneficiary on another level of consciousness?

 

Why do we cry at the departure hall of the airport but smile when facing the camera for that last group picture?

Are sad moments unworthy of documentation?

Or perhaps these moments are not sad?

Taken during the assessment visit of Elwick Road / West Street, Ashford, UK, as part of the 2015 Great Street Award.

Auckland Queen St. without cars.

 

Base photo by Urban Explorer

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