View allAll Photos Tagged STADIUM
A 31,000-seat arena planned for a LaLiga team that went down to the 4th league right before it was inaugurated... The team has incredibly many fantastic supporters that come to every match, now in the third division and hoping to go up this year. There were approx 5000 supporters attending... Amazing. And the stadium is fantastic.
After match. Guests at bar.
At night.
Builders 'Christmas lights' on nearby building.
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Built in the 5th century B.C., Its present form was acquired in the 2nd c. A.D. when Herodus Atticus financed the stone seating and the arched entrance. Its stone seats could sit around 6500 spectators!
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Life, as we know it, stays outside. Inside, the experiment begins: the stadium becomes a true social laboratory of passions. Or, in other words, a kind of play begins. But look, the players aren't the protagonists, but just the technical team of the theater. The real actors are on this side, in the audience. This is where the story unfolds. And the spectators? Who are the spectators of the play?, you will wonder. I don't know. Maybe you have the answer. I only know that once the stadium doors are closed, we all enter the scene.
Ricoh GRDIV
We watched the low fog roll in on the foottball field. in 15 minutes it was all white while light was fading away. a fascinating scene.
On a side note, any opportunities are always good to take. we were just bringing the kids to the park, not thinking there would be anything worth photographing.
there's ALWAYS something worth photographing....
You can find this pack at The Stadium which starts on August 21th : maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/STADIUM%20EVENT/113/112/46
Modif / Copy / NoTrans
The TC&W Saint Paul Turn rolls through the Warehouse District of Minneapolis with three GP38-2s screaming and thrashing.
The Panathenaic Stadium in the Pangrati area of Athens. 8-shot panorama stitched in Adobe Lightroom.
From Wikipedia:
A stadium was built on the site of a simple racecourse by the Athenian statesman Lykourgos (Lycurgus) c. 330 BC, primarily for the Panathenaic Games. It was rebuilt in marble by Herodes Atticus, an Athenian Roman senator, by 144 AD and had a capacity of 50,000 seats. After the rise of Christianity in the 4th century it was largely abandoned. The stadium was excavated in 1869 and hosted the Zappas Olympics in 1870 and 1875. After being refurbished, it hosted the opening and closing ceremonies of the first modern Olympics in 1896 and was the venue for 4 of the 9 contested sports. It was used for various purposes in the 20th century and was once again used as an Olympic venue in 2004. It is the finishing point for the annual Athens Classic Marathon. It is also the last venue in Greece from where the Olympic flame handover ceremony to the host nation takes place.