View allAll Photos Tagged Solidity
Mimicking Nature in Architecture has developed many new styles including the Blobitecture originally called ‘Blob Architecture’ by William Safire. Describing this new trend using CAD software to create shapes that reproduces the amoeba a unicellular organism that do not have a definite shape.
He also writes that the use of CAD Architecture software make able the architects to develop complex and advanced shapes without compromising the solidity of the structure.
Peter Cook designed the Kunsthaus (fig. 11) in Zurich with a futuristic style inspired by the blob Architecture. The building is constructed with an amorphous shape inspired by amoeba representing more an experiment than trying to recreate existing shapes explains Braham (2007). The result is a building being in contrast to the surrounding creating a parasite in the city.
Jencks (2011) describes the exterior of the building as a blue skin composed of a multitude of acrylic panels.
The development of Biomimicry created a kind of Architecture slightly different to Biomorphic Architecture. Biomorphic consists in mimicking the form of an animal or a plant while Biomimicry Architecture ‘engage the function delivered by a particular natural adaptation’ explains Pawlyn (2011).
Another Architecture style called Fractal has been developed trying to mimic Nature.
The origin of Fractal Architecture is described by Harris (2012) as mimicking the way natural structures are made and grow using mathematic formulas to reproduce it. He also explains that Fractal geometries consist in geometric shapes, which multiply itself infinitely by splitting the original shape into an exact copy of the original but smaller. He also supposes that we could understand the structures founded in Nature by studying those geometrical shapes.
Harris definition of Fractal geometry reside in ‘a recursive mathematical derivation of form that possess a self-similar structure at various levels of scale or detail’. He also describes Fractal as ‘an innovative direction in the design and development of architectural form, rooted in the principles that govern the geometry of natural forms.’
Mimicking Natures movements, Thomas Heatherwick a British architect designed the so-called ‘Rolling-bridge’ (fig. 12). The architect focused firstly on the way it would work and came up with an original design that the reporter of DW-TV describes opening like a caterpillar, having the end of both bits touching each other.
The use of Nature has been pushed furthermore with Mitchell Joachim, an American architect who is specialized in Ecology and Sustainability. Joachim (2008) explains his vision of future Architecture and developed new construction methods with his team to ‘grow homes’. He uses living trees to create the structure. The architect demonstrate the construction technique consisting in crafting small trees together and using CNC scaffolding to train them to adopt a specific form. Joachim also indicate that the tree trunk will be used for the load bearing structure and that the process of growing a new home will take from seven to ten years.
The architect is also one of the Co-founders of an organisation called Bioworks Institute. Joachim (2011) describes the team as a ‘group of designers, artists and scientists who seek to develop new forms of biological products and design using biotechnology’. Working with biologists, the architect aims to create a new kind of Architecture using the newest technologies available. One of their creations is called the ‘Meat habitat’ (fig. 13) and consists of engineered cell tissues 3D printed, creating an habitation. Joachim (2010) describes the result of the experiment being ugly but interesting in the way they uses new technologies.
Combining Biology and Architecture the student Magnus Larsson designed a project called ‘Arenaceous anti-desertification’ . Larsson (2009) studied the problem of sand desertification in Africa and developed a technique to create barrier and stop the sand dunes moving. Larsson plans to create structures made out of sand that will also generate habitats. He proposes to use a bacteria called ‘Bacillus Pasteurii’ that naturally glue small sand particles into solid rock. He explains that the process will only takes 24 hours to solidify the structure by injecting several layers of the bacteria in the sand.
www.academia.edu › WHY_DOES_THE_HUMAN_BRA...
A building only constituted in straight lines do not invite the brain to creativity. How can we be inspired by nature? Is it possible to adapt those habitats to human?
A week can be an awfully long time in soccer as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer showed on Saturday (Oct 30) with an impressive riposte to those who predicted his Old Trafford days were numbered.
Last weekend's humiliating 5-0 home defeat by Liverpool produced a typically hysterical response from fans and media alike, but the Norwegian deflected the unwanted spotlight as his side crushed Tottenham Hotspur 3-0 six days later.
Solskjaer's tactics had been rightly questioned in the aftermath of the Liverpool shocker but a few tweaks in north London, namely the inclusion of Uruguayan forward Edinson Cavani alongside Cristiano Ronaldo, worked a treat.
After conceding nine goals in their last two league games the inclusion of Raphael Varane in a back three alongside Victor Lindelof and captain Harry Maguire also gave Solskjaer's team more solidity.
Solskjaer could have been excused for gloating after his side's win that lifted them into fifth spot, only three points behind champions Manchester City.
Instead, Solskjaer was full of praise for his players.
"Of course, when you come off the pitch winning 3-0, keeping the ball away from our goal - David de Gea didn't have a save to make - that's pleasing," he said.
"In football, sometimes, it goes for us and sometimes against. We worked on this this week. The boys were brilliant, they took it on board.
"Raphael Varane is a top player. He reads the game well. He's quick and so experienced. To get him back was massive."
Some had even questioned Ronaldo's place in the starting line-up but the Portuguese scored a splendid opener and set up Cavani for the second.
"I've been here three years as manager and Tuesday's training performance by Edinson Cavani is the best performance anyone has put into a training session here," he said.
"The old men led from the front. They play well together. They have loads of respect for each other. The work rate and quality they put in is second to none."
Such is life in the Old Trafford hot seat, however, that Solskjaer knows a poor result away to Atalanta in midweek in the Champions League will put him in the dock once again.
And he knows that it will need more than a win against a poor Tottenham side to erase the taste of the Liverpool debacle.
"Of course, it doesn't. That's always going to be in the history books - one of the darkest days. A dark spot on our CV. But football becomes history so quickly," Solskjaer said.
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Victorian plaster cast of a roof boss in the 14th century vault of the nave. Displayed as part of a small exhibition around the Abbey in 2013.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
The main street of Hahndorf is full of beautiful old golden sandstone buildings; shops, stores, barns and houses. Buildings of such age and solidity are quite uncommon in Australia.
Die Hauptstraße von Hahndorf ist voll von schönen alten goldenen Sandstein Gebäuden; Läden, Geschäfte, Scheunen und Häuser. Gebäude in einem Alter und Solidität sind recht selten in Australien.
The Church of St. Trophime is a former cathedral in the city of Arles. It was built in the Romanesque Provencal architectural tradition between the 12th century and the 15th century.
"This important pilgrimage church was the starting point of the so-called Via Tolosa, the route that led from Arles to Toulouse (Saint Sernin) with the final destination being Santiago de Compostela. "This road was taken by pilgrims coming from Italy, Switzerland or Central Europe, as well as the "Romieux" who, after Rome, were going to Compostela, or vice versa. They had come after crossing the Alps at Montgenèvre Pass, or by the road along the Ligurian coast."
"This stone façade (12th century) features an arched entryway, columns, statues and reliefs of various biblical figures. The portal shows the influence of classical antiquity, particularly in its gable, classical columnar forms, statues with Roman solidity (albeit a bit squatty), and architectural details — fluted pilasters, classical moldings, and variations of Corinthian capitals.
The sculptures over the portal, particularly the Last Judgement, and the columns in the adjacent cloister, are considered some of the finest examples of Romanesque sculpture.
The porch includes various decorative elements: fluted pilasters, capitals with acanthus leaves, friezes adorned with Greek motifs, acanthus leaves, palmettes, other foliage."
"The portal is has the Last Judgement as the theme, angels trumpeting the call that will wake us all from our deathly slumber, and then Christ, as King, standing in judgement on every soul; ’tis to Heaven or Hell that would be y’ur only path. The left part of the frieze above the columns shows the procession of the blessed; the right part is the procession of the damned."
Arles, Provence.
France, 2019
Part of the complete sequence of seven early 14th century windows preserving most of their original glass in the choir clerestorey.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Sunset at Northway, Northway Peak, Crystal Mountain, WA
After a slushy spring day, it froze hard :(
NOT the best solid ice bootpack up or chattery run down I've ever had, but plenty of vigorous exercise was involved.
Catching the sunset and some good cardio were my primary objectives, so I wasn't worried about the quality (solidity) of the snow. I got to practice kicking steps repeatedly into rock-hard snow (which was quite scary in places like Huckleberry) and I received a good full-body vibrating massage as I side-slipped and snow(ice)-plowed down the Gap Road with only dim, flat dusk light (facing East, nonetheless). Estimated temperature while I was at the summit: 25 F. Winds: 0-10 mph. Thanks for the ride down to employee housing, van-driving co-worker girl whom I had not met before that night and probably haven't seen since. By that point, my knees were totally beat up and needed recovery.
Next time, I'll pack crampons and some paragliding gear. (After I learn the necessary skills)
Well, what to say. It's a dinky little thing that's for sure.
Canvassing existing Flickr users of the R6 and also of the Panasonic Lumix TZ-3 tipped the scales into turning a vague discontent with the outgoing Olympus into a cash on the counter purchase from Gales, our local camera shop in London.
First impressions against the old technology.....
--it's cleverer than a very clever thing
--clarity of the images is a bit "coo!" after what I'd been used to
--the macro is amazing
--192 pages in the Book of Destructions is about 185 too many for me
--God gave me fingers like a bunch of bananas - & camera buttons too small
--low light pictures aren't up to much
--I think I might miss an old fashioned glass viewfinder
-- a seven times zoom is just fabbo-lux
--it doesn't seem to have quite the bust-proof solidity of the old Olympus
--what a lot you get for your money these days
--the local camera shop isn't dead - they more or less matched internet prices
Part of the complete sequence of seven early 14th century windows preserving most of their original glass in the choir clerestorey.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Another shot of Petworth Park (aka The Deer Park) in West Sussex. In the Autumn, the trees all individually burst into red and orange like [very] slow motion fireworks.
See this (and more) in higher resolution at:
the fleeting passage of feet slowly wears away the granite steps
A slow shutter speed gives these ghostly figures a fleeting presence; the strong diagonals and perspective (from the use of a wide angle lens), and material solidity of the steps, is a perfect contrast.
Photographed at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London yesterday. I wanted to contrast the solidity of the sculpture with the fluidity of the moving human shape.
What in water did Bloom, waterlover, drawer of water, watercarrier, returning to the range, admire?
Its universality: its democratic equality and constancy to its nature in seeking its own level: its vastness in the ocean of Mercator’s projection: its unplumbed profundity in the Sundam trench of the Pacific exceeding 8000 fathoms: the restlessness of its waves and surface particles visiting in turn all points of its seaboard: the independence of its units: the variability of states of sea: its hydrostatic quiescence in calm: its hydrokinetic turgidity in neap and spring tides: its subsidence after devastation: its sterility in the circumpolar icecaps, arctic and antarctic: its climatic and commercial significance: its preponderance of 3 to 1 over the dry land of the globe: its indisputable hegemony extending in square leagues over all the region below the subequatorial tropic of Capricorn: the multisecular stability of its primeval basin: its luteofulvous bed: its capacity to dissolve and hold in solution all soluble substances including millions of tons of the most precious metals: its slow erosions of peninsulas and islands, its persistent formation of homothetic islands, peninsulas and downwardtending promontories: its alluvial deposits: its weight and volume and density: its imperturbability in lagoons and highland tarns: its gradation of colours in the torrid and temperate and frigid zones: its vehicular ramifications in continental lakecontained streams and confluent oceanflowing rivers with their tributaries and transoceanic currents, gulfstream, north and south equatorial courses: its violence in seaquakes, waterspouts, Artesian wells, eruptions, torrents, eddies, freshets, spates, groundswells, watersheds, waterpartings, geysers, cataracts, whirlpools, maelstroms, inundations, deluges, cloudbursts: its vast circumterrestrial ahorizontal curve: its secrecy in springs and latent humidity, revealed by rhabdomantic or hygrometric instruments and exemplified by the well by the hole in the wall at Ashtown gate, saturation of air, distillation of dew: the simplicity of its composition, two constituent parts of hydrogen with one constituent part of oxygen: its healing virtues: its buoyancy in the waters of the Dead Sea: its persevering penetrativeness in runnels, gullies, inadequate dams, leaks on shipboard: its properties for cleansing, quenching thirst and fire, nourishing vegetation: its infallibility as paradigm and paragon: its metamorphoses as vapour, mist, cloud, rain, sleet, snow, hail: its strength in rigid hydrants: its variety of forms in loughs and bays and gulfs and bights and guts and lagoons and atolls and archipelagos and sounds and fjords and minches and tidal estuaries and arms of sea: its solidity in glaciers, icebergs, icefloes: its docility in working hydraulic millwheels, turbines, dynamos, electric power stations, bleachworks, tanneries, scutchmills: its utility in canals, rivers, if navigable, floating and graving docks: its potentiality derivable from harnessed tides or watercourses falling from level to level: its submarine fauna and flora (anacoustic, photophobe), numerically, if not literally, the inhabitants of the globe: its ubiquity as constituting 90 % of the human body: the noxiousness of its effluvia in lacustrine marshes, pestilential fens, faded flowerwater, stagnant pools in the waning moon.
It exudes civic pride and solidity, and yet it was the centre of much debate and controversy. It took several years to even choose a site, and it is sometimes known as "The Town Hall at the Wrong End of Town". The foundation stones were laid by King George V and Queen Mary in 1914. I think its position above the Mersey is excellent, but I am not a local so who am I to say?
Part of the complete sequence of seven early 14th century windows preserving most of their original glass in the choir clerestorey.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Immersed in the “second line” are ordinary people from local neighborhoods who excitedly emerge from their homes to view or join the parade. An elderly woman popped out of her door as the parade passed by her home. Even at her old age, an expression of spontaneous joy and childlike enthusiasm is delightfully transparent. The image is “housed,” not framed, among rustic domestic items: a breadboard, stove burner, spoons, and doorknobs. On the top, a doorknob and part of a lamp brings to mind the image of a coffee grinder in a warm kitchen. It is placed on a group of spindles pushed together and framed to give the effect of a charcoal grill. The theme of domesticity continues with a fry pan competes with wooden steak, spoon and ladle. A massive stump suggesting the solidity of home life, supports the entire assemblage presented at table level not eye level.
Part of the complete sequence of seven early 14th century windows preserving most of their original glass in the choir clerestorey.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Starck pays tribute to three icons of contemporary design and creates a fusion of styles to get a “summa stilistica”, the Masters chair. Reinterpreted in “space-age” mood, the Series 7 by Arne Jacobsen, the Tulip Armchair by Eero Saarinen and the Eiffel Chair by Charles Eames interweave in a charming and winding hybrid.
Supported on four slender legs, the Masters chair is roomy and comfortable. Its distinctiveness is, of course, in the back which is characterised by the solidity and void created by the meetings of curving lines of the three different backs which flow down and join together along the perimeter of the chair.
Part of the complete sequence of seven early 14th century windows preserving most of their original glass in the choir clerestorey.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
PAGEANT 23 (WESTERLY)
Sailboat Specifications
Hull Type: Twin Keel
Rigging Type: Masthead Sloop
LOA: 23.00 ft / 7.01 m
LWL: 19.00 ft / 5.79 m
Beam: 8.00 ft / 2.44 m
S.A. (reported): 236.00 ft2 / 21.93 m2
Draft (max): 2.83 ft / 0.86 m
Displacement: 4,300 lb / 1,950 kg
Ballast: 2,094 lb / 950 kg
S.A./Disp.: 14.32
Bal./Disp.: 48.70
Disp./Len.: 279.87
Construction: GRP
First Built: 1970
Last Built: 1979
# Built: 551
Designer: Laurent Giles
Builder: Westerly Yacht Construction Ltd (UK)
Builder: Westerly Marine, Hampshire
The Pageant is one of the smaller of the Westerly range designed by Laurent Giles and produced in volume in the 1970s. She offers an excellent small cruiser, with remarkable room below for her length, and has the typical Westerly virtues of strength and solidity.
The Pageant was designed for Westerly by Laurent Giles in 1969, as a replacement for the earlier Nomad. Production ran from 1970 to 1979, the yacht shown in the photographs here being one of the last of the 550 or so built. A very few (reportedly just six) fin-keel versions were also produced in 1976, these being called Westerly Kendals. As with all other Westerly Marine yachts the Pageant was very strongly built to Lloyds specifications, which meant that the building processes were rigorously monitored and all materials had to be approved by Lloyds in order that a hull certificate could be issued.
Auxiliary Power/Tanks (orig. equip.)
Make: Volvo Penta
Model: MD1B
Type: Diesel
HP: 10
Fuel: 10 gals / 38 L
Sailboat Calculations
S.A./Disp.: 14.32
Bal./Disp.: 48.70
Disp./Len.: 279.87
Comfort Ratio: 20.61
Capsize Screening Formula: 1.97
Accommodations
Water: 15 gals / 57 L
Headroom1.75m
Cabins 2
Berths 5/6
The Ziggurat at Ur, a massive stepped pyramid about 210 by 150 feet in size, is the most well-preserved monument from the remote age of the Sumerians. It consists of a series of successively smaller platforms which rose to a height of about 64 feet, and was constructed with a solid core of mud-brick covered by a thick skin of burnt-brick to protect it from the elements. Its corners are oriented to the compass points, and like the Parthenon, its walls slope slightly inwards, giving an impression of solidity.
The ziggurat was part of a temple complex that served as an administrative center for the city, and it was also thought to be the place on earth where the moon god Nanna, the patron deity of Ur, had chosen to dwell. Nanna was depicted as a wise and unfathomable old man with a flowing beard and four horns, and a single small shrine—the bedchamber of the god—was placed upon the ziggurat's summit. This was occupied each night by only one woman, chosen by the priests from among all the women of the city to be the god's companion. A kitchen, likely used to prepare food for the god, was located at the base of one of the ziggurat's side stairways.
Metropolitan - Foster and Partners
The site of the Metropolitan office development is at the northern edge of Pilsudski Square, one of Warsaw’s most important public spaces and home to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and national ceremonial events. Formerly Victory Square, the large space was bordered by the seventeenth-century Saski Palace and the Baroque Brühl Palace, however both were destroyed during the war. The new building completes the missing edge of the square, providing a modern counterpart to neighbouring historic buildings, while sympathetically echoing their height, massing and materials.
The building extends to the perimeter of the site to establish an appropriate presence on the square, while an open public space, 50 metres wide at its heart, maintains pedestrian routes through the site. The drum-like space provides the social focus of the scheme and is lined with cafes and restaurants. At its centre is a dramatic water feature, surrounded by a ring of mature trees. The circular motif continues with a ring of light, cantilevered from the first floor of the building, which provides illumination for evening al fresco dining, and a gently glowing halo of light around the top of the building.
Above the ground level shops and restaurants there are five storeys of flexible office accommodation, grouped in three separate, yet connected buildings. Below, the underground parking level provides space for 400 cars. The glazed façades maximise daylight in the offices and take advantage of views over the square and surrounding historic buildings, while vertical granite fins balance this sense of transparency with the impression of solidity. Transforming the building’s appearance from solid to transparent according to the viewer’s perspective, the fins give the façade a rich texture appropriate to the significance of the Metropolitan’s setting.
The passageway to the laundry facilties and the boiler room is blocked by the collapsed roof, I didn't pass because I wasn't so sure about the solidity - Der Zugangsbereich zu Teilen der Wäscherei und dem Kesselhaus sind durch das eingestürzte Dach blockiert. Ein Weitergehen hielt ich nicht für sinnvoll
Old Winery; courtesy of Rhine House Collection
Napa County, CA
Listed: 08/17/2001
The Beringer Winery Historic District is a complex of buildings and structures consisting of a winery, residential buildings, winery support structures, a series of circulation routes, and a number of significant landscape elements that retains a high degree of integrity from its period of significance. At the height of Beringer activity at the site, the property looked remarkably like its present configuration. In fact, it appears to be one of the few Napa wineries that retains all four of the central site components present at most wineries: the winery building, support structures, and the crucial site circulation, as well as the residential structures and precincts. A comparison of an 1878 Lithograph of the property with Sanborn Maps from the years 1886, 1889, 1910, and 1944 give a strong indication of the appearance of the Beringer property as it developed during its period of significance.
The historical resources within the Beringer Winery Historic District are significant at the state level under National Register Criterion A in the area of California agriculture, specifically the statewide development of the viticultural industry during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Unlike early Southern California wineries which diminished in production and distribution as other agricultural uses became more lucrative in that area of the state, the Northern California wineries expanded from the mid nineteenth century until Prohibition. Significant as a continuously family-operated agricultural enterprise, the Beringer Winery differs from other early California wineries in that it remained family-run through Prohibition, Repeal, World War II, and the beginnings of the second wine boom of the 1960s. The Beringer family operated one of the "Big Four" family wineries in the Napa Valley and utilized innovative agricultural and business practices to achieve this status. Leaving Charles Krug's winery and establishing his own winery, Jacob Beringer erected a large, modern winery incorporating the latest technology. In the late 1870s, the St. Helena Star called the Beringer wine cellar "the most handsomely finished of any in the valley, and for solidity of build and completeness of appointments can have no superior anywhere." Similar to other wineries developing in Napa during the third quarter of the nineteenth century, the Beringer Winery site consisted of a residential precinct; a winery, distillery, and storage buildings located in an industrial precinct for wine production; as well as vineyards, orchards, and gardens. Elevating its significance within an agricultural context, the Beringer Winery Historic District is one of the few California wineries remaining that fully illustrates the relationship of the industrial wine making precinct to the more residential components of the winery site linked by extant circulation routes. In conjunction with establishing modern wine making practices, the Beringer winery produced large quantities of wine and distributed products across the country, including an outlet in New York.
One district contributor, the Rhine House, is currently listed on the National Register of Historic Places under Criterion C, architecture. The Rhine House, built on the property in the 1880s as Frederick Beringer's residence, is representative of the work of a significant local architect, Albert Schroepfer; it is a good example of the use of local stone; and possesses distinctive characteristics including a remarkable collection of stained glass. Additionally, the Beringer Brothers Winery building is a California State Historical Landmark.
This is an early work by Caravaggio, who sought above all to convey the reality and solidity of the surrounding world. We can already see the elements of the artist's style which were to have such a widespread influence on other artists. The figure of a young boy dressed in a white shirt stands out clearly against the dark background. The sharp sidelighting and the falling shadows give the objects an almost tangible volume and weight. Caravaggio was interested in the uniqueness of the surrounding world, and there are markedly individual features not only in the youth's face but also in the objects which make up the still life: the damaged pear, the crack in the lute, the crumpled pages of the music. The melody written on those pages is that of a then fashionable song by Jacques Arcadelt, "You know that I love you". Love as the theme of this work is also indicated by other objects. For instance, the cracked lute was a metaphor for the love that fails, as in Tennyson's Idylls of the King: "It is the little rift within the lute, That by and by will make the music mute" (Merlin and Vivien).
At the northern end of the north transept was formerly a large chapel (possibly an earlier Lady Chapel?) which consisted of a nave and chancel divided by an open arch with slender 'Y' tracery supported by a slender column. Following the Dissolution the 'nave' part of this chapel was demolished but the eastern part beyond the arch was retained with the archway partially blocked with the remainder glazed to form a large window. This fine vaulted room is at present closed to visitors, being used as the Abbey's choir room.
In 2005 I was still working for Norgrove Studios who were commissioned to reglaze the arch with quarries in handmade glass. I thus got to not only get inside a part of the Abbey not normally seen by the public but also had the rare chance to see the openings of the arch re-opened while it was reglazed, return to its original state, if only for a mere few hours.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Re-done.
In the first I had closely followed a tutorial. In this I have tried to keep the colour and solidity of the photo.
Astounding! Gracious custom built single family home in Chicago's East Village. All brick residence offers elegant finishes with coffered ceilings and crown molding and perfectly selected stones and tiling. Comfortable rooms including massive master suite with a spa-like bath. This is a home that will not disappoint, especially the attached garage or decks atop the home and garage. Call Tom McCarey to arrange private showing at 773.848.9241. Delightful custom built single family in Chicago's East Village. What sets this home apart? Its profound solidity of construction, made of all brick with limestone accents, the detail within with coffered ceilings and crown molding, and the degree of detail with perfectly chosen stones and mosaic tiling in the baths. The home features three outdoor areas that include decks atop the home and garage and a balcony off the home's great room. Another unique and unexpected plus is an attached two-car garage. Arrange private showings with Tom McCarey of The Real Estate Lounge Chicago at 773.848.9241.
Brighton & Hove Albion forward Leandro Trossard's first-half goal was cancelled out by Newcastle United's Isaac Hayden as the two sides played out a 1-1 draw at the Amex Stadium on Saturday (Nov 6) that extended the visitors' winless start to the season.
The draw kept Brighton in sixth place in the Premier League table with 17 points from 11 games. Newcastle are second from bottom on five points.
After a dull start, the game came to life in the 22nd minute when Trossard was brought down by Ciaran Clark and awarded a penalty following a lengthy VAR check. The Belgium international stepped up himself to blast the spot-kick past Karl Darlow.
Brighton dominated the ball as Newcastle failed to create any openings, registering no shots on target in the first half.
"I wanted a win. Another VAR decision against us... I'm not disputing that but I'm talking about the reaction of the players. We have had some difficult moments this season but the group is together," said Newcastle caretaker manager Graeme Jones.
Newcastle had Eddie Howe, who is reportedly close to becoming their new permanent head coach, watching on with Jones saying that the team were in the middle of a process and had shown improvement.
"In my time in the last couple of weeks it has been a process. You have to start with solidity, which we did against Chelsea and today we were more on the front foot. You can't go from the Tottenham game where we were wide open to playing like Barcelona," added Jones.
Trossard came close to adding a second immediately after the restart but his low drive was kept out by Darlow before Newcastle equalised in the 66th minute through midfielder Hayden, who volleyed home from close range.
"Up to the goal we had really good control... we did our best to keep them quiet and their goal changed the complexion of the game. It is near impossible to control a Premier League game for 90 minutes. A point is good," said Brighton boss Graham Potter.
Brighton ended the game with 10 men and centre half Lewis Dunk in goal after keeper Robert Sanchez was sent off for fouling Callum Wilson just outside the area with the striker clear on goal.
"It looked like Callum Wilson was through, it wasn't the best action from us, but you have to credit Newcastle who came here with a plan," added Potter.
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Blythe size stand made of painted acrylic resin.
It shows a little bit of a cobbled street including a storm drain and it's inspired by cities like Rome or Lisbon.
Because of the nature of the material used, it has a nice strong and compact presence and a stone-like solidity.
The pole is removable and it's crossed by a tin wire that can be bent to grab the doll.
Napa County, CA
Listed: 08/17/2001
The Beringer Winery Historic District is a complex of buildings and structures consisting of a winery, residential buildings, winery support structures, a series of circulation routes, and a number of significant landscape elements that retains a high degree of integrity from its period of significance. At the height of Beringer activity at the site, the property looked remarkably like its present configuration. In fact, it appears to be one of the few Napa wineries that retains all four of the central site components present at most wineries: the winery building, support structures, and the crucial site circulation, as well as the residential structures and precincts. A comparison of an 1878 Lithograph of the property with Sanborn Maps from the years 1886, 1889, 1910, and 1944 give a strong indication of the appearance of the Beringer property as it developed during its period of significance.
The historical resources within the Beringer Winery Historic District are significant at the state level under National Register Criterion A in the area of California agriculture, specifically the statewide development of the viticultural industry during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Unlike early Southern California wineries which diminished in production and distribution as other agricultural uses became more lucrative in that area of the state, the Northern California wineries expanded from the mid nineteenth century until Prohibition. Significant as a continuously family-operated agricultural enterprise, the Beringer Winery differs from other early California wineries in that it remained family-run through Prohibition, Repeal, World War II, and the beginnings of the second wine boom of the 1960s. The Beringer family operated one of the "Big Four" family wineries in the Napa Valley and utilized innovative agricultural and business practices to achieve this status. Leaving Charles Krug's winery and establishing his own winery, Jacob Beringer erected a large, modern winery incorporating the latest technology. In the late 1870s, the St. Helena Star called the Beringer wine cellar "the most handsomely finished of any in the valley, and for solidity of build and completeness of appointments can have no superior anywhere." Similar to other wineries developing in Napa during the third quarter of the nineteenth century, the Beringer Winery site consisted of a residential precinct; a winery, distillery, and storage buildings located in an industrial precinct for wine production; as well as vineyards, orchards, and gardens. Elevating its significance within an agricultural context, the Beringer Winery Historic District is one of the few California wineries remaining that fully illustrates the relationship of the industrial wine making precinct to the more residential components of the winery site linked by extant circulation routes. In conjunction with establishing modern wine making practices, the Beringer winery produced large quantities of wine and distributed products across the country, including an outlet in New York.
One district contributor, the Rhine House, is currently listed on the National Register of Historic Places under Criterion C, architecture. The Rhine House, built on the property in the 1880s as Frederick Beringer's residence, is representative of the work of a significant local architect, Albert Schroepfer; it is a good example of the use of local stone; and possesses distinctive characteristics including a remarkable collection of stained glass. Additionally, the Beringer Brothers Winery building is a California State Historical Landmark.
Want to know what a Viking Cathedral would look like? Well, here you go. St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall (the kirk in its name, indeed), built in the 12th century under the rule of Earl Rögnvald (later canonised - not in the slightest bit saintly that I can tell).
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Great Bedwyn, Wiltshire
St.Mary
A cruciform church of C12-C13, outside a preaching cross, with some remaining detail. of particular note is the nave with its fine capitals, which even though over restored, still have a shapely grandeur and solidity that makes them and the church worthy of special attention. The chancel is long with lancet windows, the whole feel of the place is grand and well proportioned.The monument is of John Seymour brother of Jane Seymour Queen of Henry VII. The heraldic glass was brought from Wolfhall by Georgina wife of the 5th Marquess of Ailesbury in 1905 from Wolf Hall at Burbage.
Yesterday's Tomorrow Today!
That time the aliens came to mid-century Edmonton and built their futuristic pods in the north-east corner of downtown.
On this drab grey day the vertical windows of the high-rise towers reflect the dark clouds near the horizon, while the quirky angles of city hall and the arena allow them to reflect a bright patch that appeared high in the sky.
When I first spotted this phenomenon the reflections were much brighter as I hurriedly grabbed camera and tripod, but by the time I got set up it was already beginning to fade (being old is great, until you have to move fast). In hindsight, this subdued version is closer to the equivalent of what I saw and felt; subtle is always more heartfelt than dazzle.
Being only one stop down from the zoom's long-end maximum of f/5.6 caused vignetting in the corners, adding a vintage feel. With so much sky the meter suggested an exposure that would render the backlit buildings quite dark; I further reduced the exposure by just over one stop.
Horizontal lines in an image can add a quality of stability or solidity, while stronger verticals can add vibrancy or nervous energy. To this latter end I compressed the photo horizontally by 10% to accentuate the verticals and impart an edgy, twitchy feel, with limited success. If Stantec Tower appears skinnier than usual, that's why.
Taken at 2:39pm, May 5 2024.
P.S. If 'Dark City' sounds familiar, it is also the name of a 1950 crime melodrama starring Lizabeth Scott and Charleton Heston, but stolen by supporting players and future Dragnet partners Jack Webb and Harry Morgan.
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At the northern end of the north transept was formerly a large chapel (possibly an earlier Lady Chapel?) which consisted of a nave and chancel divided by an open arch with slender 'Y' tracery supported by a slender column. Following the Dissolution the 'nave' part of this chapel was demolished but the eastern part beyond the arch was retained with the archway partially blocked with the remainder glazed to form a large window. This fine vaulted room is at present closed to visitors, being used as the Abbey's choir room.
In 2005 I was still working for Norgrove Studios who were commissioned to reglaze the arch with quarries in handmade glass. I thus got to not only get inside a part of the Abbey not normally seen by the public but also had the rare chance to see the openings of the arch re-opened while it was reglazed, return to its original state, if only for a mere few hours.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
The High Court of Australia, designed by architect James and Nicholas and completed in 1980, is a prominent example of Brutalist architecture. The building is characterized by bold geometric forms, with its massive concrete structure and large, angular volumes dominating the site. Its use of raw concrete and sharp lines emphasizes a sense of solidity and permanence, aligning with the Brutalist emphasis on functional design and a stark, utilitarian aesthetic.
The building’s design prioritizes function, with large, open spaces to accommodate the needs of the judiciary. Its geometric configuration, while imposing, ensures that the court's operations are central to the design, with clear divisions between public and private areas. The architectural language of the High Court reflects Brutalism’s commitment to raw materiality and practicality, providing an efficient, no-frills environment for the country’s highest legal institution.
Metropolitan - Foster and Partners
The site of the Metropolitan office development is at the northern edge of Pilsudski Square, one of Warsaw’s most important public spaces and home to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and national ceremonial events. Formerly Victory Square, the large space was bordered by the seventeenth-century Saski Palace and the Baroque Brühl Palace, however both were destroyed during the war. The new building completes the missing edge of the square, providing a modern counterpart to neighbouring historic buildings, while sympathetically echoing their height, massing and materials.
The building extends to the perimeter of the site to establish an appropriate presence on the square, while an open public space, 50 metres wide at its heart, maintains pedestrian routes through the site. The drum-like space provides the social focus of the scheme and is lined with cafes and restaurants. At its centre is a dramatic water feature, surrounded by a ring of mature trees. The circular motif continues with a ring of light, cantilevered from the first floor of the building, which provides illumination for evening al fresco dining, and a gently glowing halo of light around the top of the building.
Above the ground level shops and restaurants there are five storeys of flexible office accommodation, grouped in three separate, yet connected buildings. Below, the underground parking level provides space for 400 cars. The glazed façades maximise daylight in the offices and take advantage of views over the square and surrounding historic buildings, while vertical granite fins balance this sense of transparency with the impression of solidity. Transforming the building’s appearance from solid to transparent according to the viewer’s perspective, the fins give the façade a rich texture appropriate to the significance of the Metropolitan’s setting.
Castelvecchio Bridge
The Castel Vecchio Bridge (Italian: Ponte di Castel Vecchio) or Scaliger Bridge (Italian: Ponte Scaligero) is a fortified bridge in Verona, northern Italy, over the Adige River. The segmental arch bridge featured the world's largest span at the time of its construction (48.70 m).
History
It was built (most likely in 1354-1356) by Cangrande II della Scala, to grant him a safe way of escape from the annexed eponymous castle in the event of a rebellion of the population against his tyrannic rule. The solidity of the construction allowed it to resist untouched until, in the late 18th century, the French troops destroyed the tower on the left bank (although it probably dated from the occupation of Verona by the Visconti or the Republic of Venice).
The bridge was however totally destroyed, along with the Ponte Pietra, by the retreating German troops on April 24, 1945. A faithful reconstruction begun in 1949 and was finished in 1951, with the exception of the left tower.
Architecture
The bridge is in red brick in the upper part, as are all landmarks in Verona from the Scaliger era, and in white marble in the lower one. It includes three spans of decreasing length starting from pentagonal towers. The largest span, measuring 48.70 m, meant that the bridge featured at the time of its construction the world's largest bridge arch (the others measure 29.15 and 24.11 meters). The two pylons are 12.10 x 19.40 and 6.30 x 17.30 meters respectively.
The bridge has a total length of 120 m.
Legends
According to a legend, Cangrande awarded the designer of the bridge, Guglielmo Bevilacqua, with a sword which had belonged to Saint Martin.
Another legend tells that the designer presented himself at the inauguration riding a horse, ready to flee away in case the bridge had crumbled down.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Part of the complete sequence of seven early 14th century windows preserving most of their original glass in the choir clerestorey.
The attractive town of Tewkesbury has been dominated by its superb abbey church since the beginning of the 12th century, and we can be forever grateful to its townspeople for purchasing the monastic church in 1540 for £453 for use as their parish church, saving it from the fate that befell countless similar great churches across the land during the turmoil of the Dissolution. It reminds us both how lucky we are to still marvel at it today, yet also how great a loss to our heritage the period wrought when many more such buildings were so utterly plundered as to have gone without trace (the fate of the monastic buildings here and even the lady chapel of the church whose footings are laid out in the grass at the east end).
Tewkesbury Abbey is thus rightly celebrated as one of our greatest non-cathedral churches, and remarkably much of the original Norman church remains substantially intact, most apparently in the great central tower, a fine example of Romanesque architecture adorned with rows of blind-arcading. The west front is dominated by a massive Norman-arched recess (enclosing the somewhat later west window) and the nave and transepts remain largely as originally built, though this is less clear externally owing to the changes made to the windows, nearly all of which were enlarged in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style. This century also saw the complete rebuilding of the eastern limb of the church, of a form less common in England with radiating chapels surrounding the eastern apse of the choir (the central lady chapel sadly missing since 1540).
The interior reveals far more of the Romanesque structure with mighty columns supporting the round Norman arches of the nave arcades giving the building a great sense of solidity. The space is further enlivened by the changes made during the 14th century by the stunning vault over the nave (adorned with a rewarding series of figurative bosses) which sits surprisingly well with the Norman work below. Beyond the apsidal choir beckons, and both this and the space below the tower are enriched with stunningly complex vaulted ceilings (replete with further bosses and gilded metal stars), all ablaze with colour and gilding.
There is much to enjoy in glass here, most remarkably a complete set of 14th century glazing in the clerestorey of the choir, seven windows filled with saints and prophets (and most memorably two groups of knights in the westernmost windows on each side). A few of the figures have fared less well over the centuries but on the whole this is a wonderfully rare and well preserved scheme. There is much glass from the 19th century too, with an extensive scheme in the nave of good quality work by Hardman's, and more recently a pair of rich windows by Tom Denny were added in one of the polygonal chapels around the east end.
Some of the most memorable features are the monuments with many medieval tombs of note, primarily the effigies and chantry chapels of members of the Despenser family around the choir (two of the chantries being miniature architectural gems in their own right with exquisite fan-vaulting). In one of the apsidal chapels is the unusual cenotaph to Abbot Wakeman with his grisly cadaver effigy, a late medieval reminder of earthly mortality.
Tewkesbury Abbey is not to be missed and is every bit as rewarding as many of our cathedrals (superior in fact to all but the best). It is normally kept open and welcoming to visitors on a daily basis. I have also had the privilege of working on this great building several times over the years (as part of the team at the studio I once worked for), and have left my mark in glass in a few discreet places.
Deep within the solidity
of massive rocks, when sliced,
are revealed the delicate and
powerful intervening forces
that congealed in this eon for us to see.
Tribute to Leonardo da Vinci's 10 attributes of sight : Darkness, light, solidity, colour, form, position, distance, nearness, motion and rest.
I used 2 balls of yarn called Baby Econo in Seashore multi print, I love this yarn 'cause he has a lot of pretty color like blue, green, white and pink with a little wire of shining tread that adds a glittering style. So, it's really particular and a little bit expensive too, but It worth it! The front of the dress is embellished with two delicious flowers overlapped done with the same material. I think they add a touch of glamour like the ruffle in the bottom of the skirt and the ruffles around the armholes. The yarn is a sport light one and that give enough solidity and enough lightness that it's perfect during spring and fall seasons! Plus, it's completely machine washable and dryable at low settings and that's a blessing with little one's!
This dress fits a girl around 6-12 moths. It's completely handmade and took me 5 hours to realize, following some pattern find on magazine.
The hat fits 15 inch noggin and has a pretty flower sewed on a side and so the bib.
Blythe size stand made of painted acrylic resin.
It shows a little bit of a cobbled street including a storm drain and it's inspired by cities like Rome or Lisbon.
Because of the nature of the material used, it has a nice strong and compact presence and a stone-like solidity.
Measures
Height: 7.5 inch / 19 cm.
Diameter: 4.7 inch / 12 cm.
Weight: 12 ounces / 350 g. aprox.