View allAll Photos Tagged SteelStructure
Male Zebra Finch on a metal structure at a bore, providing cattle with water, on Kilcowera Station. Abundant and familiar small birds across a vast area of the continent.
A wind mill covered in the gold hue of a morning light as storm clouds swirl overhead outside of Malta, Montana.
Talk about being in the right place at the right time; the light this morning was very fleeting. And if had not been for the quickly approaching storm, this photograph would not have been nearly as interesting.
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© 2007 Todd Klassy. All Rights Reserved.
Tai Po Waterfront Park, Tolo Harbour New Territories Hong Kong. The Lookout Tower is a feature of a 25ha park on the Tai Mei Tuk Cycling route and with a wide range of facilities and amenities for visitors and nearby residents.The Tower is 32.4m high. Tower Completed in 1997.
The spiral beams supporting the ramp are laminated douglas fir from renewable forests in New Zealand.
Design Architect: Rob Deutscher (working with Hassell) Engineering: Rod Gibbons, Maunsell (Aecom)
The structures and barges BankSide and the river Hull close to Stoneferry 5 January 2020 notice the long staircase to climb to the top of the red bricked building! in Monochrome
This is the first image from my architectural diptych (that may eventually become a triptych) of the amazing Lake Point Tower building in Chicago (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Point_Tower).
I shot this image during the Vision Explorers workshop that was held last September by and with great photographers such as Joel Tjintjelaar, Julia Anna Gospodarou, Armand Dijcks, Sharon Tenenbaum, Daniel Portal, Mabry Campbell and so many more that I cannot mention them all.
To take this picture, I remember I was almost lying on the ground to have a good angle and accentuate the leading lines... It was fun, xcept for the people and especially guards around looking at me like I was a mad man or... a threat to security... Because every long exposure photographer will tell you they got bugged at one time or another while setting up their tripod, because OBVIOUSLY we might be endangering public safety... right?
The other half of the diptych is on its way soon, so stay tuned!
And just to tease a little more... this is NOT the picture I like the best of the pair...
Technical info:
16 stops (10+6 IRND filters)
f/7.1
ISO 100
32 mm
145s exposure
Software:
PS CS5
Silver Efex Pro2
For more information about my photography:
The Shard - West view from the 68th floor
A view at the heart of the city. In the background, the Thames at Blackfriars Bridge, Tate Modern, Millenium Bridge, and Shakespeare's Globe, in the foreground Southwark Bridge, London Bridge and Southwark Cathedral.
And a blink to the fascinating steel structure of the building.
Quite dark that late in the evening, heavy rain, through thick blue secured glass, no tripod allowed. I've tried my best.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=yuTMWgOduFM
Pulp - Common People
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See my most interesting here.
interestingby.isaias.com.mx/pm.php?id=8539834@N06
See all of my images here in my gallery on black:
The demolition begins on the external structure of the Gasometre
More information here: huddersfieldhub.co.uk/date-is-set-for-demolition-of-hudde...
The demolition is gathering pace on the external structure of the Gasometre
More information here: huddersfieldhub.co.uk/date-is-set-for-demolition-of-hudde...
The demolition is gathering pace on the external structure of the Gasometre
More information here: huddersfieldhub.co.uk/date-is-set-for-demolition-of-hudde...
Just came across this shot which I photographed during our visit to St Louis in Summer of 2006. Figured I'd share it on Flickr!
Link to more info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gateway_Arch
La Grande Roue de Montreal in the Old Port of Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
As the tallest ferris wheel in Canada, it was opened to the public on September 1, 2017, to celebrate the city of Montreal's 375th anniversary.
Its construction cost $28,000,000 CDN and was paid by private investors.
It is a Ferris wheel model WS60 (White Series 60 metres) from the Dutch Wheels Company (Vekoma Group) with a height of 60 metres (200 feet) and comprised of 42 passenger units, each of which can fit 8 persons for a total capacity of 336 passengers. A ride last 20 minutes.
The Russian Woodpecker, this gigantic antenna system called Duga-3 is located near Prypiat in the Chernobyl area. It was built in the 70's as an early missile detection system (over-the-horizon radar system).
Flagpole Parliament House, Canberra. Architect: Romaldo Giurgola - Mitchel Giurgola Thorp. The Building was opened in1988 to coincide with Australia's Bi-Centennary.
Photo taken mid 1980's during a construction visit. Epson V700 Olympus OM1 Kodachrome.
"The flag flown from the 81 metres (266 feet) flagpole is 12.8 by 6.4 m (42 by 21 ft), about the size of half a tennis court. The flagpole weighs 250 tonnes and is made of polished stainless steel from Wollongong. It was designed to be the pinnacle of Parliament House and is an easily recognisable symbol of national government. It is visible by day from outside and inside Parliament House and floodlit at night. The flag itself weighs approximately 15 kg (33 lb)." Source: Wikipedia
A blue sphere hangs in the sky of Eiffel tower since a few days, as a symbol of planet Earth, on the occasion of COP21 being held in Paris starting from Sunday, November 29, 2015.
Une sphère bleue accrochée dans le ciel de la tour Eiffel depuis quelques jours, symbolisant notre planète, à l'occasion de la COP21 qui se tiendra à Paris à partir du dimanche 29 Novembre.
This scary structure was used during cold war times as an early warning radar. It should report the launching of american missiles within seconds.
It has recently been announced that, following a poll by Lancashire Telegraph readers, Blackburn’s landmark £10-million bridge will be named after AW.AW was, of course, born in Blackburn, and lived here for the first thirty-three years of his life. He founded Blackburn Rovers Supporters Club, which may have been a major factor in his topping the poll.Work began on the 800-tonne steel structure the September before last. The Freckleton Street dual carriageway will form part of a multi-million scheme to transform the area, with the new road creating a link from Bolton Road to Barbara Castle Way.
Alfred ("A.") Wainwright MBE (17 January 1907 – 20 January 1991) was a British fellwalker, guidebook author and illustrator. His seven-volume Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, published between 1955 and 1966 and consisting entirely of reproductions of his hand-written manuscript, has become the standard reference work to 214 of the fells of the English Lake District. Among his 40-odd other books is the first guide to the Coast to Coast Walk, a 192-mile long-distance footpath devised by Wainwright which remains popular today.