View allAll Photos Tagged Structure,

STRUCTURES, palladium

Part of the terra cotta statuary on the facade of the mission building.

 

Known as the "White Dove of the Desert", located just south of Tucson, Arizona.

 

"A National Historic Landmark, San Xavier Mission was founded as a Catholic mission by Father Eusebio Kino in 1692. Construction of the current church began in 1783 and was completed in 1797.

 

The oldest intact European structure in Arizona, the church's interior is filled with marvelous original statuary and mural paintings.

 

The current church dates from the late 1700's, when Southern Arizona was part of New Spain. In 1783, Franciscan missionary Fr. Juan Bautista Velderrain was able to begin construction on the present structure using money borrowed from a Sonoran rancher. He hired an architect, Ignacio Gaona, and a large workforce of O'odham to create the present church.

 

Constructed of low-fire clay brick, stone and lime mortar, the entire structure is roofed with masonry vaults, making it unique among Spanish Colonial buildings within U. S. borders. The architect, Ignacio Gaona, is credited with building another church in Caborca, Sonora Mexico.

 

Little is known about the people who decorated the interior. The artwork was probably commissioned by Fr. Velderrain's successor and most likely created by artists from Queretero in New Spain (now Mexico). The sculpture was created in guild workshops and carried by donkey through the Pimeria Alta to its destination at the Mission. Craftsmen created gessoed clothing once the sculpture was in place.

 

The church contains numerous references to the Franciscan cord both on the facade and throughout the church.

 

The shell, a symbol of pilgrimage after the patron saint of Spain, Santiago or James the Greater, is replicated all through the structure in window treatments, the sanctuary, the facade and other details within the interior.

 

The Baroque architecture style features playful dramatic elements such as theatrical curtain displays, faux doors, marbling, and overall sense of balance. "

 

Linemen prepare to pull an underground transmission cable through conduit at a transition structure.

© Christy Dodd (Freackled Feather Photography)

The imposing structure of Stockport's Railway Viaduct. When it was finished in 1840 it was the largest viaduct in the world. It was widened in the 1880s, and the join is still visible. It appears in several of Lowry's paintings.

 

Stockport Viaduct on Wikipedia

Snowing on the cold and dark iron structure.

project for Club 52 - Polyclaykunst.de

"Bridge 1"

 

STRUCTURES is a series of generative art pieces the explores the constructions of our world by taking photographs of man-made and natural structures and placing them into a new structure. This process semi-randomly fragments and rearranges the photographs into a grid of my design. I'll often run the images through this process several times, using various grid structures along the way.

 

Programs used: Lightroom, Photoshop, Processing

Structure Fires Throughout the Nevada Yuba Placer Unit

Structure Synth terminates the recursion if the number of objects is greater than the given threshold ('set maxobjects ...') or if the recursion depth becomes greater than the maximum depth ('set maxdepth ...'). It is also possible to set a maxdepth for an individual rule ('rule R1 maxdepth 5').

 

I've added two new rules for controlling the termination.

 

'set minsize {size}' and 'set maxsize {size}' allows you to specify how large or small a given object can be before terminating. The 'size' parameter refers to the length of the diagonal of a unit cube in the current local state. (The initial coordinate frame goes from (0,0,0) to (1,1,1) and hence has a diagonal length of sqrt(3)~1.7). It is possible to specify both a mix and a min size. The termination criteria only stops the current branch - if other branches are still within a valid range, the will be continued.

 

This is very useful for preventing Structure Synth from creating boxes which cannot be seen anyway or from growing without bounds.

 

The image shows the same structure at three different minimum size tresholds.

 

Example script (requires a post-version 0.9 of Structure Synth!):

 

set minsize 0.8 // or 0.4, or 0.2

 

set maxdepth 600

set background #333

{ h 30 sat 0.2 h -67 b 0.8 } spiral

 

rule spiral w 100 {

box2

{ y 0.4 rx 90 hue 1 s 0.995 b 0.999 } spiral

}

 

rule spiral w 100 {

box2

{ y 0.4 rx 90 hue -1 rz -90 s 0.995 b 0.999 } spiral

}

 

rule spiral w 100 {

box2

{ y 0.4 rx 90 hue 0 rz 90 s 0.995 b 0.995 } spiral

}

 

rule spiral w 3 {

{ rz 5 s 1 1 1 } spiral

{ ry 4 h 3 s 1 1 1 } spiral

}

 

rule box2 {

{ s 1 5 1 } box

}

 

rule box2 {

{ s 5 1 1 } box

}

 

rule box2 {

}

Twitter | Instagram

 

Structure 45

Tulum Ruins

Tulum, Quintana Roo

 

Konica Hexar RF

Canon Serenar 28mm f/3.5

Kodak Portra 400

. . . . among the weeds down by the creek

 

worth seeing LARGE

It's nice when you come to Milan to take a lot of pictures and you find the one of the day in your flat!

A grim day in the Yorkshire Dales above Rylstone near Skipton. Part of a walk around Barden Reservoirs.

Rylstone Cross stands high on Rylstone Fell overlooking the parish from the south-east. Originally it was a large stone in the form of a man and was known as 'The Stone Man'. A wooden cross was erected on the top of the stone pillar to commemorate 'The Peace of Paris', the date on the back is 1885 and the initials DD and TB which are carved on it signify the Duke of Devonshire and T. Broughton, who was land agent to the Duke. The wooden structure has been renewed several times, the last occasion being after the severe winter of 1947. The present cross was rebuilt in 1997.

Thanks to Terry Roberts for the information, I "pinched" it from his photo (hope he doesn't mind)

Yaxchilán, Structure 33

 

Yaxchilan is an ancient Maya city located on the bank of the Usumacinta River in what is now the state of Chiapas, Mexico. In the Late Classic Period, Yaxchilan was one of the most powerful Maya states along the course of the Usumacinta, with Piedras Negras as its major rival. Architectural styles in subordinate sites in the Usumacinta region demonstrate clear differences that mark a clear boundary between the two kingdoms.

 

Yaxchilan was a large center, important throughout the Classic era, and the dominant power of the Usumacinta River area. It dominated such smaller sites as Bonampak, and had a long rivalry with Piedras Negras and at least for a time with Tikal; it was a rival of Palenque, with which Yaxchilan warred in 654.

 

The site is particularly known for its well-preserved sculptured stone lintels set above the doorways of the main structures. These lintels, together with the stelae erected before the major buildings, contain hieroglyphic texts describing the dynastic history of the city.

 

Structure 33, in the Central Acropolis, has been described as a masterpiece in stone and was probably dedicated in 756 by Bird Jaguar IV. The structure overlooks the plaza and the river and would have been prominent to river traffic in the 8th century. It has plain lower walls with three doorways, each of the which supports a well preserved lintel (Yaxchilan Lintels 1 to 3). In the centre of the back wall of the structure, opposite the central doorway, is a niche containing the headless sculpture of a human figure, probably Bird Jaguar IV himself. The roof of the structure is largely intact, including a sloped roof supporting a frieze and a well preserved roof comb. There are niches in both the roof comb and the frieze, the niche in the roof comb contains the remains of a sculpted figure. Tennons on both roof sections once supported stucco decoration. Leading up to the front of Structure 33 from the plaza is a stairway, the top step of which is sculpted, this step is known as Hieroglyphic Stairway 2.

 

(source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaxchilan)

// Produced by Structure Synth V 0.4

// (http://structuresynth.sf.net/)

 

set maxdepth 600

 

set background #f94

 

{ h 30 sat 0.7 } spiral

 

{ ry 180 h 30 sat 0.7 } spiral

 

rule spiral w 100 {

 

box

 

{ y 0.4 rx 5 hue 1 s 0.995 b 0.999 } spiral

 

}

 

rule spiral w 100 {

 

box

 

{ y 0.4 rx 5 hue -1 rz -5 s 0.995 b 0.999 } spiral

 

}

 

rule spiral w 100 {

 

box

 

{ y 0.4 rx 5 hue 0 rz 5 s 0.995 b 0.995 } spiral

 

}

 

rule spiral w 3 {

 

{ rx 15 } spiral

 

{ ry 180 h 3 } spiral

 

}

  

Arcelormittal Orbit

The ArcelorMittal Orbit is a 115-metre-high (377 ft) sculpture and observation tower in the Olympic Park in Stratford, London. It is Britain's largest piece of public art,[3] and is intended to be a permanent lasting legacy of London's hosting of the 2012 Summer Olympics, assisting in the post-Olympics regeneration of the Stratford area. Sited between the Olympic Stadium and the Aquatics Centre, it allows visitors to view the whole Olympic Park from two observation platforms.

 

Orbit was designed by Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond of engineering Group Arup. Announced on 31 March 2010, it was expected to be completed by December 2011, though like many projects on the Olympic Park that date was pushed back. The project came about after Mayor of London Boris Johnson and Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell decided in 2008 that the Olympic Park needed "something extra". Designers were asked for ideas for an "Olympic tower" at least 100 metres (330 ft) high, and Orbit was the unanimous choice from proposals considered by a nine-person advisory panel.

 

The project was expected to cost £19.1 million, with £16 million coming from Britain's richest man, the steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, Chairman of the ArcelorMittal steel company, and the balance of £3.1 million coming from the London Development Agency. The name "ArcelorMittal Orbit" combines the name of Mittal's company, as chief sponsor, with "Orbit", the original working title for Kapoor and Balmond's design.

 

Kapoor and Balmond believe that Orbit represents a radical advance in the architectural field of combining sculpture and structural engineering, and that it combines both stability and instability in a work that visitors can engage with and experience via an incorporated spiral walkway. It has been both praised and criticised for its bold design. It has also been criticised as a vanity project, of questionable lasting use or merit as a public art project.

  

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArcelorMittal_Orbit

 

Barcelona, Spain

rome, italy, italia

Фото начала реконструкции ЦУМа, Киев 2013.

 

Photo of beginning of Central Universal Shop in Kiev. 2013.

20150308_0033

1 2 ••• 19 20 22 24 25 ••• 79 80