View allAll Photos Tagged Structures
External support structure for a large fuel tank that changes size based on how full it is. Guess it was empty that day =)
edit: This no longer exists. To my surprise, it was torn down two weeks after this photo was taken.
From the exhibition '2nd International Festival of Artistic Tapestry Structures and Connections' in May 2007, Krakow, Poland.
Structure located in a rural area just outside of Yazoo City, Mississippi. Appears to be an old store or church but not exactly sure. Perhaps it has been used as both over time and for something else these days.
Wonderful structural, minimalist views of gas pipes outside of residences in Tel Aviv. These were all shapes and sizes and numbers of pipes. Generally a single larger pipe came up from the ground and spilt into multiple smaller pipes, connected with valves and meters, and then further pipes dissapeared into building walls.
wikipedia: Tokyo Tower (東京タワー, Tōkyō-tawā) is a communications tower located in Shiba Park, Minato, Tokyo, Japan. The 332.6-meter-tall (1,091 ft) orange and white lattice tower is the tallest self-supporting steel structure in the world, the tallest artificial structure in Japan and the 11th tallest tower in the world.
Built in 1958, this Eiffel Tower-like structure supports an antenna that broadcasts television and radio signals for important Japanese media outlets such as NHK, TBS and Fuji TV. In recent years, the tower has also been instrumental in Japan's push to switch from an analog signal to digital signal.
The tower is constructed of steel, a third of which was from recycled World War II scrap steel. Despite being 8.6 meters taller than the Eiffel Tower (32.6 if the tower's TV antenna is included), Tokyo Tower only weighs about 4,000 tons, 3,300 tons less than the Eiffel Tower.
The range between the smallest phase and the largest is another way to determine how noisy a pixel is.
2-7-2015
Approx 1000 hrs
Chapel Drive
Mattress on fire in an upstairs bedroom, taken outside by homeowner prior to FD arrival.
No injuries.
Clayton FD, Archer Lodge FD, Garner FD, Eastern Wake FD, Johnston Co EMS
Mutual Aid units quickly cancelled.
Other title: Hadrian's Villa (Tivoli, Italy)
Date: 118-134
Current location: Tivoli, Italy
Description of work: Overview of Hadrian's Villa, Tivoli model. photo G. Vaux "The summer palace of the emperor Hadrian, built between ad 118 and 134 and situated on an elevated plateau south-west of Tivoli. Its unusual architecture and wealth of sculpture and mosaics have fascinated artists and scholars since the Renaissance." – Sear, Grove Art Online
Work type: Architecture and Landscape
Culture: Roman
Source: Society of Architectural Historians, Image Exchange (http://www.sah.org/imagex.html); Photographer: Vaux, G.
Resource type: image
File format: JPG
Image size: 294x600 pixels
Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightssah.htm
Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures
Filename: 00675b.jpg
Record ID: WB3651
Sub collection: garden structures
gardens
More than 350 leaders from the Seventh-day Adventist Church in North America, meet May 14-15, 2014 at the North American Division Administrative Conference on Structure. Photo by Daniel Weber/NAD Communication ©2014 North American Division
Exposed stitching is very pretty and could be decorated with beads or charms. This is a longstitch with kettle stitches at top and bottom.
Exposition des "structures sonores" de François et Bernard Baschet, pendant le festival 'les hivernautes' à Quimper (France) en février 2007
Exhibition of the sound structures of François and Bernard Baschet, during the festival 'hivernautes' in Quimper (France) in February 2007.
This structure allows pages to lie completely flat, without the intrusion of coils and an annoying gap.
Exposition des "structures sonores" de François et Bernard Baschet, pendant le festival 'les hivernautes' à Quimper (France) en février 2007
Exhibition of the sound structures of François and Bernard Baschet, during the festival 'hivernautes' in Quimper (France) in February 2007.
Instruction #5
"Get lost in a thicket of signs and structures" Wolfgang Zurborn
streetphotographynowproject.wordpress.com/
Hasselblad Xpan+45f4+Neopan400@800 in D76 (stock)
London
Completed in 1962, this Modern memorial structure was designed by Austrian-born architect Alfred Preis to memorialize those who died in the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, sitting above the remains of the USS Arizona, where 1,102 of the 1,177 victims of the attack were lost, remaining entombed within the ship. During World War II, the superstructure of the Arizona that remained above the waterline was mostly removed, with a flagpole being erected atop the sunken ship in 1950, with a temporary memorial being created above the remains of the deckhouse. In December of 1955, a ten-foot-tall basalt stone with a plaque was placed over the mid-ship deckhouse as a permanent memorial, while plans to build a larger memorial to those who died in the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor were approved by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1958. The concrete memorial, completed in 1962, is a 184-foot-long structure, which is tallest at the ends with an arch descending towards the center, featuring a geometric roof with seven openings on the top broken by horizontal ribs, and seven openings on the sides, an opening in the floor surrounded by a railing that allows visitors a view of the remains of the USS Arizona below, an entrance area with a low ceiling that creates a sense of compression when entering the memorial, with the assembly hall of the memorial and the shrine portion of the memorial at the opposite end from the entrance area have a “release” effect with higher and open ceilings. In the shrine, there are two openings featuring the “Tree of Life” sculpture flanking a marble-clad wall with the names of those killed in the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, with the marble wall being especially sensitive to the humid and salty air of the site, necessitating its replacement twice - in 1984 and 2014. The entire memorial structure cantilevers over the USS Arizona below, hovering above the ship, but not touching it. The memorial was subsequently listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966, and the USS Arizona itself was listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1989, though the memorial does not share the same status or National Register listing. The memorial sits as a major landmark in Hawaii and has been visited by every sitting United States president since its opening, with presidents presenting a wreath and scattering flowers in the waters above the USS Arizona in honor of those who died in on December 7, 1941. In 2016, the memorial was visited by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whom paid his respects to those who had died in the attack, the first Japanese prime minister to do so, serving as a gesture of reconciliation between the two nations 75 years after the attack. Today, the memorial is run jointly by the United States Navy and National Park Service, and sees more than one million visitors every year.
A TSpan fabric structure from Tentnology. For more information about TSpan tents and event tents, visit: