View allAll Photos Tagged Subterranean
Created by water flow thousands of years ago.
Longhorn Caverns State Park
Burnet, Texas
6N2470- 07-03-16-44 610_7774-1 f 1
A new lifestyle option for housing as the surface of the Earth broils.
This photo was taken with a Zenza Bronica S2 medium format film camera and Nikkor-H 1:3.5 f=5 cm lens with a Hoya HMC 82mm Y[K2] filter using Rollei RPX 400 film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and digitally rendered using Photoshop.
Tram 14 to Keupstr. departs from the subterranean Stadtbahn system adjacent to the rear of Köln Hbf, conceived in 1956 and open by 1970 this unusual operation is fascinating to photograph and ride upon.
Full service on the east-west Tramway de Nice T2 light rail route began in December 2019, covering 11.3km from Nice Airport to Port Lympia. In the centre of Nice, the line runs underground for 3.2km, serving four deep-level stations. A westbound Alstom Citadis unit is captured here entering the station at Alsace-Lorraine.
Bit of fun with an image adapted from a shot of an unfinished metro line I took deep under a Belgian city.
It's just whimsy but this looks like a Mother, Father and Baby :) bugguide.net/node/view/1194160#2769957
Tyne & Wear 'Metrocar' No. 4063 wases into Sunderland on 20th October 2022 while forming service 2111, 1526 South Hylton - Newcastle Airport. The station, which previously had an overall arches roof, was redeveloped in 1965 when a decking was placed over the running lines and the area above redeveloped. It now consists of a single island platform. Copyright Photograph John Whitehopuse - all rights reserved
Metro Station Amendola-Fiera, Line 1, Milano, 1964.
Mezzanine ceiling.
Nikon D90, Sigma 10-20
HDR, 3 shots +/-2EV, Photomatix 4, Neat Image Pro, Topaz Adjust 4, Photoshop CS5
Recommended in large (press L or click on picture)
Subways are a world rich in contrast. A world of light and dark, thunder and silence, life and death. Sometimes the simple pleasures of youth can be experienced there too. Do you remember what it was like to dangle your feet off a bench, not a care in the world?
"K'o sjetna tica, što u krugu tavnu
Ledenih žica zarobljena stoji,
Snivaću i ja o blaženstvu davnu
O slatkom raju poljubaca tvoji'."
A. Šantić
Every large city is home to the subterraneans--those who exist outside of the eye of mainstream society. You'll often find them on dark rainy nights sitting alone in empty bars and cafés, musing over matters incomprehensible to those of us who fish in more conventional waters.
Image imagined in MidJourney AI and finished with Topaz Studio and LightroomClassic.
Amber or Amer Fort is located in Amer (a town with an area of 4 km2), 11 kilometres from Jaipur, Rajasthan state, India. It is one of the principal tourist attractions in the Jaipur area, located high on a hill.Amer Fort was built by Raja Man Singh I. Amer Fort is known for its artistic style of Hindu elements. With its large ramparts, series of gates and cobbled paths, the fort overlooks the Maota Lake, at its forefront.
The aesthetic ambiance of this formidable fort is seen within its walls on a four level layout plan (each with a courtyard) in a well turned out opulent palace complex built with red sandstone and marble consisting of the Diwan-e-Aam or the "Hall of Public Audience", the Diwan-e-Khas or the "Hall of Private Audience", the Sheesh Mahal (mirror palace) or Jai Mandir, and the Sukh Niwas where a cool climate is artificially created by winds that blow over the water cascade within the palace. Hence, the Amer Fort is also popularly known as the Amer Palace.
The palace was lived in by the Rajput Maharajas and their families. At the entrance to the palace near the fort’s Ganesh Gate, there is also a temple dedicated to Sila Devi, a goddess of the Chaitanya cult which was given to Raja Man Singh when he had defeated the Raja of Jessore, Bengal in 1604. (Jessore is now in Bangladesh).
This fort, along with Jaigarh Fort, located immediately above on the Cheel ka Teela (Hill of Eagles) of the same Aravalli range of hills, is considered as one complex, as the two are well connected by a subterranean passage. This passage was meant as an escape route in times of war for the royal family members and others in the Amer Fort to shift to the more redoubtable Jaigarh Fort.
Annual tourist visitation to the Amer Palace in Amer town was reported by the Superintendent of Department of Archaeology and Museums to the Amer Palace as 5000 visitors a day, and 1.4 million visitors were reported during 2007.
In the dark underworld, a worker drone makes its way back to the hive...
Out and about with Steph, Mike and Dex for a street walk. Such a talented lot and great friends to boot.
Shooting with the old Xpro1. These one is not quite as clean or sharp as I would have liked but it still works.
Under the Western Distributor outside the Goldbsrough Mort complex. Worth an explore but its a little dark and dodgey...