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NYPD in Times Square in New York City - © 2014 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions Photography Archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
Berjaya Times Square KL is a twin tower complex containing a shopping centre and two five star hotels located in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was opened in October 2003 by the then Prime Minister of Malaysia, YAB Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir bin Mohamad. Both towers are 203 metres (666 ft) tall, with 48 floors.
It is tagged as the "world’s largest building ever built in a single phase", with 7.5 million square feet (700,000 m²) of built up floor area. It offers shopping, luxury accommodation, business, food and entertainment. Currently, it has space for more than 1000 retail shops, 1200 luxury service suites, 65 food outlets to suit many tastes and entertainment attractions such as Asia’s largest indoor theme park, Cosmo's World and Malaysia’s first-ever IMAX 2D & 3D theatre which is located on the 10th Floor. In April 2005, Borders Group opened its first franchise store here. Currently, the store is the largest Borders store in the world. Other popular stores include Metrojaya, which is a multi-level major department store, and many more.
Times Square shopping mall.
From my trip to Hong Kong, full post www.arcticnomad.com/2011/07/02/shopping-for-a-camera-in-h...
New York City, USA - August 2, 2013:time square in the daylight is full of advertising signs,billboard, traffic and people walking by shopping or sightseeing.
You can find other pictures at www.dzphotography.it
Two Years ago...........
Puoi trovare altre immagini su www.dzphotography.it
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Always nice to read a foreign newspaper, despite what I assume is the lack of complete editorial independence of The Straits Times.
Tonemapped HDR of Times Square, a better version of this one: www.flickr.com/photos/18437453@N00/5524126580/ Took me some time to fix all the ghosting issues with the Photomatix anti-ghosting tool, the cars and people were moving a lot in-between the exposures.
Bournemouth Pier
Had a weekend away in Bournemouth and took my brand new Lee Big Stopper. The weather was suburb however there was no clouds in the sky when I took this photo however I think I got the desired effect, it would have looked better with clouds shooting across the sky wouldn't it? ;-)
If you have any tips or advice for my Lee Big Stopper that would be great :-)
Photo Details
Lee Big Stopper
f/11
ISO200
4s exposure
Software Used
Lightroom 3.0
Silver Efex Pro 2
Information
The first pier in Bournemouth consisted of a short wooden jetty that was completed in 1856. This was replaced by a much longer wooden pier, designed by George Rennie, which opened on 17 September 1861. Due to an attack by Teredo worm, the wooden piles were removed in favour of cast iron replacements in 1866, but even with this additional benefit just over a year later the pier was made unusable when the T-shaped landing stage was swept away in a gale. After repairs, the pier continued in use for a further ten years until November 1876 when another severe storm caused further collapse rendering the pier too short for steamboat traffic. The Rennie pier was subsequently demolished, and replaced in 1877 by a temporary structure. During the next three years a new pier, designed by Eugenius Birch, was completed.
At a cost of £2,600 the new Bournemouth Pier was opened by the Lord Mayor of London on August 11, 1880. Consisting of an open promenade, it stretched to a length of 838 ft (255.4 m) and spanned some 35 ft (10.6 m) across the neck of the pier, extending to 110 ft (33.3 m) at the head. With the addition of a bandstand in 1885, military band concerts took place three times a day in summer and twice daily throughout the winter. Covered shelters were also provided at this time. Two extensions, in 1894 and 1909 respectively, took the pier's overall length to more than 1000 ft (304.8 m).
In common with virtually all other piers in the south and east of the country, Bournemouth Pier was substantially demolished by an army demolition team in the spring of 1940 as a precaution against German invasion. The pier was repaired and re-opened in August 1946. Refurbishment of the pier head was carried out in 1950, and ten years later a rebuild of the substructure was completed in concrete to take the weight of a new pier theatre. A structural survey of 1976 found major areas of corrosion, and in 1979 a £1.7m restoration program was initiated. Having demolished the old shoreward end buildings, replacing them with a new two storey octagonal leisure complex, and reconstructed the pier neck in concrete giving it the bridge-like appearance that it retains today, the work was completed in two years.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bournemouth_Pier#History_of_Bournem...
Every five years, the Times Square Arts Alliance commemorates the memory of the end of World War II by re-enacting the famous kiss captured on VJ-Day, August 14, 1945. On Friday, August 14, 2015, couples were invited to gather around this statue by J. Seward Johnson now titled Embracing Peace and copy the famous image.