View allAll Photos Tagged Temporary
Temporary classrooms at Pibor Boys Primary School in South Sudan, constructed by Plan International and have a life span of up to 5 years.
AESOP | IVE Group/AFI, 162 Collins St, Melbourene VIC | August 2, 2023 | © Mark Avellino Photography
MINOT, N.D. – Water from the Souris River spills over temporary levees in Minot, N.D., June 23. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul District, continues building temporary levees around critical infrastructure in the city and will continue to provide technical assistance to affected communities along the entire Souris River Basin. USACE photo by Patrick Moes.
I have a lot of random hair lying around so I rolled up soem dreads. It's a lot of work and my hands are tired from just making these few and hot too! PHEW!
AESOP | IVE Group/AFI, 162 Collins St, Melbourene VIC | August 2, 2023 | © Mark Avellino Photography
This temporary bridge, called Melbandhon Setu, is built during winter season every year for 6-8 months to connect the two river banks. During this period the water level remains shallow. With the onset of rains and progressive rise of water level, the bridge gets destroyed by high tides. This bridge is used essentially by the pedestrians, two wheelers and occasionally three wheelers. It initially seemed scary for me to walk on, especially by its vibration during the passage of two wheelers. It wasn't my first time experience. Last year I had my maiden experience and I shared some photos in flickr. It is indeed a great subject for photography, especially during early misty morning or in the late afternoon before sunset. This time I had been to there to take some different shots before sunset. This upcoming series, I hope, will be pleasurable to my flickr friends.
I had a different upbringing to my Dad. I was brought up on a street, not a farm. Farming was something Dad did during the evenings and on weekends and my brother, sister and I would help out from time to time. Farming didn't mean much to me and wasn't something that I took much interest in, nor did it prey heavily... but it always niggled in the back of my mind.
I moved to Cardiff to study for some time and on returning home, I was constantly noticing changes. At that time, there was a strong sense of depression within the industry. I knew the area would change gradually, but this was happening at such a rate that the realisation suddenly hit me that things could be very different the next time I'd come home.
One place in particular became a site to reflect on what was happening - Dad's temporary shed. He's a tenant farmer and so can't construct permanent buildings on the land he rents. Even though this is a temporary structure, this place has witnessed his work... So I took to documenting - in as much detail as possible - what was happening under its plastic hood.
Here is where we do the lambing in the spring, keep the hay and straw bales in the summer and autumn... and it proves a good shelter for the sheep in winter. The shed's also full of tools and objects, lined up like artifacts in a museum or sculptures in a gallery - objects that have witnessed better times. I often think what fate lies in store for this place.
My Dad continued in the tradition, following what my family has always done. I know I'll never be a farmer and even though I now work and live in the city, I'll always carry around that same strong sense of belonging to the land.
Temporary Show - Métamorphose 2009 - Saint Vallier Sur Rhone - Novoceram - palier www.novoceram.fr/scenografiebrowser.jsp?documentoid=587
Near the Village of Chalna
Dacope, Bangladesh
December, 2009
In 2009, many of the villages around Dacope, Bangladesh were adversely affected by the impact of Cyclone Aila. Devastated by tremendous flooding, many village families lost their lives....their homes, their loved ones, and their livelihoods (farming rice in the paddies) to this storm. Over six months after the storm, the people of the village continue to live in inadequate temporary shelter on embankments, as well as lack of drinking water, sanitation, and adequate food for their families. Additionally, the flood waters have transformed into permanent rivers in areas that would have once been their rice patties into vast rivers of water that have engulfed entire villages.
Please enjoy these photographs, but also contemplate what your life would be like if you lived in these conditions. The realities captured in these images reflects the impact of climate change upon some of the most remote and vulnerable village populations of our planet.
I traveled to India for the first to present a keynote at the 3rd Global Conference on Emerging Trends for Business Librarianship, November 21-22, 2017 at the Indian Institute of Management - Ahmedabad, India. As part of this trip, I attended as an observer the Asia Pacific Business School Librarians' Group (APBSLG) 12th annual meeting. They were given a special tour of the temporary quarters of the Vikram Sarabhai Library at the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad. They moved there over a year ago during the renovation of their main library. The entire campus was designed by American Architect Louis Kahn and Indian Architect B.V. Doshi. They did a great job of making this space work for the temporary library at IIMA.
Kodak Tri-X 400 ISO in Kodak D-76 & Ilford Multigrade on Fomaspeed matte 24,5cm x 30cm
Find out more about the ongoing project in the album description.
www.stylespotted.com/spot_profiles/139-Temporary-showroom... Berlin Mode Fashion Shopping Designer Avantgarde Temporary Showroom
there are times in every person's life when we step out of our shoes, out of character, and run off somewhere that not everybody can see or understand. but we will come back, one day.
broken temporary air duct in Howard-Tilton Memorial Library. just last Friday, FEMA nixed the money for the library to add two floors and put a permanent HVAC system on the roof. The permanent HVAC might have to go back in the basement, which took on 8 feet of water in August 2005.
Two units. Not much deeper than they are wide. Huge debris pile in the background.
An article about Ishinomaki almost 3 years after the tsunami.