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Turning Torso i Malmö.
Photo: News Øresund - Henrik Smångs
© News Øresund - Henrik Smångs (CC BY 3.0).
Detta verk av News Øresund är licensierat under en Creative Commons Erkännande 3.0 Unported-licens (CC BY 3.0). Bilden får fritt publiceras under förutsättning att källa anges. .The picture can be used freely under the prerequisite that the source is given. News Øresund, Malmö, Sweden
News Øresund är en oberoende regional nyhetsbyrå som är en del av det oberoende dansk-svenska kunskapscentrat Øresundsinstituttet..
Vertical Turning Lathe SC22, yom 1900
Main technical data:
- table diameter : 2000 mm
- max. swing : 2200 mm
- workpiece max. height : 1500 mm
- workpiece max. weight : 12000 kg
- table speed range : 1.5 - 140 rpm
- vertical travel Z axis of rail head : 1200 mm
- main motor, DC type : 55 KW
- machine weight ab. 31000 kg
Price: on request
HSM korea
Website : www.hsm7111.com/
E-mail : hsmkorea7111@gmail.com
Skype : hsmkorea7111@gmail.com
Contact : 0082-51-311-7111
Fax : 0082-51-311-7112
Mobile : 0082-10-6382-2125 ( James )
Captured at Turning Leaf in Charleston, South Carolina, USA — settings: Camera: ILCE-9, focal length: 24mm, SS: 1/250, Aperture: f/2.8, ISO: 800, Flash: off — by Kevin Lowery
Originally commissioned for St Anne’s Square, Belfast, in 1992 Turning Point was later abandoned and apparently forgotten about. It appears to have rescued from a quarry in Belfast and - although originally earmarked for the Armagh Observatory - was eventually installed at the top end of the Mall.
Long exposure taken from a camera fixed on a fixed gear bicycle during night, dusk, while turning. Light streams are visible in the background.
Elétricos line 28, Rua das Escolas Gerais, Lisbon, Portugal.
Shot with automatic Fuji Tiara II & Fujinon EBC 28mm f/3.5 wide-angle lens on Kodak ProImage ISO-100 35mm film (DX coded).
The story behind it:
The house is making a right from Church onto Monroe St. At this point they had been at it for about 10 hours and moved the house 2 blocks.
In its new location, this house now serves as a law office.
This house is on the National Register of Historic Places and so cannot be torn down. It was built at Pratt & Meridian St. in Huntsville in the 1820s and owned by Jeremiah Clemens (1814 - 1865), a Huntsville native and U.S. Senator from Alabama and cousin of Samuel Clemens - better known to most people as Mark Twain.