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The University of East Anglia's architecturally remarkable grade II-listed Ziggurats, Norfolk and Suffolk Terrace, designed by Denys Lasdun in the early 1960s. Internally updated, they provide on campus student accommodation.

www.uea.ac.uk/stud/undergraduate/accommodation/options/st...

 

Lasdun first proposed this style of accommodation for Cambridge. He intended that a student should be able to get from bed to a class in five minutes.

"The rear of the blocks is concealed below the walkways, with car parking and bicycle racks. To the front, the stepped section made possible rooms that have a high part facing the countryside and a low part to the rear, making the stairs slightly less steep, with only 12 steps between each floor, but the inner parts of the rooms consequently very low."

Elain Harwood, 4 January 2010, in bdonline www.bdonline.co.uk/revisiting-denys-lasdun%E2%80%99s-uea/...

 

Grade II listed: historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1390647

 

The cover for the Streets' album Computers and Blues, released in February 2011, features a Ziggurat. news.bbc.co.uk/local/norfolk/hi/people_and_places/arts_an...

A view of the university buildings in Dundee with a lovely Sunset tonight !Have a great weekend !!

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at the University of Delhi in New Delhi, India July 19, 2009. [State Department photo]

Apr. 28.

Sapporo.

Hokkaido University.

Shidare cherry.

北大構内にある枝垂れ桜。

University of Portsmouth student accommodation.

 

I usually photograph buildings making sure verticals are vertical etc.so thought try tilt camera at angle and look up to accentuate converging verticals, taken with wide angle lens.

Bit trial and error deciding where to crop.

 

Intent to make all b&w, but made some colour as top of building is yellow.

 

I like the clouds.

Grace Campbell (11)

 

Payton Chang (10)

Ivana Vanjak (13)

 

Stanford University

Palo Alto, CA

A-Level Project: My laser-cutting and engraving experimentation inspired by "The First Cut" paper art exhibition in Manchester.

 

Size: A2 Sketchbook

Modern structure so different from most of the university buildings.

Our friend Kate bought these at a yard sale in college and wore them constantly. They are so ugly as to be totally awesome, and unbelievably comfortable to boot. Lately they have become "the pregnancy overalls," and get handed around the group as necessary. LT here is the second woman to have worn them (not counting Kate).

Intersection of University/Queen, Toronto. South African War Memorial (Boer War) erected 1910. Drive by shooting.

The University of Pheonix building in Rogers, AR during a really wild thunderstorm. This one was shot in the dark and the wind was really blowing with the storm moving through so there is a lot of movement in the trees.

In the center is a bridge that connects two buildings.

A-Level Project: Top left-hand corner- research from my visit to The First Cut paper art exhibition in Manchester. Bottom of left-hand page and right hand page- my own laser-cut experimentation with artist research and secondary source images alongside, including the paper cuts of Noriko Ambe and Lucas Simoes and the paintings of Mark Posey.

 

Size: A2 Sketchbook

The University of Toronto.

 

Another view of University College at University of Toronto from College street with my telephoto. I googled to try and find out if there was a story to the missing spire, but couldn't find anything out. No one who commented on my post yesterday seemed to know either. One of my contacts said it has been like that for 50 years.

princeton preview (admitted students' days) for the class of '15

From the Park Circus gate of Kelvingrove Park

University of Oregon campus.

Radcliffe Quad, 1717-19, displaying its 'quite remarkable conservatism'.

Two senior students received the Dr. Oliver S. Ikenberry Award.

Pictured (from left to right) are LaShawn Tolson of Washington, D.C., Ikenberry’s daughters Margaret Elizabeth (Betty) Wade ’58 and Dr. Jane Ikenberry-Dorrier ’65, and Thomas Jones, an environmental science major from Towson, Maryland.

I think the tram is Tatra KT4SU nr 71 with overall advertising for Stimaroll chewing gum.

More about Kopli here

Estonian Maritime Academy (formerly the main building of Tallinn University of Technology, 1932–1964).

This is the University Club in Detroit. From what I could gather, it was formed in 1899, originally located at Woodward and Larned, the club was moved in 1931 to this site on East Jefferson. Members had to have graduated from a university or some other form of higher education. The first woman to be allowed to actually be a member was a stockbroker, Susan Reck in 1978. The club went into bankruptcy in 1992. It is now abandoned, but with only a few noticeable areas, it still looks pretty good....from the outside at least!

Old College and New College Buildings. It was on this very spot where the first State-chartered University system in The USA was begun.

Night lights on University Avenue in Madison, Wisconsin with the state capitol illuminated in the background.

 

Please feel free to visit my portfolio to see more of my photography or to purchase prints.

Incoming medical students joined the ranks of their profession Sunday, July 28, as the Class of 2017 at the University of Louisville School of Medicine participated in the White Coat Ceremony. Held annually on the Sunday before orientation week, the White Coat Ceremony marks the first time students put on their white lab coats. It is the first taste of their professional careers and their first rite of passage into the health care community.

January 23, 2021 - "Located on the northwest corner of the Oval at The Ohio State University is University Hall. University Hall was completed in 1873 and was used to house many different facilities. The first building on The Ohio State University’s campus was a precedent for University Hall, as it is a replica of the first building. In 1976, the hall was rebuilt due to the building being structurally unsafe. The hall was deemed unsafe in 1968 and torn down in 1971. During the renovation, the tower clock, entrance, and pillars were salvaged from the original 1873 building (Hidden Gems on Campus). These three aspects of the original University Hall are incorporated into the current University Hall.

 

University Hall is divided with a tripartite both horizontally and vertically. Horizontally, the main entrance with the parts of the façade that stick out on either side of the entrance are considered the center part of the tripartite. A clock tower is located directly above the main door entrance. The remaining part of the façade on both the right and the left of the entrance are the two other parts of the horizontal tripartite. Vertically, the bottom floor is the first part of the tripartite. The grey roofing is the third tripartite and everything in between the bottom floor and the grey roof is the middle tripartite. Inside University Hall you will find a lot of wood. This wood lines many parts of the building. It is what you would think of as your typical old architecture building on a college campus.

 

The library, classroom, a chapel, a male dormitory, and faculty apartments have all been located in University Hall at one point since 1873. The first class that met in University Hall met on September 17, 1873. There were twenty-five students that were in the Agriculture College, which is all the University offered at this time. All of the facilities were at this location in 1873. Students and faculty flocked to class even though the building was not completely finished yet. There was also quite a bit of construction going on around the building which made hearing in recitations and lectures difficult sometimes. The student’s dorms and even the faculty’s housing were located in University Hall (Tebben). Although University Hall has housed many different facilities, the current uses of the building are all different from the previous uses. The Graduate school, the College of Humanities, and the College of Arts and Science are all located here currently."

 

Previous text from the following website: u.osu.edu/explorecolumbus/featured-columbus-sites/osu-sit...

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