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The 'Walkie Talkie' Building, 20 Fenchurch Street, London, UK.

Copyrighted © Wendy Dobing All Rights Reserved

Do not download without my permission.

Cúpula de la Parroquia de San Antonio de Padua. Ciudad de México, México.

f5.0, 11 mm, 1/13 sec

City Point reflection, looking up from groundfloor courtyard

Not using artificial intelligence

New construction at SFSU tweaked with corel paintshop filters

Another photo looking up at Lombard Wharf, a residential tower in south London. Architects: Patel Taylor.

Greenwich Street, lower Manhattan

The Renaissance Center (aka GM Renaissance Center) is a group of seven interconnected skyscrapers in Downtown Detroit, on the shore of the Detroit Rivers. The complex is owned by General Motors, which uses it as its world headquarters. The central tower, the Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center with its curved glass-clad facade, is the second tallest all-hotel skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere. It has been the tallest building in Michigan since it was erected in 1977. The principal architect was John Portman.

The Freedom Tower in lower Manhattan as reflected in the façade of the 9/11 Memorial at Ground Zero

Abstract architecture in Manchester.

Geometricity XII

 

(In-Camera Multiple Exposure)

f5.6, 18 mm, 1/2 sec

Downtown XIV

(In-Camera Double Exposure)

f4.5, 10 mm, 1/200 sec

Midtown Manhattan

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Copyrighted © Wendy Dobing All Rights Reserved

Do not download without my permission.

 

Meatpacking District, Manhattan

artist:DAX

PHOTOGRAPHOHOLIC

I born to capture |

 

(C) DAX ☆

All rights reserved!

Unauthorised use prohibited!

f5.6, 10 mm, 1/750 sec

Another detail shot of the 44-floor (589-foot (180 m)) Erastus Corning Tower in Albany, New York State. Completed in 1973.

 

The spines of this facade are faced in Vermont Pearl Marble.

 

Architect: Wallace K. Harrison

  

Photo taken: May 2024

One World Trade Center (2014), de David Childs (Skidmore, Owings and Merrill) y Daniel Libeskind. Nueva York, Lower Manhattan

Chelsea neighborhood, Manhattan

Downtown IV

(In-Camera Multiple Exposure)

I was immediately drawn to the repeating diamond pattern on this building facade. Looking up, I positioned my camera to capture just the pattern itself, removing any context that would identify the structure.

Working in black and white helped emphasize the strong contrast between the white panels and the dark shadows they create. I love how the diagonal arrangement creates this sense of movement across the frame, almost like a visual rhythm.

What I find fascinating about architectural photography is finding these moments where function becomes pure form. By focusing tightly on just this section, a practical building element transforms into something more abstract - a study in repetition and light.

The clean, high-contrast look gives it an almost graphic quality, like something designed on paper rather than built in the real world. Sometimes the most interesting architectural photos aren't of the entire building, but of the thoughtful details most people walk right past.

Detail shot showing two sides of the 44-floor (589-foot (180 m)) Erastus Corning Tower in Albany, New York State. Completed in 1973.

 

Architect: Wallace K. Harrison

 

Photo taken: May 2024

transbay transit center

san francisco, california

abstract architecture

f5.6, 10 mm, 1/50 sec

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