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built by Harde & Short in the French Renaissance style (Francis I)
Manhattan Midtown
please do not use without permission
built by Harde & Short in the French Renaissance style (Francis I)
Manhattan Midtown
please do not use without permission
State Prison Hollow Rd, Starksboro, Vermont USA • Also known as the Knight House Complex. By 1799 the Hoag family had harnessed the power of the Great Falls of Lewis Creek, building this stone grist mill to grind wheat and corn for farmers from Starksboro and neighboring towns.
☞ This structure is listed on the Vermont State Register of Historic Places. Source: Data excerpts from "The Historic Architecture of Addison County: including a listing of the Vermont State Register of Historic Places"; Vermont Division of Historic Preservation; Curtis B. Johnson, Editor; © 1992.
☞ On April 22, 1980, the National Park Service added this complex of buildings and landscape to the National Register of Historic Places (#80000325).
☞ GeoLocation: -73.068439179 × 44.243517599
In England in the10th century many common old folk, people and families were unable to find work and were forced to go into Alms houses which were set up by rich land owners, The larger house in the center was the school, and the buildings either side were the Alms houses.
Happily those days are behind us and they are used for Art studios housing many local artists.
Featured on gaileguevara.blogspot.com/
Architecture & Interiors by SUYAMA PETERSON DEGUCHI ARCHITECTS
State Prison Hollow Rd, Starksboro, Vermont USA • Also known as the Knight House Complex. By 1799 the Hoag family had harnessed the power of the Great Falls of Lewis Creek, building this stone grist mill to grind wheat and corn for farmers from Starksboro and neighboring towns.
☞ This structure is listed on the Vermont State Register of Historic Places. Source: Data excerpts from "The Historic Architecture of Addison County: including a listing of the Vermont State Register of Historic Places"; Vermont Division of Historic Preservation; Curtis B. Johnson, Editor; © 1992.
☞ On April 22, 1980, the National Park Service added this complex of buildings and landscape to the National Register of Historic Places (#80000325).
☞ GeoLocation: -73.068439179 × 44.243517599
Featured on gaileguevara.blogspot.com/
Architecture & Interiors by SUYAMA PETERSON DEGUCHI ARCHITECTS
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
Reprogramming the City: Opportunities for Urban Infrastructure is a global overview of ways in which the existing infrastructure of cities around the world is being redesigned, repurposed, and reimagined to serve alternate and expanded functions for urban dwellers and visitors. Reprogramming the City celebrates more than 20 examples of imaginative reuse and repurposing of urban infrastructure, from physical objects to the city’s most functional systems and surfaces. Cities represented include London, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Hong Kong, Los Angeles and Boston.
built by Harde & Short in the French Renaissance style (Francis I)
Manhattan Midtown
please do not use without permission
The 'Caldea' at Escaldes Engordany, on the northeastern edge of Andorra la Vella. One of the most striking pieces of modern architecture I've ever seen.
It was built in 1994 and houses a complex of thermal baths and swimming pools, in addition to a shopping centre and restaurant, on three different levels. The central hub of the building is crowned by the gleaming 'silver' glazed spire, which contains a viewing gallery accessed by lift (unfortunately not operational by the time we got there).
The complex is currently in the process of being enlarged. We didn't get inside the main thermal pool rooms but at least got a taste of the ultra modern interiors from the areas still accessible.
Andorra la Vella, capital of the Principality of Andorra is a largely modern city surrounded by mountain ranges, reflected in the typography of it's street layout which is on several different levels. It was thus never a large city with so little room for expansion.
There are medieval monuments such as the ancient Casa de la Vall (the old council chamber) and the church of St Esteve (mostly rebuilt in more modern times) but the overall flavour is contemporary, owing to modern architecture and sculptures around the city.
Hampi (Kannada: ಹಂಪೆ Hampe) is a village in northern Karnataka state, India. It is located within the ruins of Vijayanagara, the former capital of the Vijayanagara Empire. Predating the city of Vijayanagara, it continues to be an important religious centre, housing the Virupaksha Temple, as well as several other monuments belonging to the old city. The ruins are a UNESCO World Heritage Site, listed as the Group of Monuments at Hampi.[1] According to statistics of 2014, Hampi is the most searched historical place in Karnataka on Google.
Source - Wikipedia
Featured on gaileguevara.blogspot.com/
Architecture & Interiors by SUYAMA PETERSON DEGUCHI ARCHITECTS