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Surfacing. ©Copyright 2017 Karlton Huber Photography - all rights reserved.
The top of this building reminded me of a submarine conning tower. I put a little tilt on the composition to give the impression of a submarine surfacing.
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"Cenuşa" Crematorium
The "Cenușa" Crematorium in Bucharest, Romania, was the first and only functioning crematorium in the country for much of the 20th century. Built in 1928, it was part of a broader movement in Romania advocating for cremation as a modern and secular alternative to traditional burial. The crematorium became particularly notorious during the communist era, when the regime used it for secretive purposes, including the disposal of bodies of political prisoners and dissidents executed by the Securitate. After decades of operation, the facility was eventually closed in 2002 due to its deteriorating condition and the decline in public support for cremation in Romania at the time.
Architecturally, the "Cenușa" Crematorium reflects the early 20th-century modernist and neoclassical influences that shaped many public buildings in Bucharest during that period. Its design features a grand yet solemn façade, with imposing columns and a functional, symmetrical layout that emphasized its role as both a place of mourning and industrial efficiency. The building also housed furnaces and technical facilities necessary for cremation, designed with both discretion and solemnity in mind. Over the years, the structure suffered from neglect and was eventually replaced by a new cremation facility, but its historical and architectural significance remains an important part of Romania’s urban heritage.
An abandoned shopping cart outside of the "highrise ghetto" that is Midpark Towers in Richardson, Texas.