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These are the big vats that they used for refining sugar from molasses when this mill was in operation. All that remains of the original structure is the walls and these kettles and other machinery. The roof is now replaces by a huge, steel structure, and walkways have been built inside it so people can get closer to the equipment.
When I first started coming to Sugar Mill Gardens back in January of 2008, the walls had no protection around them and the whole ruin was encircled by a chain link fence to keep people out. I think the decision to reinforce the structure with the steel roof was done to preserve what's left of the walls and the kettles. Parts of the wall came down even during the time between when I started visiting, and when they built the enclosure. It is rather monolithic and ugly, but the good thing is that we can now go inside and see things closer up than before. Future generations stand a better chance of seeing this old mill's ruins now.
Brick Pond Park is a forty acre restored wetland and wildlife habitat located in the heart of the City of North Augusta, South Carolina along the Savannah River front.
Bricking it he certainly is , saw this character climbing all over a spare brick . Not sure exactly what make and model he is , but I guess some sort of Pill Woodlice . At a guess he was a good inch long - a lot bigger than a cheesy bug that you see round the house or in the garden ,
Not the best of shots as I had to grab the old Pano TZ60 - if I had gone indoors to get the dslr and swap lenses to the 105 think he might have wandered off on me !!
Brick plaza at dawn,
Young woman's silhouette rests,
Sunrise paints her grace.
--- Haiku by ChatGPT
This work by Dennis Behm is licensed under a creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
The shop on the right just behind the black car was once the home of Dr. Timothy Killeen. He was the doctor that examined the body of Martha Tabram, found in George Yard on August 7 1888.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 24mm F2.8D lens. Ferrania Orto 50 35mm B&W film.
This composition was photographed in the new outskirts of Amsterdam. I particularly loved the geometrical variation and the inventive use of the brick surface of the original building. I framed it especially to highlight its minimalist changes and the shifts in reflected blue hues.