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Broadway Tower is a folly on Broadway Hill, near the village of Broadway, in the English county of Worcestershire, at the second-highest point of the Cotswolds. Broadway Tower's base is 1,024 feet above sea level.
(Wikipedia)
Broadway Tower is a unique Capability Brown Folly Tower open to visitors wanting to experience great English heritage in an inspiring location. It is one of England’s outstanding viewpoints and at 1024 feet (312m) above sea level, it is the second highest point on the Cotswold escarpment with unrivalled views. You can survey an expanse of a 62 mile radius and as many as 16 Counties
Broadway is one of the prettiest villages in the Cotswolds, the main street is lined with buildings built from golden coloured Cotswold stone and the decorations at Christmas are charming!
HBM and Happy New Year 🎉 🍷 🍻
The Tower is an iconic landmark on top of the beautiful Cotswolds escarpment. It was the brainchild of the great 18th century landscape designer, “Capability Brown”. His vision was carried out for George William 6th Earl of Coventry with the help of renowned architect James Wyatt and completed in 1798 on Beacon Hill.
Breath 13/2
An image from a late summer shoot at Broadway Tower in the Cotswolds in the company of fellow photographer, Hans Davis, whose wonderful images can be seen here www.flickr.com/photos/hansdavis/
An early morning view of one part of this station taken from another part of it. Several subway lines interconnect at this station. To the back of the camera is a subway maintenance yard. We are viewing the J&Z lines platform from the L-line platform. The covered superstructure with the windows is a passageway from the L line to the J&Z lines. This station has a 3rd subway level underground reachable by a long escalator.
I have been adding photos of people on Broadway and 34th street, thought that I would add some backgroud shots of the streets of New York.
Press L for the full cinematic effect!
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Broadway Building (1907)
Architect: Llewellyn B. Dutton
1401–19 Broadway
Downtown
Oakland, Alameda
© Matthew X. Kiernan
NYBAI18-7396
The Broadway Theater District in Downtown Los Angeles is the first and largest historic theater district listed on the National Register of Historic Places. With twelve movie palaces located along a six-block stretch of Broadway, it is the only large concentration of movie palaces left in the United States. This photo shows the Tower Theater -- built in 1927 and the 1st to show talking pictures, the Rialto--1917 and restored by Urban Outfitters, and a smidge of the 1927 Orpheum Theater -- on the far right. (National Register of Historic Places #79000484)