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West Lindsey team covering the lime coping on the finished dry stone wall at St Cuthberts Brattleby.
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
Coronación de piscina en piedra natural Altamira vintage con efecto de cantos desgastados //
Pool coping in vintage Altamira natural stone with worn edges effect.
Ubicación: Dinamarca
Contacta con nosotros / Contact us:
Tel: +34 968725656
info@rosalstones.com
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
While the flood waters have receded from the recent floods, Chaluay Kawaonag and her team of community leaders are convinced that their work is just beginning, to create a better informed and prepared community for the future.
(Photo: UN Women/Oisika Chakrabarti)
Related Article
Leadership in Communities: Thai Women Preparing for Natural Disasters
Two and a half weeks before we took this photo, on June 12, there was a hard frost that killed 80% of the kikuyu in the valley. Due to a dry start to the season, the legumes and ryegrass hadn’t got going properly yet, so overnight, the available paddock pick went down to nearly nothing. In common with other farmers in the valley, we partially de-stocked, immediately sending our two-year-old steers to market. This is the first lot we didn’t manage to grow out completely on pasture – that would have taken another six months including a spring flush. Feedlots buy feeder cattle under such circumstances. We’re not thrilled, but at least they won’t go hungry. We kept the yearling heifers and are supplementing them with our tree fodder (Tagasaste, Acacia saligna), bought-in oaten hay, and a day a week grazing in the lower tier of the garden, which didn’t get any frost. There they join the old gelding, who always eats his supplementary feed in the garden and who has the upper tier for fresh grass whenever he wants it.
hey demi
miley want her style
i think she is really coping miley!!!!!!!
demi girl miley is miley! you cannot be her!!! HER FAME IS HUGEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!
Accepting nature, but coping better has become the new motto of the community, a testimony to the resilience of the people of this working class Thai community.
(Photo: UN Women/Oisika Chakrabarti)
Related Article
Leadership in Communities: Thai Women Preparing for Natural Disasters
From www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-397566-herbert-pavili...
Alternatively known as: Royal Herbert Hospital, Woolwich, SHOOTERS HILL ROAD, Woolwich.
Military hospital, now flats. 1859-65, by Captain Douglas Galton RE, with R O Mennie, Surveyor of Works to the War Department; converted c1992. White Suffolk bricks with Bath stone dressings, fireproof internal construction, and slate hipped roof PLAN: symmetrical plan of a spine corridor witl1 wards off, two each side at the ends, a shorter central rear ward connected to a front chapel and library within a central courtyard, and facing an H-shaped front entrance and administration block to the road. EXTERIOR: Italianate style. Front range 3 storeys and basement; 3:9:5:9:3-window range; pavilion wards 2 storeys and basement; 9-window ranges. Former administration block has ~l1d and central sections set forward with clasping rusticated pilaster strips, plat bands, balustrading under the windows, a deep bracketed cornice and parapet. The centre has banded ashlar rustication to .2 storeys, with a large round through-archway to the central courtyard. Flanking sections have flat-headed ground-floor and round-arched upper windows, the upper ones without architraves. The ward blocks have plat bands and cornice, flat- headed 6/6-pane sashes, with articulated corner sanitary towers containing narrow lights, with a wide round-arched end casement window. The chapel has a 3-window N end with clasping pilaster strips, round- arched ground-floor and second-floor openings with a central doorway, and a central first-floor balcony with a round clock face; the sides have tall round-arched windows. The wards are connected by a single-storey covered way the full width of the building; at the E end is a single storey former isolation ward, and at the W end a 2-storey annexe formerly containing an operating theatre. Open walkways with cast-iron supports connects the front range to the wards and chapel. INTERIOR not inspected, but noted as being of fireproof construction, with iron stairs on trussed girders, and concrete floors. The chapel reported to contain a gallery on iron posts and an elliptical-arched ceiling. Subsidiary features: Quadrant decorative iron railings with cast-iron coping connect ends of front range with piers and large cast-iron lamps, and extend approx. lOOm to the Wand approx. 7OOmm E along Shooters Hill Road, Well Hall Road and Broad Walk to the Wand rear; a battered retaining wall encloses a terrace to the S of the former hospital. HISTORY: The Royal Herbert was the first large-scale hospital to embody the pavilion concept of separate, cross-lit wards, well ventilated, with wash rooms and lavatories separated by a lobby in the corner towers. The plan of this seminal building was of great importance in the development of hospital design. It included advanced systems of construction, heating and ventilation, and marked the ascendancy of the sanitary reformers led by Florence Nightingale. She described the Herbert as 'by far the finest hospital establishment in the United Kingdom, or indeed Europe' (quoted in RCHME Report). The pavilion principle dominated hospital design in England for the next fifty years. The front range included offices, accommodation for the Governor, and nurses' dormitories. This is a remarkably complete building, notably so for a hospital, set within its original grounds, and is one of the most important examples of its type in the country.
(RCHME report, NMR, Swindon)
A rainy day visit to the Holyhead Maritime Museum.
The museum is housed in an old lifeboat station that they have had since 1998.
The Holyhead Maritime Museum is a maritime museum located in Holyhead, North Wales.
Housed in what is claimed to be the oldest Lifeboat station in Wales (built c. 1858), it houses a number of collections.
The lifeboat station opened in 1858 and the first lifeboat was unnamed, launching 18 times, saving 128 persons. Replaced by the Prince of Wales, she launched 38 times and rescued 128 persons. In 1875, Member of Parliament Joshua Fielden and his brothers donated the Thomas Fielden, named after their father, which necessitated extending the house. In 1890, a second large boat was obtained, for which the house was extended to enable beach based landing from a horse-drawn carriage.
After local maritime exhibitions were held in 1982 and 1983 elsewhere, a trustees group was formed on 24 September 1984. The trustees obtained a nine-year lease on the redundant St Elbods church from the Church in Wales, with the museum opened officially by the Duke of Westminster in March 1986.
On expiration of the lease, and after failing to agree a lease within a new development, Stena Line offered the museum a peppercorn rent on the renovated Lifeboat house at Newry Beach. Deciding to improve the building through the construction of new visitor facilities, after a successful bid for funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund and a renegotiation of the lease to 99 years, the museum reopened on its current site in 1998.
The museum today tells the maritime history of Holyhead and Anglesey, from earliest days to the modern ferries to Ireland. It features an interactive combination of historical artifacts, models and sensory exhibitions. All of its part-time volunteers have extensive maritime and local knowledge. Accessible to wheelchairs, the museum has its own cafe, the Harbour Front Bistro.
The Holyhead at War exhibition is located in an air raid shelter located alongside the Maritime Museum.
Grade II Listed Building
History
Former lifeboat house, circa 1850s, now converted to restaurant.
Exterior
Rubble with freestone dressings and copings (but mainly rendered and painted), slate roof. Aligned roughly N-S with gable and facing sea. Shaped gables (similar to Holyhead market hall) with ball finials; former broad doorways covered during conversion to restaurant (added bay window to N). Long shallow extension to W side; attached gabled range to NE. Some remains of slipway mechanism to seaward side.
Reasons for Listing
Believed to be the oldest surviving lifeboat house in Wales.
Listing above from 1994. The museum moved in 1998.
model lifeboat - RNLB Christopher Pearce
Coronación de piscina en piedra natural Altamira vintage con efecto de cantos desgastados //
Pool coping in vintage Altamira natural stone with worn edges effect.
Ubicación: Dinamarca
Contacta con nosotros / Contact us:
Tel: +34 968725656
info@rosalstones.com
This is a vertical coping shot to show the color variations that can be achieved in the process. This particular color is Sierra and has a haystack grout.
Ph: 888-282-7832
We developed our Coping For Fiberglass Pools as an easy alternative to styrofoam concrete forms. It gives you a much more consistent look without the drawbacks of cantilever deck forms. It takes 2 guys about 2 hours to install and you can shim the coping to match the waterline on out of level pools. Also - you don't have to get into the pool to finish the concrete - definitely a bonus in cold weather.
Check out the video on YouTube: www.youtube.com/vastecusa
Pools built by Vantage Pools, BC, Canada, using VASTEC's innovative and easy Coping For Vinyl Liner Pools. Contact VASTEC USA at 888-282-7832 or www.vastecusa.com for more info. Our patented notching process makes the coping flexible enough to bend at the jobsite to fit the pool. No need for custom bending or welding at the factory. Available in White, Light Gray, Dark Gray, Single-track, Double-track, and Fiber-optic ready. Photos courtesy of Vantage Pools, www.vantagepools.ca
The coping Stones on top of this wall appear at possible risk of falling.
St Loy's Road Tottenham N17 runs under a railway bridge. On the western side of the bridge on the northern side of St Loy's Road there's a wall between the pavement and the railway embankment.
As shown in my photos the row of coping stones at the top of the wall seems to be coming loose. It might eventually topple onto the footway due to pressure exerted by the branch growing through the brickwork.
The railway embankment and, probably the wall, are the property of Network Rail. However I assume Haringey Council Building Control team has a role in safeguarding members of the public - in this case in liaison with Network Rail.
_____________________________
§ Problem reported to Haringey Council using the free website: FixMyStreet.
§ Google Street View of the wall in St Loy's Road N17.
so i've been trying to figure out how to balance the whole "photo a day" thing with the whole "i work wonky hours as a crisis worker" thing.
for obvious reasons, i can't bring my camera to work ("hello perfect stranger, i know you're having a crisis right now but do you mind scooting closer to the nice police officer so i can take a picture? perfect. now everyone say 'cheese!'").
however, i figured out a plan after a conversation with a co-worker who has been in the field for 20+ years. she was talking about coping skills...and how she doesn't have any. and i thought, "coping skills? i LOVE coping skills!"
so, my plan is to dedicate at least one day a week (on a day when i work the late shift) to taking a photo of one of my coping skills. that will leave me with catalog of 50+ coping skills and serve as a great reminder once the dark, drizzly winter weather sets in (oh wait, it already has).
so, for the first in my series may i present....chocolate. what can i say...dark chocolate is probably my greatest, and most utilized, coping skill.
now granted, i prefer darker than a 70% cacao. but sometimes you just gotta take what grocery outlet can give you (at a crazy, reduced price!!).
9/17/10: home
50mm
The owner of this residence created a custom blend featuring Buechel Stone's Mill Creek Castle Rock, Mill Creek Country Castle Rock, and Texas Cream Cut Stone accents (window lintels, coping, headers, & sills) to achieve the perfect look. Explore these inspirational products and get more information at www.buechelstone.com/shoppingcart/products/Mill-Creek-Cas... and www.buechelstone.com/shoppingcart/products/Texas-Cream-Cu...
Ukraine is still coping with the lingering effects of six years of conflict in the east of the country, and the current COVID-19 pandemic accentuates these effects in a number of ways - especially economically.
Oleksiy Ovchinnikov teaches dance at the studio his mother founded in 1983 in Sloviansk, Donetsk Oblast in eastern Ukraine. In 2014, they were forced to take a break when studio's building was damaged during the clashes. The entrepreneur found a way out – in place of the lost five halls in Sloviansk, he opened 10 others in four towns. “The main thing is that the studio, despite the hard situation in our region, has kept going and developing, and the kids have place where they can train and fulfill their dreams,” he says.
UNDP Ukraine has already supported over 800 small and medium businesses, like the Ovchinnikovs', to start or get back on their feet during the conflict. Reacting to the challenges of the current crisis and its recent quarantines, we are working with our supported businesses to help them to adapt, such as by moving activity online and digitising operations where they can.
Photo: Artem Getman / UNDP Ukraine
The Stover Canal is a canal located in Devon, England. It was opened in 1792 and served the ball clay industry until it closed in the early 1940s. Today it is derelict, but the Stover Canal Society is aiming to restore it and reopen it to navigation.
The canal was built at a time when the ball clay industry was expanding, but transport of the bulky product was difficult. James Templer (1748–1813) of Stover House, Teigngrace, saw this as an opportunity, and began to construct the canal at his own expense in January 1790. He planned to reach Bovey Tracey, passing through Jewsbridge, near Heathfield en route, and to construct a branch to Chudleigh. Having invested over £1,000 in the project, he sought an Act of Parliament which would allow him to raise more capital, but although the Act was passed on 11 June 1792, he did not invoke its powers, as the canal had already reached Ventiford, Teigngrace and he did not extend it further.
As built, the canal was 1.7 miles (2.7 km) long and included five locks. It was supplied with water from three feeders, one from Ventiford Brook, a stream which also supplies Stover Lake (now in Stover Country Park) and one from the River Bovey at Jewsbridge, both of which fed the top pound, and one from the River Teign at Fishwick, which entered the canal just below lock 4. The exit from the canal was on to the tidal Whitelake channel, and from there to the River Teign and the docks. The first three locks did not originally have side walls, but used earth banks instead, which were replaced with timber or brick walls in due course. The Graving Dock lock was only 56 ft (17 m) long, and so could take a single barge, but all the others were long enough to take two barges end to end. The first Jetty Marsh lock was much bigger, at 215 ft long and 45 ft wide (65m by 13.7m), but carries the inscription Duke of Somerset, 1841, and so it would appear that it was reconstructed as a basin, so that barges could wait in it for the tide. The Graving Dock lock is probably unique in the United Kingdom, in that it was reconstructed with a dock at its side, which could be used as a dry dock when the lock was empty. Both Jetty Marsh lock and Graving Dock lock are currently Grade 2 listed.
Having invested most of his capital in the project, James Templer was rewarded by the success of the canal. A major contract with Josiah Wedgwood and Sons was re-established in 1798. Wedgwood remained the major recipient of the ball clay until 1815, after which trade was established with other pottery manufacturers and other ports.
Route of the canal in relation to other relevant features
James' son, George Templer built the Haytor Granite Tramway to connect his granite quarries at Haytor Rocks to the canal basin at Ventiford. It opened on 16 September 1820,and for the next 40 years, the traffic in granite supplemented the ball clay trade. The canal was sold in 1829 by George Templer, along with the Stover estate and the quarries and tramway, to Edward St Maur, 11th Duke of Somerset (1775-1855).When plans to build the Moretonhampstead and South Devon Railway were proposed, his son the 12th Duke of Somerset, who by then had inherited the Stover estate, sought to sell both the canal and the trackbed of the derelict Granite Tramway to the fledgling railway company.It was duly sold for £8,000 on 4 June 1862, by which time the section above Teignbridge was effectively redundant, and so the railway company was not required to maintain it.However, the section up to Graving Dock lock was retained, so that users of the canal could still repair their barges, and it was at this point that the new dock was constructed which gave the Graving Dock lock its name. The canal was almost immediately leased to Watts, Blake and Co., a company who sank clay-pits.
The canal passed into the ownership of the Great Western Railway in 1877, but continued to be leased to Watts, Blake and Co., who paid a fixed price for its use, and were also required to maintain it. Traffic dwindled and finally ceased in 1937, but Watts, Blake and Company's latest 14-year lease did not end until 1942,and so it was not formally abandoned until March 1943. It remained in water until 1951, when one of the banks was breached, flooding a clay pit.
© Wikipedia
Coronación de piscina en piedra natural Altamira vintage con efecto de cantos desgastados //
Pool coping in vintage Altamira natural stone with worn edges effect.
Ubicación: Dinamarca
Contacta con nosotros / Contact us:
Tel: +34 968725656
info@rosalstones.com
Cutting forces are very low so the v block on its side works o.k..
Makes it very easy to set the platen height. I actually can't believe how well this set up works.
Manganese Stair tread Saltillo Tile.
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