View allAll Photos Tagged firstfloor
Loughborough University Business School site transporting concrete mixture from mixer to first floor
This image is part of the CalVisual for Construction Image Archive. For more information visit www.engsc.ac.uk/resources/calvisual/index.asp
Author: Loughborough University
This photo was taken at insomnia52
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
Loughborough University Business School site constructing first floor
This image is part of the CalVisual for Construction Image Archive. For more information visit www.engsc.ac.uk/resources/calvisual/index.asp
Author: Loughborough University
This photo was taken at insomnia52
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia53
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia53
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia54
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by Andrada Florentina Dumitrescu/Chasing Andi
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia54
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
Kitchen viewed from the living room door. You can see our wine rack and wine cooler, another TV that came with the house, and the pantry and other custom cabinets. Peter is at the built in desk. The cabinet above him is a "charging station" with mail slots and lots of outlets to charge cellphones and the like.
Island and fridge also visible. Dining room in the background.
Peter is working on something on his computer. Poor guy--we don't have furniture yet.
This hallway, on the first floor, was called the Basket Hallway - Mrs. Thompson was very interested in the preservation of Native American culture and collected baskets made by various native groups of the American Southwest. The baskets were displayed in this hallway. Her interest continued to grow and in 1920, she was awarded the Cornplanter Medal for her support of Native American cultural preservation and understanding. Most of the basket collection resides at the Ontario County Historical Society while a portion of the collection was bequeathed to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC after her death. From this hallway you could enter through the archway into the Drawing Room. Located in the mansion at Sonnenberg Gardens & Mansion State Historic Park at 151 Charlotte Street in Canandaigua, NY. (165)
This photo was taken at insomnia54
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
this photo was taken inside the bolton building, which was once a part of central state mental hospital.
click here for history, and more photos on this set
and for a more indepth perspective, check out my sister's set..... she has some really great insight into the past.....
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This is the 11th century White Tower.
Most of the early Norman castles were built from timber, but by the end of the 11th century a few, including the Tower of London, had been renovated or replaced with stone. Work on the White Tower —which gives the whole castle its name— is usually considered to have begun in 1078, however the exact date is uncertain. William made Gundulf, Bishop of Rochester, responsible for its construction, although it may not have been completed until after William's death in 1087. The White Tower is the earliest stone keep in England, and was the strongest point of the early castle. It also contained grand accommodation for the king. At the latest, it was probably finished by 1100 when Bishop Ranulf Flambard was imprisoned there.
Flambard was loathed by the English for exacting harsh taxes. Although he is the first recorded prisoner held in the Tower, he was also the first person to escape from it, using a smuggled rope secreted in a butt of wine. He was held in luxury and permitted servants, but on 2 February 1101 he hosted a banquet for his captors. After plying them with drink, when no one was looking he lowered himself from a secluded chamber, and out of the Tower. The escape came as such a surprise that one contemporary chronicler accused the bishop of witchcraft.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that in 1097 King William II ordered a wall to be built around the Tower of London; it was probably built from stone and likely replaced the timber palisade that arced around the north and west sides of the castle, between the Roman wall and the Thames. The Norman Conquest of London manifested itself not only with a new ruling class, but in the way the city was structured. Land was confiscated and redistributed amongst the Normans, who also brought over hundreds of Jews, for financial reasons. The Jews arrived under the direct protection of the Crown, as a result of which Jewish communities were often found close to castles. The Jews used the Tower as a retreat, when threatened by anti-Jewish violence.
When William the Conqueror moved in with the hostile Londoners he had just defeated, he wanted to create his own Green Zone -- and so shortly after his Christmas Day coronation, built a medieval keep which, because of its whitewashing two centuries later, eventually became known as the "White Tower." These Normans had defeated the Brits more through luck than sheer power or strategy, and so William was wise to separate himself from his subjects by wide walls of stone. It took about 20 years to complete
Probably designed by the most noted Norman military architect of the day, Bishop Gundulf of Rochester, the White Tower has had a number of uses since its days of protecting and housing the early Norman kings. Today it is a display museum as seen from this descriptive photo near its entrance:
There is a wooden floor between each of the storeys of the other part. In a staircase which has now disappeared on the south side, some children's bones were found in the reign of Charles II. They were identified, somewhat conjecturally, with the remains of Edward V and his brother who disappeared so mysteriously at the accession of Richard III, and were removed to Westminster Abbey in 1678.
This photo was taken at insomnia53
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
On the Cutting Edge: Laser cut paper of a map of Oakland. Students of the Lanscape Architecture class, 3D Digital Design Communication first traced ARC GIS aerial images and then sent them to the d[Fab] Lab to laser cut
The exhibit runs from 01/10/14 - 02/14/14
On the Cutting Edge: Alphabet Topography that students from the Landscape Architecture class, 3D Digital Design Communication, created from laser cut slats of paperboard. The heights of the letters depict how frequently they are used in different languages. The exhibit runs from 01/10/14 - 02/14/14
On the Cutting Edge: Alphabet topography projects that students from the Landscape Architecture class, 3D Digital Design Communication, created from laser cut slats of paperboard. The heights of the letters depict how frequently they are used in different languages. The exhibit runs from 01/10/14 - 02/14/14
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
On the Cutting Edge: Laser cut paper of urban cities. Students of the Lanscape Architecture class, 3D Digital Design Communication, first traced ARC GIS aerial images and then sent them to the d[Fab] Lab to laser cut
The exhibit runs from 01/10/14 - 02/14/14
Another look at this Victorian Evening Gown which is located in the Back Gallery (first floor) of the Paddock Mansion. This gown was worn by Mrs. (Sarah) Roswell P. Flower at the White House in 1883. Made by M.A. Connelly of NYC. It is a two piece satin brocaded and velvet gown. The satin paneled front skirt has wide pleats and inserts of pink satin with pearls and crystal beads. The velvet jacket is trimmed with fringe. ( Her husband Roswell P. Flower, who was born in Jefferson County, served three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives and was the 30th Governor of NY from 1892 to 1894). The Paddock Mansion is part of the Jefferson County Historical Society located at 228 Washington Street in Watertown, NY. (43)
Loughborough University Business School site laying concrete to form part of first floor
This image is part of the CalVisual for Construction Image Archive. For more information visit www.engsc.ac.uk/resources/calvisual/index.asp
Author: Loughborough University
Johnston House - First floor - Farmhouse Kitchen. Notice the wide fireplace area, vintage furniture and the old wood floor. Located off Route 96A at 3523 East Lake Road in Geneva, NY. (192)
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
Check out the shadow on the wall behind me -- A test run for putting mirrors in my windows. Robert Smithson meets Gordon Matta-Clark in my dark first floor apartment.
On the Cutting Edge: Laser cut paper of urban cities. Students of the Lanscape Architecture class, 3D Digital Design Communication, first traced ARC GIS aerial images and then sent them to the d[Fab] Lab to laser cut.
The exhibit runs from 01/10/14 - 02/14/14
KLUB MOOZAK #38
Wednesday / Mittwoch
25.08.2010
FLUC / VIENNA
free entry
LIVE:
BÖSZE:NOID:FUCHS (AT)
WALDLUST (DE)
Djs:
KLUB MOOZAK RESIDENTS (AT)
------------------------------
about WALDLUST (DE)
"see with your ears"
improvisation with electronic and biological material
waldlust aka tobias schmitt and lasse-marc riek from frankfurt upon the forest construct their acoustic mother soil while walking in the hills surrounding frankfurt and drinking at the promenade of bourgeois frankfurt. both are children of experimentation.
archive material from field recordings and (fragments of) scores are formed by means of improvisation.
about BÖSZE:FUCHS:NOID (AT)
cordula boesze - floeten
arnold "noid" haberl - cello
wolfgang fuchs - schallplattenspieler
floete, cello und schallplattenspieler gehen eine allianz auf
improvisatorischer basis ein, einmal mehr, dann wieder weniger
verbindlich.
am staerksten ziehen die beteiligten an einem gemeinsamen strang, wenn die
grenzen zwischen den instrumenten merklich aufgeloest werden:
ventile klappern, saiten schwingen, platten kratzen.
ventile schwingen, saiten klappern, platten kratzen.
ventile kratzen, saiten klappern, platten schwingen.
ventile schwingen, saiten kratzen, platten klappern.
texturen, mikrotonale verschiebungen und innerliche tanzschrittmuster
geben den ton an und treiben das musikalische geschehen voran.
cordula boesze, arnold "noid" haberl und wolfgang fuchs reden viel ueber
musik, spielen (zumindest bisher) in der gemeinsamen dreier-besetzung eher
wenig.
dafuer bleibt die angelegenheit frisch und die potenzielle fanschar auf
entzug.
PHOTO CREDITS: Benedikt Guschlbauer
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
Tea, a muffin and a leaflet about eReaders: pretty good lunch, I think. Dining Out got pretty busy as I left; had to ask a nice Austrialian to get the fuck out of my way and to take his screaming baby with him out the window.
This photo was taken at insomnia54
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
This photo was taken at insomnia51
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass Photography
Loughborough University Business School site constructing part of first floor structure
This image is part of the CalVisual for Construction Image Archive. For more information visit www.engsc.ac.uk/resources/calvisual/index.asp
Author: Loughborough University