View allAll Photos Tagged framework!

Framework for the station house and platforms is well under construction.

Daniel, Tom and Cassie approach the 'door' in Framework written and directed by Sean Mckenna. Photo by Guy Blackett.

Demon had a sparse display with a very interesting frame.

 

Scene from Framework written and directed by Sean Mckenna. Photo by Guy Blackett.

A view of Saw's Immelmann Loop at dusk - taken at Fright Night 2011. It was a great event and fantastic to experience the rollercoasters in the dark.

Here is a project that is typical of how I work, make it up as you go. I had put up the cedar framework and then decided to use some of the salvaged Victorian gingerbread to make it more dramatic. The brackets you see on the left I took from a mansion in North Goshen that was demolished about twenty years ago that served as the Boys and Girls Club for many years. In order to make them fit in visually with the new cedar, I gave everything a couple coats of oil based stain. The brackets I soaked in a five gallon bucket of the same for a while to get the old wood good and saturated. Previously, I had taken them to the car wash to blast off the remains of the old paint.

 

The fancy work across the middle came from a house that was torn down in Goshen to make way for a building for the newspaper, or maybe their parking lot. Something important enough to justify tearing down a perfectly good gem of a Victorian house, I'm sure. Here is a pic of that house when it stood on 5th St.:

www.flickr.com/photos/50788895@N00/3759350727/in/set-7215...

 

A large proportion of marine litter is plastics (UNEP 2009). The impact of large plastic material on the environment has been widely studied. Effects include entanglement of marine animals in plastic and ingestion of plastic by marine organisms.

 

For any form of publication, please include the link to this page:

www.grida.no/resources/5895

 

This photo has been graciously provided to be used in the GRID-Arendal resources library by: GRID-Arendal

Went to visit the secondary school where my son must go after next summer and was very impressed by this framework situated outside in the playground, it is only a framework without any wall, just to protect from the rain or sun;

Liked the look of this framework of branches etc!

#In the framework of the ambitious project of aerospace company Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) has started pre-production of the attack helicopter weighing 10-12 tonnes, which is planned to commence by 2027. As expected, the new own rotor helicopter is comparable with the best foreign products in the class of medium-duty trucks, such as American “Apache”.As explained in the HAL, the Corporation has already completed the preliminary design of the helicopter. All the plans had been release at least 500 units. The first prototype should be ready by 2023, if the government approves this initiative. One of the major projects on …

 

remmont.com/157081/

The concrete framework of the Knight Arena on the University of Oregon campus gets poured.

When you decide to take part in a project titled "Outdoors in Black and White" you know that, at least in this part of the world, it's likely to mean taking a walk in the rain. But that's ok, rain & B&W go together like, well, rain & NW England. How I ended up climbing scaffolding for the shot is another matter entirely.

Vista de cerca de tejido montado en el bastidor

an old model of mine I came across today - must be a few years old but can't even remember why I put it together! It'll be interesting to review it

mamiya 645 pro TL

120mm f4 macro

kodak ektar

A look through to the stable.

Hamilton (Thermo Fisher) Buildings, Two Rivers, Wisconsin

Recomendação : PHP Orientado a Objetos. Excelente livro.

Lines indicate a direct relationship between two items. For example, a musical fifth (top left in green) is a 3:2 interval, which relates directly to the 2:3 geometric proportion. The 2:3 geometric proportion, in turn, relates to the square, as it can be constructed with two square overlapped on their halves.

 

This version is a draft. Future plans include additional items as well as detailed descriptions of each relationship.

 

Recommendations, clarifications, corrections, etc. are welcome and encouraged.

St Peter, Elmsett, Suffolk

 

Elmsett is a large working village to the west of Ipswich. It straggles around a number of lanes, but the church is out in the fields, the landscape dropping away dramatically to the north. And there is something fascinating across the road, which we'll come back to in a moment. The graveyard is secretive and attractive, a lovely setting for the long nave and chancel, and the neat 13th century tower. This is a building which appears to be larger than it actually is. The porch is interesting, because it has a wooden framework similar to a number of others in this area, but here the framework is infilled with clunch and plastered. Were the others also once like this? Or was this done later?

 

You step into a long building, full of light. The lack of coloured glass lends an air of dignity, seemly and fitting for traditional worship. At the west end, a fairly awesome Norman font sits on its blockish pedestal. It has a stubborn quality about it, as if, being quite the oldest thing here, it has no intention of ever changing. The pulpit is from the redundant church of Ipswich St Mary at Quay, now in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. It is panelled with mermaids flanked by sea monsters. The crisp royal arms, which are lettered to George II and dated 1758, are in fact the arms of Queen Anne of earlier in the century, and the reason that the words Dieu et mon Droit appear cramped in the banner below is that they would originally have read simply Semper Eadem.

 

Perhaps the best single feature of the interior is the 1609 memorial to Edward Sherland. He kneels at his prayerdesk with a scythe, an hourglass and the paraphernalia of death. Beneath, two wickedly grinning skulls seem to be enjoying their moment enormously. The inscription is reflective and cautionary: Tombes have noe use, unlesse it bee to showe The due respecte which friende to friende doth owe; Tis not a Mausolean Monument Or Hireling Epitaph that can prevent The flux of fame: A painted sepulchre Is but a rotten trustlesse treasurer, And a faire gate built to oblivion. But he whose life, whose everie action, Like well-wrought stones, and Pyramides, erect His Monument to honor and respect, as this mans did: Hee needes noe other herse, Yet hath but due, having both tombe and verse.

 

The Elmsett war memorial nearby lists eleven boys who never returned from the horror of the First World War, including three members of the Keeble family. Below this are ten names of villagers killed by German bombs on the 12th May 1941, including five members of the Taylor family. Most of the dead were children.

 

Back across the road, then. Here is the famous Elmsett tithe wars memorial. This recalls an incident, just one of many, in which possessions were seized from the home of a land owner in lieu of payments to the Church. It reads: 1934. To commemorate the Tithe seizure at Elmsett Hall of furniture including baby's bed and blankets, herd of dairy cows, eight corn stacks and seed stacks valued at £1200 for tithe valued at £385.

 

The relationship between East Anglian parish churches and their villages is an easier one today than it has been for generations, since the abolition of the hated tithe system, by which landowners had to contribute a proportion of their income to the church for the upkeep of its incumbent. This was the case even if they were not Anglicans, which in Suffolk many were not.

 

It is salutary for us to recall that the tithe controversy has lingered well into the collective folk memory of modern Suffolk. This part of East Anglia gave strong support to the British Union of Fascists in the 1930s, who were vocal in their support for the tithe rebels. George Orwell documented the struggle in his novel A Clergyman's Daughter. A fascist councillor was elected by the tithe protesters at Eye and, in 1936, massed lines of police confronted fascist blackshirt thugs protesting against the tithe system outside Wortham Rectory. Hard to imagine, now.

A framework for public transit development

DSRL suppliers day - Framework agreement event hosted at the Norseman Hotel, Wick

5 May 2017. This event presented an overview of ADB's new procurement framework and an overview of opportunities for businesses in ADB-financed projects in key sectors.

Behind the scenes of Framework movie. Shooting scenes in Asda. Photo by Guy Blackett.

Kevin Cooper © Photoline: Paul Stapleton, Managing Director at NIE Networks, speaking at Chambré Policy Eye NI Events, in partnership with Cleaver Fulton Rankin, hosted the conference providing unique insights into the issues that need to be considered as the Department for the Economy seeks to develop an energy vision for 2050 on Wednesday 11th September 2019 in Titanic Belfast. Delegates were welcomed by Will Chambré, Managing Director at Chambré and Editor at Policy Eye Northern Ireland, and Chair of the conference Jamie Delargy, Business broadcaster. The conference heard from keynote speakers: Richard Rodgers, Head of Energy at Department for the Economy, Jenny Pyper, Chief Executive at Utility Regulator, Declan Billington MBE, Chair of CBI Northern Ireland Energy Forum, Stephen Cross, Director and Head of Energy at Cleaver Fulton Rankin, followed by a panel discussion. There followed a panel discussion on Whole Energy System Transition with Jo Aston, Managing Director at SONI (System Operator for Northern Ireland), Dr Andrew Cripps, Regional Director, Sustainability at AECOM, Charlie Simpson, Partner and Head of Mobility 2030, Global Strategy Group at KPMG UK, Michael McKinstry, Group Chief Executive Officer at Phoenix Natural Gas. Two parallel sessions followed: the first session on Energy Consumption was Chaired by Grainia Long, Commissioner for Resilience at Belfast City Council, with panellists: Pat Austin, Director at National Energy Action (NEA) Northern Ireland, Karl Purcell, Programme Manager of Behavioural Economics Unit at Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI), Professor Tom Woolley, Visiting Professor at Anglia Ruskin University, Richard Leach, Local Area Energy Planning Consultant at Energy Systems Catapult. The second session on Energy Production was Chaired by John Young, Head of Policy, Northern Ireland and Ireland, SSE, with panellists: Dara Lynott, Chief Executive at Electricity Association of Ireland (EAI), David Smith, Chief Executive at Energy Networks Association (ENA), Chris Johnston, Principal Scientist & Project Leader, Agri Environmental Technologies Unit at Agri-Food & Biosciences Institute (AFBI), Professor Neil Hewitt, Professor of Energy/Director of the Centre for Sustainable Technologies at Ulster University. Reportage from the parallel sessions and the final session on A New Strategic Energy Framework was Chaired by Eleanor McEvoy, Chair at Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) Northern Ireland Energy Group. Panellists included: Panellists included: Steve Aiken (UUP, South Antrim) with Daniel McCrossan (SDLP, West Tyrone), Paul Frew (DUP, N Antrim), Caoimhe Archibald (Sinn Féin, East Derry), and Claire Bailey (Green, South Belfast). Final remarks on that day’s discussions were by Paul Stapleton, Managing Director at NIE Networks and closing comments were by Jamie Delargy. Final remarks on that day’s discussions were by Paul Stapleton, Managing Director at NIE Networks and closing comments were by Jamie Delargy.

with all original spelling mistakes!

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