View allAll Photos Tagged important

including Important 20th C. Design, Fusion Contemporary Art & Design, and Emile Jacques Ruhlman

 

eloisemoorehead.com/post/2191390447/dear-emile-jacques-ru...

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Another important milestone was achieved on the National Mall: the new irrigation system – a part of the construction currently underway to restore the lawn panels on the Mall – was tested for the first time.

 

All the elements of the turf restoration project have been designed to create a healthy and water efficient landscape. The irrigation system is an essential part of this project, which also includes engineered soils to resist soil compaction and improve drainage, large underground cisterns for rainwater harvesting, drought resistant turf varieties, and beautiful granite curbing to protect the lawn edges.

Recognizing Connetquot River State Park Preserve as one of New York's Important Bird Areas.

Learn more about the Important Bird Areas Program - Audubon Society USA + BirdLife International

 

IMPORTANT:

If you would like to use this photo in a way that is appropriate under its Creative Commons license, you are welcome to do so, but please make sure to credit me by my real name and Flickr handle, and please also include a link to the Flickr page of the photo, as well as a link to the relevant Creative Commons license text. I have put examples of proper attribution on my profile page. Optionally, you may also send me a little note about your use... :)

 

For any other type of use, please contact me to properly license this image.

 

Thank you!

 

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Sabrina made an important change today. She was not a Biology Major and now she is. Her declaration was quick and she knew she wanted Dr. Tallman as an adviser and that she is oriented towards the human and health science part of biology.

The city of Bath in South West England was founded in the 1st century AD by the Romans who used the natural hot springs as a thermal spa. It became an important centre for the wool industry in the Middle Ages but in the 18th century under the reigns of George l, ll and III it developed into an elegant spa city, famed in literature and art.

The City of Bath is of Outstanding Universal Value for the following cultural attributes: The Roman remains, especially the Temple of Sulis Minerva and the baths complex (based around the hot springs at the heart of the Roman town of Aquae Sulis, which have remained at the heart of the City’s development ever since) are amongst the most famous and important Roman remains north of the Alps, and marked the beginning of Bath’s history as a spa town.

The Georgian city reflects the ambitions of John Wood Senior (1704-1754), Ralph Allen (1693-1764) and Richard “Beau” Nash (1674-1761) to make Bath into one of the most beautiful cities in Europe, with architecture and landscape combined harmoniously for the enjoyment of the spa town’s cure takers.

The Neo-classical style of the public buildings (such as the Assembly Rooms and the Pump Room) harmonises with the grandiose proportions of the monumental ensembles (such as Queen Square, Circus and Royal Crescent) and collectively reflects the ambitions, particularly social, of the spa city in the 18th century.

The individual Georgian buildings reflect the profound influence of Palladio (1508-1580) and their collective scale, style and the organisation of the spaces between buildings epitomises the success of architects such as the John Woods (elder 1704-1754, younger 1728-1782), Robert Adam (1728-1792), Thomas Baldwin (1750-1820) and John Palmer (1738-1817) in transposing Palladio’s ideas to the scale of a complete city, situated in a hollow in the hills and built to a picturesque landscape aestheticism creating a strong garden city feel, more akin to the 19th century garden cities than the 17th century Renaissance cities.

Criterion (i): Bath’s grandiose Neo-classical Palladian crescents, terraces and squares spread out over the surrounding hills and set in its green valley, are a demonstration par excellence of the integration of architecture, urban design and landscape setting, and the deliberate creation of a beautiful city. Not only are individual buildings such as the Assembly Rooms and Pump Room of great distinction, they are part of the larger overall city landscape that evolved over a century in a harmonious and logical way, drawing together public and private buildings and spaces in a way that reflects the precepts of Palladio tempered with picturesque aestheticism.

Bath’s quality of architecture and urban design, its visual homogeneity and its beauty is largely testament to the skill and creativity of the architects and visionaries of the 18th and 19th centuries who applied and developed Palladianism in response to the specific opportunities offered by the spa town and its physical environment and natural resources (in particular the hot springs and the local Bath Oolitic limestone). Three men – architect John Wood Senior, entrepreneur and quarry owner Ralph Allen and celebrated social shaper and Master of Ceremonies Richard “Beau” Nash – together provided the impetus to start this social, economic and physical rebirth, resulting in a city that played host to the social, political and cultural leaders of the day. That the architects who followed were working over the course of a century, with no master plan or single patron, did not prevent them from contriving to relate each individual development to those around it and to the wider landscape, creating a city that is harmonious and logical, in concord with its natural environment and extremely beautiful.

Criterion (ii): Bath exemplifies the 18th century move away from the inward-looking uniform street layouts of Renaissance cities that dominated through the 15th–17th centuries, towards the idea of planting buildings and cities in the landscape to achieve picturesque views and forms, which could be seen echoed around Europe particularly in the 19th century. This unifying of nature and city, seen throughout Bath, is perhaps best demonstrated in the Royal Crescent (John Wood Younger) and Lansdown Crescent (John Palmer). Bath’s urban and landscape spaces are created by the buildings that enclose them, providing a series of interlinked spaces that flow organically, and that visually (and at times physically) draw in the green surrounding countryside to create a distinctive garden city feel, looking forward to the principles of garden cities developed by the 19th century town planners.

Criterion (iv): Bath reflects two great eras in human history: Roman and Georgian. The Roman Baths and temple complex, together with the remains of the city of Aquae Sulis that grew up around them, make a significant contribution to the understanding and appreciation of Roman social and religious society. The 18th century re-development is a unique combination of outstanding urban architecture, spatial arrangement and social history. Bath exemplifies the main themes of the 18th century neoclassical city; the monumentalisation of ordinary houses, the integration of landscape and town, and the creation and interlinking of urban spaces, designed and developed as a response to the growing popularity of Bath as a society and spa destination and to provide an appropriate picturesque setting and facilities for the cure takers and social visitors. Although Bath gained greatest importance in Roman and Georgian times, the city nevertheless reflects continuous development over two millennia with the spectacular medieval Abbey Church sat beside the Roman temple and baths, in the heart of the 18th century and modern day city.

Integrity

Remains of the known Roman baths, the Temple of Sulis Minerva and the below grounds Roman archaeology are well preserved and within the property boundary as are the areas of Georgian town planning and architecture, and large elements of the landscape within which the city is set. Despite some loss of Georgian buildings prior to inscription, the Georgian City remains largely intact both in terms of buildings and plan form. An extensive range of interlinked spaces formed by crescents, terraces and squares set in a harmonious relationship with the surrounding green landscape survive. The relationship of the Georgian City to its setting of the surrounding hills remains clearly visible. As a modern city, Bath remains vulnerable to large-scale development and to transport pressures, both within the site and in its setting that could impact adversely on its garden city feel and on views across the property and to its green setting.

Authenticity

The hot springs, which are the reason for the City’s original development, are of undoubted authenticity. The key Roman remains are preserved, protected and displayed within a museum environment, and the Roman Baths can still be appreciated for their original use. The majority of the large stock of Georgian buildings have been continuously inhabited since their construction, and retain a high degree of original fabric. Repairs have largely been sympathetic, informed by an extensive body of documentation, and aided by a programme of restoration in the late twentieth century. More vulnerable is the overall interaction between groups of buildings in terraces, crescents and squares and views to the surrounding landscape that contributed to the City’s visual harmony. There is a need for new developments to respect the planning of the Georgian terraces, to respect the scale and rhythm of its structures, and to contribute to picturesque views.

India v West Indies, 2009 World Twenty20 @ Lord's Cricket Ground (Super 8s, 12 June)

 

The Windies chased a comfortable target of 154 and won by 7 wickets with 8 balls to spare. Yuvraj Singh top scored for India with 67 off 43 balls, while Dwayne Bravo picked up 4/38. Bravo put in an all-round performance to then smash an unbeaten 66 off just 36 deliveries to lead the Windies to victory.

 

Despite the loss, it was still a great day out at the Home of Cricket - my first experience of watching a match there.

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Tsurugaoka Hachimangū is the most important Shinto shrine in the city of Kamakura. For most of its history, until 1868, it was both a Hachiman shrine and a Tendai Buddhist temple.

 

As one enters, after the first torii (Shinto gate) there are three small bridges, two flat ones and an central arched one. The bridges span a canal that joins together two ponds dug in 1182, "Genpei ponds", named for two warring families, the Minamoto ("Gen") and the Taira ("Pei"). One of the islands in the Minamoto pond hosts a sub-shrine called Hataage Benzaiten Shrine (dedicated to Buddhist goddess Benzaiten). The sub-shrine was rebuilt in 1956, having been dismantled in 1868 under the religious separation order.

 

Tsurugaoka Hachimangū includes several sub-shrines, the most important of which are the Junior Shrine (Wakamiya ) at the bottom, and the Senior Shrine (Hongū ) 61 steps above. A couple of hundred meters to the right of the Junior Shrine lies Shirahata Jinja, near which an annex was created to allow the shogun to worship distant Yui Wakamiya (Moto Hachiman). To the left of the Senior Shrine lies Maruyama Inari Shrine with its many torii.

 

An unusual feature of the shrine is its 1.8 km approach, which has three torii gates and extends all the way to the ocean in Yuigahama along Kamakura's main street. The dankazura, a raised pathway flanked by cherry trees, has gone or is currently concealed behind boarding.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsurugaoka_Hachimang%C5%AB

 

We had to check of dirty diapers, feedings and keep track of our nurses.

APPROXIMATE RELEASE DATE: 2023-

IMPORTANT NOTES: This outfit is a reissue of the Girl of Today Year 2000 Outfit (originally released in 1999). The hair clips were added for Isabel's set, and were not included in the original version.

 

PERSONAL FUN FACT written by my sister: I'm blown away by this outfit! I love how the top is separate from the sweater. You would think they'd be one piece! It really is the sort of thing I remember seeing on clothing racks and on kids growing up in this time. The shoes on the other hand...what child would wear these shoes? Imagine trying to tie these shoes before school in the morning. WAY too much work. The tights are actually nice and thick. The fabric for this ensemble is surprisingly durable. And it's all so sparkly and purple! The skirt is simple on its own, but until I saw it separately, it escaped my mind that it was so plain, because the whole outfit is just so sparkly! They added these butterfly clips--which Shelly actually had many just like back in the late 90s/early 2000s--to this look for Isabel! I think it's such a good way to accessorize. Really time period accurate (all the cool girls wore clips like that) and so pretty! I was really surprised by both this and her pajamas! In terms of quality, this outfit was the winner!

You always need tissues at the Voices of the Year presentation.

Outside wall of Greenwell's Machine Shop in Petoskey, Michigan, 25 April 2010.

On Whitehall, just down the street from the Horse Guard building in London.

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Important rice storage houses for Japan during Edo Period (1603-1867)

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Crac des Chevaliers, is a Crusader fortress in Syria and one of the most important preserved medieval military architectures in the world.

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Lake Elementaita is shallow a soda lake located on the floor of Kenya's Great Rift Valley 20 km southeast of the city of Nakuru at an altitude of 1,776 meters. Its surface are is 18 square kilometers (6.9 sq miles). Its deepest point is 1.9 meters; much of the lake is less than one meter deep. 450 bird species can be found here; it is an important stop for migratory birds. The lake is designated as Ramsar Site and as Important Bird Area (IBA). Lake Elementaita Wildlife Sanctuary encompasses the whole of Lake Elementaita and its riparian land; it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Kenya Lake System in 2011.

Everything important to me in late 1988!

 

Scanned from a photo

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Vinicio Cerezo, Expresidente de la República; Roberto Alejos, Presidente del Congreso de la República y Doris Cruz, Instituto Holandés para la Democracia Multipartidaria. Vinicio Cerezo, Expresidente de la República; Roberto Alejos, Presidente del Congreso de la República y Doris Cruz, Instituto Holandés para la Democracia Multipartidaria

I'm not lost, just wandering. Where I end up is not as important as what I see along the way.

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