View allAll Photos Tagged oculus
Andrea Mantegna, 1465-1474, fresque, 270 cm. de diamètre, Mantoue, Palazzo Ducale, Camera degli Sposi (Chambre des époux)
www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/m/mantegna/1/index.html
Consultée le 14.03.2011
Photo by Rocco S. Cetera
OCULUS
World Trade Center
Financial District, Lower Manhattan
New York City
May 26, 2016
NYC: Financial District / World Trade Center
Oculus Beer Garden
Leica M10 | Summilux-M 35/1.4 ASPH FLE
An interactive installation by Kyle McDonald and Ranjit Bhatnagar, co-produced by STRP Festival and Cinekid.
This image is meant to be viewed on Oculus Rift DK1.
An interactive installation by Kyle McDonald and Ranjit Bhatnagar, co-produced by STRP Festival and Cinekid.
This image is meant to be viewed on Oculus Rift DK1.
National Museum of the American Indian - entrance hall roof.
Architect: Douglas Cardinal (thanks to BillyWarhol for that info').
Best viewed: lying on your back!
'Post processing' via Picasa2.
On Thursday, March 4th, the World Trade Center Transportation Hub in Lower Manhattan officially opened to the public. The hub replaces the PATH train station that was destroyed during the 9/11 terrorist attacks, which — if you'll recall — was rather a long time ago. Indeed, over 12 years in the making, the new train station is symbol of both governmental waste and architectural excess. Its centerpiece is the Oculus, a mind-boggling glass-and-steel structure designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava to look like a dove in flight, but it actually more closely resembles a pair of ragged claws, scuttling across the sands of Lower Manhattan.
Critics have blasted the hub for its massive cost overruns ($4 billion in public money) and lack of anything resembling a traditional train station (ticket machines, clocks, maps). But its existence is significant, if only because the hub represents the type of ambitious open spaces that used to exemplify public transit in the US. Grotesquely expensive, sure. Tough on the eyes, no question. But at least we all get to share in the spectacle.
Source: The Verge