View allAll Photos Tagged openspace

Palo Alto rangers have got you covered. #openspace #paloalto via Instagram ift.tt/2gxQUbL

Out and about on a lovely summer morning.

VRM Open Space sessions held in Sun's offices

A small, unnamed creek in the Madera Openspace (but just days away of being added to the Hillside Natural Area).

Design & A.D. per LUBE Industries

Ph. Emozioni

MODE2 "PRELUDES"

Vernissage le Samedi 26 Novembre 2016 de 18h à 21h en présence de l'artiste

Exposition du 26 Novembre 2016 au 28 Janvier 2017

GALERIE OPENSPACE - 116, boulevard Richard Lenoir - 75011 PARIS

I went camping on Memorial weekend and there was a farm where i got to ride a horse and feed a cow and pick blackberries. I now want to own a farm when i get old(:

This building is undergoing refurbishment in Liverpool. It's an amazing space - would love to do a fashion or editorial shoot here!

 

High Contrast

Variant Name: Lambert Tree Studios courtyard

Architect: Parfitt Brothers (Firm); Hill & Woltersdorf

 

Description: View of ivy-covered walls of the rear courtyard at the Tree Studio Building (601-623 North State Street). The courtyard is formed by the walls of the two additions (annexes), and the rear wall of the Medinah Temple.

Photographer: Brubaker, C. William, 1976

 

Architecture Date: 1894 (Tree Studios); 1912 (Medinah Temple); 1912-1913 (Tree Studios annexes)

Geographic coverage: Near North Side (Chicago, Ill.); River North (Chicago, Ill.)

 

Collection: C. William Brubaker Collection (University of Illinois at Chicago)

Repository: University of Illinois at Chicago. Library. Special Collections Department

File Name: bru007_11_s

 

Rights: This image may be used freely, with attribution, for research, study and educational purposes. For permission to publish, distribute, or use this image for any other purpose, please contact Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library at lib-spec@uic.libanswers.com

 

For more images from the collection, visit collections.carli.illinois.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/uic_bru...

 

On the far end beneath the sun is the Pacific Ocean.

The tide is still rolling in. #paloalto #openspace via Instagram ift.tt/2B5PVbm

Date: 1500's

Current location: Rome, Italy

Description of work: View of statue of Giordano Bruno in Piazza Campo de' Fiori. Photo 1998

Work type: Architecture and Landscape

Culture: Italian

Subject of work: piazzas;

Source: copyright James DeTuerk; Photographer: DeTuerk, James

Resource type: image

File format: JPG

Image size: 1024x1280 pixels

Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightsarch.htm h.htm

Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures

Filename: Campo de Fiori05.JPG

Record ID: WB6476

Sub collection: monuments

squares (open spaces)

 

the iliveisl sim, Enercity Park, goes away shortly after these pics were taken. it was one of only 100 or so remaining openspace sims.

 

it had been 3750 prims but when Linden Lab poorly executed their change in policy and pricing and went from $75 to $95 per month and from 3750 prims to 750 prims, this became the most expensive type of land isl

 

but i promised my residents that Enercity would have a park so kept it until the estate was transferred to the very best residents in all of second life

 

the park was the closest to a home that Ener Hax had. two sparse fallout shelters would become Ener's homes

 

one just a bare mattress and cardboard boxes to reduce drafts from broken windows and had and old turret slowly rotating that stood as a silent sentinel to bygone eras when we humans could have taken a lesson from our own avatars and the other a small emergency shelter for the bus stop

 

the lake in the park was called Butterfly Lake from its shape when viewed from the air and had a swan and ducklings swimming and a nice bench for friends to sit and visit under a weeping willow. near that spot was an old underground shelter to park military vehicles. that spot became an underground skatepark and was connected to the city's catacombs. these catacombs, like in Paris, ran below the city streets

 

zombies lived in one section near a small graveyard. no one knew why zombies were there, some suspect it was related to the war time bunkers. the manhole cover near the zombies was opened and the catacombs tagged with "i <3 ener hax" and "subQuark sux"

 

the most favourite spot for Ener Hax was near the bus stop and the 1950's era rotating and steaming coffee billboard (hmm, maybe the chemical smoke from that big coffee cup is to blame for the zombies? after all, the "steam" does drift over the grave yard

 

the fave spot looked over the smaller lake west of the bus stop and was in view of one of the parks two waterfalls. that spot was made very special because of Mr. Bunny. Ener loved to sit on the ground and just watch Mr. Bunny hop around and doze occasionally. what a cute bunny =) he even had his own carrots planted by Ener

 

high above the eastern part of the park was the huge zebra striped zeppelin. a bit of a trademark of the iliveisl estate

 

it was a lovely spot, even had tai chi on the big bunker and a zip line from the water tower

 

ooh, the water tower! as a surprise gift, DreamWalker scripted the water tower and turned it int a funky hang out spot. there was an abandoned pool inside the tower (???) and place to sit and talk. even a cute ladybug called it home. the water tower's top would slide up and down and also turn invisible. for romance, a moon beam came through the towers top port and could even have its brightness changed

 

even though the park was outrageously expensive, it was Ener Hax and Mr. Bunnies home and will be sincerely missed

 

namas te

Will is one of the happiest fishermen seen in a while. 7 pounder that he threw. back. in. Boronda Lake. #paloalto #openspace #fishing #bass #tryyourluck via Instagram ift.tt/1PVaXcd

Freitag, 18. Juli 2008 16:48:42

Balloon carcasses in the wild. #notgood #openspace #paloalto via Instagram ift.tt/2dTu6k1

Other title: Piazza del popolo (Rome, Italy)

Creator: Fontana, Domenico, 1543-1607; Valadier, Giuseppe, 1762-1839

Date: 1589-1824

Current location: Rome, Italy

Description of work: View of Piazza del Popolo showing Obelisk of Ramses II. Piazza original dated 1589 in the city plan proposed by Sixtus V. "the project to ennoble the Piazza del Popolo, Valadier's triumphant experiment in urban design. As early as 1793 Valadier had considered the problem of unifying the various elements of this incoherent ensemble: the 15th-century church of S Maria del Popolo, the 16th-century Porta del Popolo and the twin churches by Carlo Rainaldi, Gianlorenzo Bernini and Carlo Fontana that had been commissioned by Alexander VII and built in the 1660s. Valadier originally proposed a treatment not unlike Michelangelo's Piazza del Campidoglio (1539-64 completed in the 17th century by others), with two long columnar facades converging towards the Porta del Popolo to produce a trapezoidal piazza. The schemes he drew up from 1812, however, were much more ambitious, involving the demolition of a large area to the west of the piazza and the laying out of extensive gardens. The trapezoidal form was initially retained, although flanked by semicircular areas. In later projects, the semicircles were further emphasised until the piazza itself took on the oval form that was finally adopted. To the east, a series of ramps lead up the Pincian Hill to a formal garden of some complexity. Many different schemes exist for the siting of a monumental building on this hill, but all that was finally built was a coffee house, the Casina Valadier. In the piazza itself, the four corners were anchored by two speculative residential blocks to the south, a barracks to the north-west and a monastery adjoining S Maria del Popolo. The asymmetrically placed 16th-century fountain was replaced by four stone lions spouting water at the four corners of the existing obelisk. The work was approved by Pope Pius VII in 1816 and completed in 1824." Source: R. John, "Giuseppe Valadier", The Grove Dictionary of Art Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed 2 August 2003), www.groveart.com

Work type: Architecture and Landscape

Style of work: Renaissance through Rococo

Culture: Italian

Subject of work: piazzas;

Source: copyright James DeTuerk; Photographer: DeTuerk, James

Resource type: image

File format: JPG

Image size: 1024x1280 pixels

Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightsarch.htm h.htm

Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures

Filename: Piazza del Popolo02.JPG

Record ID: WB6671

Sub collection: squares (open spaces)

 

Other title: Piazza del popolo (Rome, Italy)

Creator: Fontana, Domenico, 1543-1607; Valadier, Giuseppe, 1762-1839

Date: 1589-1824

Current location: Rome, Italy

Description of work: View of Piazza del Popolo showing Obelisk of Ramses II. Piazza original dated 1589 in the city plan proposed by Sixtus V. "the project to ennoble the Piazza del Popolo, Valadier's triumphant experiment in urban design. As early as 1793 Valadier had considered the problem of unifying the various elements of this incoherent ensemble: the 15th-century church of S Maria del Popolo, the 16th-century Porta del Popolo and the twin churches by Carlo Rainaldi, Gianlorenzo Bernini and Carlo Fontana that had been commissioned by Alexander VII and built in the 1660s. Valadier originally proposed a treatment not unlike Michelangelo's Piazza del Campidoglio (1539-64 completed in the 17th century by others), with two long columnar facades converging towards the Porta del Popolo to produce a trapezoidal piazza. The schemes he drew up from 1812, however, were much more ambitious, involving the demolition of a large area to the west of the piazza and the laying out of extensive gardens. The trapezoidal form was initially retained, although flanked by semicircular areas. In later projects, the semicircles were further emphasised until the piazza itself took on the oval form that was finally adopted. To the east, a series of ramps lead up the Pincian Hill to a formal garden of some complexity. Many different schemes exist for the siting of a monumental building on this hill, but all that was finally built was a coffee house, the Casina Valadier. In the piazza itself, the four corners were anchored by two speculative residential blocks to the south, a barracks to the north-west and a monastery adjoining S Maria del Popolo. The asymmetrically placed 16th-century fountain was replaced by four stone lions spouting water at the four corners of the existing obelisk. The work was approved by Pope Pius VII in 1816 and completed in 1824." Source: R. John, "Giuseppe Valadier", The Grove Dictionary of Art Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed 2 August 2003), www.groveart.com

Work type: Architecture and Landscape

Style of work: Renaissance through Rococo

Culture: Italian

Subject of work: piazzas;

Source: copyright James DeTuerk; Photographer: DeTuerk, James

Resource type: image

File format: JPG

Image size: 1024x1280 pixels

Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightsarch.htm h.htm

Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures

Filename: Piazza del Popolo01.JPG

Record ID: WB6670

Sub collection: squares (open spaces)

 

Design & A.D. per LUBE Industries

Ph. Leon

the iliveisl sim, Enercity Park, goes away shortly after these pics were taken. it was one of only 100 or so remaining openspace sims.

 

it had been 3750 prims but when Linden Lab poorly executed their change in policy and pricing and went from $75 to $95 per month and from 3750 prims to 750 prims, this became the most expensive type of land isl

 

but i promised my residents that Enercity would have a park so kept it until the estate was transferred to the very best residents in all of second life

 

the park was the closest to a home that Ener Hax had. two sparse fallout shelters would become Ener's homes

 

one just a bare mattress and cardboard boxes to reduce drafts from broken windows and had and old turret slowly rotating that stood as a silent sentinel to bygone eras when we humans could have taken a lesson from our own avatars and the other a small emergency shelter for the bus stop

 

the lake in the park was called Butterfly Lake from its shape when viewed from the air and had a swan and ducklings swimming and a nice bench for friends to sit and visit under a weeping willow. near that spot was an old underground shelter to park military vehicles. that spot became an underground skatepark and was connected to the city's catacombs. these catacombs, like in Paris, ran below the city streets

 

zombies lived in one section near a small graveyard. no one knew why zombies were there, some suspect it was related to the war time bunkers. the manhole cover near the zombies was opened and the catacombs tagged with "i <3 ener hax" and "subQuark sux"

 

the most favourite spot for Ener Hax was near the bus stop and the 1950's era rotating and steaming coffee billboard (hmm, maybe the chemical smoke from that big coffee cup is to blame for the zombies? after all, the "steam" does drift over the grave yard

 

the fave spot looked over the smaller lake west of the bus stop and was in view of one of the parks two waterfalls. that spot was made very special because of Mr. Bunny. Ener loved to sit on the ground and just watch Mr. Bunny hop around and doze occasionally. what a cute bunny =) he even had his own carrots planted by Ener

 

high above the eastern part of the park was the huge zebra striped zeppelin. a bit of a trademark of the iliveisl estate

 

it was a lovely spot, even had tai chi on the big bunker and a zip line from the water tower

 

ooh, the water tower! as a surprise gift, DreamWalker scripted the water tower and turned it int a funky hang out spot. there was an abandoned pool inside the tower (???) and place to sit and talk. even a cute ladybug called it home. the water tower's top would slide up and down and also turn invisible. for romance, a moon beam came through the towers top port and could even have its brightness changed

 

even though the park was outrageously expensive, it was Ener Hax and Mr. Bunnies home and will be sincerely missed

 

namas te

Freitag, 18. Juli 2008 13:48:52

A thematic map detailing the amount of open space, in hectares, per 1000 people. (Population figures are derived from the 2006 Census).

 

Note: West End calculation includes Stanley Park.

Creator: Moore, Charles with U. I. G. and Perez Associates

Date: 1975-1980

Current location: New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.A.

Description of work: Oblique view, Piazza d'Italia, New Orleans, LA.

Work type: Architecture and Landscape

Style of work: Postmodern

Culture: American

Source: Society of Architectural Historians, Image Exchange (http://www.sah.org/imagex.html); Photographer: Breiner, David

Resource type: image

File format: JPG

Image size: 769x1177 pixels

Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightssah.htm

Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures

Filename: 07450h.jpg

Record ID: WB6860

Sub collection: squares (open spaces)

 

Other title: Piazza San Pietro (Vatican City)

Creator: Bernini, Gian Lorenzo, 1598-1680

Date: 1657-1667

Current location: Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy

Description of work: The open space in front of St. Peter's was regularized under Pope Alexander VII into one of the world's most distinctive urban compositions by Gianlorenzo Bernini from 1657-1667. It was designed as a conjunction of two forms: a trapezoidal space immediately in front of the facade, called the "Piazza Retta" and a laterally-oriented elliptical "Piazza Obliqua" centered on the Vatican obelisk. The enormous "arms" around the Piazza Obliqua consist of colonnades that are both permeable to pedestrian traffic and a clear boundary for the space. The geometry also allows a maximum number of people to view Papal appearances at the benediction loggia in the church facade.

Work type: Architecture and Landscape

Style of work: Baroque: High Baroque

Culture: Italian

Source: Copyright James DeTuerk; Photographer: DeTuerk, James

Resource type: image

File format: JPG

Image size: 675 x 1024 pixels

Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightsarch.htm

Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures

Filename: WB2006-531 St Peter Square view southeast from dome.jpg

Record ID: WB2006-531

Sub collection: squares (open spaces)

 

These are used to avoid two planes using the same radio frequency in the same area.

The sky was filled with these big clouds and the long-awaited rain fell shortly thereafter. It was not a big storm but instead a pleasant storm.

No Netflix but chill. #openspace #paloalto via Instagram ift.tt/28PkO7U

The Flat Iron Mountains! Not the "natural" food store, that's an Austin Icon.

 

This work is licensed under a

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.

Please Attribute to: Brett VA

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