View allAll Photos Tagged optus
Looking straight up at the glass awning over the back entrance to the Optus building on the corner of South Terrace and King William Street. It had been raining and the sky was a stormy grey.
Two young men using the abseiling method to wash the exterior glass windows on the Optus building on the corner of South Terrace and King William Street.
The inside corner of the Optus building as seen from the top of the Holland Street carpark. There is a building going up on the left, hence the reflection of the crane.
Matagarup bridge over the Swan River. Perth WA “Matagarup " is the Nyungar name for the whole area – waters included – around Heirisson Island, and which means "place where the river is only leg deep, allowing it to be crossed"
These fittings on the external facade of the glassy Optus building turned out to be sprinklers when I zoomed in on them. I had thought they were lights.
The construction crane at the building site next to the Optus building on King William Street, near South Terrace.
Explore #67 - thanks everyone ^^
Had a day off today, so I decided to do some shooting in south side of the city.
3 exposures HDR shot with 5dmkii with EF 16-35mm lens at 16mm with CPL.
Post processing workflow:
- tonemapped in photomatix
- added a curve
- adjusted the level for increased brightness
- unsharp mask at the background layer
All comments and critiques are welcome.
The 370 metre long Matagarup Bridge is so much more than just a pedestrian bridge.
Connecting Optus Stadium and the Burswood Peninsula to East Perth, Matagarup Bridge symbolises a ‘coming together of diverse cultures’.
The flowing arches can represent a pair of black and white swans or the Wagyl, a water-serpent of great importance to local Noongar culture. Feature lighting on the arches illuminates the bridge every night of the year.
The Bridge is also home to a bridge climb with an open air viewing platform 72m above the river, and a 400m long zip line that reaches 75km/hr.
Visit Perth.
The great Optus Stadium in Perth. Awesome to watch the footy here, although could do with more toilets. I watched Collingwood get up in the last minute to beat West Coast last year with my dad.
Nikon D800.
The afternoon sun highlights the beautiful brickwork, on this classic tram depot in Melbourne's inner eastern suburbs.
A recently re-painted D1 Class tram, showing 'Optus' advertising, has just arrived at the depot.
In the new Optus Stadium, Perth, Western Australia.
New Zealand 'Warriors' .V. South Sydney 'Rabbitohs'. March 10th 2018.
Not so much anymore. At 120m. tall and a having a mere 28 floors, North Sydney's Optus Plaza Tower is to become diminutive when compared with 100 floor buildings being planned for the area.
North-West Sydney features the largely residential and industrial suburbs west of the North Shore, north of the Parramatta River, and to the north-west of the Sydney central business district.
The area includes the Hills District centered around Castle Hill and Baulkham Hills.
Sydney's Silicon Valley encompasses Macquarie Park (home to many large, international corporations including Microsoft, Optus and Canon), North Ryde and Macquarie University.
The district also includes large residential suburbs in Ryde, Epping and Carlingford. @sydney
‘Matagarup Bridge’
The 370 metre long Matagarup Bridge is so much more than just a pedestrian bridge.
Connecting Optus Stadium and the Burswood Peninsula to East Perth, Matagarup Bridge symbolises a ‘coming together of diverse cultures’.
The flowing arches can represent a pair of black and white swans or the Wagyl, a water-serpent of great importance to local Noongar culture. Feature lighting on the arches illuminates the bridge every night of the year.
What a way to finish off my visit to Perth....
Bright red brick building sandwiched between bare wintry branches and the bright yellow Optus building.
Perth’s Lord Mayor has called for the city to “go blue” to thank the WA Police officers who found missing four-year-old girl Cleo Smith. after 18 days missing from her distraught family,
Cleo vanished from her family’s campsite in the early hours of October 16 in an incident that was quickly deemed a suspected abduction.
“Lighting up in blue is just a simple gesture on our part to let WA Police, family and friends of Cleo and the Carnarvon community know that we are thinking of them and are relieved that Cleo has been reunited with her family.”