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Relocated the Pop - up Hide into ' The Crater ' a large hole that holds water.
High Farm C.P.
Routh.
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This photo has been taken as part of the scientific effort of the salvage archaeologist team H.U.N.E. to document the Sudanese Arab tribe of the Manasir and their cultural landscape 'Dar al-Manasir' situated at the Fourth Cararact of the River Nile.
The homeland of the Manasir will be submerged by the reservoir lake of the Hamdab High Dam (Merowe Multi-Purpose Hydro Project) in the very near future and all inhabitants have to be relocated by the Sudanese government.
For further details click: www.daralmanasir.com
(c) 2005 by David Haberlah - please contact david@haberlah.com
This armor unit has been given orders to relocate. An Officer barks orders at a pair of Tele-Vipers, as a HISS and Vipers begin to move out.
Surprise this morning: Chaco snake-barked and we thought that he found 2 rattlers mating. We don't really want to encourage a Diamondback nursery in our dog-run, so after removing Chaco from the scene, and making this video, I got my snake stick and bin and lifted the first big one into it. Ops, that was too easy - and there were still 2 tails connected on the ground. Ménage a trois. Lifting the still connected pair with one snake hook prove quite difficult, but all eventually all got collected in the bin and carried far away into the wild. In transport they lost interest in mating and eventually went their 3 different ways. Looking at my in situ video now I can of course see 3 different tails (one rattling).
YACHIYO
Although Atelier Tekuto’s «Relocation» project has been underway since 2007, Yachiyo is the first «Re-location» building completed in Japan. The building is situated 100 meters from the ocean in Hayama, Kanagawa prefecture. This is used as a secondary residence and temporary shop.
PURPOSE
To make 100 year old materials last for another 100 years.
To fuse old and new material, juxtaposing the regional and cultural differences in a parallel arrangement.
We treat sunlight as a material. A material that can be captured only for an instant. It has the ability to fuse the juxtaposing elements or emphasize their differences. It exists both within and outside the human concept of time. Sunlight turns the interior space inside out. It highlights the dramatic structure as it permeates the building, accentuating the marriage between traditional and contemporary values. At night, custom handmade light fixtures let Yachiyo float into sight like a constellation fireflies.
Yachiyo - Japanese word meaning «a long time».
RELOCATION
Two abandoned warehouses built 100 and 120 years ago were chosen. In order to reinforce the structure, the two warehouses were wrapped with furring strips that also function as thin columns. Enhanced high-pressure wood wool cement boards which act as insulation were attached. This provided structural reinforcement, humidity control and thermal insulation all in one system
The wrapping material was reduced to a thickness of 95mm in order to provide more interior space. Also, the preexisting material was treated in order to prevent infestation and provide resistance against the salty environment. The first floor is composed of, eighty year old bricks made in Shanghai. The material of the previous first floor was then refinished and applied to the 2nd floor. In effect, disused materials were transported from distant locations and given new life.
Re-configuring Values
“Re-configuring Values” is a concept that will permeate the 21st Century. The following concepts are essential to this discussion:
Ecology
The conservation of the global environment - the most significant theme for this century – ought to be examined from a new standpoint, through new developments and re-configurations.
Cross-Culture
Adopting specific local and regional characteristics in order to achieve not just simple integration between different architectural styles and cultures, but to create culture on an entirely new dimension.
Reconsideration of Time
A re-examination of the past in order to predict the future. An increased awareness of time as a phenomenon that can preserve local and regional differences in material and character.
It is essential to achieve a greater understanding of when to preserve, when to eliminate or when to maintain.
Based on these three approaches, we are working to “re-configure values” by recycling, reducing and relocating Japan’s traditional Minka houses in order to give them new life.
Atlier Tekuto
Photographer
Toshihiro Sobajima
25 January 2016. Yida: Asylum seekers from South Kordofan, Sudan, are attended at the clinic in Yida, South Sudan.
South Sudan, where there is a civil war since December 2013, also hosts more than 260,000 refugees who fled from conflicted areas in Sudan, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of Congo and Central Africa Republic.
Photo by Albert Gonzalez Farran - www.albertgonzalez.net
(September 17, 2009) — Sixty ordnance treasures made the 200-mile trip down treacherous Interstate 95 to Fort Lee, Va., during Phase 1 of the Ordnance Museum relocation Aug. 3 to 7. Powering the historical move were drivers from the Meadow Lark Transportation Company and crane operators and riggers from A&A Transfer Inc. out of Virginia. Read more...
The only block with old houses that survived on Quijiang Lu in Hongkou is not gong to stay there for long. When a family moves out, the workers break the walls and the roofs, to make houses unlivable.
The move ran smoothing where we arranged for personal belongings and furniture to be relocated and also prepared the offices for the company with organisation including a searing plan for 100+ staff, welfare facilities, signage and more.
CEA Projects Myanmar recently undertook a project for the moving of a 25-year-old bottle washer from Wardan in downtown Yangon to the clients’ new soft drink manufacturing plant 20kms away in the Northern Yangon district of Shwe Pyi Thar.
The washer weighed over 45 Tonnes and had been affixed in the same position since its installation over 25 years ago. The washers dimensions of 14m x 3.4m x 4m (LxWxH) resulted in a careful and meticulous removal as the washer was moved from its original operating area, skated through 90 degrees then jacked 1.2 meters off the ground and readied for transportation.
Due to the complexity of the Transportation, special permits were required from six Yangon Townships prior to moving the washer. Due to certain height restrictions on the roads in Yangon transportation began in the early hours to take advantage of the low volume of traffic. CEA teams ensured that power lines, traffic lights and other potential roadside hazards were avoided and kept intact throughout the journey.
Upon arrival at the new plant, the washer was turned to the correct angle and carefully skated into position. The final procedure consisted of levelling the washer to the correct height making it ready for installation and operation. Once again CEA Myanmar in conjunction with CEA Thailand have shown their expertise in a potentially difficult and challenging project that’s was completed on time safely and within budget.
Col. Jeffery Harris, and Command Sgt. Maj. Drew Underwood, 202nd Military Police Group (CID) case the unit colors during a relocation ceremony held on Stem Kaserne June 11. (Photo by Jason L. Austin, Herald Post Staff)
You can see the "stock" mirror location holes on the door panel. These are going to be filled before we get the truck painted. Don't know why they built it that way but it sure don't make any sense.
You can also see the mod to the upper door hings (lower is similar) and the new mirror bracket to relocate the stock mirror. Yeah- I know it needs to be painted- just like everything else.
Now when the doors come off the truck is still legal.
Rock cut sculptures of four seated figures: Ra-Horakhty, the deified king Ramesses, and the gods Amun Ra and Ptah. Ra-Horakhty, Amun Ra and Ptah were the main divinities in that period and their cult centers were at Heliopolis, Thebes and Memphis respectively.
It is believed that the axis of the temple was positioned by the ancient Egyptian architects in such a way that on October 22 and February 22, the rays of the sun would penetrate the sanctuary and illuminate the sculptures on the back wall, except for the statue of Ptah, a god connected with the realm of the dead, who always remained in the dark. People gather at Abu Simbel on these days to witness this.
These dates are allegedly the king's birthday and coronation day, respectively. There is no direct evidence to support this. It is logical to assume, however, that these dates had some relation to a significant event. In fact, according to calculations made on the basis of the heliacal rising of the star Sirius (Sothis) and inscriptions found by archaeologists, this date must have been October 22. This image of the king was enhanced and revitalized by the energy of the solar star, and the deified Ramesses the Great could take his place next to Amun-Ra and Ra-Horakhty.
Because of the accumulated drift of the Tropic of Cancer due to Earth's axial precession over the past 3 millennia, the event's date must have been different when the temple was built. This is compounded by the fact that the temple was relocated from its original setting, so the current alignment may not be as precise as the original one.
The downtown transit terminal in Saskatoon was relocated due to a water-main break between 2nd Avenue North and 3rd Avenue North on 23rd Street East.
There are too many pictures of Ada for one Flickr account to be enough. arieleremy is becoming an archive, and we can be found posting away here:
www.flickr.com/photos/pixel_8/
and
The Library of Occidental College seeks to make known its unique collection of materials regarding the Japanese American relocation and evacuation during World War II. These historical documents were preserved through the efforts of President Remsen DuBois Bird and College Librarian, Elizabeth McCloy, in the mid-1940’s. An initial grant from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation’s Archival Grants Program in 2004 partially funds the Library’s digital archive project to preserve, digitize and distribute a selection of the letters, materials and newspapers published in the Japanese internment camps during World War II.
In The Relocation Program: A Guidebook for the Residents of Relocation Centers, it is stated that "At all centers, the WRA [War Relocation Authority] encourages the evacuee residents to assume the fullest possible responsibility for publishing a newspaper that meets the community needs..." Indeed, residents of relocation centers produced numerous publications, describing and documenting their experience.
A wall beside a partially-demolished hutong near Qianmen. The posters are all advertising new apartments, for the benefit of the soon-to-be-displaced residents. However, the only places that many of these people will be able to afford are a long way from the centre of Beijing.
So much for progress.
I think this is the same hutong in happier days, nearly ten years ago.
CEA Projects Myanmar recently undertook a project for the moving of a 25-year-old bottle washer from Wardan in downtown Yangon to the clients’ new soft drink manufacturing plant 20kms away in the Northern Yangon district of Shwe Pyi Thar.
The washer weighed over 45 Tonnes and had been affixed in the same position since its installation over 25 years ago. The washers dimensions of 14m x 3.4m x 4m (LxWxH) resulted in a careful and meticulous removal as the washer was moved from its original operating area, skated through 90 degrees then jacked 1.2 meters off the ground and readied for transportation.
Due to the complexity of the Transportation, special permits were required from six Yangon Townships prior to moving the washer. Due to certain height restrictions on the roads in Yangon transportation began in the early hours to take advantage of the low volume of traffic. CEA teams ensured that power lines, traffic lights and other potential roadside hazards were avoided and kept intact throughout the journey.
Upon arrival at the new plant, the washer was turned to the correct angle and carefully skated into position. The final procedure consisted of levelling the washer to the correct height making it ready for installation and operation. Once again CEA Myanmar in conjunction with CEA Thailand have shown their expertise in a potentially difficult and challenging project that’s was completed on time safely and within budget.
CEA Projects Myanmar recently undertook a project for the moving of a 25-year-old bottle washer from Wardan in downtown Yangon to the clients’ new soft drink manufacturing plant 20kms away in the Northern Yangon district of Shwe Pyi Thar.
The washer weighed over 45 Tonnes and had been affixed in the same position since its installation over 25 years ago. The washers dimensions of 14m x 3.4m x 4m (LxWxH) resulted in a careful and meticulous removal as the washer was moved from its original operating area, skated through 90 degrees then jacked 1.2 meters off the ground and readied for transportation.
Due to the complexity of the Transportation, special permits were required from six Yangon Townships prior to moving the washer. Due to certain height restrictions on the roads in Yangon transportation began in the early hours to take advantage of the low volume of traffic. CEA teams ensured that power lines, traffic lights and other potential roadside hazards were avoided and kept intact throughout the journey.
Upon arrival at the new plant, the washer was turned to the correct angle and carefully skated into position. The final procedure consisted of levelling the washer to the correct height making it ready for installation and operation. Once again CEA Myanmar in conjunction with CEA Thailand have shown their expertise in a potentially difficult and challenging project that’s was completed on time safely and within budget.
Since the devastation of hurricane Ike, House mover Garrett Denny, and long time structural mover Gary R. Denny have been raising houses in Texas. GR Denny and Son has over 20 years of experience in moving, lifting, shifting and shoring houses and buildings while leaving the structural integrity of your building unharmed.
The Farver School was built in 1868. Originally, the school was located about two miles from its present location. The building was relocated and restored. In 2016, the building housed the local historical society's museum.
Golden Gate Produce Terminal. 1962 to present. View of plant in South San Francisco nearing completion. The move to the privately financed Golden Gate Produce Terminal, west of Bayshore Highway, culminated a long and bitter fight over where the merchants were to relocate after their district in San Francisco was redeveloped.
These pictures are just a small example of the devastation in and around Tuscaloosa, Alabama right now. Total destruction. Miles long. Miles wide. You see a pile and wonder if it is a house. You stare for a few minutes and still do not know.
It is most interesting to look in these piles and see people's lives, once private, now exposed in the sunshine, laying on the ground.
Quality Tips For Home Enhancement Projects
Removals Little Bay is your home buddy to a successful moving. Little Bay is 14 kilometers away from the Central Business District of Sydney. The suburb offers many great things for everyone both for singles, families and even retirees. The wrap-around ocean fronts, golf course, reservation parks and sport fields are all found in Little Bay. The secluded beaches are so pristine it is best place to unwind and to relax from life stressors.
The suburb is clean and the heritage structures are just around the corner to tell you about the suburb’s rich cultural history. It is also nearby Coogee, Maroubra and Randwick. Moving here is a great move for you family because you will surely enjoy the quietness and peacefulness of the place.
Fancy restaurants, cafes and retail shops are also nearby you really have everything in the suburb. In fact the University of New South Wales is just 10 minutes’ drive from the community. Also the Bondi Junction and Northern Suburbs are adjacent to the suburb.
Some even say that residing in Little Bay is like residing in a millionaire’s oasis. Why? Because they said that it’s a piece of paradise while the homes and workplaces are very affordable. You can tell us some more about it when you are moved in.
Removals Little Bay will help you to move pain free and stress free to the wonderful land of Little Bay. We hope that the following guidelines can help you:
Throw away all flammables such as matches, cleaning fluids, bleach, etc. You don’t need to bring this stuff when moving.
Inform or discontinue regular services such as window cleaning or newspaper delivery.
Identify belongings that you will bring with you. Sort out the items that you can sell or give it away.
Arm yourself with a clean inventory printed on a spreadsheet of all your items in a room by room basis.
Label all your boxes and use durable and tough deals.
Removalists Little Bay suggests to reduce the cost of your home moving through the following tips and methods.
Give yourself enough time to canvass for the best elimination company around. There are many competitive moving quotes such as the services of Removals Little Bay.
Pack items that you can manage. You may ask the removals company to pack complex and breakable items.
Using quality packing materials may cost you a little but it can save your valuable items.
Be practical with your moving schedule, like you can move at the end of a lease.
Don’t forget to ask your removals company about their extra offers and make sure to write them down.
Moving can be fun and exciting if you know what you are doing. Planning and organizing all your stuff are the best practices when moving. Involve all your family members, surely your children will be happy to become part of the planning and moving day.
Removals Little Bay is worthy of your trust and confidence. The company has been the moving buddy of Sydney and its nearby metropolitan areas for many years. It’s a family owned business that is successfully operating based on the principles of honesty and quality service. superiorremovals.com.au/removals-north-willoughby/
Almost 3500 internally displaced people have been successfully relocated from the UN Protection of Civilians site in Juba to a new site within the community in a joint effort between the United Nations Mission in South Sudan and humanitarian agencies.
“This is the first movement of displaced people of this magnitude out of the UN Juba protection site. Almost all of those relocated were women and children,” said the UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of UNMISS, David Shearer. “They had expressed a strong desire to leave the UN site and to be reunited with their husbands and other family members. Early indications and, in my discussions with those who moved, is that they are pleased to be back in the wider community.”
The combined effort to relocate the families to an existing site at Mangateen in the central city followed an UNMISS-negotiated end to sporadic fighting between various groups within the UN protection camp over the past few weeks that threatened vulnerable civilians inside. Once a resolution was reached and people expressed a desire to leave, humanitarian agencies and UNMISS worked quickly and cooperatively to establish temporary housing at Mangateen along with clean water, sanitation and health services.
“All those involved in the relocation process realized the seriousness of the situation given the large number of vulnerable women and children being moved. It was a true team effort to carry out the massive logistical task of transporting and supporting these families in a new location within just a few days,” said David Shearer.
The Mangateen site has traditionally been managed by the South Sudan Government’s Relief and Rehabilitation Commission and it will continue to do so. Humanitarian agencies will provide additional assistance on request.
“I am particularly grateful for the Government’s rapid response to this situation which ensured that people were able to be safely moved and accommodated back in the community,” said David Shearer.
“Hundreds of thousands of people fled to UN protection sites across South Sudan out of fear for their lives during the ongoing conflict. But these camps are not a good long-term option for families,” said David Shearer. “If people have the trust and confidence that the environment is safe enough for them to voluntarily return home, UNMISS is poised to assist them. But providing that confidence in the security situation very much lies with the Government.”
Photo: UNMISS / Eric Kanalstein