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Relocated was a three year (2001 – 2003) project based at Kensington public housing estate.
Photographer Angela Bailey and writer Angela Costi were based at the estate and worked with tenants and relocated tenants to document the redevelopment of this estate in physical, social and emotional terms and to acknowledge and celebrate the contribution made by tenants (past and present) to Kensington and to Melbourne generally.
This public housing estate was redeveloped into a new public/private housing development and 400 households (around 1000 people) were relocated temporarily or permanently from the estate to suburbs across Melbourne. Given the small size of Kensington (approximately 5000 people), this redevelopment signified a huge shift locally.
The project was a collaboration with the Tenants Union of Victoria, the Kensington Public Tenants Association, and the Office of Housing. Public outcomes of reLOCATED included an exhibition and public performance on the estate, an exhibition at Horti Hall Gallery in Carlton, and the publication of a book.
Photograph by Angela Bailey
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Warehouse Live
Houston, TX
2.24.12
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Close to nest entrance in an Acer dead branch, Dolichoderus quadripunctatus workers moving nymphs to a new location.
In February 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066. It authorized the relocation of all Japanese-Americans living on the West Coast of the United States. Over 120,000 people were sent to 10 war relocation centers. One of them was Minidoka, located in the desolate Magic Valley of South Central Idaho. More than 9,000 Japanese-Americans were forced to live here during World War II. Today the National Park Service oversees the site.
Tri Valley Recyclers is a premier office mover, committed to help making your business move as simple as possible. Our services include the moving/relocation of:
- Offices
- Laboratories
- Factories / Warehouses
- Store fixtures
- Corporate Suites
- Hotel Furniture
- Trade show equipment
- Etc ...
Also,our relocation specialists can assist in setting your priorities, developing a relocation plan and helping with all aspects of your move.
Running a business is a lot of work. Let us take care of your relocation, so you can focus on what's most important to you.
This carousel, now found in the Watkins Regional Park in Upper Marlboro, Md., used to be in a now-defunct amusement park in Chesapeake Beach, Md.
For the first bit of time on the beach, Annabelle was happy to putter around right at the shoreline, but didn't venture much further.
Manzanar Relocation Center, Manzanar, California. Grandfather and grandson of Japanese ancestry at this War Relocation Authority center.
Tri Valley Recyclers is a premier office mover, committed to help making your business move as simple as possible. Our services include the moving/relocation of:
- Offices
- Laboratories
- Factories / Warehouses
- Store fixtures
- Corporate Suites
- Hotel Furniture
- Trade show equipment
- Etc ...
Also,our relocation specialists can assist in setting your priorities, developing a relocation plan and helping with all aspects of your move.
Running a business is a lot of work. Let us take care of your relocation, so you can focus on what's most important to you.
Relocated was a three year (2001 – 2003) project based at Kensington public housing estate.
Photographer Angela Bailey and writer Angela Costi were based at the estate and worked with tenants and relocated tenants to document the redevelopment of this estate in physical, social and emotional terms and to acknowledge and celebrate the contribution made by tenants (past and present) to Kensington and to Melbourne generally.
This public housing estate was redeveloped into a new public/private housing development and 400 households (around 1000 people) were relocated temporarily or permanently from the estate to suburbs across Melbourne. Given the small size of Kensington (approximately 5000 people), this redevelopment signified a huge shift locally.
The project was a collaboration with the Tenants Union of Victoria, the Kensington Public Tenants Association, and the Office of Housing. Public outcomes of reLOCATED included an exhibition and public performance on the estate, an exhibition at Horti Hall Gallery in Carlton, and the publication of a book.
Photograph by Angela Bailey
Relocated was a three year (2001 – 2003) project based at Kensington public housing estate.
Photographer Angela Bailey and writer Angela Costi were based at the estate and worked with tenants and relocated tenants to document the redevelopment of this estate in physical, social and emotional terms and to acknowledge and celebrate the contribution made by tenants (past and present) to Kensington and to Melbourne generally.
This public housing estate was redeveloped into a new public/private housing development and 400 households (around 1000 people) were relocated temporarily or permanently from the estate to suburbs across Melbourne. Given the small size of Kensington (approximately 5000 people), this redevelopment signified a huge shift locally.
The project was a collaboration with the Tenants Union of Victoria, the Kensington Public Tenants Association, and the Office of Housing. Public outcomes of reLOCATED included an exhibition and public performance on the estate, an exhibition at Horti Hall Gallery in Carlton, and the publication of a book.
Photograph by Angela Bailey
Her hair has been trimmed a little to even it up, it's longer than this picture shows, because it's been up in a ponytail for a while. I will wet it and let it dry to make sure it's not rumply before I send her.
Designed in 1908-1909 and built in 1909-1910, this Prairie-style house was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for Frederick C. Robie, assistant manager of the Excelsior Supply Company, and his wife, Lora Hieronymus Robie, a 1900 graduate of the University of Chicago who aspired to become the owner and operator of a Kindergarten. Built by the H.B. Barnard Co., the house was the last to be designed in the Chicago area during Frank Lloyd Wright’s period of residency in Oak Park, before he relocated to Taliesin the year following the completion of the house. The house was the home of the Robie family for only fourteen months before marital and financial difficulties forced them to sell the house, and it was acquired by David Lee Taylor, president of the Taylor-Critchfield Company, an advertising agency, and his wife, Ellen Taylor. The Taylors only lived in the house for just over a year prior to David Lee Taylor’s death, after which Ellen sold it to Marshall D. Wilber, treasurer of the Wilber Mercantile Agency, and the house remained the home of the Wilber family for the next 14 years.
The Wilber family moved out in the summer of 1926, selling the house to the nearby Chicago Theological Seminary, whom utilized the house as a dormitory and dining hall, eventually intending to replace the house with a new purpose-built building, a plan that was put on hold for decades by the Great Depression and World War II. In 1957, the Seminary finally put into motion the plans to demolish the house to replace it with a new dormitory and dining hall facility, which elicited outcry from the architectural community, including an appeal from Frank Lloyd Wright, whom showed up with protestors at the age of 90 to decry the impeding demolition of one of his masterworks. Eventually, a deal was reached with two adjacent fraternities to sell the land upon which their houses sat to the seminary in order to save the Robie House, and the dormitory and dining hall facility was subsequently constructed to the north of the house. The house was acquired by William Zeckendorf, a personal friend of Wright’s and proprietor of development company Webb and Knapp, whom donated the house to the University of Chicago in 1963, ensuring the preservation of the house. The house served as the Adlai E. Stevenson Institute of International Affairs in the 1960s, and later the home of the school’s Alumni foundation. In 1997, university offices were moved out of the house, and it was opened to the public as a museum.
The house features a steel and masonry structure, which affords an open interior floor plan and a highly transparent facade, which allows for ample views out of the house, while maintaining privacy. The house, like other houses of Wright’s Prairie School, features a low-pitch hipped roof with broad overhanging eaves, ribbon art glass windows, exterior terraces and porches, and concrete planters. The house is clad in red roman brick with limestone trim, and has heavy horizontal emphasis in its design. The front entrance is recessed from the street at the rear of a courtyard on the north side of the front facade, while the south facade features a courtyard and three-car garage at the east end of the house, an almost unheard of feature in 1910. The interior of the house features woodwork, custom brass and wood wall sconces, custom furniture, art glass doors, brick fireplaces, tiled bathrooms, a needle shower in the master bathroom, and large amounts of natural light.
The house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1963, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966. The house was further designated as a Chicago Landmark in 1971, and was one of eight Frank Lloyd Wright buildings that comprise The 20th-Century Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright World Heritage Site, designated by UNESCO in 2019. Today, the house, after undergoing a significant restoration between 2002 and 2019, is owned by the University of Chicago, and stewarded and operated as a museum by the Frank Lloyd Wright Trust.
Relocated was a three year (2001 – 2003) project based at Kensington public housing estate.
Photographer Angela Bailey and writer Angela Costi were based at the estate and worked with tenants and relocated tenants to document the redevelopment of this estate in physical, social and emotional terms and to acknowledge and celebrate the contribution made by tenants (past and present) to Kensington and to Melbourne generally.
This public housing estate was redeveloped into a new public/private housing development and 400 households (around 1000 people) were relocated temporarily or permanently from the estate to suburbs across Melbourne. Given the small size of Kensington (approximately 5000 people), this redevelopment signified a huge shift locally.
The project was a collaboration with the Tenants Union of Victoria, the Kensington Public Tenants Association, and the Office of Housing. Public outcomes of reLOCATED included an exhibition and public performance on the estate, an exhibition at Horti Hall Gallery in Carlton, and the publication of a book.
Photograph by Angela Bailey
Relocated was a three year (2001 – 2003) project based at Kensington public housing estate.
Photographer Angela Bailey and writer Angela Costi were based at the estate and worked with tenants and relocated tenants to document the redevelopment of this estate in physical, social and emotional terms and to acknowledge and celebrate the contribution made by tenants (past and present) to Kensington and to Melbourne generally.
This public housing estate was redeveloped into a new public/private housing development and 400 households (around 1000 people) were relocated temporarily or permanently from the estate to suburbs across Melbourne. Given the small size of Kensington (approximately 5000 people), this redevelopment signified a huge shift locally.
The project was a collaboration with the Tenants Union of Victoria, the Kensington Public Tenants Association, and the Office of Housing. Public outcomes of reLOCATED included an exhibition and public performance on the estate, an exhibition at Horti Hall Gallery in Carlton, and the publication of a book.
Photograph by Angela Bailey
Sunshine is a suburb of Melbourne, Australia, lying 11 km west of the CBD, located within the City of Brimbank local government area.
Initially a town just outside Melbourne, today Sunshine is a residential suburb with a mix of period and post-War homes, with a town centre that is an important retail centre in Melbourne's west.
It is also one of Melbourne's principal places of employment outside the CBD with many industrial companies situated in the area, and is an important public transport hub.
To protect the loggerhead turtle eggs from the elements and predators while they incubate the eggs are moved to a safer and protected location above high tide. We have to attend classes and be certified by the DNR (Department of Natural Resources) in order to be allowed to move the eggs.
Relocated this cute orb weaver from my washing line to the tip of a leaf of a port wine magnolia tree.