View allAll Photos Tagged scaffolding

I've been telling everyone about the bamboo scaffolding. This is a street level view.

Disassemble of a grandstand used at the World Cup in alpine skiing at Hammarbybacken in Stockholm, Sweden.

Inside Hagia Sophia, 13 June, 2015

Bamboo, both sturdy and flexible, makes for good scaffolding. Look at these construction workers climbing way up there...

Don't let scaffolding cover up your business. Let everyone know you are still there and open by using signage.

 

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cette photo a été prise avec un téléphone Samsung SGH-E900

Scaffolding on a building saying it is alarmed.

Spotted this recently in Ann Arbor. This stack of scaffolding was on a truck that had just arrived at a construction site on the University of Michigan campus.

The stuccoing begins!

We have left Kowloon Park and are walking down to the harbour, we paused on this corner whilst some went to change money. I was very taken with the bamboo scaffolding, especially the scaffolding that seems to hang on the side of buildings, presumably put out from the windows to replace or repair them.

I think this will be holding up the lobby area of the shopping mall, Hotel or Office block being built here. This site is above Tseung Kwan O MTR Station.

The courtyard of the Reynolds Center will eventually be roofed; the designer is the same man who designed the roof of the British Museum courtyard

Scaffolding on a building near ground zero

A large building with layers of scaffolding and offices

View LARGE to get a good impression of this amazing art. Bamboo scaffolding, held together with little ropes, sometimes al the way up to the top of sky scrapers!

 

btw, thanks for the autostitch tip Harold!

 

Check out this video on youtube for an idea of how this is built.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=pzBVf5u3T50

jaipur, november 2007

When I visited Greyfriars Kirkyard last October, I was so excited to see certain gravestones. Well...many of my favorites were hidden behind scaffolding and I was kinda ticked. Well, I've been looking at each photo seeing what I can salvage. Here is my first salvage job. I was pretty far away and it was kinda high up AND under scaffolding, but I did my best.

 

OH, it's got a little bit of everything. You got your Latin, you got your skeleton, you got your cherub, your skull, your angel, your hourglass, your Bible etc. Can you see why I was a bit miffed?

 

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Hidden away behind other buildings is one of the gems of Edinburgh's Old Town, the Kirk of the Greyfriars: also known as the Greyfriars Tolbooth and Highland Kirk, or just simply Greyfriars Kirk.

 

Churches are usually amongst the easiest of buildings to find, announcing their presence with a tower or steeple. Not so Greyfriars Kirk, and as a result finding it takes a little detective work. Your starting point should be the circular stone tower of the beautiful new Museum of Scotland building. Looking across the road to its west you see a pub, Greyfriars Bobby's Bar. To the left of the pub as you look at it is a passageway. It leads into Greyfriars Kirkyard.

 

The Kirk itself is a beautifully restored yellowish harled barn of a building, sitting amid a surprisingly large space to have been so successfully hidden away in the heart of the Old Town.

 

Greyfriars was the first church to be built in Edinburgh after the Reformation of 1560, and was built on land granted by Mary Queen of Scots, previously the property of the Franciscan convent in the Grassmarket (hence the name Greyfriars). Building started in 1602, using stone reclaimed from a disused Dominican convent elsewhere in the city, and the kirk opened for business on Christmas Day, 1620.

 

Greyfriars has an important place in Scottish history. In 1638 the National Covenant was signed here, sparking a series of conflicts that were to last for nearly half a century including, arguably, the English Civil War and certainly the "killing time" of the latter half of the 1600s

 

In 1679 the Wars of the Covenant returned to Greyfriars, when the South Yard of the kirkyard was used as a temporary prison for 1200 Covenanters awaiting trial. This must have been a remarkably grim prison, shared with the mausoleums that line both sides of the yard, but it is hard to see how it could have been an especially secure one.

 

Elsewhere in the kirkyard is the Martyrs Monument, erected in 1709 in memory of the Covenanters killed in the 1600s. The rest of the kirkyard contains one of the best collections anywhere of monuments going back to the 1600s. But it is a more recent grave that is one of the most visited in the kirkyard. This is the grave of John Gray, who was an Edinburgh policeman who died of tuberculosis on 15 February 1858 and was buried here. He had a dog, a Skye Terrier called Bobby, and for the following 14 years, until the dog's own death in 1872, Bobby kept watch over John Gray's grave. Hence the name of the pub next to the kirkyard entrance. And hence the statue of a dog in front of the pub.

 

The interior of Greyfriars Kirk is beautiful and spacious. The church has had an accident prone history, and as a result much of what you see inside is younger than you might expect. For example Greyfriars originally had a tower at its west end. However, the town council used it as a gunpowder store, and in 1718 the inevitable happened. When the west end of the church was rebuilt, the tower was omitted, though space was provided for two separate congregations.

 

In 1845 fire destroyed much of the older part of the church and badly damaged the newer part. The rebuilding took until 1857 to complete, and included the first addition of stained glass windows to any Scottish parish church since the Reformation nearly three hundred years earlier. Robert Louis Stevenson's 1897 observations on Greyfriars in Edinburgh: Picturesque Notes can be read here.

 

It was only with a major restoration between 1931 and 1938 that the two halves of Greyfriars Kirk were reunited under a magnificent new ceiling of Californian redwood.

Current Scaffolding of the Congress Theatre, Eastbourne. Whoever thought of doing this instead of horrid metal poles and wood was a genius.

Crunch! Bang! Crumple!

 

Last week, the scaffolding collapsed on the building next to my work and closed Castlereagh St between Park and Market Sts.

Tues. the 28th headed out but had to come back in. So some old works.

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I loved the look of the bamboo scaffolding that the Chinese used un building construction. It's incredibly dangerous to work on, but it looks good.

DUBAI, World Parachuting Championships Dubai am 29.11.2012 , Dubai Marina. Scaffolding being disassembled.

The painting is nearly complete - just before the scaffolding is removed.

Bhojeshwar temple, Bhojpur near Bhopal. Syncretism tour, Oct 2011.

Scaffolding at the Haghia Sophia, Image in Black and White

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