View allAll Photos Tagged structure

THSD Farewell Tour

August 20.2010

London Music Hall, London, ON

www.myspace.com/wearestructures

Things seen at this year's Strathbungo Window Wanderland.

 

I especially liked the architectural effort at Greek Thomson's old house

The structure collapse site at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pa. served as a mock industrial explosion and building collapse site. Several teams from multiple states' national guards set up decontamination tents in the response. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Coltin Heller/Released)

Red/Cyan glasses needed to view in 3D.

It’s clear that it’s been a while since this area last saw some maintenance go into it.

 

Not sure why someone would either put or leave material hanging over one of the girders.

 

It’s a scene of an old place full of memories.

 

I think the light is balanced well and I also think there’s a nice level of detail in this shot.

Taken at The Regency, Laguna Woods, California. © 2013 All Rights Reserved.

My images are not to be used, copied, edited, or blogged without my explicit permission.

Please!! NO Glittery Awards or Large Graphics...Buddy Icons are OK. Thank You!

 

The A52 assignment: to make a diptych of a building and a detail from that building ~ see my tags.

I was really wanting to go downtown Laguna Hills but it didn't look like I was going to make it so I chose structures close to home! This building is where my apartment is...

 

Have a grand day/ evening (whatever it is where you are when you see this!), my Flickr friends!

At 3:55AM on January 5, 2025 the Los Angeles City Fire Department responded to a reported structure fire in the 1500 block of W 2006th St in Harbor Gateway South.

Firefighters extinguished fire in a one-story, single family dwelling with no injuries reported.

 

© Photo by Jacob Terzoli

 

LAFD Incident: 010525-0204

 

Connect with us: LAFD.ORG | News | Facebook | Instagram | Reddit | Twitter: @LAFD @LAFDtalk

Shot with Petri Color 35, using a C.C. Petri 40mm f/2.8 lens

Lomochrome Metropolis film

Shot at ISO 160, developed normally

Erected in 1928, this structure was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

 

Texarkana, Arkansas, along with the immediately adjacent municipality of Texarkana, Texas, is a regional economic center for northeastern Texas, southwestern Arkansas, southeastern Oklahoma, and northwestern Louisiana. Its name is a portmaneau combination of TEX(as), ARK(ansas), and louisi(ANA), though the town itself only extends into the former two states. Texarkana, Arkansas serves as the county seat of Miller County.

Esta obra foi o resultado da minha busca por um padrão geométrico tão singular e complexo que revelasse a natureza do meu fazer artístico. A minha identidade, Michelangelo, está naturalmente na minha visão espacial e no movimento de minhas mãos.

Vejam o meu documentário em: euricopoggi.blogspot.com/

Ícaro. Estrutura geométrica. Madeira de Ipê, parafusos e tela plástica. 1986 -1996.

 

icarocontemplacaoesonho.blogspot.com/

 

The battle between the normal logic of being and the madness that I was involved in took place. The result of this battle is the wood structure called Icarus (this sculpture was created to allow me an accurate comparison with the Rebel Slave), where I found a lot of 3-dimensional qualities defining my natural identity with Michelangelo.

 

Ype wood, screws and plastic wire netting. 1986-96.

 

michelangeloisback.blogspot.com/

11-1-2016

Structure Fire

105 Josephine Rd, Garner

Polenta Elementary School

Mobile Unit

Cleveland FD, Clayton FD, 50-210 FD, 50-210 EMS, Johnston Co Fire Marshal.

11-1-2016

Structure Fire

105 Josephine Rd, Garner

Polenta Elementary School

Mobile Unit

Cleveland FD, Clayton FD, 50-210 FD, 50-210 EMS, Johnston Co Fire Marshal.

symmetrical geometry

Jacob K. Javits Convention Center

11-1-2016

Structure Fire

105 Josephine Rd, Garner

Polenta Elementary School

Mobile Unit

Cleveland FD, Clayton FD, 50-210 FD, 50-210 EMS, Johnston Co Fire Marshal.

Pat and I ran into some colorful people on our walk home after dinner.

Structures à Confluence

Camp de détention de la seconde guerre mondiale.

Aix les Milles

Today was a day when we got to break stuff in our structures class! In the previous semester, we built a flitch beam (a hybrid of wood and metal) and crushed it with a machine in the basement of our building that can exert tens of thousands of pounds of pressure.

 

This semester we are studying lateral forces and concrete. Our first project was to test various structural systems against lateral forces (i.e. wind and earthquakes). The way to do this without taking into consideration gravity or other loads, was to design a "building" that could be suspended from the wall and loaded on it's side. This would demonstrate how three types of structural systems behaved.

 

My group had to design a braced frame structure, and our brilliant and simple plan was sidetracked several times by not planning out our choice of materials very well. We chose to use aluminum rods as the columns, not realizing until it was too late that no continuous metal pieces could run through joints (e.g. floorplates). So we cut up our metal into bits, and then had to figure out how to glue it back together (gorrilla glue, anyone?). Eventually we settled on a combination of pvc pipe and epoxy, and then were able to string fishing line as our braced elements, creating a giant tension truss. Our original idea had been to make our building totally transparent, and had chosen to use plexiglass as the floor plates.

 

During testing, our building was able to sustain quite a bit of loading in comparison to its own weight (6 lbs.). Eventually it failed due to the columns not being secure enough in the base, being pulled out and demonstrating the property of "uplift."

 

Next project in a few weeks: we are casting concrete, making beams, and then crushing them! Breaking stuff is so cool :)

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