View allAll Photos Tagged structure

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.

Shatterconed sandstone in Ontario, Canada.

 

Shattercones are striated conical structures in rocks formed by a powerful shock wave or pressure front moving through during an impact event. They have a three-dimensional cone-like structure, with the points of the cones directed toward the shock wave origination site. Undisturbed shatterconed rocks will have the apex of the cones pointing toward the direction of the incoming object (i.e., upward - toward space).

 

The host rocks here consist of ~2.3 to 2.4 billion year old fluvial sandstones of the Mississagi Formation. Notice that the shattercones are pointing downward, indicating that the impact event also overturned the beds.

 

This outcrop is in the Sudbury Impact Structure, the site for one of the largest impact events in Earth history. The impact structure, located in southeastern Ontario, is ovoid in shape, about 37 miles long by 19 miles wide. It was originally ~circular, but has since been laterally compressed by tectonic deformation. Before erosion and structural deformation, the structure may have been between 60 and 120 miles across. The impacting object is estimated to have been about 6 miles in size. The impact event itself occurred at 1.85 billion years ago. At that time, this part of Ontario was ocean. Computer modeling indicates that the splash wave generated by the Sudbury Impact may have reached about 30 miles high and generated a ~300 feet high megatsunami that radiated away from the target area for up to ~1800 miles. The impact punched a hole down into underlying mantle rocks.

 

Abundant evidence indicates that the Sudbury, Ontario area was indeed the site of an impact long ago. This includes impact breccias, shattercones, and extensive syn-formational sulfide mineralization. The sulfides are rich enough for mining to occur. In fact, the Sudbury Mining District targets the # 1 most productive nickel deposit on Earth.

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This is a no-hammer outcrop.

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Stratigraphy: Mississagi Formation, upper Hough Lake Group, Huronian Supergroup, Paleoproterozoic, ~2.3 to 2.4 Ga

 

Locality: Ramsey Lake Road outcrop - roadcut on the southern side of Ramsey Lake Road, ~0.9 miles east of Paris Street (a.k.a. Long Lake Road; a.k.a. Route 80), southern side of the city of Sudbury, Sudbury Impact Structure, Ontario, southeastern Canada (46° 28’ 06.97" North latitude, 80° 58’ 46.21" West longitude)

 

Venice Biennale 2010

"Decay of a dome"

Designed by:

Amateur architecture studio

 

More info:

www.world-architects.com/amateur/

  

Continental OH. I think this is where the CN crossed

Uneven Structure - Matthieu Romarin, Igor Omodei, Arnaud Verrier

Promo Day - Paris, France - 2019

MusicWaves

Philippe Bareille

Engineer Matt Osborne (left) helps Firefighter Alexander Park cool down.

Fully-involved structure in Minnehaha Springs, WV, 9 miles east of Marlinton.

Issey Miyake

The recognisable structure of Issey Miyake's 'Bao Bao' bag is achieved with a series of triangular tiles that shift as the bag is moved to create new geometric forms. The versatile nature of the surface resembles origami and makes the bag changeable, moulding to the shape of its contents as well as to the wearer's body.

[V&A]

 

Bags: Inside Out

(July - January 2022)

 

Bags: Inside Out is the UK's most comprehensive exhibition dedicated to the ultimate accessory. With an exclusive look inside the world of the factory and atelier, this exhibition explores our longstanding fascination with the bag, from designer handbags to despatch boxes, vanity cases to military rucksacks.

Bags project bold statements to the outside world whilst concealing our most treasured belongings. Featuring around 300 objects, varying in scale from tiny purses held on a fingertip to luxurious travel trunks, the exhibition explores the function, status and craftsmanship of these highly covetable objects from the 16th century to today.

The first section of the exhibition examines bags as practical objects designed to hold our belongings – from holiday outfits to confidential documents, make-up to money and even gas masks.

Titled Status and Identity, the second of the exhibition sections looks at the central role of the bag in celebrity culture as well as its notoriety amongst the political and societal elite.

The use of bags as a blank canvas for slogans, personal statements and political messages and their role as a public platform to share beliefs and convictions is represented through objects including an anti-slavery reticule bag from 1825, the 'I am NOT a Plastic Bag' tote by Anya Hindmarch and a 'My Body My Business' handbag by artist and activist Michele Pred.

The final section of the show will look at the Design and Making process from sketch to sample, sewing to selling. A 'maker's table' will allow visitors to get up close with bag making processes and materials, alongside newly commissioned interviews with designers and makers.

A hotbed for collaboration, the bag offers an opportunity for experimentation and statement designs. A 17th-century purse in the shape of a frog, Thom Browne's handbag in the form of his dog Hector and a Chanel bag transformed into a milk carton will explore the surrealism and humour evoked through accessories.

The exhibition finishes with designers experimenting with innovative and environmentally sustainable materials.

[V&A]

 

Taken in the V&A

Overpass near Bang Chak BTS station, Bangkok

Winter Garden Jiang Tai project, Beijing.

 

Specialist Designer: HDA

 

Architect: Benoy

 

Photos: October 2010

generated wire structure. delaunay triangulation

 

Photo by Cody Williams.

 

Structure Closing Party

Monday June 25, 2012 6:00pm - 9:00pm @ Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams (1526 14th St NW Washington, DC 20005)

 

A celebration to conclude the Benevolent Media Festival.

 

Join us for “Structure,” a party set against a backdrop of stunning images taken by photojournalists dedicated to using their craft for social change. Whether shot in the field or displayed in your home, these compelling visual stories inspire viewers to celebrate human dignity and support sustainable development in communities worldwide.

 

Prints will be available for purchase at the event. Sizes range from 8” x 10” to 30” x 40” and print prices range from $50 - $1,000. 25% of proceeds from prints sales benefit participating photojournalists and 50% benefit Architecture for Humanity and Architecture for Humanity - Washington DC chapter, a non-profit design services firm committed to building a more sustainable future through the power of professional design.

 

Architecture for Humanity's DC Chapter will also be featuring a small-scale 3D model of [IIII] Box, a fresh initiative that promotes community development by repurposing recycled cargo containers to activate vacant lots and bring positive change to neighborhoods throughout Washington, DC. The [IIII] Box aims to be self-sustainable, green and flexible enough to adapt to different communities and their respective needs. Learn more: www.boxcollective.org/.

 

Raffle items by Photoshelter and Zipcar!

 

Doors open at 6pm

$10 online

$15 at the door

Includes complimentary drinks and appetizers

All proceeds to benefit Architecture for Humanity

 

Enter our raffle: PhotoShelter, the leader in portfolio websites for photographers, gives away a FREE Standard Account, a $329 value with 60 GB of space to archive and market thousands of your high quality photographs.

 

Hosted by: Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams

Curated by: Nuru Project

To benefit: Architecture for Humanity

The Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden or Jardim Botânico is located at the Jardim Botânico district in the South Zone of Rio de Janeiro.

 

The Botanical Garden shows the diversity of Brazilian and foreign flora. There are around 6,500 species (some endangered) distributed throughout an area of 54 hectares (130 acres) as well as numerous greenhouses. The garden also houses monuments of historical, artistic, and archaeological significance. There is an important research center, which includes the most complete library in the country specializing in botany with over 32,000 volumes.

 

It was founded in 1808 by King John VI of Portugal. Originally intended for the acclimatization of spices like nutmeg, pepper and cinnamon imported from the West Indies, the garden was opened to the public in 1822, and is now open during daylight hours every day except 25 December and 1 January.

 

The 140 hectares (350 acres) park lies at the foot of the Corcovado Mountain, far below the right arm of the statue of Christ the Redeemer and contains more than 6,000 different species of tropical and subtropical plants and trees, including 900 varieties of palm trees. A 750 metres (2,460 ft) line of 134 palms forms the Avenue of Royal Palms leading from the entrance into the gardens. These palms all descended from a single tree, the Palma Mater, long since destroyed by lightning. Only about 40% of the park is cultivated, the remainder being Atlantic Forest rising up the slopes of Corcovado. The park is protected by the Patrimônio Histórico e Artístico Nacional and was designated as a biosphere reserve by UNESCO in 1992.

 

The Botanical Garden has an important research institute, which develops a wide range of botanical studies in Brazil. The institute has taxonomists who specialize in the identification and conservation of the neotropical flora.

 

The gardens house collections that include bromeliads, orchids, carnivorous plants, and cacti. These include Brazil’s largest botanical library and collections of dried fruits, rare Brazilian plants, and many photographs. The painted cast-iron Fountain of the Muses was made in Derby, UK, and until 1895 was sited at Henrique Lage's villa at Largo da Lapa, as part of the landscaping by the English painter John Tydall.

 

The park contains 140 species of birds, many of which have become accustomed to humans and are consequently much easier to observe than in the wild. These include the channel-billed toucan, rusty-margined guan, slaty-breasted wood rail and the endangered endemic white-necked hawk. Capuchin monkeys and tufted-eared marmosets are also frequently seen in the Botanical Gardens.

 

Features of interest include an old gunpowder factory, the Victoria lilies in the Lago Frei Leandro pond, the Japanese Garden, and many sculptures and fountains.

 

IG:@cyrohenrique24

 

stock.adobe.com/br/contributor/207752944/CyroHenrique

Built between 1921 and 1926, this Renaissance Revival-style Cathedral Basilica was designed by Emile Ulrich as a shrine paying homage to the Blessed Mother Mary. The basilica replaced the previous St. Patrick’s Parish Church, a Gothic Revival-style structure that stood on the same site that was damaged by fire in 1916, leading to temporary repairs, with Father Nelson Baker, whom built up the surrounding charitable institutions that were once located in a series of red brick Queen Anne-style buildings around the basilica, subsequently making plans for a new, grander church to replace the old building. Dedicated as a shrine to the Virgin Mary, the basilica was constructed with funds from a direct-mail fundraising club, which sourced funding from across the United States, and was built without incurring debt in the process.

 

The church was complete enough by late 1925 to hold its first worship services, with the first mass being held on Christmas in 1925, with the church being consecrated in May of 1926, with the church being elevated to the status of Minor Basilica by Pope Pius XI in July of 1926, being the second church being bestowed the title in the United States, with The Basilica of Saint Mary in Minneapolis, Minnesota preceding it by five months.

 

The building originally featured two 165-foot-tall towers that were inspired by Portuguese Renaissance and Baroque architecture, but a thunderstorm in 1941 saw the towers struck by lightning and severely damaged, being lowered and simplified into their present form, with copper domes replacing what used to be the third tier of the towers, shortening them considerably, and the remaining portion of the towers being fully enclosed. This has led to the dome over the crossing being made more dominant in the building’s profile and front facade, with the original towers having stood as tall as the lantern on top of the dome, unbalancing the hierarchy of the composition to lean more towards the dome in the back, with it no longer being balanced as it originally was by the towers in the front.

 

The building is clad in marble with green copper on the domes, with the largest dome, located at the crossing of the nave and transepts, being 165 feet in height, and holding the distinction when completed in 1925 of being the second-largest dome in the United States, only surpassed in size by the dome atop the United States Capitol. However, much larger domes have since been built than the one on either building. The dome features a lantern at the top, and four copper statues of angels with trumpets, which are positioned at 90 degree intervals around the base, shifted 45 degrees from the rest of the building. The building features a multi-tiered massing with setbacks at the semi-circular apse on the rear facade, with roman arched and oxeye stained glass windows, a high gabled central nave and transepts with low shed and hipped-roofed aisles to either side, a recessed arched portion of the front facade between the base of the two towers with statues above a first floor portico with a domed copper roof and doric columns at the main entrance to the building, flanked by pilasters, quoins at the corners of the bases of the towers, and arcing colonnades flanking the front facade, with sculptures atop the ends, doric columns and pilasters, and pediments at the end bay of the colonnades. The interior of the basilica is richly decorated with murals, sculptures, classical columns and pilasters, an organ loft above the entrance, multiple tabernacles around the perimeter of the sanctuary, an ornate high altar with sculptures and spiraling stone columns with ionic capitals, African mahogany pews, and stone floors with multiple colors creating a decorative composition.

 

The basilica is in active use as the primary Catholic church for Lackawanna and South Buffalo, as well as being a popular pilgrimage site for devout Catholics in the Buffalo region. The basilica is part of the Diocese of Buffalo, though the diocese is seated at St. Joseph Cathedral in Downtown Buffalo.

Experiments with spatial structure by J. Mayer. H.

Exhibition 'Rapport' at Berlinische Galerie, 16.09.2011–09.04.2012. Germany.

 

www.berlinischegalerie.de/en/exhibitions/archives/2012/j-...

Bognor Pier support structure taken early morning at low water.

Vasco Da Gama Tower in Lisboa - Portugal

pencil and gouache drawing

Arfak Mountains, Irian Jaya/ West Papua, New Guinea

3-24-2016

400-blk Pecan Lane off of Cornwallis Rd

 

Mobile Home and brush fire

 

Garner FD, Clayton FD, Cleveland FD, NC Forest Service, Johnston County Sheriff's Office, Johnston County Fire Marshal's Office

3-24-2016

400-blk Pecan Lane off of Cornwallis Rd

 

Mobile Home and brush fire

 

Garner FD, Clayton FD, Cleveland FD, NC Forest Service, Johnston County Sheriff's Office, Johnston County Fire Marshal's Office

a study in lines, planes and shapes.

Here is a picture of one of my favorite collections of buildings and roadwork, in December sun.

 

My eyelashes accidentally got into the picture at the top left, and I apologize for that.

 

Yours sincerely,

 

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In downtown Flint, Michigan, on December 9th, 2018, a view from the southwest corner of Beach Street and West Kearsley Street. There is the "James W. Rutherford Parking Structure."

 

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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:

• Flint (7013765)

• Genesee (county) (1002406)

 

Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:

• central business districts (300000868)

• construction sites (300312090)

• intersections (300003871)

• townscapes (built environment) (300008923)

• traffic signals (300003915)

 

Wikidata items:

• 9 December 2018 (Q45921992)

• Central Michigan (Q2945568)

• December 9 (Q2304)

• December 2018 (Q31179612)

• James (Q677191)

 

Transportation Research Thesaurus terms:

• Street closure (Cratutts)

• Traffic control devices (Dcmthr)

 

Library of Congress Subject Headings:

• Road work zones (sh2005005055)

We take a day trip to Ayutthaya, the ancient capital of Thailand, north of Bangkok. It was destroyed in the 1700s by a Burmese invasion, and there are extant ruins from temples and the royal palaces, which had been built in stone.

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Golden temples, markets, amazing beaches, yellow curry noodles, balloon pants, and many more amazing sights, in Chiang Mai, Koh Phangan, and Bangkok. This is Thailand!

 

Follow us on www.circumnavacation.com!

©AVucha 2018

A structure fire caused $100,000 in damage to a house in unincorporated McHenry on Wednesday.

 

The McHenry Township Fire Protection District was dispatched about 2:30 p.m. to the 500 block of Deerpath Drive, according to a news release from the district.

 

Upon arrival, firefighters saw fire coming from the back of the house and heavy smoke coming from the doors and windows.

 

One crew contained the fire from the exterior while a second crew entered the front door to hose the inside.

 

A thorough search of the building was conducted, and no people were found inside.

A dog died in the fire, officials said.

 

One person was taken to the hospital with injuries not considered life-threatening.

 

The house sustained extensive damage and is uninhabitable, officials said.

 

The fire district and McHenry County Sheriff’s Office continue to investigate the fire.

 

Fox Lake, Richmond and Spring Grove fire crews also responded.

  

*Written by Megan Jones, Northwest Herald

  

This photograph is being made available only for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial material, advertisements, emails, products, promotions without the expressed consent of Alex Vucha.

 

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