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Tulum Mexico Pre Columbian Maya ruins along the east coast of the Yucatán Peninsula on the Caribbean Sea 2013 Architecture Building Mayans Structures Old
6-24-2015
Bojangles
I-40/NC 42
Light haze in the structure. Determined to be HVAC unit on the roof.
Cleveland FD, Clayton FD, Garner FD, EMS24, Medic 2
Gigaom Structure Data event at Pier 60, Chelsea Piers in New York, NY on Wednesday March 19, 2014. (© Photo by Jakub Mosur).
It has only been in Greenwood a few times, usually stays about a week. Takes emplyees and their guests on tour rides of Greenwood. Although I have tried to get a ride, the closest I came was to sit in the gondola while parked.
Free photos. Set 24.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
I think it is unbalanced. Need to enlarge the ball on the left. Interesting exercise to see how unbalanced structures affect your state of mind.
Interesting as well as I had to show some kind of fixing to the top, just red blobs, otherwise it seemed the whole structure was unstable.
Structured Bokeh and Hillarys Boat Harbour. Canon EF 75-300mm. Setting at f4, 300mm. A six (6) pointed star template in front of the UV filter to shape the Bokeh
This bizarre structure, in the shape of a pineapple, was built in 1761 as a folly to enjoy the fantastic views.
Extensive glasshouses and pineapple pits once grew a variety of exotic fruit and vegetables within these walls.
Concord (NC) Fire Department working at a structure fire in an older building at the Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Facility.
The population structure of 407 miscanthus accessions including Miscanthus sacchariflorus and Miscanthus sinensis from China, Korea, and Japan.
This figure is associated with CABBI’s Year 2 Summary Narrative.
Figure courtesy of Albert Wu, a member of Daniel Rokhsar's Feestocks lab.
In 1861 a plan was formed to construct a breakwater off Laggers Point to make Trial Bay a harbour of refuge for those ships too big to cross river mouths.[3] Further plans included the idea to use prison labour for the construction, with a prison established specifically for that purpose. In 1877 work on the gaol commenced and in 1886 it was proclaimed a prison and inmates moved there.
The breakwater they worked on was to extend some 1500 metres out into the bay, built from granite blocks quarried from the nearby hill. Heavy gales caused damage to the structure as it progressed over the years. In 1898 and 1899 new wings were built on the prison, suggesting work was intending to continue, but in 1903 it was abandoned. Apparently the prison was costly to run and didn't fit with ideas of penology of the time.
About 300 metres of breakwater had been built, and it had shoaled up the bay considerably. A wharf had been built inside the breakwater in 1898, not meant for public use, but which ended up used regularly by passenger ships which could not navigate the Macleay River mouth. Today only a small section of the breakwater remains, about 50 metres, and nothing of the wharf.
In 1915 the gaol was reopened to hold German wartime internees. Most were single men of some education and included officers of the German Army Reserve. A rumour went around in 1917 that a German landing party planned to free the men and when a German raider the SS Wolf was seen in 1918 the men were moved to the large camp at Holsworthy outside Sydney.
This was the last use made of the prison and it was stripped and fixtures sold off in 1922. Today it's open to the public, operated as a heritage site by the National Parks and Wildlife Service. Wikipedia..