View allAll Photos Tagged travellator
An experiment using a slow shutter speed with the camera resting on the arm rest of a escalator at Melbourne Central shopping centre, Australia
This is Singapore Changi Airport, shot with my old Canon Powershot.
What started as a bit of fun to relieve the boredom as we waited for our flight turned into a photographic challenge. The Powershot isn't really comfortable shooting at low shutter speeds and the shutter lag feels like 10 minutes but I got some reasonable pictures (though I did take quite a few).
24th January 1990
304002 pauses in Platform 13 at Manchester Piccadilly forming 17:30 Altrincham - Macclesfield.
In the background to the right a Class 31 and vans can be seen on the then-parcels Platform 11 when there was road vehicle access between platforms 10 and 11 where the travellators are now.
This moving walkway (travellator or flatalator) leads passengers from the underground station Wilhelminaplein directly to the other side a busy intersection, to the New Luxor Theatre.
Many photographers have captured it since it was opened in 2005. This is the fourth version in my photo stream and probably not the last one.
In 2019, the airport received the World Travel Award in the category "Europe's leading airport" for the 17th time in a row. The Skytrax Award also ranks Zurich Airport among the top 10 airports in the world for millions of travellers each year. Switzerland's federal parliament decided in 1945 that Zürich was to be the site of a major airport, and sold 655 hectares of the Kloten-Bülach Artillery Garrison to the canton of Zürich, giving the canton control of the new airfield.
In 2019, the airport received the World Travel Award in the category "Europe's leading airport" for the 17th time in a row. The Skytrax Award also ranks Zurich Airport among the top 10 airports in the world for millions of travellers each year. Switzerland's federal parliament decided in 1945 that Zürich was to be the site of a major airport, and sold 655 hectares of the Kloten-Bülach Artillery Garrison to the canton of Zürich, giving the canton control of the new airfield.
In 2019, the airport received the World Travel Award in the category "Europe's leading airport" for the 17th time in a row. The Skytrax Award also ranks Zurich Airport among the top 10 airports in the world for millions of travellers each year. Switzerland's federal parliament decided in 1945 that Zürich was to be the site of a major airport, and sold 655 hectares of the Kloten-Bülach Artillery Garrison to the canton of Zürich, giving the canton control of the new airfield.
Agfa APX 100, pushed two stops. Ricoh 35 ZF. V800 scan. Somewhere around Incheon Airport, September 2019.
Should I stay or should I go now? Indecision on the Bank travellator as we head towards the Central Line on the way back from Greenwich.
...ator!
I made a trip north this weekend, dropped the car at Altrincham and bought a day rover for Greater Manchester. I arrived on the Northern Rail DMU seen here on Platform 10, and took the travellator to Platform 13, one of Picadilly's through lines, heading for Victoria Station via Salford Crescent.
Manchester Picadilly seems quite bright and vibrant under the wonderful trainshed. In contrast, whilst Manchester Victoria is undergoing some redevelopment in connection with the tram system, it is completely different in a dark and dingy way.
Saturday 14.2.15
The first flight abroad from Switzerland was on July 21, 1921, but the search for a location for a major airport wasn’t started until 1943 inside the Canton of Zürich. The first flights off the west runway were not until 1948.
Finally back on Flickr after a 3 months break, finished my first semester in University, currently travelling the North East of the USA. How time flies.
The first flight abroad from Switzerland was on July 21, 1921, but the search for a location for a major airport wasn’t started until 1943 inside the Canton of Zürich. The first flights off the west runway were not until 1948.
The first flight abroad from Switzerland was on July 21, 1921, but the search for a location for a major airport wasn’t started until 1943 inside the Canton of Zürich. The first flights off the west runway were not until 1948.
The first flight abroad from Switzerland was on July 21, 1921, but the search for a location for a major airport wasn’t started until 1943 inside the Canton of Zürich. The first flights off the west runway were not until 1948.
This walkway is called The Sentosa Broadway featuring canopy-covered travellators that will let you take leisurely strolls to Sentosa.
The curvy design is beautiful and its always feel good to have an evening stroll along the walkway.
Press "L" to view large
It was Sentosa's Boardwalk Grand Opening. The rain never stopped.
Peter and I were just persistent to shoot!
A 700-metre long public pedestrian boardwalk complete with
commercial infrastructure between mainland Singapore and the new integrated resort at
Sentosa island. The design brief called for a network of covered travellators as a 'fast-track'
mode of transport across the waterway, and this key feature is integrated into the overall
development by introducing a continuous canopy with a flowing silhouette facilitating
natural cross-ventilation. A service corridor tucked beneath the travellator platform
effectively screens off the back-of-house from public view.
Non HDR
No Photoshop
Enhanced Sharpness
Latest additional mode of access into Sentosa, the Boardwalk is a leisurely stroll from VivoCity Shopping Mall’s waterfront promenade, made easy by two-way canopy-covered travellators.
The first flight abroad from Switzerland was on July 21, 1921, but the search for a location for a major airport wasn’t started until 1943 inside the Canton of Zürich. The first flights off the west runway were not until 1948.
The Tees Barrage International White Water Course, originally the Teesside White Water Course, is an artificial whitewater course on the north bank of the River Tees, in northern England. It is part of the Tees Barrage and is located in the Stockton-on-Tees district, accessible by road only from Thornaby-on-Tees and best accessed by the A66. The course was built in 1995 at a cost of £2 million. The course is now open once more under the new name TBIWWC (Tees Barrage International White Water Centre).
The course is owned by the Canal & River Trust but administered by Tees Active from the on-site watersports centre. The white water facility offers kayaking, whitewater slalom, playboating and white water rafting plus surfing on the 'surf wave'.
The centre's facilities include a high ropes course, a placid practice pool; watersports centre, shop and cafe; car parking, camping, picnicking and caravanning areas; bandstand and landscaped amphitheatre, The Talpore pub, a restaurant and hotel. The course itself is a U-shaped loop,[3] 250 m long, 7 m wide with a 3.7 m drop and a flow of 14 cumecs (m3/s). The immediate environs of the white water course include the Teesdale Way cycle path (National Cycle Network), the River Tees, the Tees Barrage and the placid grade A two star waters of the river Tees; the David Lloyd Leisure racquet centre, a superstore and Portrack Marsh Nature Reserve.
The state of the course can depend on the level of the tide in the River Tees. The course can operate by flow diversion for two or three hours either side of low tide[3] but can operate at any time when the pumps are used. The course can operate all year round and in hours of darkness when it is flood-lit, and spot-lit on the two footbridges.
Budget Terminal opened for operations on 26 March 2006. It was built in response to the emerging trend of low cost carriers (LCCs) in Asia. Located along Airport Boulevard, near Changi Airport, it was officially opened on 31 October 2006.
The operating costs at Budget Terminal are kept low to meet the needs and operating models of LCCs. It is a single-storey terminal, with no travellators, escalators and aerobridges. The 28,200 square metres terminal comprises two adjacent single-storey buildings for departure and arrival and is about the size of three football fields.
Lens: EFS 18-135 IS
EXIF: 4pm, 13-Oct-2010, f8, 1/100, ISO-3200, 18mm, Pattern, no flash, Aperture Priority, handheld.