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Practical origami, part two. The highly sensitive connection between IPad and TV needs some kind of protection. Again the triangular box is a perfect fitting, thanks to the design of Hans-Werner Guth. Instruction: Sara Adams on YouTube.
This shot was captured on a guided tour of 700 Bourke Street, which houses 5,000 worker bees for National Australia Bank (NAB) - it is a modern day salt mine with funkiness!!
The workplace design is very modern with lots of special spaces to hang out in different work groups, but I think it is a shame that individual employees do not have a sense of their own space, as no one has their own desk where they can keep a family photo or photos of their kids or pets. Obviously NAB likes to keep all employees on their toes!!
The building is triangular in shape, with wonderful colours that reflect local geology and space. This carries right from the lagre spaces to the decorations on the walls and window shapes.
This shot is taken from the top of the main atrium from the 14th floor, looking down to ground level. Light projects from the top of the building right down to the ground level - a great way of reducing energy needs in the building.
View from the old city wall near Chora Church onto a triangular house, photographed in the gardens of Blue Mosque (Sultanahmet Camii) in Istanbul, Turkey, May 2012.
Creative commons by DrTH80 (CC-BY-SA 2.0)
18" high side table.
Made of Cold Rolled mild steel.
The 3 vertical bars are Custom made-
Machined on a
Bridgeport Milling Machine,
so that the diamond profile matches the Triangular
corners of the Top and Bottom frames.
The .500 inch thick Starfire glass top (low-iron)
rests
perfectly flush with the Steel Frame.
Bronze Plated finish.
Very Architectural!
Designed and Conceived by Bill Godu and Alan Boyd!
For more examples of my Custom Metal Furniture,
take a look @ www.kramerdesignstudio.com
Built by the Carriage House at Cylburn Arboretum with help from friend and classmate Fernando Guerra. This simple rustic structure is a component of my final project for the Maryland Master Naturalist program, an educational & volunteer opportunity created by the University of Maryland Extension Program.
For my project, I utilized my scenic design and set building skills to create a semi-permanent modular play area in which children can experiment with and discover natural building techniques and materials. It is intended to be offered alongside conversational curriculum about and physical examples of animal and bird nests and how they are an expression of the ecosystem.
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In my original design, I hadn't measure the actual materials. Just had a quick rough look at some salvaged lumber in a cluttered storage room at the Carriage House. I pictured the posts as being a couple feet longer than they actually were. And I thought there were four of them. Whoops! Fortunately, we were able to adapt on our original prototype based on the conditions of actual reality! This to me is one of the key principles of "natural" building.
Triangular club-rush
Schoenoplectus triqueter
Tamar Estuary
Tamar - Tavy Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest
Devon
Copyright Natural England/Peter Wakely
1996
Exitazo del Triangular Blue Christmas con Liceo Sorolla C y Colegio Americano en Reebok Sports Club la Finca. ¡Tarde de diversión, fútbol y aprendizaje para nuestros benjamines!
This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
This frame vernacular church was built circa 1920 by a black congregation. It has a basic rectangular form with gabled roof. The entrance, from which a squared belfry rises, is covered by a hip roof. The windows, especially the triangular lights at the top show the influence of the Gothic-Revival style on a vernacular design.
The church was named for Rev. Robert Henry, pastor of Cub Creek Church in the late 18th century, a man dedicated to the ministering and teaching of slaves. I don’t know the denomination of the congregation nor the date when the structure ceased to be used; Cub Creek Church, however, was a Presbyterian church and it’s possible that Henry Church was as well. The building, at present, shows a great deal of neglect.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
The White Mountains of California and Nevada are a triangular fault block mountain range facing the Sierra Nevada across the upper Owens Valley. They extend for approximately 60 mi (97 km) as a greatly elevated plateau about 20 mi (32 km) wide on the south, narrowing to a point at the north, with elevations generally increasing south to north. The range's broad southern end is near the community of Big Pine, where Westgard Pass and Deep Springs Valley separate it from the Inyo Mountains. The narrow northern end is at Montgomery Pass, where U.S. Route 6 crosses. The Fish Lake Valley lies east of the range; the southeast part of the mountains are separated from the Silver Peak Range by block faulting across the Furnace Creek Fault Zone, forming a feeder valley to Fish Lake Valley. The range lies within the eastern section of the Inyo National Forest.
The highest point in the range is White Mountain Peak, which at 14,252 ft (4,344 m) is the third-highest summit in California. This peak is actually an extinct volcano rising about 1,600 ft (490 m) above the plateau surface. The summit is composed of Mesozoic metavolcanic rock - lava lifted and melted by rising granite. The volcano itself is long since gone. The White Mountains are the highest range completely inside the Great Basin, although the adjacent Sierra Nevada Range along the basin's western edge has two higher summits.
The entire range is within the Inyo National Forest.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Mountains_(California)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...
Triangular spider, Arkys lancearius. I was meditiating under a tree (not a bodhi, fyi) and when I opened my eyes he was crawling on my shirt. He has the most awesome pattern on his back.
When having to go through ice to scuba dive, a triangular cutout works best. It is the fastest to make, and the 60 degree angles are comfortable for resting your arms pre or post dive.
My street impressions from Barcelona, Spain in this album The infinite Barcelona I wrote these little blogs: Barceloneta belongings blogs and The Infinite Barcelona blog