View allAll Photos Tagged urbandevelopment

2 October 2022. Mid-1960’s offices at the corner of Victoria Street and Marlborough Street. There was the following planning permission (10 November 2016) “LA04/2016/1275/F New façade treatment to ground floor elevations on Marlborough Street (part) and Victoria Street. Marlborough House 30 Victoria Street Belfast BT1 3GG” .

The building, which abuts properties at Donegall Quay, was reported sold in mid-2022. It appears on the website of a local property developer but without any information about future plans.

The leaning Albert Clock is on the left.

Botanic Avenue railway bridge before the student accommodation. 24 February 2019.

The Botanic Avenue side as the first floor rises above the hoardings. 22 August 2021.

The Bradbury Place/University Road side as the first floor rises above the hoardings. 22 August 2021.

San Diego is promoting urban living in the central core by encouraging high density project such as this condo development at Island/13th. The architecture of these developments is very interesting but the street life has not yet developed, such as in Portland's Pearl. Wide, one way streets and large blocks populated by the homeless will make development of San Diego's urban street life difficult.

The view from Bankmore Street. Most of the building is now demolished. 10 October 2021.

Publication Info: Prepared by the Department of City Planning, City and County of San Francisco, July 1969

 

Subject Keywords: San Francisco, Bayview Hunters Point, South Bayshore, San Francisco Department of City Planning, urban development

 

Collection: Bayview Branch Archives

 

Repository: San Francisco History Center - San Francisco Public Library

A “for sale” sign on the Waring Street hoarding. 29 August 2021.

Bedford Street/Franklin Street. Old cladding gradually disappearing. Extension structural steelwork at the bottom. Ewart’s dome (left) for height comparison 3 June 2017.

The former entrance and car park. The Lagan on the left and the Laganbank Road on the right. 19 May 2019.

The Castle Lane side, with a “to let” sign. looking towards Cornmarket. 24 March 2019.

There were some minor external works last week but all now seem to be complete. Nobody visible, on site, today. 24 August 2022.

At bottom of Grays Inn Road, the sign of building and development all over London

Premises, with an archway leading to a yard, close to the corner of Gordon Street.

 

Occupants, in the last century, included a distiller, a cooper and his stables and a sack maker. Now part of the Cathedral Quarter, mainly devoted to hospitality. The archway has cast-metal corner protection - the manufacture of which was a local speciality. 6 April 2019.

Actors of Urban Change 2017-19 Kick-Off

January 24-28, 2018

Circular Economy House, Berlin

Photos by Panos Georgiou

 

Actors of Urban Change aims to achieve sustainable and participatory urban development through cultural activities and by using specific potentials of culture as driver and enabler of positive change. This is carried out by strengthening the competencies for cross-sector collaboration among actors from the cultural, public and private sectors. Through local projects, an international qualification program, Europe-wide exchange and individual coaching, our participants put those skills into practice.

More information at www.bosch-stiftung.de/en/project/actors-urban-change.

Braintree, Essex

 

[Urban] Development is a personal photo project that sets out to document everyday unspectacular moments in time around our villages, towns and cities across the UK for future generations. It can be fascinating to look back on old photographs from decades ago and see how things have changed - perhaps a building has been demolished or had a change of use, a housing estate has appeared, a road has been created, transportation has evolved or maybe the shop that was once there is now used by some other retail establishment. Future generations should be able to look back and see what life was like in the earlier years of the 21st century. Everyday unspectacular moments in time.

Recent changes in NYC zoning are threatening the industrial areas of Long Island city, Queens, where I spend my peaceful time taking photos of the empty streets. This is my retreat, and now in the name of development, this great city of New York is taking it away from me block by block.

Magnet House, former Government offices, at the corner of York Street (left) and Gt Patrick Street, before demolition and replacement by “Liv Student” private-sector student accommodation. 21 August 2015.

The Lagan, immediately upstream from the Stranmillis Weir, lowered by its opening. Now the site of the new footbridge. The graffiti-covered building (subsequently demolished - top right) provides a common reference point. 11 February 2015.

The view along College Street. 18 September 2021.

an abandoned industrial site in the poblenou neighborhood of barcelona

Am 23. August 2022 präsentierte sich Bremerhaven bei sommerlichem Wetter mit Temperaturen um 22 °C. Die frische Brise vom Wasser und die klare Sicht boten ideale Bedingungen für Erkundungen entlang der Küste.

 

Die Deichpromenade in Bremerhaven erstreckt sich entlang der Weser und verbindet verschiedene historische und kulturelle Sehenswürdigkeiten. Am nördlichen Ende befindet sich der Pingelturm, ein markanter Leuchtturm, der gemeinsam mit der Kaiserschleuse und dem neuen Freilaufkanal in die Weser die maritime Geschichte der Stadt widerspiegelt. Weiter südlich schließen sich der Simon-Loschen-Leuchtturm, die Neue Schleuse und der Alte Vorhafen an. Der Simon-Loschen-Leuchtturm, erbaut im 19. Jahrhundert, ist der älteste noch in Betrieb befindliche Festland-Leuchtturm an der deutschen Nordseeküste. Das Auswandererdenkmal auf dem Willy-Brandt-Platz erinnert an die zahlreichen Menschen, die von Bremerhaven aus in die Neue Welt aufbrachen. In unmittelbarer Nähe befindet sich der Zoo am Meer, der 1928 als Tiergrotten eröffnet wurde und heute eine moderne Einrichtung für nordische und aquatische Tierarten darstellt. Der Alte Hafen, 1830 eröffnet, war einst ein bedeutender Umschlagplatz für den Überseehandel und spielte eine zentrale Rolle im Auswandererverkehr in die USA. Heute beherbergt der Hafen das Technikmuseum mit dem U-Boot Wilhelm Bauer, einem restaurierten U-Boot des Typs XXI aus dem Zweiten Weltkrieg, das als technisches Meisterwerk seiner Zeit gilt. Die Aussichtsplattform des SAIL City Hotels bietet in 86 Metern Höhe einen Panoramablick über die Stadt, die Häfen und die Wesermündung. Das Weser-Strandbad, direkt am Deich gelegen, lädt mit seinem weitläufigen Sandstrand zum Verweilen ein, auch wenn das Schwimmen in der Weser aus Sicherheitsgründen nicht gestattet ist. Die modernisierten Umkleide- und Sanitäranlagen verbinden modernen Komfort mit dem Flair historischer Architektur. Ein Wasserspielplatz sorgt für Abkühlung und Unterhaltung für die jüngeren Besucher.

 

Die Natur in und um Bremerhaven ist geprägt von der Lage an der Wesermündung und der Nähe zur Nordsee. Die Deichlandschaften bieten Lebensraum für zahlreiche Vogelarten, darunter Möwen, Seeschwalben und Kormorane. Die Salzwiesen entlang der Küste sind ein wichtiger Bestandteil des Ökosystems und dienen als Rast- und Brutgebiete für Zugvögel. Die Gezeiten beeinflussen das Leben in den Wattgebieten, die bei Ebbe freigelegt werden und eine Vielzahl von Organismen beherbergen. Die Flora in diesen Bereichen ist an die salzhaltigen Bedingungen angepasst und umfasst Arten wie Queller und Strandaster. Die Nähe zur Nordsee bringt ein maritimes Klima mit sich, das durch milde Winter und kühle Sommer gekennzeichnet ist. Die frische Seeluft und die offenen Landschaften bieten ideale Bedingungen für Spaziergänge und Naturbeobachtungen. Die städtischen Grünanlagen und Parks ergänzen das natürliche Angebot und bieten Erholungsmöglichkeiten im urbanen Raum. Die Kombination aus maritimer Atmosphäre und naturnahen Erlebnissen macht Bremerhaven zu einem attraktiven Ziel für Naturfreunde und Erholungssuchende.

 

Bremerhaven bietet eine Vielzahl von Sehenswürdigkeiten und Naturerlebnissen, die sowohl kulturell als auch landschaftlich von Bedeutung sind.

 

Wikipedia-Link:

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bremerhaven

 

Kamera und Objektiv:

Sony QX1 und Sony SEL18200

Sony A6500 und Sony SEL18200LE

Sony ILCE-7CR und Sony SEL24240

 

Bildinformation:

12MP - 3465 x 3465 px - ca. 3 bis 6MB

Bildbearbeitung: Adobe Photoshop Express

 

#Deutschland #Bremerhaven #Deichpromenade #ZooAmMeer #WeserStrandbad #AlterHafen #UBootWilhelmBauer #SailCity #Nordsee #Weser #MaritimeKultur #Hafenstadt #Naturfotografie #Reisefotografie #Fotografie #Reisen #Sehenswürdigkeit #Kulturgeschichte #Stadtentwicklung #Architektur #Aussichtsplattform #Strand #Vogelschutz #Salzwiesen #Wattenmeer #Küstenschutz #Leuchtturm #Schifffahrt #Auswanderung #Technikmuseum

 

#Germany #Bremerhaven #DikePromenade #ZooByTheSea #WeserBeach #OldHarbor #SubmarineWilhelmBauer #SailCity #NorthSea #WeserRiver #MaritimeCulture #PortCity #NaturePhotography #TravelPhotography #Photography #Travel #Sightseeing #CulturalHeritage #UrbanDevelopment #Architecture #ObservationDeck #Beach #BirdProtection #SaltMarshes #WaddenSea #CoastalProtection #Lighthouse #Shipping #Emigration #TechnologyMuseum

Botanic Avenue. The Botanic Link (temporary name) student accommodation close to completion and occupation. The former Arts Theatre (right) now looking like the last relic of the rockabilly era. 17 September 2022.

Construction of the parking garage proceeds at Mercer Commons.

The view from Marcus Ward Street - not much left. 31 October 2021.

3CDC's 15th & Race project aims to add 27 affordable apartments, 23 condos, and 11 townhomes to this block of Over-the-Rhine.

Nearing completion and open to public view. “Spirit of Belfast” sculpture on the right. 23 October 2022.

Queen Street hoarding - an architect’s impression of the completed project. 28 August 2022.

A conventional view along College Square North. The structure is just starting to appear. 4 September 2022.

The view towards Queen Street at an early stage of piling. 12 September 2021.

Londonderry House re-born as “Chichester House”. The previous two buildings, of that name, were at no 64. Garrick Bar on the left. 21 August 2022.

Finally all ten new Actors teams met in Berlin! In December 2015 the 30 new participants not only presented their projects but also rolled up their sleeves to further develop and refine them. For this process, the peer-learning approach and feedback by other colleagues was helpful, quite like inputs by Andreas Knoth (socius gGmbH) and Ania Rok (ICLEI). Loukas Bartatilas and Stelios Voulgaris, two alumni from team Athens, shared some retrospectives about their Actors project. Moreover, a field trip in Berlin touched upon various urban development issues, with stop overs in the housing estate Märkisches Viertel, at the press conference about development plans for the House of Statistics, at the co-housing project Spreefeld as well as at the Center for Art and Urbanistics (ZK/U), an Actors alumni project. Thanks again to the teams from Bologna, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Geretsried, Istanbul, Krasnoyarsk, Messolonghi, Novi Sad, Porto and Skopje - your combination of projects, places and people promises another exciting year and a half! For more information visit www.actors-of-urban-change.org.

Photo by Panos Georgiou

Wendy Abt, Deputy Assistant Administrator for the EGAT Bureau, makes opening remarks.

27 August 2017. Castle Street looking towards College Avenue and Millfield. The Bank Buildings (long before the fire) on the right. The Primark extension (Commonwealth House site) under construction to its left. Norwich Union towards the middle left.

The cleared site, from the Albert Bridge, looking towards the Ravenhill Road. 30 May 2021.

The College Square North doorway before the present scheme had been conceived. 8 October 2017.

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