tom$ posted a photo:
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shukhov_Tower
The Shukhov radio tower (Russian: ????????? ?????), also known as the Shabolovka tower, is a broadcasting tower in Moscow designed by Vladimir Shukhov. The 160-metre-high free-standing steel structure was built in the period 1920?1922, during the Russian Civil War. It is a hyperboloid structure (hyperbolic steel gridshell).
Due to its lattice structure, the steel shell of the Shukhov Tower experiences minimum wind load (the main hazard for high-rising buildings). The tower sections are single-cavity hyperboloids of rotation made of straight beams, the ends of which rest against circular foundations.
The tower is located a few kilometers south of the Moscow Kremlin, but is not accessible to tourists. The street address of the tower is "Shabolovskaya Street, 37", hence the tower's informal name "Shabolovka, 37".
tom$ posted a photo:
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shukhov_Tower
The Shukhov radio tower (Russian: ????????? ?????), also known as the Shabolovka tower, is a broadcasting tower in Moscow designed by Vladimir Shukhov. The 160-metre-high free-standing steel structure was built in the period 1920?1922, during the Russian Civil War. It is a hyperboloid structure (hyperbolic steel gridshell).
Due to its lattice structure, the steel shell of the Shukhov Tower experiences minimum wind load (the main hazard for high-rising buildings). The tower sections are single-cavity hyperboloids of rotation made of straight beams, the ends of which rest against circular foundations.
The tower is located a few kilometers south of the Moscow Kremlin, but is not accessible to tourists. The street address of the tower is "Shabolovskaya Street, 37", hence the tower's informal name "Shabolovka, 37".
tom$ posted a photo:
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shukhov_Tower
The Shukhov radio tower (Russian: ????????? ?????), also known as the Shabolovka tower, is a broadcasting tower in Moscow designed by Vladimir Shukhov. The 160-metre-high free-standing steel structure was built in the period 1920?1922, during the Russian Civil War. It is a hyperboloid structure (hyperbolic steel gridshell).
Due to its lattice structure, the steel shell of the Shukhov Tower experiences minimum wind load (the main hazard for high-rising buildings). The tower sections are single-cavity hyperboloids of rotation made of straight beams, the ends of which rest against circular foundations.
The tower is located a few kilometers south of the Moscow Kremlin, but is not accessible to tourists. The street address of the tower is "Shabolovskaya Street, 37", hence the tower's informal name "Shabolovka, 37".
dysturb posted a photo:
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shukhov_Tower
The Shukhov radio tower (Russian: ????????? ?????), also known as the Shabolovka tower, is a broadcasting tower in Moscow designed by Vladimir Shukhov. The 160-metre-high free-standing steel structure was built in the period 1920?1922, during the Russian Civil War. It is a hyperboloid structure (hyperbolic steel gridshell).
Due to its lattice structure, the steel shell of the Shukhov Tower experiences minimum wind load (the main hazard for high-rising buildings). The tower sections are single-cavity hyperboloids of rotation made of straight beams, the ends of which rest against circular foundations.
The tower is located a few kilometers south of the Moscow Kremlin, but is not accessible to tourists. The street address of the tower is "Shabolovskaya Street, 37", hence the tower's informal name "Shabolovka, 37".
dysturb posted a photo:
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shukhov_Tower
The Shukhov radio tower (Russian: ????????? ?????), also known as the Shabolovka tower, is a broadcasting tower in Moscow designed by Vladimir Shukhov. The 160-metre-high free-standing steel structure was built in the period 1920?1922, during the Russian Civil War. It is a hyperboloid structure (hyperbolic steel gridshell).
Due to its lattice structure, the steel shell of the Shukhov Tower experiences minimum wind load (the main hazard for high-rising buildings). The tower sections are single-cavity hyperboloids of rotation made of straight beams, the ends of which rest against circular foundations.
The tower is located a few kilometers south of the Moscow Kremlin, but is not accessible to tourists. The street address of the tower is "Shabolovskaya Street, 37", hence the tower's informal name "Shabolovka, 37".
dysturb posted a photo:
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shukhov_Tower
The Shukhov radio tower (Russian: ????????? ?????), also known as the Shabolovka tower, is a broadcasting tower in Moscow designed by Vladimir Shukhov. The 160-metre-high free-standing steel structure was built in the period 1920?1922, during the Russian Civil War. It is a hyperboloid structure (hyperbolic steel gridshell).
Due to its lattice structure, the steel shell of the Shukhov Tower experiences minimum wind load (the main hazard for high-rising buildings). The tower sections are single-cavity hyperboloids of rotation made of straight beams, the ends of which rest against circular foundations.
The tower is located a few kilometers south of the Moscow Kremlin, but is not accessible to tourists. The street address of the tower is "Shabolovskaya Street, 37", hence the tower's informal name "Shabolovka, 37".
dysturb posted a photo:
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shukhov_Tower
The Shukhov radio tower (Russian: ????????? ?????), also known as the Shabolovka tower, is a broadcasting tower in Moscow designed by Vladimir Shukhov. The 160-metre-high free-standing steel structure was built in the period 1920?1922, during the Russian Civil War. It is a hyperboloid structure (hyperbolic steel gridshell).
Due to its lattice structure, the steel shell of the Shukhov Tower experiences minimum wind load (the main hazard for high-rising buildings). The tower sections are single-cavity hyperboloids of rotation made of straight beams, the ends of which rest against circular foundations.
The tower is located a few kilometers south of the Moscow Kremlin, but is not accessible to tourists. The street address of the tower is "Shabolovskaya Street, 37", hence the tower's informal name "Shabolovka, 37".
EmmyEcstasy posted a photo:
Candid:) I was trying to take a different pictures but the dogs kept interrupting. They had to pee lol.
seansharifi <aka essquared> posted a photo:
Week of August 29th: Murse defined by Urban dictionary - a man-purse. very fashion-forward right now, seen on many hipster guys. The line between a messenger bag and murse is very fluid - typically a murse is a bit smaller than a traditional messenger, and may have a slightly more stylized look to it. A murse can also be used to carry a laptop computer - one of the reasons it is so popular right now.
Not that I mind that I have a murse, but I would have to say that this is more of a messenger bag =D
Pos-processing: Level adjustment, BW conversion + muting colors, and playing with sepia/red colors.
SB600 bounced off wall to cameras right @ 1/8th power zoomed to 85mm, triggered by d80 flash @ 1/64th
reachlocal posted a photo:
To see the original post, visit: blog.reachlocal.com/13746/2010/09/02/-round-and--round-it...
Scarlet.Lee posted a photo:
Another forest day, i love it and its like the only place i can take photo's right now ( my house is cramped)
lemon eating...very interesting to say the least...aha
+1 in comments
[AndreasS] posted a photo:
This was shot in a pitch black room using a small LED light with diffiser and looong shutter speed. I'm quite pleased with the focusing...
"On a hillside somewhere in Norway, overlooking a beautiful fjord, lays this abandoned building. A majestic sanatorium built to heal and cure people with tuberculosis. It opened in 1902 with 96 beds. After several renovations the maximum number of patients that could be treated was 150 in 1950.
Tuberculosis is an often deadly infectious disease that usually attacks the lungs. One of the treatment methods for tuberculosis was the constant exposure of fresh air. Even during the wintertime the patients laid in their beds outside underneath a shelter.
After WW2 effective medicines against tuberculosis were invented, people were vaccinated and the sanatorium shut down. Between 1950 and 1990 it was used as a psychiatric hospital and then the place was used as a reception center for refugees from the Balkan war. In 1994 it was abandoned completely. "
Explored together with MartinW and ThomasP.
mauricio jordan posted a photo:
pharmacist with mask giving thumbs up
-Bennie- ( ... ) posted a photo:
A more tighter cropped in version than the other upload...
She has sparkly eyes! :-)