North Italy: Verona Impression’s 5 – Riverside Adige (dt. Etsch) by SwissFiveNine by SwissFiveNine

Verona Impression’s – Riverside Adige (dt. Etsch).

See also my gallery “North Italy”. – My own pictures from strolling through the cities Verona and Bergamo in Fall 2015.

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Stockholm by Nureco2014 by Nureco2014

Art in the subway

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The Holy places by peamnateswi by peamnateswi

This temple is a sacred place and the public . Bush is the worship of Nakhon Si Thammarat , Thailand .

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Monocurve by Ted Gore http://ift.tt/1SJpnUR

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Baby Blue Eyes Flower Fields in Japan by HansGuichardo by HansGuichardo

Full bloom of the Baby Blue Eyes flowers in Japan, an event not to be missed.

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Phanom Rung Historical Park by jengstudio by jengstudio

Phanom Rung Historical Park
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Phanom Rung Historical Park
Place PhnomrungPrasat.jpg
Phanom Rung Historical Park is located in Thailand Phanom Rung Historical ParkPhanom Rung Historical Park
Location in Thailand
Name
Proper name Phanom Rung
Geography
Coordinates 14°31′57″N 102°56′30″ECoordinates: 14°31′57″N 102°56′30″E
Country Thailand
Province Buriram
Culture
Primary deity Shiva
Architecture
Architectural styles Khmer
History and governance
Date built 10th–13th centuries
Phanom Rung (Thai: พนมรุ้ง), or full name, Prasat Hin Phanom Rung (Thai: ปราสาทหินพนมรุ้ง – Phanom Rung Stone Castle), is a Khmer temple complex set on the rim of an extinct volcano at 402 metres (1,319 ft) elevation, in Buriram Province in the Isan region of Thailand. It was built of sandstone and laterite in the 10th to 13th centuries. It was a Hindu shrine dedicated to Shiva, and symbolises Mount Kailash, his heavenly dwelling.
Thailand’s Department of Fine Arts spent 17 years restoring the complex to its original state from 1971 to 1988. On 21 May 1988, the park was officially opened by Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn.[1] In 2005, the temple was submitted to UNESCO for consideration as a future World Heritage Site.

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La Granja de San Ildefonso by JuanFigueirido by JuanFigueirido

The Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso (Spanish: Palacio Real de La Granja de San Ildefonso) is an 18th-century palace in the small town of San Ildefonso in the hills near Segovia, 80 km north of Madrid, central Spain, formerly the summer residence of the kings of Spain since the reign of Philip V. The palace is in a restrained baroque style surrounded by extensive gardens in the French manner and sculptural fountains. It is now open to the public as a museum.

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Callot B1 Housing / Jacques Boucheton Architectes


© Stéphane Chalmeau

© Stéphane Chalmeau


© Stéphane Chalmeau


© Stéphane Chalmeau


© Stéphane Chalmeau


© Stéphane Chalmeau

  • Project Author: Jacques Boucheton
  • Project Manager : Raphael Picaper
  • New Area : 1618 sqm

© Stéphane Chalmeau

© Stéphane Chalmeau

From the architect. Following the partial demolition of a social housing units, this project expresses a link between the historical district and the vale of “Dervallières” while re-introducing an appropriation of the nearby green spaces.


Diagram

Diagram

The volumetric aspect consists of a new building attached to a larger old building complex. The project thus sets up in the axis of the composition of the original plan, in order not to obstruct the East-West perspectives of the neighbourhood, and make the project fit in the important site topography. Stretching eastward, the project conveys the will to anchor the building over the vale and the Renoir street, major axis of the revival of the eastern part of the district.


© Stéphane Chalmeau

© Stéphane Chalmeau

The project results from the combination of three entities. The perception of the five-storey apartment block facing Callot street is radically scrambled by its shortening, and the visual separation of its lower floors. These levels now establish a base fitting into the landform, an intermediate building with lively terraces facing the pedestrian path. The new eastern construction extends the composition with a simple volume, a five-storey apartment block standing on a base.


Elevation South

Elevation South

Elevation North

Elevation North

The design of a light metallic framework, inspired by the composition grid of the old building and the close ones, enables a consistency of the whole building complex. Stretching the silhouette of the new building to the lower floors of the old building, this structure accommodates new functions.


© Stéphane Chalmeau

© Stéphane Chalmeau

The combination of steel and wood for the new building and the refurbishment of the old lower floors conjures up a shared imaginary realm of gardens and parks, in close relation with the near green spaces.


© Stéphane Chalmeau

© Stéphane Chalmeau

The unvarying and monochrome coating of the Callot building makes it easily understandable, while giving it back the elegance of a simple horizontal building.


© Stéphane Chalmeau

© Stéphane Chalmeau

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