' I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture.' [John10:9]
Does anyone have information on this door? It is a wood door with book-matched veneer. Probably birch. How old? What country?
' i am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture.
does anyone have information on this door?
it is a wood door with book-matched veneer.
' I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture.' [John10:9]
Does anyone have information on this door? It is a wood door with book-matched veneer. Probably birch. How old? What country?
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
I can see you are going to be difficult to deal with.
Absolutely correct.
Now known as the Qube. One of the first buildings I worked in after graduating Grade 12. I was 17 years old.
The Qube is a building in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
It was built as the headquarters for Westcoast Transmission Co. in 1969 and won the 1970–71 Design in Steel Award from the American Iron and Steel Institute. It was known as the Westcoast Transmission Building from 1969 to 2000, Duke Energy Building from 2000 to 2004, and then was renovated to condominiums as the Qube in 2005.[1]
The building was built from the top down. The thirteen-story[2] core was built first then steel was hung from cables at the top and the 9 occupied floors were successively built downwards.[1]
It is considered to be one of Vancouver's most earthquake-resistant structures.[3]
The building's address was changed from 1333 W. Georgia St to 1383 W. Georgia St. during the condominium conversion. It is located in Vancouver's West End, halfway between the main business district and Stanley Park.
The building was used in the television series MacGyver as the headquarters for the fictional Phoenix Foundation, employer of the title character.[4]
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
Next pic.
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
This church contains the tombs of many members of the House of Savoy, including King Victor (King Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia), his wife, Queen Maria Teresa, and one of their daughters, Princess Marie Adelaide of Savoy. Also here is the tomb of King Victor's great-grandmother, Anne Marie d'Orléans, Queen of Sardinia, granddaughter of King Charles I and heir presumptive to King James III and VIII from 1715 to 1720; it is through her that the succession to the throne passed to the House of Savoy in 1807. |
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
In 1913, Oskar von Miller, founder of the Deutsches Museum (German Museum) in Munich, had an idea for an apparatus that would depict the apparent motions of the sun, moon, and planets along with those of the stars. He soon asked the Carl Zeiss Company for suggestions concerning this kind of a planetarium, but World War I interrupted things. Walther Bauersfeld, after unveiling a new design for a projection planetarium in March 1919, began working with the employees under him to flesh out the details. The long-awaited moment finally arrived in August 1923 when the artificial sky lit up for the first time, far exceeding expectations. After completion, the apparatus – Model I – was permanently installed at the Deutsches Museum in Munich in 1925. Subsequent developments in planetarium technology ultimately led to Model IX and also resulted in smaller size models for teaching purposes. Yet no end was in sight for the innovations: with the advent of computers, Carl Zeiss equipped planetariums with computer-assisted control systems, built mid-sized planetariums, and developed fiber optics to depict the night skies more brilliantly than ever. The evolution of ZEISS planetariums, which can now be found all over the world, eventually led to the VELVET video projector – featuring the superior contrast for perfect fulldome projection.
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.
first person to identify this building and its location gets to post the next image .
.
and on we go!.