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The first project looks very much like the studenthousing for the technical university in Delft, the Netherlands.
http://www.duwo.nl/eCache/ENG/1/764.html
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Those Reversible Destiny units don't look handicap accessible by any means. what an interesting concept, though.
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I don't think it started in 1970. I saw a modular housing development in Montreal in 1967, called Habitat. Google "habitat 67 montreal" and click on images.
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thanks Alan,
I updated the post
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These are the good looking ones. There are some shipping container ones that are elegant as well. This link is a rather grim reality:
http://www.photomichaelwolf.com/100x100/
100 10' x 10' apartments in Hong Kong.
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I see nothing grim about the pics in the michaelwolf link. Humble--yes. Spartan--absolutely. But grim--only to the eyes of a spoiled westerner who associate the size of one's living space with his/her self-worth. Many of the rooms featured there are probably cleaner and more orderly than your apartment noh?
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My father made a pedestal for a sundial by taking several natural rocks and stacking them to find a way that they would balnce before cementing them in place. He said there was no reason to have gravity working against him.
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Good day.
to insert ...
http://igrushka.kz/vip56/intraf.php
http://igrushka.kz/vip56/intraf2.php
http://igrushka.kz/vip56/intraf3.php
author: Tom Tit
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Thank you Sergei
I think we've covered these in our
first post :)
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Bill Dan, rock balancing artist:
http://billdan.blogspot.com/
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Wow, its very great.
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If we look carefully at the bottle with two cardboard rings balanced on it, about halfway down, there's a small nail supporting the right side of the bottle. It's not as much of a balancing demonstration as first meets the eye.
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The gas powered pogo stick was actualy manufactured, at least in limited numbers. I've seen one.
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It was called "The Hop Rod". Here's the website, with video, even.
http://www.thehoprod.com/
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I have an inventor dad, Then married an inventor husband (w/patent & pat pend) and sons... It is like being on one of those pogo sticks all the time!!! Great stuff! I was laughing out loud all alone- Is that normal? Jan C.
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Brilliant, I especially loved the “inflatable floating furniture”. It MUST be made!!
www.loveinventions.com
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Fairly recently, there were monks constructing a mandala in a Midwest airport... and a toddler who got away from his mother came and kicked his way through it! I can just imagine how mortified she must have been, but it sounds like the monks handled it gracefully and philosophically.
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haha... yes, peace of mind is the whole idea.
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The toddler "attack" occurred at Union Station in Kansas City, MO. I used to work across the street and watched the monks construct these several times.
They use long, hollow metal sticks with ridges. They rub wooden sticks across the ridges to coax the sand out a grain at a time.
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Neither of those cars are a Japanese import. The first one is a Ford Fiesta, and the second one is an (Austin)Mini Metro. Crushing them is however probably the best things you can do with either model.
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Also, the second crushed car picture (the one with the girl in it) shows what looks to be a crushed BMW 3 series.
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This armored vehicle is a BRDM rather than a BTR.
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Or to be more exact it is a BTR-40P-2 which is widely known as BRDM-2 :)
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thank you for the info guys... interesting
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thanks a lot..
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Title should be Modern Spanish Design, not Italian!
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From artist's bio:
"Complementing a precise, science oriented undergraduate instruction, a Master of Industrial Design from the prestigious Domus Academy in Milan... Infusing a materials and technology savvy character with the rich, bold, and sensual styling associated with leading modern Italian Design."
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Wow, Extreme Submarines. I wonder how much overtime they put in coming up with that original name. The extreme tag is so overused and generic, it just sounds stupid.
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Wow. Beautiful designs... (in into the aquatic vehicles and underwater activities in particular) -- I've got some additional photos of other types of subs at my website squidoo.com/submarines --and I'd like to link to this site as well! If only cars could be designed like this as well--the aerodynamics would improve fuel economy as well!
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Thank you Dave, you got good site there.
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Ok so the last bridge is the "Pont de Normandie" in France (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pont_de_Normandie).
That was an easy one.
Well OK I am French and used to drive throught this bridge on a regular basis a few years ago ;)
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i'm somewhat appalled. no calatrava bridges?
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Being from the Pacific Northwest, I'd have voted for the Astoria-Megler bridge to be on there. I believe it's still the longest "continuous truss" bridge in the world (but don't quote me on that) and is 4.1 miles long, with a main span of 1,232 feet.
And it's just fun to drive across :-)
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Prawdziwe cudeńka .
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My favorite was the Hangzhou Bay Bridge. I would love to drive accross that one! I imagine it would feel pretty weird having all that ocean surrounding your car. 36 kilometers means that you wouldn't even be able to see land at some point! There's no way I'd drive accross that in a storm!
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Here's a link to a really neat bridge from British Columbia. Scroll down to find the one that was there in 1872. Low tech and incredible. http://michaelkluckner.com/bciw10hagwilget.html
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Here is a link to a bridge in Redding California that is very cool. http://www.turtlebay.org/sundial/sundial03.shtml
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Thank you all for great suggestions! We will get them into next articles.
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I was surprised that the Charles Bridge in Prague wasn't included.
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Check out my photos and a couple of videos of the
Millenium Bridge featured in your post.
I see that bridge every day of my life and it's still amazing watching it open after dozens of times.
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I have three good photos of the Turtle Bay Bridge, but really, it's so photogenic that it's hard to take a bad one.
Pic IPic IIPic III Read more
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There is also
Bosphorus Bridge in Istanbul in Turkey. It connects two continents to each other. Asia to Europe or Europe to Asia. ;)
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you forgot the "pont du Gard", "bridge of Gard" which date from the romans and still stand in south of france. besides it was also an "aqueduc", at the top goes a canalisation to bring water to a city.
here's a link for the story http://www.interlog.fr/candi/PdG/PdG_description.html
and one for pictures
http://www.interlog.fr/candi/PdG/pont_du_gard.htm
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Yes.There is also Bosphorus Bridge in
Istanbul.Not interesting but it meets two continents each other.
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The bridge across Niagra Falls. The first strand was laid down by a kite, and built up from there. Engineered by the same man who engineered the Brooklyn Bridge (John Augustus Roebling). Beautiful.
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I'm from New Orleans and I used to drive the Lake Ponchartrain Causeway about once a week...It's a long drive, but pretty at sunset.
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The Fixed Link is indeed a thing of beauty, and the uprights are coincidentally the highest points in Denmark.
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Superb mind-blowing pictures!!!! Hangzhou Bay Bridge, China, what a beauty... really enjoyed a lot.. thanks for sharing
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The Mostar bridge was later rebuilt by Spanish UN troops.
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There is a bigger train bridge in Lethbridge, AB, Canada...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lethbridge_Viaduct
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http://www.mackinacbridge.org/facts--figures-16/
needs some representation!
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very cool buddy!! great collection
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I think I feel a bit green around the gills. And I admit, it's likely to make me blanch a little when I think about going to the Maryland beaches.
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Gruinard Island Coordinates
Latitude 57°53'32.80"N
Longitude 5°28'7.13"W
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Dumping chemical weapons into the ocean is a scary thought, but most of that stuff degrades and becomes inert very quickly when diluted into that much seawater. Oddly enough, agricultural and industrial run-off is usually much more threatening to ocean ecology than these dumped chemical weapons.
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I clicked on the link to thinkprogress.com. Credibility went out the door for this entire page. think bee ess.com would be more correct.
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and lots of chemical, nuclear, and bio weapons oops in the US of A over the years. Lots of it happened in Utah.
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tried to put a link up too, but it ate the link
www.deseretnews.com/dn/sview/1,3329,250010322,00.html
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^ I was just about to post the same link James...
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,250010322,00.html
Another casualty was Ray Peck's family in Skull Valley. They were likely hit with low doses of the nerve gas from a Dugway Proving Ground test that accidentally killed 6,000 sheep near their home in 1968. The Pecks lived but haven't been the same since.
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There was an incident at Fort Polk, Louisiana in the late spring/early summer of 1987 in which containers of mustard gas were unearthed while trenches for underground cables were being dug. It took nearly a month to clean up the site, and all involved, including myself, were told to keep our mouth's shut. The Army clamped down on this, and the story never went public...how many times has something like this happened, I wonder?
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