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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Surprised Astronauts (Funny Pics)


"QUANTUM SHOT" #559
Link - by A. Abrams



"My God, it's full of stars!"

Allen Steele once wrote a book "Rude Astronauts". Well, today we have a short and sweet page called "Surprised Astronauts" - maybe somebody will write a book around it, too.

Surprised by what? We can only guess... Nanobot swarms, aliens with indigestion, invincible totalitarian spies, or inept blondes in spacesuits, you fill the blanks.

Don Knotts in "The Reluctant Astronaut" (1967) presents the classic "oh no" expression:



images credit: Universal City Studios, all rights reserved

This article title says it all: "Boomerang works in space, says astronaut" -


(image credit: AFP, via)

Astronaut Takao Doi threw a boomerang and saw it come back - "I was very surprised and moved to see that it flew the same way it does on Earth," he says

Practice makes perfect (should be no surprises here) - photos from 1952:



(images via)

Russian cosmonaut training:


(image credit: JJ)

Ready for take-off:


(image credit: Todd Bates)

Displaced astronauts:
On a beach (Cottosloe Beach, Perth, Australia) -


(image credit: fedemate)

... in Edinburgh, in strange company -


(image credit: Barry Farquharson)

Nasty surprise -


(image credit: Jason Lips)

This is not where you attach the umbilical cord for spacewalks! -
(we are not sure what's going on in painting on the right, original unknown)


(images via 1, 2)

Spacesuit for a dog (concept, Russian space program) -


(image via)

We obviously have to include a classic shot of surprised, awed, mesmerized, and humbled astronaut - Dave Bowman (played by Keir Dullea) in "2001: A Space Odyssey" - seeing mind-boggling existential vistas:


(image via)


Attacked!


Art by Douglas Fraser

"The Tragic Death of a Spaceman", one of many -


(image credit: Sunday Williams)

This fate is even worse:


(image credit: Sunday Williams)

Fallen victim to love triangle... this story is beyond bizarre:


(image via)

Astronaut sculptures are not safe either. This one got attacked by coat hangers:


(image credit: Meg)

Sidetracked by politics... Fidel Castro and Yuri Gagarin:


(image via)


Astronauts and Cute Girls: for good luck charm, of course

Old advertisers knew a good thing when they saw it. We "grok" it, too.


(image via)

A touch of luck for the Apollo 10 crew - more info:


(image credit: NASA)


From Playpus to Zombie to Astronaut - in one simple cheat-sheet, "choose your monster" chart

Created by "Creebobby" Jacob Borshard, this is an indispensable tool for coming up with comic super-heroes, space villains or imbeciles:


(image credit: Jacob Borshard, click to enlarge)

CONTINUE TO "LADIES IN SPACE"! ->

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Category: Space,Funny Pics

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COMMENTS:

7 Comments:

Blogger Bruce said...

"My God - it's full of stars"Isn't that from "Fadeout", by Patrick Tilley?
(Brilliant book...should have had a sequel.)

___  
Blogger Sarah said...

It may be from "Fadeout" but if so was quoting "2001".

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The astronaut suits on the beach in Perth are from Tintin.

___  
Blogger John Kankley said...

Astronaut baseball wins.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

they are from tintin they are from Explorers on the moon in volume 5 of the tintin series

___  
Blogger Drasher said...

I believe that on closer inspection you will see that the astronaut "attacked by coat hangers" is actually made of coat hangers. The triangular part of the hanger is reshaped to hake the statue and the hook part is hanging out.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"My God - it's full of stars" - Dave Bowman from 2001.

___  

Post a Comment

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  • Great roundup and pix, but here's one you missed: Morgantown, West Virginia's Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) at University of West Virginia. But it doesn't have a rail so technically doesn't qualify. But so cool! http://admissions.wvu.edu/undergraduate/discover/prt.asp
    Read more

  • Monorails! Fantastic, thanks. I'm still waiting, and won't believe that the future has arrived till I ride one.
    The last image is almost identical to one of Chris Foss's concept drawings for Superman!
    Read more

  • This reminded me of Blaine the mono in Stephen King's Dark Tower epic.
    Read more

  • Here's some more you've missed:
    http://peeron.com/inv/sets/6990-1?showpic=6467
    http://peeron.com/inv/sets/6991-1?showpic=3077
    http://peeron.com/inv/sets/6399-1?showpic=6487
    And I have 6399.
    ha ha, had to do it.

    Give it a Splat!
    Read more

  • Bertin's Aerotrain (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A%C3%A9rotrain) was tested in the late 60s on a test track constructed near Orléans France. Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VvsxaaFNAs
    Read more

  • Don't forget the early-1900's Brennan gyro-monorail (linky)
    Read more

  • Don't forget about the Las Vegas monorail, designed and built by Bombardier, the world's largest rail company.
    Read more

  • great tips, all - the full story is not told yet, will go into part two.
    Read more

  • I used to know a bloke who'd ridden on the Bennie Railplane as a young man. Sadly, he died last year, and I wish I'd talked to him more about it. Although, frankly, I don't think there was much to tell: as you say, it was a test track, and didn't actually go anywhere. He did say that it sounded - as you would expect - exactly like a plane. And at 20-30 feet from the ground, that must have been quite a racket. Not to mention the wash from the propellers (one at the front, one at the rear).

    By all accounts, Bennie wasn't much of a businessman, but I can't help thinking that the technical issues doomed it as much as the economics.
    Read more

  • There is a monorail very similar to the one at Disney located at the Miami Metrozoo in South Florida.
    Read more

  • You forgot the best one http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marge_vs._the_Monorail
    Read more

  • The Senate subway wasn't (and still isn't) a monorail. Notice the motors on the trucks beneath the cars. The upper track is just the power source, like pangraph, but more durable.
    Read more

  • Very interesting article and awesome pictures. Well done to all the photographers.
    Read more

  • Good article. An interesting fact for you, Komodo Dragons are capable of parthenogenisis, this is the ability to produce offspring without mating. There is a dragon exhibit at my local zoo and a few years back, a female who had no male contact ever, produced several baby dragons! So much for the "miracle of the virgin birth." Its worth looking into this fascinating process. I am a member of the zoo and visit often, I though the keeper was kidding when they told us about it.
    Read more

  • A sillily pedantic point: I'd always been told (as an NZer) that the Tuatara (a much slower, less bitey animal) was the closest thing to dinosaurs that were still living.
    Read more

  • No need to go to remote islands! there are loads in malasia , in KL (the capital) just head for the hills, near the park, i saw 20+ just walking around, i didnt realise they could kill a man so i tried to grab one of their tails! it snapped at me but didnt get me, i left them alone after that! i have photos of them if anyone is intrested
    Read more

  • Some amazing snaps in this informative article. The closest I got to one was at the zoo. Magnificent looking creatures.
    Read more

  • Two points of clarification: First, the initial claim that they are venomous is incorrect -- they have enough bacteria in their mouths to infect just about any bite to the point of fatality as is mentioned later in the article, but it's not the same as venomous. Second, only the little ones can climb trees, which they generally do to get away from their hungry and cannibalistic parents. For more and lighter on dragons, Douglas Adams recounts his trip to see the dragons in chapter 2 of "Last Chance to See".
    Read more

  • Surely the closest living thing to a dinosaur would be their descendants the birds? Lizards aren't even archosauromorphs (the clade that includes (non-avian) dinosaurs, birds, pterosaurs and crocodiles).
    Read more

  • I don't leave you enough notes, but I always enjoy stopping by. Thanks for everything you do. You keep life lively.
    Read more

  • Anonymous: those you saw are monitor lizards. They look like Komodo dragons, but they're smaller. And yes, monitor lizards are quite common, even Singapore has them.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Monitor
    Read more

  • Thank you Maggie, really appreciate :)
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  • And people are saying dinosaurs had feathers? Idiots.
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  • Great article and the pictures are amazing. Thanks so much for sharing!
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  • I recall two great shows about these creatures. One with Dave Attenborough, and the other was a Kratt bros “Be the Creature” episode.

    Even though he had a big stick, Dave was definitely getting quite nervous when a bunch of them started getting a little too close.

    The Kratts filmed them eating a large pig or a boar… apparently they have jaws that can dislodge like a snake …the last thing to eat was the animal’s head and one of them swallowed it whole –The head was easily twice the size of the dragons if not more.

    The Kratts said the dragons don’t like poo and the young will roll in it as a deterrent to being eaten by their parents. So, if you’re ever stranded in Komodo and it’s getting dark… Another oddity is that they have a ‘third eye’ on the top of their head. Not really an eye but light sensitive nonetheless (not unique to komodo dragons btw).
    Read more

  • Fascinating facts! Thank you, anonymous
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  • need to update the part about "bacteria in the mouth is what kills prey" in the komodos. they actually have poison glands and inject venom that causes rapid loss of blood pressure so the victim can not run away. Other than that, excellent pics
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  • Breaking News: Komodos ARE venomous. It has recently been determined they have a well-developed venom gland that is ducted to between their large teeth. See this link to BBC:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/
    nature/8056040.stm

    The long held notion that their mouths were so infested with bacteria that the condition acted as a venom is incorrect. This is the work of U of Cambridge herpetologist Clemente in a follow up study of U of Melbourne.
    Read more

  • This post has been removed by the author.
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  • FYI, Google's unofficial motto is "Don't be evil." Apple has no such policy and can and will be evil.
    Read more

  • Yeah, confused apple with google there. Apple does some pretty mean things.
    Read more

  • That second MGM lion photo looks very much like Bert Lahr in the Wizard of Oz. Hmmmm.
    Read more

  • The garishly-colored wagon in that last photo is most likely a Doppler radar truck... :-)

    --TwoDragons
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  • I agree that the mystery object is a radar, but judging by the high-visibility markings it is most likely a mobile ground-controlled approach radar station for airports or military airfields. These were often used during the construction of the Distant Early Warning radar sites in northern Canada to assist cargo aircraft landing in bad weather.
    Read more

  • Brain food for those craves the images and not the words at the moment. :)

    Thank you!
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  • Love that spider/helicopter one..

    There are some more drawings, some with a sci-fi art twist here:
    http://www.marty.com.au/sci-fi-gallery/drawings.html
    Read more

  • I find the harvest of philosophy to be rather heavy and wooden myself.
    Read more

  • that lighthouse in the sand was covered in an Link Latte here last year: http://www.darkroastedblend.com/2008/12/link-latte-92.html

    original:
    http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/featured/the-lighthouse-devoured-by-sand/5115
    Read more

  • Those are great. Rob Gonsalves has done the mirrors thing too.
    Read more

  • Thank you Colan, good catch - updated

    Lynn, so true about Rob Gonsalves: mirrors indeed, and not just one picture.
    Read more

  • This is great.

    Check out this surreal video similar to the last picture.

    IDIOT BOX
    http://vimeo.com/2875674
    Read more

  • seriously some twisted stuff
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  • The Sergei Kharlamov image is reminiscent of paintings Picasso did in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Seated Bather (1930) is probably the most famous (and most extreme).
    Read more

  • This is really cool stuff. I seen some similar stuff like this on http://www.masterpieceonline.com
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  • Pretty cool surreal artwork! I especially like the painted pics.
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  • relly great, thanks Avi
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  • creepyweirdnwonderful!
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  • #7 - The eyes; they glint.
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  • love #19
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  • number 12 is probably Jerzy Stuhr, a polish actor and director.
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  • lol I love 22
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  • 40 is my new favourite picture
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  • #59 was in Leipzig, Germany during the Wave Gotik Treffen. Greatk girl! :) And indeed not the most extreme hair to find there. ;)
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  • #7. Wearing that grin, with gleaming eyes, in front of the dearly departed is too creepy.
    Read more

  • Oh my!

    No. 6 is my friend Floyd!

    http://columbiagazette.com/
    Read more

  • Things that do not belong in a funny photo post, ever: photos taken at a wake, with an OPEN COFFIN in the background. Maybe I'm just being oversensitive, but I really truly think that #7 has no business being in this post, and I'm shocked on behalf of the deceased and his family that this picture is being circulated around the internet for cheap laughs.

    That said, the rest of the photos ARE hilarious. :P
    Read more

  • I think it's hysterical when people flash "gang" symbols for photos when you know the closest they have ever been to a gang is seeing one on tv.
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  • so #16... the girl making the odd face is still hot and the dude is still a loser. you're out-classed man...sorry about your bad look.
    Read more

  • Where's no. 11?
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  • These are funny as @#$@. I noticed a recurring theme in the first half of bad bad dental hygiene.
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  • DISTURBING!
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  • #7, natural creepiness always wins over contrived creepy :)
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  • #30 I sense the soul society is near...
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  • # 1 - the participant of famous russian reality-show "dom 2"... i suppose..
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  • #37 has to be a montage, the shadows are wrong!
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  • Thought you should know that #6 is used by a pedo who calls himself Black Bart.He pops up from time to time,putting up imageboards on free hosting sites.where he disseminates Cp from old Russian sites.
    Read more

  • #7 !
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  • person with the first pictures - the person is party to the popular Russian project - "House-2":
    1. http://dom2.ru/everyday/photos/5331267?order=day.date:desc
    2. http://dom2.ru/
    Read more

  • 7!
    Read more

  • 46,

    there's no denying that is the coolest person in the world.
    Read more

  • These pictures are PRICELESS. XD
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  • #6 made my day
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  • Regarding the segway PUMA: How about a simple motor scooter? Hmm.
    Read more

  • Nice reading again!
    A small addition to your information, the "strange prototype" plane with the front and rear propellor is a Dornier Pfeil.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dornier_Do_335
    Read more

  • while planned, V-1s were never air-launched from planes.

    Germany did lead in the developement of radio-guided stand-off weaponry with the HS-239 anti shipping missile ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henschel_Hs_293 ) and the less successful Mistel combos ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mistel )
    Read more

  • I can't find any info on a USS Essex being destroyed. The aircraft carrier I found on Wikipedia was decomissioned after the war, and used later during the Cuban middle crisis.
    Read more

  • Dirk, thank you, post updated

    Casey, you're right, USS Essex was hit, but not destroyed, here is a photo of a hit: link
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  • Nice post! Although one of the shown short-wing planes is a japanese Yokosuka Ōka Modell 11 plane.
    This kamikaze-plane should have been carried by a bomber to the target.
    http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yokosuka_MXY-7
    Read more

  • The WunderWaffe 2 looks like a complete crap shoot.
    Read more

  • fantastic post. i was at the german industrial museum in munich the other day and saw a lot of the aviation stuff you mention - amazing how advanced they were back then. spotted you on the searchles portal. so many thanks for sharing
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  • Very nice post, thanks
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  • The german word for "curved" means "gebogen" or technicaly more fitting to the curved MP44 "gekrümmter Lauf".

    The second aircraft in the side comparsion to the V-1 is not a Baka, but a Fieseler Fi103R Reichenberg. It is a german suicide plane based on the more common Fi103 (V-1), following on reports of sucesses about the japanese kamikazes, but it was used only for training. About 175 Fi103R have been build until the program was cancelled in Fall of 1944.

    Not only the MiG-15 is based upon the Focke-Wulf Ta183, but also its american counterpart the F-86 Sabre. Because of this similarty pilots of both side during the Korea War had their trouble to identify friend and foe.

    K.
    Read more

  • The pictures of the E100 are false. It was never completed. Only one chassis was partially built and it was captured before completion. It was later scraped by the Brits.
    Read more

  • Maus (and especially the larger design study at Krupp) put me in mind of Keith Laumer's Bolos (Gigantic cybernetic... well, tanks, but writ Colossally, Titanically *hyooge*.
    Read more

  • Intersting article ; you could also have mentioned the (unproperly called) "V3", a very long supergun similar to the one planned by Saddam Hussein during the 90's.

    http://www.route-3945.com/modulosite2/fiche.php?id_bouton=1507&id=221&fr=0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-3_cannon#Mimoyecques_site
    Read more

  • Paul - great tip, thanks

    Herbicide - I remember reading Bolo stories. Somebody would have to make a movie based on these designs.
    Read more

  • While the Ar-234 was used as a bomber, it was more often put to use as a reconnaissance aircraft. In fact, one of them buzzed some of the Normandy beaches on D-day.
    Read more

  • It should be said that super-large tanks were a BAD idea. Hitler had been in the trenches in World War I, and he personally demanded that large tanks be designed. He even took personal control, by radio, of the first combat mission of a new-model big tank. The mission was a disaster.

    Aside from sinking into swamps, not going between obstacles, and the like, they had a more basic disadvantage that they could never be plentiful. The American light tanks weren't exactly unstoppable, but like the jeep, they were plentiful, and that mattered.
    Read more

  • Aren't those paintings from My Tank is Fight?

    It's definitely cool if any of this super-weaponry stuff interests the reader: http://www.amazon.ca/My-Tank-Fight-Zack-Parsons/dp/0806527587
    Read more

  • The IR baffles on German submarines were introduced when Allied planes started sinking Nazi boats at night. The Germans had developed IR vision equipment and figured the enemy had done the same and were using it to find the subs. However, the Allies "knew" IR vision equipment was impossible.

    The actual situation was that the Allies had developed airborne microwave radar, which the Germans "knew" was impossible.
    Read more

  • So why the fcuk they didn't win the freaking war?!! Looks like the US stole most of their technology to develop what we know as US advanced army.
    Maybe that's why US goes into war every time, to steal something!
    Read more

  • Anonymous, er..one of you :)

    The Germans actually relied on a lot of captured Jewish scientists to come up with they're scientific breakthroughs in Aviation and Rockets.
    I believe the flying wing and swept wing concepts were originally pioneered by them. The Americans took a lot of the captured Jewish & German Scientists/German Weaponry back to the US to further the development as did Russia.
    The F-111 and F-14 are two examples of this as are the early Mig's for Russia, the single mid mounted jet engine was also a Messerschmidt concept from memory.
    Germany in reality lost the war because of Hitler's Ego causing him to make a number of emotional strategic errors, bottom line. I believe Jet fighters were originally held back by German High Ranking officials and quite possibly, Hitler. If these developments had been funding boosted pre-/early WW2...the outcome may have been very, very different and we could all be talking German right now.
    Read more

  • Pretty pictures, yes, but rather gullible writing.

    The German navigation beacons could certainly be said to be forerunners of GPS... in the same sense that fire can be thought of as the forerunner of lasers.
    Read more

  • Well, let's see who finds the truth behind this picture first ! Clue : someoe is playing music.
    Read more

  • I don't know what the picture at the bottom is, but it reminds me of a church in a an earlier era prison, where the "solitary" prisoners were made to/allowed to go to church, but never permitted to even see each other, yet alone come into contact with each other (security guard in front, church organist on the left).
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  • This must be in church in some high security prison. Prisoners are guided to church hall individually and seated in seperate chambers, so they can't contact with each other, and all they can see is preist in front. If i remember correctly, this was first used in New Zealand.
    Read more

  • The brain is from "The Brain From Planet Arous" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qImQ1YBZtwg
    Read more

  • Is there a trick to that bicycle thing?
    Read more

  • The tongue is a giraffe's.
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  • the left worker-on-a-scaffolding picture looks a lot like south korea to me. while in germany, scaffoldings almost always stand on the ground (for a famous exception, see http://www.flickr.com/photos/klaus-ottes/2991170356/ the (cologne cathedral)), are anchored in the walls, have walking boards that safely rest on the scaffolding's bars, have a handrail, and even a rim shelf (to make it less likely for a worker to slip their foot under the rail and fall from under the handrail). nothing of that applies to korean scaffolds: they are often hung from the top of the walls that are being built, often with thin wires; the boards are shifted around on the struts to wherever they are needed, and are in no way fixed. rails are unheard of. one false move and world population decreases by one. i have seen workers standing on the 30cm x 30cm top of a steel column that ended in thin air tens of meters above the ground, waiting for the crane operator to move a multi-ton I beam towards him so he can grab its end and nudge it into position. scary. no saftey ropes, nothing. an accidental swallow could have knocked off the guy with ease.
    Read more

  • Might I suggest "Octopodes"?
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  • Montsnmags and Jealousy are right. This is a church in a prison - unfortunately Iscanned it a while ago and can't remember if it's american or french. Must be during the 50's.
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  • Good investigation, guys - enjoyed it!
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  • The Disney cloned animation left out the Winnie The Pooh steal from Dumbo of the Pink Elephants On Parade used for Heffalumps. No big deal - just sayin'.
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  • There is a large chapel in the victorian prison contained within Lincoln prison in England.
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/lincolnian/2732197356/
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  • I Love "Romantika"! Beautiful :)
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  • The last photo showing a prison chapel was not first used in New Zealand as suggested. There is one very similar to this (without the tops, and standing room for one person in each compartment - at least 6 rows of over 10 compartments one in front of the other) in the Port Arthur Penitentiary ruins in Tasmania, Australia, in use when New Zealand was first settled by the English - the prison in Port Arthur was for English criminals.
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  • What, no Flatiron Building? Surely you jest!
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  • Moving large pieces of furniture into the narrow houses in Amsterdam is frequently done by hauling them up via the protuberance at the top front of the houses, built into them for that very purpose. You can see them on some of the photos.
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  • Another incredibly skinny house on Place Kleber in Strasbourg, France, a little gem that tourists seem to overlook. It is 26 m deep, 6 floors high, and approxiamtely 2.5 m wide. The owner also has a smoke shop downstairs. (Scroll to the bottom of the page):

    http://weburbanist.com/2007/12/01/weburbanist-update-the-past-present-and-future-of-your-favorite-urban-weblog/
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  • 6 feet is 2 meters, not 1 (in the Madre de Deus house)
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  • Great Designs! I love the Kitchen interior shot in Japan.

    I remember eating in a restaurant in Lyon about 10 years ago called Traboule. ( Traboules are tunnels between buildings that were used to transport silk up from the river to the shops are warehouses in the 13th century- only wide enoughfor men to carry the bolts of silk on their shoulders.)

    The restaurant was built into one of the traboules in central Lyon- a row of 2-person tables along one wall, kitchen in the back. Very intimate, and like all restaurants in Lyon, great food!

    I couldn't find a reference online, so it may not exist anymore. I can't imagine that they could have made a decent living in such a small place. Not much turnover on four tables.
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  • Here's a Flickr site with some Traboule shots to give you an idea of dimension.
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/traboule/
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  • The first building you show ("unknown location") is here: http://tinyurl.com/cvprku . The neighborhood in Tokyo is called Sangenjaya, and the building is owned by a ramen shop.
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  • The reason old amsterdam houses are so thin is not because of a lack of space like you write. In fact the correct reason is in the 16th and 17th century the ammount of tax you pay was measured by the width of your house on streetside. So people tried to build the houses as thin as possible to avoid paying large amounts of money.
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  • Pittsburgh has a skinny building, 5 feet 2 inches wide.

    In 1903, the City of Pittsburgh confiscated 30 feet of throughway to widen Diamond Way into what is now Forbes Avenue. Given that the standard parcel was 36 feet wide, there wasn't much left and most property owners sold off the remaining fragments to the city to become wider sidewalks.

    In 1907, banking magnate Andrew Mellon purchased the 6 foot wide parcel of land, hoping the city would widen the street further and offer him a profit on his investment. In any case, the City wasn't buying and in 1918 he sold the parcel to Louis Hendel who built a three story building on the parcel. He may have been trying to take advantage of a quirk in the tax structure that assessed undeveloped property at a higher rate but most people think he built to spite the city.

    Nearly a century later, the city changed its mind. Wanting to redevelop the Fifth-Forbes corridor, Mayor Tom Murphy threatened to seize the property using eminent domain and hand it over to developers. That plan collapsed (as did the one after that) so the building lives on.

    http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM4JQ
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  • Another very small house:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/23879104@N06/2295271175/

    (in Gent, Belgium)
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  • I agree with Atty Finch; 23 Wall Street is essential to any such survey. An old joke cites it as the tallest buikding in the world because it has the most "stories".
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  • There is another one in Valencia, Spain. Just 1m wide. They say is one of the marrowest of europe. It is the red one: http://www.vhfdx.net/photos/foto.php?File=valencia4.jpg&Lan=S
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  • this is incredible collection
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  • Same situation with my country , many small building too, visit http://www.andihope.com.
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