Noroc's Stuff
A collection of random interesting and inspiring images
Noroc's Stuff
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ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
ianbrooks:

Frozen Moscow TV Tower
The TV tower of Ostankino in Moscow built in 1967 and held the championship belt for tallest man-made building (at 1,772 feet tall, surpassing the Empire State Building) until the CN Tower was built in Toronto in 1976. Due to numerous fires and accidents, large portions of the tower are now largely uninhabitated though it remains a testament to Soviet engineering and one helluva view.

(Photos via: vs-arts / via: English Russia)
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letsbuildahome-fr:

Stamp House
Architects: Charles Wright Architects
Location: Queensland, Australia
Year: 2013
letsbuildahome-fr:

Stamp House
Architects: Charles Wright Architects
Location: Queensland, Australia
Year: 2013
letsbuildahome-fr:

Stamp House
Architects: Charles Wright Architects
Location: Queensland, Australia
Year: 2013
letsbuildahome-fr:

Stamp House
Architects: Charles Wright Architects
Location: Queensland, Australia
Year: 2013
letsbuildahome-fr:

Stamp House
Architects: Charles Wright Architects
Location: Queensland, Australia
Year: 2013
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lustik:

Tesler + Mendelovitch
lustik:

Tesler + Mendelovitch
lustik:

Tesler + Mendelovitch
lustik:

Tesler + Mendelovitch
lustik:

Tesler + Mendelovitch
lustik:

Tesler + Mendelovitch
Light Sculpture/Installationfacebook.com
‘Mul­ti­verse’ LED Art sur­round­ing Mov­ing Walk­way at Nation­al Gallery of Art by Leo Vil­lare­al Photo Michael Poole (Long­mont, CO) on design-dautore.com
rawluh:

by  zara pfeifer
jesusaintdead:

Steven Seagull
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ianbrooks:

Makha Bucha Day Celebration
At Dhammakaya Temple in the Pathum Thani province of Thailand, monks gathered to celebrate Makha Bucha Day by holding a candlelight procession called a wian tian (wian meaning circle and tian meaning candle), meant to commemorate two events during the Buddha’s lifetime that occurred on the same date, 45 years apart. The first was the ordainment of 1,250 monks who came from all over, and the second was the delivering of the Buddha’s teachings shortly before his death. Both events happened on the full moon of the third lunar month. The spiritual aims of the day are not to commit any kind of sins, do only good, and to purify one’s mind.

(photos: Rungroj Yongrit @ EPA  / via: NBC Photoblog)
ianbrooks:

Makha Bucha Day Celebration
At Dhammakaya Temple in the Pathum Thani province of Thailand, monks gathered to celebrate Makha Bucha Day by holding a candlelight procession called a wian tian (wian meaning circle and tian meaning candle), meant to commemorate two events during the Buddha’s lifetime that occurred on the same date, 45 years apart. The first was the ordainment of 1,250 monks who came from all over, and the second was the delivering of the Buddha’s teachings shortly before his death. Both events happened on the full moon of the third lunar month. The spiritual aims of the day are not to commit any kind of sins, do only good, and to purify one’s mind.

(photos: Rungroj Yongrit @ EPA  / via: NBC Photoblog)
ianbrooks:

Makha Bucha Day Celebration
At Dhammakaya Temple in the Pathum Thani province of Thailand, monks gathered to celebrate Makha Bucha Day by holding a candlelight procession called a wian tian (wian meaning circle and tian meaning candle), meant to commemorate two events during the Buddha’s lifetime that occurred on the same date, 45 years apart. The first was the ordainment of 1,250 monks who came from all over, and the second was the delivering of the Buddha’s teachings shortly before his death. Both events happened on the full moon of the third lunar month. The spiritual aims of the day are not to commit any kind of sins, do only good, and to purify one’s mind.

(photos: Rungroj Yongrit @ EPA  / via: NBC Photoblog)