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The Empty Room
Mia Bergeron
Riverside drive viaduct NYC by Martijn van Dam Via Flickr: Explore - #18 The Riverside Drive Viaduct, built in 1900 by the US City of New York, was constructed to connect an important system of drives in Upper Manhattan by creating a high-level boulevard extension of Riverside Drive over the barrier of Manhattanville Valley to the former Boulevard Lafayette in Washington Heights. F. Stuart Williamson was the chief engineer for the municipal project, which constituted a feat of engineering technology. Despite the viaduct's important utilitarian role as a highway, the structure was also a strong symbol of civic pride, inspired by America’s late 19th-century City Beautiful movement. The viaduct’s original roadway, wide pedestrian walks and overall design were sumptuously ornamented, creating a prime example of public works that married form and function. An issue of the Scientific American magazine in 1900 remarked that the Riverside Drive Viaduct's completion afforded New Yorkers “a continuous drive of ten miles along the picturesque banks of the Hudson and Harlem Rivers.”[1] The elevated steel highway of the viaduct extends above Twelfth Avenue from 127th Street (now Tiemann Place) to 135th Street and is shouldered by masonry approaches. The viaduct proper was made of open hearth medium steel, comprising twenty-six spans, or bays, whose hypnotic repetition is much appreciated from underneath at street level. The south and north approaches are of rock-faced Mohawk Valley, N.Y., limestone with Maine granite trimmings, the face work being of coursed ashlar. The girders over Manhattan Explore - #40 Street (now 125th Street) were the largest ever built at the time. The broad plaza effect of the south approach was designed to impart deliberate grandeur to the natural terminus of much of Riverside Drive’s traffic as well as to give full advantage to the vista overlooking the Hudson River and New Jersey Palisades to the west. The viaduct underwent a two-year long reconstruction in 1961 and another in 1987. (source: Wikipedia)
📷 Fred Stein Le Gaz Paris 1935
Evil building - The Majestic Hotel 1930- Art Deco- Illustration by Hugh Ferriss
Medieval Wound Man, “…a compendium of all the injuries that a body might sustain.”
Wound man, Pseudo-Galen, Anathomia; WMS 290 (he's in the Wellcome Collection!)
Women_
Girl in her circus costume, Maryland, Photo by Diane Arbus, 1970
view Little girl playing with her dog on wordPress
Ergy Landau :: Petite fille jouant avec son chien. | Little girl playing with her dog, undated. | src Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Monica Bellucci photographed by Bettina Rheims
Liza Korol photographed for Saber Viver Magazine, November 2019, by Goncarlo Claro
Cr: @frankenstein_
Astronaut Dave Scott enjoying the view out of his Apollo command module, 1969