The Power of Nature
Hanoi, a city on lakes
Mysterious unknown
ARC - I/S Amager Ressourcecenter
Candy Bomber (on smartphone)
Candy Bomber (on film)
Beijing bicycle
Modern Bratislava
Mountain Goats of the City Zoo
invisible
Interwar Modernism
Copenhagen from a boat
From that rooftop: a Boatride
Over the Roofs of Tomorrow
Dystofuturium
Why they call him a river horse???
Golden Tower
BÅDTEATRET
A Broken Flower
Cricket Street Championship
Misty morning
Today I just go to Patrónka, thank you
Futuristic city
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Fotografija Kaunas
Remembering History: A Winter Walk to the WWII Mon…
Ugrasen-ki Baoli / detail
Pop
Spa town faux ‘antique’ architecture
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ART of extraordinary interior design and decoration
ART of extraordinary interior design and decoration
" ART - comme architecture ! Art - like architecture ! Art - come l'architettura! " Art - wie Architektur !
" ART - comme architecture ! Art - like architecture ! Art - come l'architettura! " Art - wie Architektur !
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Sky Park Lightwell
Born in wartime Bratislava, the Jurkovič Heating Plant rose from the banks of the Danube between 1941 and 1944, designed by the legendary Slovak architect Dušan Jurkovič as the beating industrial heart of the Apollo refinery complex.
The same year it opened, Allied bombers scarred its walls — yet it kept supplying heat to the city for decades until silence finally fell over its turbines. Declared a national cultural monument in 2008, it was spared demolition and handed to architect Martin Paško and DF Creative Group, who completed its resurrection in 2021.
Their solution was bold: a sleek glass volume inserted inside the raw concrete shell, so in your photographs the two architectures confront each other across a soaring 22‑metre atrium washed with skylight and reflections. From your viewpoint, glass floors hover like calm water above the warm‑lit halls, black steel bridges stitch together old and new, and 31,736 reclaimed bricks texture the walls — a vertiginous interior landscape where industrial memory and contemporary life quite literally meet in the frame of your lens.

The same year it opened, Allied bombers scarred its walls — yet it kept supplying heat to the city for decades until silence finally fell over its turbines. Declared a national cultural monument in 2008, it was spared demolition and handed to architect Martin Paško and DF Creative Group, who completed its resurrection in 2021.
Their solution was bold: a sleek glass volume inserted inside the raw concrete shell, so in your photographs the two architectures confront each other across a soaring 22‑metre atrium washed with skylight and reflections. From your viewpoint, glass floors hover like calm water above the warm‑lit halls, black steel bridges stitch together old and new, and 31,736 reclaimed bricks texture the walls — a vertiginous interior landscape where industrial memory and contemporary life quite literally meet in the frame of your lens.

E. Adam G., Berny, Heide, Jean-luc Drouin and 15 other people have particularly liked this photo
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