I know this blog is supposed to showcase the beauty of Philadelphia but I like to travel and each time I do, I am reminded that there is no place like home and to me, there is no other city more beautiful than Philadelphia which will always be home to me. Here are some images that I captured during this visit to our neighboring city.
This sculpture, located in Zucotti Park, looks strikingly similar to the one diagonal from the Philadelphia Museum of Art. After a couple of google searches, it turns out that these sculptures are from the same artist by the name of Mark (Marco Polo) di Suvero. This one is called Joie de Vivre, the one in Philly is called Irroquois.
Construction at the World Trade Center. Building is more than half way done to 104 stories according to the banner update.
Commissioned for the One Chase Manhattan Plaza in 1980, this sculpture by Ken Mowatt is called "The Raven Puts the Sun in the Sky". It iis based on a very interesting indian folklore, Raven & Sun which you can read more at:
http://www.wwu.edu/depts/skywise/legends.html#Raven%20and%20Sun
http://www.wwu.edu/depts/s
Located at 70 Pine, this 1932 art-deco bld. was formerly the HQ of AIG who sold it along with the bld. at 72 Wall St. to a South Korea-based Kumho Investment Bank in 2009 for total of 150 million dollars. Kumho resold these 2 buildings 2 years later for 251 million dollars, a nice return on investment, don't you think? 70 Pine is currently the tallest skyscraper in lower Manhattan and will be converted to condos.
The architect of the Brooklyn Bridge is John Augustus Roebling, the same man that built the Delaware Aqueduct 20 years earlier in 1845 connecting Minisink Ford, NY to Lackawaxen, PA. (The aqueduct is the oldest existing wire suspension bridge in the US spaning 535 feet (175 meters)
The history of the bridge construction is very interesting. Read how it killed Roebling Sr, paralyzed Roebling Jr. and eventually relied on the supervision of Jr.'s wife for most of the construction on ADP blog: http://andydinhphotographyblog.blogspot.com/2011/07/nyc-july-15-17-2011.html
The history of the bridge construction is very interesting. Read how it killed Roebling Sr, paralyzed Roebling Jr. and eventually relied on the supervision of Jr.'s wife for most of the construction on ADP blog: http://andydinhphotography
Caught this plane flying across the Chrysler building while cruising on the Hudon river, thought it was pretty cool.
10th Avenue & 18th St. This is one of my favorite pictures, you can see the neighborhood transforming. I'm curious to see what street will look like in 10-15 years...
This Beaux-Arts building is stunningly beautiful (almost fairytale-ish) when the evening sunlight shines on it. This was the prototype for the Wrigley building in Chicago. Can you name and locate it???
No comments:
Post a Comment