Creative angles of the Experience Music Project building in Seattle, Washington.
In other words … wow! The genius of Frank Gehry, Boeing technology, computers and his collaborative project teams. (A featured work in the Architectural Photography Group.)
...ella está ahí! Even if we try to hide it…she’s there!
Frank Gehry’s emp (experience music project): Who could have guessed what that crumpled piece of paper in the waste bin would turn into?
The Space Needle is a tower in Seattle, Washington. The needle is a major landmark of the Pacific Northwest region of the United States and a symbol of Seattle. Located at the Seattle Center, it was built for the 1962 World’s Fair. It is shown here reflected in the shiny surface of the Experience Music Project and Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame (EMP|SFM). The museum is dedicated to the history and exploration of both popular music and science fiction located in Seattle, Washington. The Frank Gehry-designed museum building is located on the campus of the Seattle Center, adjacent to the Space Needle and the Seattle Center Monorail, which runs through the building.
More wonders from architect Frank Gehry at Seattle’s emp. (“Architecture … the greatest art of all” – the viewpoint of Australian artist Lloyd Reece. Definitely a very worthy notion, but my own feeling is that, much as I love good architecture, that accolade should go to film and cinema.) / View my complete series of Experience Music Project images.
This shot was taken in front of the EMP in Seattle, Washington, USA / Architect: Frank Gehry
Seattle, WA. The EMP Music Experience. This is Frank Gehry’s architectural design in action. This is not a result of me playing around with colors. This is how the exterior of the building looks in a particular light. It is very colorful and reflective and changes depending upon where you are standing and the time of day. Much fun to work with!
Just walking around on a camping site and saw an empty glass tea cup with a spoon in it. Didn’t think too much of it, but after taking the picture, it shows up pretty nicely…..in my opinion. 5D Mark II / Sigma 105mm
More Frank Gehry architectural magic. emp – Seattle. Art generating art. (“Architecture … the greatest art of all” – the viewpoint of Australian artist Lloyd Reece. Definitely a very worthy notion, but my own feeling is that, much as I love good architecture, that accolade should go to film and cinema.) / View the complete series of Experience Music Project images taken in Seattle.
emp … gehry … genius
the concert venue at the / Experience Music Project, Seattle Center
Seattle Center
Seattle Center
the Experience Music Project building designed by Gehry starts getting into its own groove
top of the experience music project in seattle
Space Needle reflecting in the metal hull of the EMP.
EMP and Space Needle, Seattle, WA
The Experience Music Project in Seattle, Wa. I was experiencing the architecture. Amazing design!!
This is one piece of Newfoundland History which is a little more unusual then the rest. The story of the Bell Island Explosion has always…
This is one piece of Newfoundland History which is a little more unusual then the rest. The story of the Bell Island Explosion has always facinated me, so I thought I’d share it with everyone here on the bubble. / Bell island From Wikipedia: / On April 2, 1978, there was a loud explosion on Bell Island that caused damage to some houses and the electrical wires in the surrounding area. Two cup-shaped holes about two feet deep and three feet wide marked the major impact. A number of TV sets in Lance Cove, the surrounding community, also exploded at the time of the blast. Weather men confirmed that atmospheric conditions at the time were not conducive to lightning. The blast was heard 45 kilometers away in Cape Broyle. Apparently U.S. Vela satellites picked up the event. The incident was investigated promptly by two representatives from a U.S. weapons laboratory at Los Alamos, according to the news media.(1) It has been speculated that the explosion was ball lightning. However, a recent documentary aired on The History Channel about electromagnetic pulse weapons speculated that it may have been a result of top secret experiments by either the Russian or U.S. governments, involving high energy beams focused into the ionosphere that where attracted by the iron in abandoned mines. From The History Channel: / On a calm Sunday morning in 1978, residents of Bell Island, Newfoundland hear an odd, high-pitched hum, immediately followed by a sudden and terrifying blast resounding for hundreds of miles. Witnesses observe a “straight shaft of light” descending from the sky, and a barrage of violent electrical phenomenon. Outbuildings are destroyed, livestock electrocuted, televisions explode and power lines vaporize. Observed from space, the light emissions from the “boom” are more powerful than those of the Hiroshima blast. The Invisible Machine unravels the mystery of the Bell Island “boom” and in doing so takes a chilling look at the U.S. military’s experimentation with electromagnetic pulse (EMP) weapons,”e-bombs”, directed energy weapons that can destroy electrical and communications systems but leave people seemingly unharmed. We interview eye witnesses, an EMP weapons designer, scientists, journalists, policy makers and activists who warn that these weapons are real and may have been used by the US military during its “shock and awe” campaign against Iraq in 2003. While the United States continues to develop and experiment with these weapons of mass destruction, the questions remain: were the bizarre events on Bell Island in 1978 related to early testing gone wrong and were directed EMP weapons at Baghdad’s electricity generation plant the most recent experiment? If so, what are the consequences of unleashing this powerful force? The Invisible Machine pulls back the veils of secrecy to find the answers. / Photo by Kevin Kroeker
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