Roundhouse 

40 creative works found

  • Pictures from the enormous surf on the California coast in December 2007.

  • Detail of a recreation of an Iron Age roundhouse at Flag Fen, Cambridgeshire, England. /   / One of our many steps on the climb up Mount Improbable. /   / Part of the series Against the Sky /   /

  • It was a very cold spring day at Flag Fen and quite windy. Inside the Roundhouse it was a different matter, although there was no fire lit it was surprising how much it shielded you from the elements. Please see www.theancientmuse.co.uk for details of the Eisteddford in June which promises to be a very interesting two day event. There will be entertainment, stalls, workshops and an Art Exhibition which I am co-ordinating. The main event will be the Battle of the Bards when the first Bard of the Fens will be named.

  • / This is a Round House that was taken on our last trip to the UK a few years ago, and is located at St.Fagins Museum of Welsh Life, not far from Cardiff in Wales. / The smoke is from the fire which is located on the floor in the centre of the dwelling. / If you are planning to visit you must allow yourself at least a whole day. Just Brilliant. / Click here! if you want to read about The History of Welsh Life.

  • The Kymin, Monmouth – Wales Shot taken with a Nikkormat 35mm SLR and infrared film, and finished with an Orton effect canvas, card, kymin, tree, framed, laminated, matted, mounted, poster, print, rb, redbubble, moneypenny, Monmouth, ir, infra, red, country, rural, monument, museum, Nelson, roundhouse /

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  • About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • This photo gives an idea of the size of this place. About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • More junk sitting about the Roundhouse. About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • A heap of a multitude of items at the Roundhouse in Rossville Illinois. About a mile south of Rossville along the old Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad line stands one of the few surviving railroad / roundhouses in Illinois. Built in 1912-13, the five engine stall concrete building served as a service and repair facility for the Elgin, / Joliet and Eastern Rail Road (EJ&E). US Steel, the owner of the EJ&E, wanted a train yard in this area to make hauling coal from / the Vermilion County mines to Chicago and Gary easier. The Roundhouse consisted of a yard office, a sand house, water tank, and / tool sheds. In 1914, a marble, stone and concrete YMCA was built just south of the facility to house the EJ&E crews. A cafeteria- / style dining room was part of the “Y” and was a popular place for local residents to have their Sunday meals. The Depression took its toll on the facility, and in 1938 the EJ&E closed the Roundhouse. The YMCA had closed seven years earlier / and had become a tomato canning facility. Eventually, the structure was abandoned and then purchased by L.H. Schlecht of the / Rossville Canning Company who in 1940 had the building demolished. The Roundhouse stood empty until 1944 when AW Industries took the site over and turned it into a corncob rendering plant. / Eventually, that industry closed. Today, the deteriorating structure is privately owned. Information © and courtesy of: http://www.andersonmacintyrehistoricalservices.com/Roundhouse.html

  • This is the inside of an Indian Roundhouse in Colonial Jamestown, Virginia / This was taken with natural light with a Canon AE1 film camera / 200 ASA film / 60 shutter speed

  • The original gears from the turntable that worked the Roundhouse, built in 1888, Vancouver. A roundhouse is a building used by railroads for servicing locomotives. Roundhouses are large, circular or semicircular structures that were traditionally located surrounding or adjacent to turntables. The defining feature of the traditional roundhouse was the turntable, which facilitates access when the building is used for repair facilities or for storage of steam locomotives.

  • If you are interested in Archaeology and Medieval History like I am, this is right up your alley. / Every minute that I spent in this place was a transportation back to that time in history. / This is a thatched Round House that was the main living area of that period. / The Butser Ancient Farm which is a trip back in time, is situated about 4 miles south of Petersfield in Hampshire. England. / ( B = Butser ) =========== Click here. if you want to read about the Butser Ancient Farm. =====================

  • LMS 4-6-0 Class 5MT Black Five no. 45110 and MR 1377 Class 0-6-0T no. 41708 at The Diesel Gala at Barrow Hill Roundhouse, South Yorkshire. Nikon D80 – Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens – Orton Effect

  • D1023 Western Fusilier at The Diesel Gala, Barrow Hill Roundhouse. Nikon D80 – Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens – ND4 grad

  • Tres Fashion Heres a girl who knows how to be spotted in a crowd, My friend Ella is one of sydneys leading cosplayers, And has even represented australia in a competition for it in Japan! This in your face portrait fits her perfectly, At the time of posting I can’t remember the character she’s cosplaying in the shot but boy is it colourful. There has been no post processing at all in this shot, Thats actually how bright her hair and eyes were at the time too. Hope you all enjoy this one :) Taken just inside the entrance in UNSW. / Model: Canon EOS 50D / Lens: Canon 50mm 1.8 / ISO: 100 / Aperture: f1.8 / Shutter Speed: 1/160th sec / WB: Auto / Focus Type: AF / Focal Length: 50mm / Style: Portrait (models permission Obtained as per sales and uploading.) Cosplay is: A subculture centered on dressing as characters from manga, anime, tokusatsu, and video games.

  • LMS 4-6-0 Class 5MT Black Five no. 45110 in Barrow Hill Roundhouse.Barrow Hill Roundhouse & Railway Centre, until 1948 known as Staveley Roundhouse & Train Centre, is a former Midland Railway roundhouse in Barrow Hill, near Staveley and Chesterfield, Derbyshire. Nikon D80 – Sigma 10-20mm lens Featured in the Nikon D80 Users Group AUG 2009.

  • BR Class 40 no. D213 and BR Class 55 no. 55 016 Gordon Highlander at the Barrow Hill Diesel Gala Aug 2009. Nikon D80 – Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens – polarisor/ND4 grad

  • This image is a combination of photographs showing the Concord Pacific buildings along the Yaletown, Vancouver waterfront and images from the Roundhouse Mid Winter Festival of Lights celebration.

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