For your browsing convenience, I am going to provide you with an entry that contains videos and music that you can open in a second tab and listen to while you browse. Enjoy!
For your browsing convenience, I am going to provide you with an entry that contains videos and music that you can open in a second tab and listen to while you browse. Enjoy!
Urban Exploration – From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_exploration
Urban exploration (often shortened as urbex or UE) is the examination of the normally unseen or off-limits parts of urban areas or industrial facilities.[1] Urban exploration is also commonly referred to as infiltration, although some people consider infiltration to be more closely associated with the exploration of active or inhabited sites. It may also be referred to as “draining” (when exploring drains) “urban spelunking”, “urban caving”, or “building hacking”.
Abandonments
Ventures into abandoned structures are perhaps the most common example of urban exploration. Abandoned sites are generally entered first by locals, and often sport large amounts of graffiti and other acts of vandalism. Explorers face various risks in abandoned structures including collapsing roofs and floors, broken glass, guard dogs, the presence of chemicals, other harmful substances, most notably asbestos, hostile squatters and sometimes motion detectors. Some explorers wear respirators to protect their airways.
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Looking for an adventurous photoshooting experience, a friend of mine offered to take me on an Urban Exploration session with him. The target was the Barra Castle in downtown Kitchener. The over a century old building is declared a heritage landmark and can not be tore down for that reason, however this aspect of importance does not seem important enough for the city to apply the needed repairs to it. And since the owner does not have the required funds either, the building remains in its current state for another while. How sad. For those of you interested in perhaps visiting the place, keep in mind that the building is closed since it is deemed unsafe for inhabiting. The floors are moldy and being made of wood are likely to give you a very short trip from the top floor to the bottom one. I need not mention the old building dust which will likely give you a sore throat the following day (as I am having now) either. If you do decide to go in, please respect the building as it is a Kitchener landmark and it would be really cool if future generations get to see it as intact as possible. The building is located across the street (pretty much) from the Joseph Schneider haus museum on Queen Street, a little West from the intersection with Courtland Avenue.
Google Maps: http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=queen+street+and+courtland+avenue,+kitchener&daddr=43.445295,-80.493787&hl=en&geocode=&mra=dme&mrcr=0&mrsp=1&sz=19&sll=43.445358,-80.493009&sspn=0.001054,0.002543&ie=UTF8&t=h&z=19
More info on the Barra Castle building in downtown Kitchener [The Record, newspaper]: http://news.therecord.com/News/Local/article/293668
Photographs from the Barra Castle, Kitchener, Ontario – January 2009:
The Red Livingroom – Barra Castle 2009.
It is that time again…
Every once in a while I feel a deep and unquenchable craving for an adventurous outing into the realm of the outdoors for the purpose of retrieving some primary material for my industrious activity of choice: photography. That material which I speak of is none other than raw pictures, ready to hatch their JPG or RAW shells and develop into saturated contrasty coloured works of art.
Alright alright, enough poeticness. I crave to go out photoshooting and I melancholically remember past photoshooting trips that I have been on in the past year and am trying to decide which location to re-visit, or whether to attempt something more bold and to discover some new locations. Available companionship for such an endeavour is also scarce these days *sigh* so the outlook seems kindof bleak at times. But I shall not lose hope, instead I will take the time to share some memories and ideas below.
caving by ~chirilas on deviantART
wf-10 by ~chirilas on deviantART
The original article is from the Official Google BLOG. I am posting this because I not only find the topic to be interesting and relevant to my own philosophy, but I believe it is a topic that affects all of us, since we all share the planet and its future.
Original link: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/01/back-to-energy-future.html
1/21/2009 03:36:00 PM
In 1979 President Jimmy Carter installed 32 solar hot water panels on the roof of the White House. Recently a Googler from our Washington D.C. office asked the question, “What ever happened to the Carter panels?” After a little digging, we were able to track down the original panels to Unity College, an environmental college in Maine, and bring one of them back to Washington D.C.
So what ever happened to the panels? It turns out that during President Reagan’s administration the solar hot water panels were removed from the White House in 1986 and placed in storage. In 1992, Unity College located the panels and transferred them from a General Services Administration warehouse to their campus in Maine. After restoration,16 panels provided their cafeteria with hot water for the next 12 years. In cooperation with Unity College, Google was able to bring one of these panels down to our Washington DC office for display throughout the next year.
At the panels’ dedication in 1979, Jimmy Carter stated:
“This dependence on foreign sources of oil is of great concern to all of us. In the year 2000, this solar water heater behind me, which is being dedicated today, will still be here supplying cheap, efficient energy. A generation from now, this solar heater can either be a curiosity, a museum piece, an example of a road not taken, or it can be just a small part of one of the greatest and most exciting adventures ever undertaken by the American people.” (To watch video of the dedication, check out this trailer for a movie about the panels) here: http://www.roadnottaken.info/ .
As we welcome our new U.S. president to office this week, we wanted to share this piece of this history with you. Google is committed to a clean energy future and we hope that
you will join us in supporting the creation and adoption of renewable energy technology — what could still be one of the greatest and most exciting adventures for all of us.
Dear readers,
The moment has finally come that the new blog is out and going! Due to the fact that BLOGGER is allowing HTML/CSS editing on the blog page, I was able to implement my own taste and liking and thus this new blog interface was born. I was debating importing the old posts from the other blog http://stefansphoto.wordpress.com but I eventually decided that I should compile a “Best Of 2008” instead. This should give anybody who visits this blog a better overview over the past year and fit it all into one entry. So hang on tight for here it comes:
Engagements 2008:
Joe and Jenny’s engagement, Summer 2008.
This was indeed one of the highlights of the summer of 2008. It was my second engagement shoot and I think one of the best I believe. I caught some very lovely lighting and discovered a spot that I think I will be using a lot from now on.
Portraits 2008:
Photography 2008:
The Notre Dame Cathedral in Montreal, Quebec.
The view was fantastic and I do not believe this picture does it justice at all. Having forgotten to take the tripod from the hotel room, I had to make use of the lens cap and a plastic filter box to prop the lens up to take this picture. Boy how I love improvisation…
I shot this at the docks in Montreal by the St Lawrence River. There were many ships there, mostly yachts and one or two freight ones. When I saw this man I thought to myself “wow he looks cool!” so i pulled out the Tamron 70-300mm and quickly shot a few shots of him. They weren’t great so I decided to forget about it and leave him onto my memory. But then as it was time to embarque the little tour boat that I had a ticket for, I noticed that from the lower part of the dock, in this position he looked great. So once again, quickly before he had the chance to leave, I put the eye to the lens and off I was shooting. Was very glad I caught a glimpse of this most mysterious looking character. And I went onto the ship.
Only later, when I looked at this picture again did it occur to me, “could he be a sailor? …leaning in most a poetical fashion over the railing, waiting for the ship that shall take him back home, to his beloved sea…” Who knows. But I most certainly love being blessed with the opportunity to capture such stories full of emotion.