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Showing posts with label Places. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Places. Show all posts

Singapore's highest pedestrian bridge - Henderson Waves :



Henderson Waves is a 274-metre (899 ft) long pedestrian bridge. At 36 metres (118 ft) above Henderson Road, it is the highest pedestrian bridge in Singapore. It connects Mount Faber Park and Telok Blangah Hill Park. It was designed by IJP Corporation, London, and RSP Architects Planners and Engineers (PTE) ltd Singapore.


The bridge has a wave-form made up of seven undulating curved steel ribs that alternately rise over and under its deck. The curved ribs form alcoves that function as shelters with seats within. Slats of yellow balau wood, an all-weather timber found in Southeast Asia, are used in the decking. The wave-forms are lit with LED lamps at night from 7pm to 2am daily.


Photo Credits : Source
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Slauerhoffbrug - The Bridge That Looks Like It's Flipping Pancakes :

The Slauerhoffbrug is one tail bridge that stands out, even in the bridge-happy Netherlands. The bridge, located in Leeuwarden, was designed by Van Driel Mechatronica to be a fully automatic bridge with an ability to sense and adapt to its surroundings. While this technology is not for just any bridge—more traffic requires a more intelligent controller—the bridge is sensibly high-tech for its area, says Bart Ney, a Public Information Officer for the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge, which is scheduled to be completed in 2013. "The Slauerhoffbrug is immediately both iconic and utilitarian and allows optimum flow of maritime and automobile traffic," he says.

The Slauerhoffbrug crosses over the Harlinger Vaart River. "A movable bridge was necessary because a new beltway crossed this canal," van Driel says. Constructed in 2000 from iron and steel, the bridge is raised and lowered 10 times a day by two hydraulic cylinders located in a single pylon next to the bridge. The lift bearing, complete with asphalt and road markings, seamlessly disappears into the road when lowered. The base model of the bridge is a limited turntable bascule bridge, in which the rising section is counterbalanced by a weight, like the Pegasusbrug near Ouistreham in France. Such bridges were built all over the world in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, van Driel says.


The Slauerhoffbrug is built in an L-shape, bending the bearing bars that lead to the deck, with the foundation built beside the bridge. The principal beams and cross girders are absent. This allows a low construction height that increases the lifting height. And in true Dutch fashion, this tail bridge isn't just an engineering feat, but a work of art. It is painted in yellow and blue, representative of Leewaurden's flag and seal. The asymmetrical shape can be seen for miles when the deck is completely raised and locked upright in midair.

Photo Credits : Source



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El Penon de Guatape, Guatape, Colombia :

A massive stone rising over 650 feet out of the flat ground of Guatape, Colombia, the Piedra de Penol or El Peñon de Guatape was once worshiped by the Tahamies Indians. By the 1900s, the massive 10-million-ton rock was seen by local farmers as a nuisance, a giant version of the rocks that the farmers regularly dug out of their fields.
        In 1954 a group of friends—supposedly at the urging of a local priest—climbed the rock using a series of boards wedged into a crack. These were the first people known to have climbed El Peñon de Guatape. (It is unknown whether the Tahamies had a way of ascending the stone.) Climbing the huge stone took five days, but the top of the rock revealed both beautiful views and a new species of plant, Pitcairma heterophila. The rock soon became a modest tourist attraction.
        The rock, which is almost entirely smooth, has one long crack, the one that the climbers used in ascending it. In the crack was later wedged a 649-step masonry staircase, the only way to get to the top of the Piedra de Penol. In the 1970s, the area was dammed, and the view from the rock changed: It now overlooks a dramatic series of lakes and islands.
Photo Credits : Source1, Source2
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The Potala Palace - Fortress of the seventeenth century :

The Potala Palace is a palace-fortress of the seventeenth century Dzong, located in Lhasa, on the hill Marpari ("red hill") the center of Lhasa Valley. Including a "White Palace" and "Red Palace", and their ancillary buildings, the building embodies the union of spiritual and temporal power and their respective roles in the administration of Tibet.
Built by the fifth Dalai Lama, Lobsang Gyatso (1617-1682), including the palace was the principal residence of successive Dalai Lamas until the flight of the fourteenth Dalai Lama to India after the uprising against the military China in 1959. Today, the fourteenth Dalai Lama lives in Dharamsala in northern India and the palace became a museum of the People's Republic of China.
























Photo Credits : Source.
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World's 'scariest' suspension bridge opens 1,500ft above a glacier in the Swiss Alps :

 The world's scariest bridge has been opened - a pedestrian walkway suspended 1,500ft above a glacier in the Swiss Alps. Engineers have spent the past five months building the Titlis Cliff Walk, Europe's highest suspension bridge at 9,000ft above sea level. The structure, which cost £1 million, is 330ft long but just 3ft wide and sits a vertigo-inducing 1,500ft above a glacier.


The impressive bridge on Mount Titlis was built to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the opening of a cableway which joined the towns of Engelberg and Gerschnialp in January 1913. Construction work was an extreme challenge for engineers, with working hours determined by the weather conditions. Peter Reinle, from Titlis Cable Cars, said: 'Everyone was very impressed by the bridge.
'It opened in a real snow storm which made it an adventure for everyone who crossed it.'

Photo Credits : Source
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Life up in a Korowai tree house - West Papua, Indonesia :

The korowai, also called the Kolufo, are a people of southeastern Papua (i.e., the southeastern part of the western part of New Guinea. They number about 3,000. Until 1970, they were unaware of the existence of any people besides themselves. The majority of the Korowai clans live in tree houses on their isolated territory.

 The distinctive high stilt architecture of the Korowai houses, well above flood-water levels, is a form of defensive fortification- to disrupt rival clans from capturing people (especially women and children) for slavery or cannibalism. The height and girth of the common ironwood stilts also serves to protect the house from arson attacks in which huts are set alight and the inhabitants smoked out.





















Photo Credits : Source
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The Beautiful key monastery - India :

Key Gompa is a Tibetan Buddhist monastery located on picturesque hilltop at an altitude of 4,166 metres above sea level, close to the Spiti River, in the Spiti Valley of Himachal Pradesh, India. The monastery has the distinction of being the oldest and the biggest in the Lahaul and Spiti district of Himachal Pradesh and a religious training centre for Lamas. It is home to around 300 lamas who receive their religious education here.

Key Gompa is said to have been founded by Dromtön (Brom-ston, 1008-1064 CE), a pupil of the famous teacher, Atisha, in the 11th century. This may however, refer to a now destroyed Kadampa monastery at the nearby village of Rangrik, which was probably destroyed in the 14th century when the Sakya sect rose to power with Mongol assistance. Nevertheless, it is believed that the monastery is at least a thousand years old. There was even a celebration of its millennium in 2000 in the presence of the Dalai Lama.


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Maeklong Railway Market-Thailand :

Maeklong Railway Market, located in Samut Songkhram, Thailand, around 37 miles west of Bangkok, looks like any other open-air market in Asia. There are tropical fruits and vegetables such as lychee, durian, and mango in big brightly colored piles, variety of dried spices, pastes and herbs, freshly caught seafood and other local foods. The crowd weave their way around in between vendors, picking up whatever they need for the day. The market is sheltered by low-hanging awnings/umbrellas and if you look closely, you will notice that you are actually walking on train rails.


Once the train is gone, the vendors push back the stalls and awnings into position and everything goes back to normal as if nothing has happened. After all the market has been here for generations way before when the railway was set up in 1905. Thais call this place Talad Rom Hoop Market which literally translates to “Market Umbrella Pulldown”.


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Buddha Head in Tree Roots, Wat Mahathat :




Ever seen something marvelous and wonderful that mesmerizes you completely, but totally non-understandable as to how could it have taken shape? There are many things in the world that come into this category. And, you can witness one such wonderful and mesmerizing thing if you are planning to visit Thailand. Well, you must have seen a lot of wonderful and beautiful Buddha images and idols, but this one is absolutely and totally different from what you could have even imagined ever.
        If you happen to be in Thailand anytime, you cannot afford to miss one of the most iconic Buddha idols – Buddha head entwined within the roots of a tree! Made out of stone completely, visitors wonder how it could have happened. The Buddha head in tree roots is also one of the most common Thailand-related images that you’ll see on guidebooks and postcards. The wonderful site is located at Wat Mahathat, Ayuthhaya, which is the old capital of Thailand. Located around 20 kilometers north of Bang Pa-In, Ayuthhaya is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. This ex-capital has numerous ruins of various buildings that were invaded and destroyed by Burmese army back in 1767.
 


Tracking back to 1767, a lot of temples were destroyed and numerous idols of Buddha were vandalized by the Burmese army during that invasion. Post-invasion, the place remained abandoned until the Department of Fine Art began restoration of the site in 1950.
      However, no one knows how could the Buddha head have entwined in the tree roots, there are several theories supporting this magnificent site. While one theory suggests quite logically that Buddha head might have entwined in the roots while the area was uninhabited, the other theory reiterates that a thief moved the Buddha idol’s head away from the temple in order to hide it. Well, no one, except time, exactly knows what could have happened. History has a lot of things in store for us that we will never come to know. At the end, it is better to believe your eyes and enjoy the magnificence.
      Tourists who might have planned to visit Thailand for the first time need to follow a few guidelines while visiting this place. This place, in addition to being a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is also sacred. It is considered pious and holds high importance in Thai culture, and every tourist should respect it. Visitors may photograph the statue, but in a kneeling position, as to pay their respect. Also, touching this statue is prohibited.
Photo Credits : http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/countries/thailand-guide/ 
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