aros:
Breuer/Lundberg Cabin. LUNDBERG DESIGN
livestock tank pool. 25-feet diameter and 14-feet deep.
aw man
(via littlegraybunny)
Source: lundbergdesign.com
aros:
Breuer/Lundberg Cabin. LUNDBERG DESIGN
livestock tank pool. 25-feet diameter and 14-feet deep.
aw man
(via littlegraybunny)
Source: lundbergdesign.com
(via notmybeautifulhome)
The ladies in the Opera Philadelphia chorus love to play Bananagrams backstage.
Saw #maxadler at Starbucks ( #davidkarofsky ) @popepoop @skarlie666 @teenage_nothing @sabrina_alba4 [x]
Dear Max. I miss you. You’re looking well. Hope life is treating you kindly. Good wishes always. Mel
New ITV sitcom Vicious (x)
*sounds of crying and wimpering*
So…..Ian McKellan stars in a show about a couple who have apparently been together since the ’60s and argue all the time.
How is the other guy not Patrick Stewart? That can’t be legal.
I can’t stop laughing because they are both holding the teacup
I remember some interview the two of them gave years ago, how it turned out that when they were baby actors in their 20s they both had ENORMOUS crushes on the other one, but were too shy/closeted at the time to say anything.
SO THIS IS BASICALLY THEM WRITING RPF FANFIC ABOUT THEMSELVES, OKAY, AND IT’S BEAUTIFUL
(via wordstomeawhisper)
Source: jamandstuff
Source: fausterella
Bohemian Homes: A frame
Still in progress. That shirt is going to be hell. I’ve been doing so much sketching lately that it feels good to paint again.
So haunting and gorgeous that it makes my chest ache.
Damn
(via 7thnephilim)
Source: harrysdeatheater
(via notmybeautifulhome)
(via notmybeautifulhome)
World’s Most Beautiful Abandoned Places
Italian product manager and web designer Francesco Mugnai recently added a collection of images to his blog touting some of the most beautiful images of abandoned spots and modern ruins that he’d ever seen. The images Mugnai has captured come from empty castles, shuttered power plants, and dilapidated churches around the world. From a sunken yacht in Antarctica to a forever-closed amusement park in Japan, these images all make up a sort of anti-phoenix; rather than rising as new from the ashes, these husks remain preserved in decomposition, forcing viewers to confront the strange beauty of ruination.
i love these more than anything
It feels really eerie but at the same time peaceful. I could stare at this photoset all day, ah
(via pulpobsessed)
Source: kaajoo
These vegetated surfaces don’t just look pretty. They have other benefits as well, including cooling city blocks, reducing loud noises, and improving a building’s energy efficiency.What’s more, a recent modeling study shows that green walls can potentially reduce large amounts of air pollution in what’s called a “street canyon,” or the corridor between tall buildings.
For the study, Thomas Pugh, a biogeochemist at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany, and his colleagues created a computer model of a green wall with generic vegetation in a Western European city. Then they recorded chemical reactions based on a variety of factors, such as wind speed and building placement.
The simulation revealed a clear pattern: A green wall in a street canyon trapped or absorbed large amounts of nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter—both pollutants harmful to people, said Pugh. Compared with reducing emissions from cars, little attention has been focused on how to trap or take up more of the pollutants, added Pugh, whose study was published last year in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
That’s why the green-wall study is “putting forward an alternative solution that might allow [governments] to improve air quality in these problem hot spots,” he said.Compared with reducing emissions from cars, little attention has been focused on how to trap or take up more of the pollutants, added Pugh, whose study was published last year in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
That’s why the green-wall study is “putting forward an alternative solution that might allow [governments] to improve air quality in these problem hot spots,” he said.
Source: National Geographic
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