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Nice Real Estate Sales photos

Check out these real estate sales images:


Ashburn | Sherwood Real Estate
real estate sales
Image by sherwoodrealestate
Real Estate properties in Sherwood, New Construction, Gated Communities and Lots for Sale


Ashburn | Sherwood Real Estate
real estate sales
Image by sherwoodrealestate
Real Estate properties in Sherwood, New Construction, Gated Communities and Lots for Sale

Gold Beach Real Estate | 94440 Linda Lane, Gold Beach, Oregon

Some cool oregon real estate images:


Gold Beach Real Estate | 94440 Linda Lane, Gold Beach, Oregon
oregon real estate
Image by Gold Beach Real Estate
Breathtaking Ocean front with sandy beach, crashing surf and rugged views from Crook point to Cape Sebastian.Accessed via private lane into your diverse forested canopy offering protection and privacy. The property has septic & power installed at the home site and 2 wells. Your environment is a diverse, gentle blend of Pacific NW essences, topped with extraordinary views.


Gold Beach Real Estate | 94440 Linda Lane, Gold Beach, Oregon
oregon real estate
Image by Gold Beach Real Estate
Breathtaking Ocean front with sandy beach, crashing surf and rugged views from Crook point to Cape Sebastian.Accessed via private lane into your diverse forested canopy offering protection and privacy. The property has septic & power installed at the home site and 2 wells. Your environment is a diverse, gentle blend of Pacific NW essences, topped with extraordinary views.

living room in owners' house

Some cool maine real estate images:


living room in owners' house
maine real estate
Image by Dana Moos
Rockwood Cottages is a 3.5 acre parcel on Moosehead Lake with a view of Mt.Kineo, offering 8 housekeeping cottages and an owner's home. A great place to vacation for a short stay or a couple weeks. A BBQ pit, play horseshoes, take a canoe out on the lake, bring your own boat, hike on Kineo, take a moose safari...this is a nature lovers paradise. A wonderful opportunity to own a recreational business.


Approaching the cottages
maine real estate
Image by Dana Moos
Rockwood Cottages is a 3.5 acre parcel on Moosehead Lake with a view of Mt.Kineo, offering 8 housekeeping cottages and an owner's home. A great place to vacation for a short stay or a couple weeks. A BBQ pit, play horseshoes, take a canoe out on the lake, bring your own boat, hike on Kineo, take a moose safari...this is a nature lovers paradise. A wonderful opportunity to own a recreational business.

Nice Real Estate California photos

Check out these real estate california images:


Bethany | Sherwood Real Estate
real estate california
Image by sherwoodrealestate
Sherwood Real Estate, Southern California Country Club, Golf in Thousan Oaks


Bethany | Sherwood Real Estate
real estate california
Image by sherwoodrealestate
Sherwood Real Estate, Southern California Country Club, Golf in Thousan Oaks

Gold Beach, Oregon

Check out these oregon real estate images:


Gold Beach, Oregon
oregon real estate
Image by Gold Beach Real Estate


Gold Beach, Oregon
oregon real estate
Image by Gold Beach Real Estate

la foto 3

Check out these real estate spain images:


la foto 3
real estate spain
Image by lucasfoxbcn
Luxury 6 bedroom Ibiza villa in an exclusive private development. The house is brand new and has sea views, pool and spa with a second heated indoor pool.
For further information on Ibiza Real Estate


la foto 1-1
real estate spain
Image by lucasfoxbcn
Luxury 6 bedroom Ibiza villa in an exclusive private development. The house is brand new and has sea views, pool and spa with a second heated indoor pool.
For further information on Ibiza Real Estate

Nice Real Estate In Florida photos

A few nice real estate in florida images I found:


IDX Tradeshow Booth
real estate in florida
Image by Bishma
IDX was at this years NAR conference in Florida. The team there sent this photo (from the crappy iPhone camera) of the booth once they had it set up.


New Home in Lakeland, FL by Highland Homes
real estate in florida
Image by highlandhomes
Available floor plans feature three to five bedrooms with 1,210 to 3,000-plus square feet and the design experts at our Personal Selection Studio are here to help you customize your home with every feature and finish you could imagine from countertops to appliances to lighting.

Forest Creek Round Rock Texas

A few nice texas real estate images I found:


Forest Creek Round Rock Texas
texas real estate
Image by Austin Appraiser


Forest Creek Round Rock Texas
texas real estate
Image by Austin Appraiser

Seville

Some cool real estate florida images:


Seville
real estate florida
Image by naplesrealestate


Cambridge
real estate florida
Image by naplesrealestate


Cambridge
real estate florida
Image by naplesrealestate

Queens Museum of Art | The Panorama of the City of New York | element of the stitched view from the west near the lower tip of Manhattan

Check out these real estate new york images:


Queens Museum of Art | The Panorama of the City of New York | element of the stitched view from the west near the lower tip of Manhattan
real estate new york
Image by Chris Devers
A few years ago, I got to see a 1:1500 scale model of London at the Building Centre there. It is a large scale model of the heart of the city in three dimensions, with representations of most buildings, landmarks, parks, the Thames, and the (at the time yet to be built) Olympic Park.

It's extremely impressive.

And it is as nothing compared to The Panorama at the Queens Museum of Art.

Here's two panorama photos to give a sense of the scale:

• view from the “west”
• view from the ”south”



Quoting from the Museum’s page on the The Panorama of the City of New York:

The Panorama is the jewel in the crown of the collection of the Queens Museum of Art. Built by Robert Moses for the 1964 World’s Fair, in part as a celebration of the City’s municipal infrastructure, this 9,335 square foot architectural model includes every single building constructed before 1992 in all five boroughs; that is a total of 895,000 individual structures.

The Panorama was built by a team of 100 people working for the great architectural model makers Raymond Lester Associates in the three years before the opening of the 1964 World’s Fair. In planning the model, Lester Associates referred to aerial photographs, insurance maps, and a range of other City material; the Panorama had to be accurate, indeed the initial contract demanded less than one percent margin of error between reality and the model. The Panorama was one of the most successful attractions at the ‘64 Fair with a daily average of 1,400 people taking advantage of its 9 minute simulated helicopter ride around the City.

After the Fair the Panorama remained open to the public, its originally planned use as an urban planning tool seemingly forgotten. Until 1970 all of the changes in the City were accurately recreated in the model by Lester’s team. After 1970 very few changes were made until 1992, when again Lester Associates changed over 60,000 structures to bring it up-to-date.

In the Spring of 2009 the Museum launched its Adopt-A-Building program with the installation of the Panorama’s newest addition, Citi Field, to continue for the ongoing care and maintenance of this beloved treasure.

The Queens Museum of Art has a program giving you the opportunity to “purchase” NYC real estate on The Panorama of the City of New York for as low as . To learn how you can become involved click here.

We hope that you will take time to enjoy the Panorama of the City of New York.

The Panorama of the City of New York is sponsored by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and New York State Assembly members Mike Gianaris, Mark Weprin, Audrey Pheffer, Nettie Mayersohn and Ivan Lafayette, The New York Mets Foundation and the supporters of the Adopt-A-Building Program.

View the winning pictures from our Gala 2011 Panorama Picture Contest!

View pictures from our Gala 2011 Photo booth, May 12, 2011!

View pictures of the Panorama on its Flickr page

Add your own pictures to our Panorama Flickr Group!



Quoting now from The Panorama section in Wikipedia’s Queens Museum of Art article:

The best known permanent exhibition at the Queens Museum is the Panorama of the City of New York which was commissioned by Robert Moses for the 1964 World’s Fair. A celebration of the City’s municipal infrastructure, this 9,335-square-foot (867.2 m2) architectural model includes every single building constructed before 1992 in all five boroughs; that is a total of 895,000 individual structures. The Panorama was built by a team of 100 people working for the architectural model makers Raymond Lester Associates in the three years before the opening of the 1964 World’s Fair. The Panorama was one of the most successful attractions at the ’64 Fair with a daily average of 1,400 people taking advantage of its 9 minute simulated helicopter ride around the City. After the Fair the Panorama remained open to the public and until 1970 all of the changes in the City were accurately recreated in the model by Lester’s team. After 1970 very few changes were made until 1992, when again Lester Associates was hired to update the model to coincide with the re-opening of the museum. The model makers changed over 60,000 structures to bring it up-to-date.

In March 2009 the museum announced the intention to update the panorama on an ongoing basis. To raise funds and draw public attention the museum will allow individuals and developers to have accurate models made of buildings newer than the 1992 update created and added in exchange for a donation. Accurate models of smaller apartment buildings and private homes, now represented by generic models, can also be added. The twin towers of the World Trade Center will be replaced when the new buildings are created, the museum has chosen to allow them to remain until construction is complete rather than representing an empty hole. The first new buildings to be added was the new Citi Field stadium of the New York Mets. The model of the old Shea Stadium will continue to be displayed elsewhere in the museum.



Quoting now from the explanatory sign at the exhibit:

THE PANORAMA OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK

The Panorama of the City of New York, the world's largest scale model of its time, was the creation of Robert Moses and Raymond Lester. Presented in the New York City Pavilion as the city’s premiere exhibit at the 1964/65 New York World’s Fair, it was intended afterwards to serve as an urban planning tool. Visitors experienced the Panorama from a simulated “helicopter” ride that travelled around perimeter or from a glass-enclosed balcony on the second floor, while news commentator Lowell Thomas provided audio commentary on “The City of Opportunity.” One of the “helicopter” cars is now on view in the Museum’s permanent exhibition, A Panoramic View: A History of the New York City Building and Flushing Meadows Corona Park.

Constructed at the Lester Associates workshop in Westchester, New York, the Panorama contains 273 separate sections, many of which are four-by-ten-foot rectangular panels. They are composed of Formica flakeboard topped with urethane foam slabs from which the typography was carved. Lester Associates’ staff consulted geological survey maps, aerial photographs, and books of City insurance maps, to accurately render the City’s streets, highways, parks, and buildings. Once the Panorama’s modules were completed at Lester Associates’ workshop, they were assembled on site in the New York City Building. It took more than 100 workers, three years to complete the model.

Built on a sale of 1:1,200 (1 inch equals 100 feet), the Panorama occupies 9.335 square feet and accurately replicates New York City including all 320 square miles of its five boroughs and 771 miles of shoreline, as well as the built environment. It includes miniature cars, boats, and an airplane landing and taking off at LaGuardia Airport.

The majority of the City’s buildings are presented by standardized model units made from wood and acrylic. Of more than 895,000 individual structures, 25,000 are custom-made to approximate landmarks such as skyscrapers, large factories, colleges, museums, and major churches. The amount of detail possible on most buildings is limited; at a scale of 1 inch to 100 feet, the model of the Empire State Building measures only 15 inches. The most accurate structures on the Panorama are its 35 major bridges, which are finely made of brass and shaped by a chemical milling process.

The model is color coded to indicate various types of land use. The dark green areas are parks. Parkways are also edged in dark green. Mint green sections are related to transportation including train and bus terminals. The pink rectangles that dot the City show the locations of recreational areas including playgrounds and tennis and basketball courts. Clusters of red buildings are indicative of publicly subsidized housing.

Red, blue, green, yellow, and white colored lights were installed on the surface of the Panorama in 1964 to identify structures housing City agencies relating to protection, education, health, recreation, commerce, welfare, and transportation. Overhead lights have been designed to run in a dawn to dusk cycle, and the nighttime effect is enhanced by ultraviolet paint, illuminated by blacklight.

In 1992, the City began a renovation of the Queens Museum of Art and the Panorama. Using their original techniques, Lester Associates updated the Panorama with 60,000 changes. In the current instalation, designed by Rafael Viñoly Architects, visitors follow the course of the original “helicopter” ride on an ascending ramp that enables them to experience the Panorama of the City of New York from Multiple Perspectives.


Queens Museum of Art | The Panorama of the City of New York | view north from the Atlantic over the Verrazano Narrows Bridge, over Brooklyn toward Manhattan
real estate new york
Image by Chris Devers
A few years ago, I got to see a 1:1500 scale model of London at the Building Centre there. It is a large scale model of the heart of the city in three dimensions, with representations of most buildings, landmarks, parks, the Thames, and the (at the time yet to be built) Olympic Park.

It's extremely impressive.

And it is as nothing compared to The Panorama at the Queens Museum of Art.

Here's two panorama photos to give a sense of the scale:

• view from the “west”
• view from the ”south”



Quoting from the Museum’s page on the The Panorama of the City of New York:

The Panorama is the jewel in the crown of the collection of the Queens Museum of Art. Built by Robert Moses for the 1964 World’s Fair, in part as a celebration of the City’s municipal infrastructure, this 9,335 square foot architectural model includes every single building constructed before 1992 in all five boroughs; that is a total of 895,000 individual structures.

The Panorama was built by a team of 100 people working for the great architectural model makers Raymond Lester Associates in the three years before the opening of the 1964 World’s Fair. In planning the model, Lester Associates referred to aerial photographs, insurance maps, and a range of other City material; the Panorama had to be accurate, indeed the initial contract demanded less than one percent margin of error between reality and the model. The Panorama was one of the most successful attractions at the ‘64 Fair with a daily average of 1,400 people taking advantage of its 9 minute simulated helicopter ride around the City.

After the Fair the Panorama remained open to the public, its originally planned use as an urban planning tool seemingly forgotten. Until 1970 all of the changes in the City were accurately recreated in the model by Lester’s team. After 1970 very few changes were made until 1992, when again Lester Associates changed over 60,000 structures to bring it up-to-date.

In the Spring of 2009 the Museum launched its Adopt-A-Building program with the installation of the Panorama’s newest addition, Citi Field, to continue for the ongoing care and maintenance of this beloved treasure.

The Queens Museum of Art has a program giving you the opportunity to “purchase” NYC real estate on The Panorama of the City of New York for as low as . To learn how you can become involved click here.

We hope that you will take time to enjoy the Panorama of the City of New York.

The Panorama of the City of New York is sponsored by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and New York State Assembly members Mike Gianaris, Mark Weprin, Audrey Pheffer, Nettie Mayersohn and Ivan Lafayette, The New York Mets Foundation and the supporters of the Adopt-A-Building Program.

View the winning pictures from our Gala 2011 Panorama Picture Contest!

View pictures from our Gala 2011 Photo booth, May 12, 2011!

View pictures of the Panorama on its Flickr page

Add your own pictures to our Panorama Flickr Group!



Quoting now from The Panorama section in Wikipedia’s Queens Museum of Art article:

The best known permanent exhibition at the Queens Museum is the Panorama of the City of New York which was commissioned by Robert Moses for the 1964 World’s Fair. A celebration of the City’s municipal infrastructure, this 9,335-square-foot (867.2 m2) architectural model includes every single building constructed before 1992 in all five boroughs; that is a total of 895,000 individual structures. The Panorama was built by a team of 100 people working for the architectural model makers Raymond Lester Associates in the three years before the opening of the 1964 World’s Fair. The Panorama was one of the most successful attractions at the ’64 Fair with a daily average of 1,400 people taking advantage of its 9 minute simulated helicopter ride around the City. After the Fair the Panorama remained open to the public and until 1970 all of the changes in the City were accurately recreated in the model by Lester’s team. After 1970 very few changes were made until 1992, when again Lester Associates was hired to update the model to coincide with the re-opening of the museum. The model makers changed over 60,000 structures to bring it up-to-date.

In March 2009 the museum announced the intention to update the panorama on an ongoing basis. To raise funds and draw public attention the museum will allow individuals and developers to have accurate models made of buildings newer than the 1992 update created and added in exchange for a donation. Accurate models of smaller apartment buildings and private homes, now represented by generic models, can also be added. The twin towers of the World Trade Center will be replaced when the new buildings are created, the museum has chosen to allow them to remain until construction is complete rather than representing an empty hole. The first new buildings to be added was the new Citi Field stadium of the New York Mets. The model of the old Shea Stadium will continue to be displayed elsewhere in the museum.



Quoting now from the explanatory sign at the exhibit:

THE PANORAMA OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK

The Panorama of the City of New York, the world's largest scale model of its time, was the creation of Robert Moses and Raymond Lester. Presented in the New York City Pavilion as the city’s premiere exhibit at the 1964/65 New York World’s Fair, it was intended afterwards to serve as an urban planning tool. Visitors experienced the Panorama from a simulated “helicopter” ride that travelled around perimeter or from a glass-enclosed balcony on the second floor, while news commentator Lowell Thomas provided audio commentary on “The City of Opportunity.” One of the “helicopter” cars is now on view in the Museum’s permanent exhibition, A Panoramic View: A History of the New York City Building and Flushing Meadows Corona Park.

Constructed at the Lester Associates workshop in Westchester, New York, the Panorama contains 273 separate sections, many of which are four-by-ten-foot rectangular panels. They are composed of Formica flakeboard topped with urethane foam slabs from which the typography was carved. Lester Associates’ staff consulted geological survey maps, aerial photographs, and books of City insurance maps, to accurately render the City’s streets, highways, parks, and buildings. Once the Panorama’s modules were completed at Lester Associates’ workshop, they were assembled on site in the New York City Building. It took more than 100 workers, three years to complete the model.

Built on a sale of 1:1,200 (1 inch equals 100 feet), the Panorama occupies 9.335 square feet and accurately replicates New York City including all 320 square miles of its five boroughs and 771 miles of shoreline, as well as the built environment. It includes miniature cars, boats, and an airplane landing and taking off at LaGuardia Airport.

The majority of the City’s buildings are presented by standardized model units made from wood and acrylic. Of more than 895,000 individual structures, 25,000 are custom-made to approximate landmarks such as skyscrapers, large factories, colleges, museums, and major churches. The amount of detail possible on most buildings is limited; at a scale of 1 inch to 100 feet, the model of the Empire State Building measures only 15 inches. The most accurate structures on the Panorama are its 35 major bridges, which are finely made of brass and shaped by a chemical milling process.

The model is color coded to indicate various types of land use. The dark green areas are parks. Parkways are also edged in dark green. Mint green sections are related to transportation including train and bus terminals. The pink rectangles that dot the City show the locations of recreational areas including playgrounds and tennis and basketball courts. Clusters of red buildings are indicative of publicly subsidized housing.

Red, blue, green, yellow, and white colored lights were installed on the surface of the Panorama in 1964 to identify structures housing City agencies relating to protection, education, health, recreation, commerce, welfare, and transportation. Overhead lights have been designed to run in a dawn to dusk cycle, and the nighttime effect is enhanced by ultraviolet paint, illuminated by blacklight.

In 1992, the City began a renovation of the Queens Museum of Art and the Panorama. Using their original techniques, Lester Associates updated the Panorama with 60,000 changes. In the current instalation, designed by Rafael Viñoly Architects, visitors follow the course of the original “helicopter” ride on an ascending ramp that enables them to experience the Panorama of the City of New York from Multiple Perspectives.


Queens Museum of Art | The Panorama of the City of New York | element of the stitched view from the west near the lower tip of Manhattan
real estate new york
Image by Chris Devers
A few years ago, I got to see a 1:1500 scale model of London at the Building Centre there. It is a large scale model of the heart of the city in three dimensions, with representations of most buildings, landmarks, parks, the Thames, and the (at the time yet to be built) Olympic Park.

It's extremely impressive.

And it is as nothing compared to The Panorama at the Queens Museum of Art.

Here's two panorama photos to give a sense of the scale:

• view from the “west”
• view from the ”south”



Quoting from the Museum’s page on the The Panorama of the City of New York:

The Panorama is the jewel in the crown of the collection of the Queens Museum of Art. Built by Robert Moses for the 1964 World’s Fair, in part as a celebration of the City’s municipal infrastructure, this 9,335 square foot architectural model includes every single building constructed before 1992 in all five boroughs; that is a total of 895,000 individual structures.

The Panorama was built by a team of 100 people working for the great architectural model makers Raymond Lester Associates in the three years before the opening of the 1964 World’s Fair. In planning the model, Lester Associates referred to aerial photographs, insurance maps, and a range of other City material; the Panorama had to be accurate, indeed the initial contract demanded less than one percent margin of error between reality and the model. The Panorama was one of the most successful attractions at the ‘64 Fair with a daily average of 1,400 people taking advantage of its 9 minute simulated helicopter ride around the City.

After the Fair the Panorama remained open to the public, its originally planned use as an urban planning tool seemingly forgotten. Until 1970 all of the changes in the City were accurately recreated in the model by Lester’s team. After 1970 very few changes were made until 1992, when again Lester Associates changed over 60,000 structures to bring it up-to-date.

In the Spring of 2009 the Museum launched its Adopt-A-Building program with the installation of the Panorama’s newest addition, Citi Field, to continue for the ongoing care and maintenance of this beloved treasure.

The Queens Museum of Art has a program giving you the opportunity to “purchase” NYC real estate on The Panorama of the City of New York for as low as . To learn how you can become involved click here.

We hope that you will take time to enjoy the Panorama of the City of New York.

The Panorama of the City of New York is sponsored by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and New York State Assembly members Mike Gianaris, Mark Weprin, Audrey Pheffer, Nettie Mayersohn and Ivan Lafayette, The New York Mets Foundation and the supporters of the Adopt-A-Building Program.

View the winning pictures from our Gala 2011 Panorama Picture Contest!

View pictures from our Gala 2011 Photo booth, May 12, 2011!

View pictures of the Panorama on its Flickr page

Add your own pictures to our Panorama Flickr Group!



Quoting now from The Panorama section in Wikipedia’s Queens Museum of Art article:

The best known permanent exhibition at the Queens Museum is the Panorama of the City of New York which was commissioned by Robert Moses for the 1964 World’s Fair. A celebration of the City’s municipal infrastructure, this 9,335-square-foot (867.2 m2) architectural model includes every single building constructed before 1992 in all five boroughs; that is a total of 895,000 individual structures. The Panorama was built by a team of 100 people working for the architectural model makers Raymond Lester Associates in the three years before the opening of the 1964 World’s Fair. The Panorama was one of the most successful attractions at the ’64 Fair with a daily average of 1,400 people taking advantage of its 9 minute simulated helicopter ride around the City. After the Fair the Panorama remained open to the public and until 1970 all of the changes in the City were accurately recreated in the model by Lester’s team. After 1970 very few changes were made until 1992, when again Lester Associates was hired to update the model to coincide with the re-opening of the museum. The model makers changed over 60,000 structures to bring it up-to-date.

In March 2009 the museum announced the intention to update the panorama on an ongoing basis. To raise funds and draw public attention the museum will allow individuals and developers to have accurate models made of buildings newer than the 1992 update created and added in exchange for a donation. Accurate models of smaller apartment buildings and private homes, now represented by generic models, can also be added. The twin towers of the World Trade Center will be replaced when the new buildings are created, the museum has chosen to allow them to remain until construction is complete rather than representing an empty hole. The first new buildings to be added was the new Citi Field stadium of the New York Mets. The model of the old Shea Stadium will continue to be displayed elsewhere in the museum.



Quoting now from the explanatory sign at the exhibit:

THE PANORAMA OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK

The Panorama of the City of New York, the world's largest scale model of its time, was the creation of Robert Moses and Raymond Lester. Presented in the New York City Pavilion as the city’s premiere exhibit at the 1964/65 New York World’s Fair, it was intended afterwards to serve as an urban planning tool. Visitors experienced the Panorama from a simulated “helicopter” ride that travelled around perimeter or from a glass-enclosed balcony on the second floor, while news commentator Lowell Thomas provided audio commentary on “The City of Opportunity.” One of the “helicopter” cars is now on view in the Museum’s permanent exhibition, A Panoramic View: A History of the New York City Building and Flushing Meadows Corona Park.

Constructed at the Lester Associates workshop in Westchester, New York, the Panorama contains 273 separate sections, many of which are four-by-ten-foot rectangular panels. They are composed of Formica flakeboard topped with urethane foam slabs from which the typography was carved. Lester Associates’ staff consulted geological survey maps, aerial photographs, and books of City insurance maps, to accurately render the City’s streets, highways, parks, and buildings. Once the Panorama’s modules were completed at Lester Associates’ workshop, they were assembled on site in the New York City Building. It took more than 100 workers, three years to complete the model.

Built on a sale of 1:1,200 (1 inch equals 100 feet), the Panorama occupies 9.335 square feet and accurately replicates New York City including all 320 square miles of its five boroughs and 771 miles of shoreline, as well as the built environment. It includes miniature cars, boats, and an airplane landing and taking off at LaGuardia Airport.

The majority of the City’s buildings are presented by standardized model units made from wood and acrylic. Of more than 895,000 individual structures, 25,000 are custom-made to approximate landmarks such as skyscrapers, large factories, colleges, museums, and major churches. The amount of detail possible on most buildings is limited; at a scale of 1 inch to 100 feet, the model of the Empire State Building measures only 15 inches. The most accurate structures on the Panorama are its 35 major bridges, which are finely made of brass and shaped by a chemical milling process.

The model is color coded to indicate various types of land use. The dark green areas are parks. Parkways are also edged in dark green. Mint green sections are related to transportation including train and bus terminals. The pink rectangles that dot the City show the locations of recreational areas including playgrounds and tennis and basketball courts. Clusters of red buildings are indicative of publicly subsidized housing.

Red, blue, green, yellow, and white colored lights were installed on the surface of the Panorama in 1964 to identify structures housing City agencies relating to protection, education, health, recreation, commerce, welfare, and transportation. Overhead lights have been designed to run in a dawn to dusk cycle, and the nighttime effect is enhanced by ultraviolet paint, illuminated by blacklight.

In 1992, the City began a renovation of the Queens Museum of Art and the Panorama. Using their original techniques, Lester Associates updated the Panorama with 60,000 changes. In the current instalation, designed by Rafael Viñoly Architects, visitors follow the course of the original “helicopter” ride on an ascending ramp that enables them to experience the Panorama of the City of New York from Multiple Perspectives.

Nice Real Estate Canada photos

Some cool real estate canada images:


ALBERTA FREEDOM TO CREATE, SPIRIT TO ACHIEVE CANADA featured at Buildex Vancouver-Photos Courtesy of Ron Sombilon Gallery and PacBluePrinting-3
real estate canada
Image by SOMBILON ART, MEDIA and PHOTOGRAPHY
BUILDEX VANCOUVER - Vancouver Convention Centre West
BUILDEX Vancouver is about designing, building and managing real estate.

www.BuildexVancouver.com

For Other MMPI Canada Events visit

www.MMPICanada.com



ALLWOOD THERMALLY MODIFIED WOOD-CHEMICAL FREE-ROT RESISTANT-REAL WOOD-featured at Buildex Vancouver-Photos Courtesy of Ron Sombilon Gallery and PacBlue Printing
real estate canada
Image by SOMBILON ART, MEDIA and PHOTOGRAPHY
BUILDEX VANCOUVER - Vancouver Convention Centre West
BUILDEX Vancouver is about designing, building and managing real estate.

www.BuildexVancouver.com

For Other MMPI Canada Events visit

www.MMPICanada.com

Nice Oregon Real Estate photos

Check out these oregon real estate images:


Gold Beach, Oregon
oregon real estate
Image by Gold Beach Real Estate


Gold Beach, Oregon
oregon real estate
Image by Gold Beach Real Estate


Gold Beach, Oregon
oregon real estate
Image by Gold Beach Real Estate

Cool Maryland Real Estate images

Some cool maryland real estate images:


basement bath
maryland real estate
Image by ajd, mhd, njd, med & gsd


basement steps
maryland real estate
Image by ajd, mhd, njd, med & gsd


DSC_0274.JPG
maryland real estate
Image by ajd, mhd, njd, med & gsd

Cool Real Estate Commission images

Check out these real estate commission images:


Riccarton House, Edinburgh (c.1904)
real estate commission
Image by pellethepoet
Real photo postcard. Postally used. Stamp intact. Cancellation date of 10th of February, 1904.

Published by A. P. Montgomery, Juniper Green.

Found at the Camberwell Markets, Melbourne.

Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland - Canmore ID: 50266

Riccarton House was built in the 15th century and greatly extended in 1621 and 1827. The Gibson-Craig family were not permanently in residence when the estate was requisitioned by the army during the Second World War and by the end of this time it had fallen into an extreme state of disrepair. This resulted in the house being demolished in 1956. - www.hw.ac.uk/ppr/docs/garden_trail.pdf

The house was located where the library of Heriot-Watt University now stands.


Tomb of Jasper Newton Smith
real estate commission
Image by dolescum
Tomb of Jasper Newton Smith at Oakland Cemetery in Atlanta, October 2006. Smith was in real estate in Atlanta and commissioned this life-size statue of himself for his tomb. Apparently Smith hated wearing neckties and initially refused to pay the sculptor because the statue had a tie. The impasse was resolved when the sculptor chiseled it off.

Smith's statue is perched above the entrance to his mausoleum and the tour guide suggested it was because he wanted to keep an eye on the city.


Help me Rhonda!
real estate commission
Image by sandyfeet
Commissioned sculpture for SPI Real Estate Agent Rhonda Overton (remax) at Wanna Wanna today...

Nice Real Estate Investing photos

Some cool real estate investing images:


DSC31097, Signorello Estate Winery, Napa Valley, California, USA
real estate investing
Image by jimg944
History of the Signorello Estate Winery:

Starting the Venture
Ray Signorello Jr. began his journey as winemaker and vineyard owner in the Napa Valley during the mid 1980's. Ray, born in San Francisco, California, moved to Vancouver, Canada where the Signorello family continues to maintain a home. Ray divides his time between Napa, San Francisco, Vancouver and business related travel. Ray's father, Ray Sr., initiated the vineyard project during the mid 1970's by purchasing the 100-acre estate located on the Silverado Trail in the beautiful Napa Valley. Ray Sr. worked side by side with Ray Jr., establishing the winery's reputation for excellence until his passing in the fall of 1998.

No Turning Back
Signorellos' original plan was to grow quality grapes to sell to existing wineries, but the harvest of 1985 changed this plan into a new level of evolvement. The bountiful crop allowed Signorellos to custom crush the excess grapes. This opportunity demonstrated what fabulous wine their vineyards were capable of producing. The project continues to grow, as do the spectacular 42 acres planted in several different varietals. Ray's continuing effort represents the invested energies that created this reality from a dream.

In 1986 the Signorellos began the second phase of the venture, this was the building of the main winery structure. This beautiful building is used for barrel storage, wine tasting and retail sales. Along with the building of the winery, wine production was expanded to include Cabernet Sauvignon and Pinot Noir. By the end of the 1980's the Signorello family was thoroughly committed to making wine as well as growing grapes.

The decade of the nineties proved to be pivotal for Signorello Estate. In 1990 the first planting of red varietals began on the property- Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot and Syrah.

What brought the Signorellos to the Napa Valley was the romantic side of winemaking; growing grapes, working the land, and enjoying the wine country lifestyle of camaraderie, good wine and great meals. While the Valley lifestyle is a very real part of the business, there is a serious responsibility to making a dream become a reality, both father and son realized this fact early in the endeavor.

This venture was a dream; now it is reality.



DSC31096, Signorello Estate Winery, Napa Valley, California, USA
real estate investing
Image by jimg944
History of the Signorello Estate Winery:

Starting the Venture
Ray Signorello Jr. began his journey as winemaker and vineyard owner in the Napa Valley during the mid 1980's. Ray, born in San Francisco, California, moved to Vancouver, Canada where the Signorello family continues to maintain a home. Ray divides his time between Napa, San Francisco, Vancouver and business related travel. Ray's father, Ray Sr., initiated the vineyard project during the mid 1970's by purchasing the 100-acre estate located on the Silverado Trail in the beautiful Napa Valley. Ray Sr. worked side by side with Ray Jr., establishing the winery's reputation for excellence until his passing in the fall of 1998.

No Turning Back
Signorellos' original plan was to grow quality grapes to sell to existing wineries, but the harvest of 1985 changed this plan into a new level of evolvement. The bountiful crop allowed Signorellos to custom crush the excess grapes. This opportunity demonstrated what fabulous wine their vineyards were capable of producing. The project continues to grow, as do the spectacular 42 acres planted in several different varietals. Ray's continuing effort represents the invested energies that created this reality from a dream.

In 1986 the Signorellos began the second phase of the venture, this was the building of the main winery structure. This beautiful building is used for barrel storage, wine tasting and retail sales. Along with the building of the winery, wine production was expanded to include Cabernet Sauvignon and Pinot Noir. By the end of the 1980's the Signorello family was thoroughly committed to making wine as well as growing grapes.

The decade of the nineties proved to be pivotal for Signorello Estate. In 1990 the first planting of red varietals began on the property- Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot and Syrah.

What brought the Signorellos to the Napa Valley was the romantic side of winemaking; growing grapes, working the land, and enjoying the wine country lifestyle of camaraderie, good wine and great meals. While the Valley lifestyle is a very real part of the business, there is a serious responsibility to making a dream become a reality, both father and son realized this fact early in the endeavor.

This venture was a dream; now it is reality.

Nice Texas Real Estate photos

Check out these texas real estate images:


Avery Ranch Austin Texas December 2010
texas real estate
Image by Austin Appraiser
Avery Ranch Photographs and Real Estate Market Report for 2009 and 2010


Avery Ranch Austin Texas December 2010
texas real estate
Image by Austin Appraiser
Avery Ranch Photographs and Real Estate Market Report for 2009 and 2010

IMG_5176

Some cool real estate australia images:


IMG_5176
real estate australia
Image by imarker
SB 28 in Room to left bounced into corner.


IMG_5181
real estate australia
Image by imarker
Mostly Ambient, one SB28 CR Bounced into ceiling

Cool Real Estate New York images

Check out these real estate new york images:



IMG_1772
real estate new york
Image by Brennan Cavanaugh
12/6/11 -- Occupy Real Estate march in East New York, against bank foreclosures, and for getting people into empty buildings. Housing is a human right. (Photo by Brennan Cavanaugh; Creative Commons rules apply, please use responsibly.)

Bathroom 1200

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Bathroom 1200
real estate wa
Image by The_Smiths
12415 54th Drive SE, Snohomish, WA 98296


Kitchen 1200
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Image by The_Smiths
12415 54th Drive SE, Snohomish, WA 98296

Sosua, Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic Apartment For Sale - Dream house

A few nice real estate law images I found:


Sosua, Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic Apartment For Sale - Dream house
real estate law
Image by International Real Estate Listings
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Check out the property details here
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Port Edward Kwazulu Natal South Africa Lots Land For Sale
real estate law
Image by International Real Estate Listings
This brand new Port Edward Kwazulu Natal South Africa Lots Land For Sale image that was just uploaded online at the Worlds top international real estate site: www.internationalrealestatelistings.com/




Check out the property details here
www.internationalrealestatelistings.com/7142/port_edward_...




Check out the property pictures here
www.internationalrealestatelistings.com/add_images/7142/l...




If you are looking to stay up to date with what is going on World Wide with different real estate markets, laws, whats hot, whats not, where to invest, and more...get signed up on our Twitter page.




www.twitter.com/irelistings




(Dont worry – we understand its called social media for a reason. We will not just post links to our site.)


Rio De Janeiro Rio De Janeiro Brazil Lots Land For Sale
real estate law
Image by International Real Estate Listings
This brand new Rio De Janeiro Rio De Janeiro Brazil Lots Land For Sale image that was just uploaded online at the Worlds top international real estate site: www.internationalrealestatelistings.com/




Check out the property details here
www.internationalrealestatelistings.com/7226/rio_de_janei...




Check out the property pictures here
www.internationalrealestatelistings.com/add_images/7226/l...




If you are looking to stay up to date with what is going on World Wide with different real estate markets, laws, whats hot, whats not, where to invest, and more...get signed up on our Twitter page.




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6th Ave Empty Signifier - A Great Deal on Sky High Value

Some cool real estate values images:


6th Ave Empty Signifier - A Great Deal on Sky High Value
real estate values
Image by Graham Coreil-Allen


Changed priorities ahead
real estate values
Image by jann_on

Cool Los Angeles Real Estate images

Check out these los angeles real estate images:


IMG_0314
los angeles real estate
Image by Morgantis
Real Estate BarCamp Los Angeles 2009

(CC) Morgan Brown. www.turnhere.com. Feel free to use this picture. Please credit as shown


REBCLA
los angeles real estate
Image by Morgantis
Real Estate BarCamp Los Angeles 2009

(CC) Morgan Brown. www.turnhere.com. Feel free to use this picture. Please credit as shown

Ashburn | Sherwood Real Estate

A few nice real estate sales images I found:


Ashburn | Sherwood Real Estate
real estate sales
Image by sherwoodrealestate
Real Estate properties in Sherwood, New Construction, Gated Communities and Lots for Sale


Ashburn | Sherwood Real Estate
real estate sales
Image by sherwoodrealestate
Real Estate properties in Sherwood, New Construction, Gated Communities and Lots for Sale


Ashburn | Sherwood Real Estate
real estate sales
Image by sherwoodrealestate
Real Estate properties in Sherwood, New Construction, Gated Communities and Lots for Sale

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