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Army Corps Personnel Tour Passaic River Basin - 9-19-2012

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A few nice real estate commission images I found:


Army Corps Personnel Tour Passaic River Basin - 9-19-2012
real estate commission
Image by New York District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Personnel from the New York District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers discuss the operations of the Wanaque Reservoir Wednesday September 19, 2012 in northern New Jersey with an engineer from the Water Supply Commission (in the neon vest). They discussed how the reservoir is managed, which is outside the jurisdiction of the Corps of Engineers, in order to better understand how the reservoir and its operations impacts flow in the Passaic River Basin.
Ray Schembri (in blue), a longtime hydraulic engineer with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New York District, took a group of USACE personnel working on the Passaic River Basin General Re-evaluation Study (including mostly engineers, but also biologists, real estate specialists and more) around the Passaic River Basin to see in person some of the major hydrological points of interest so they could get a better understanding of the basin. The study is a partnership between the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the state of New Jersey to evaluate and compare potential flood risk management alternatives for the Passaic River Basin. Click here to learn more about the study.
No alternatives being evaluated include alterations to the management of the Wanaque Reservoir, which is outside the scope/jurisdiction of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; rather personnel visited it because of its hydrological importance in the basin. (photo by Chris Gardner, New York District public affairs)


Bradbury Building
real estate commission
Image by monette lyan
The building’s exterior features brown sandstone and panels of terra cotta details.

Located at 304 S. Broadway in Los Angeles
Visitors are welcomed on a daily basis and are allowed to go up to the first landing but not past it.

The Bradbury was built in 1893. It was commissioned by Lewis Bradbury, a mining millionaire who later became a real estate developer. Sumner Hunt, a local architect, was first hired to design the building. However, Lewis Bradbury ruled against constructing Hunt’s plan as it did match his vision of grandeur. Goerge Wyman, a draftsman at Hunt’s firm, was later hired to design the building. Although Wyman was not trained as an architect, his design was inspired by Edward Bellamy's 1887 utopian novel Looking Backward which described a utopian society in the year 2000.Sadly, Lewis Bradbury died months before the building opened in 1893.


Bradbury Building
real estate commission
Image by monette lyan
The building’s exterior features brown sandstone and panels of terra cotta details

Located at 304 S. Broadway in Los Angeles
Visitors are welcomed on a daily basis and are allowed to go up to the first landing but not past it.

The Bradbury was built in 1893. It was commissioned by Lewis Bradbury, a mining millionaire who later became a real estate developer. Sumner Hunt, a local architect, was first hired to design the building. However, Lewis Bradbury ruled against constructing Hunt’s plan as it did match his vision of grandeur. Goerge Wyman, a draftsman at Hunt’s firm, was later hired to design the building. Although Wyman was not trained as an architect, his design was inspired by Edward Bellamy's 1887 utopian novel Looking Backward which described a utopian society in the year 2000.Sadly, Lewis Bradbury died months before the building opened in 1893.

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