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Category: Urban
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..a random snowboarder taking advantage of the empty roads..
owens-thomas
The Owens-Thomas House is a historic home in Savannah, Georgia that is operated as a historic house museum by the Telfair Museum of Art.(…)
work break
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suzuki shuttle
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florentine detail
..a close up shot of yesterday’s post..
florentine
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The Florentine Building or Sims Building is a two-story, terra-cotta clad building on the southeast corner of 2nd Avenue North and 21st Street, the former site of the Jefferson County Bank Building. It was built between 1925 and 1927 for the Club Florentine by Henry Upson Sims. Architect David O. Whilldin designed the foundations to support an eventual 10-story building, but only the lower two floors, totaling about 23,000 square feet, were ever completed. One legend has it that the excavation revealed an underground stream which required the change in plans. (source)
scaffolds
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..instant prints!
an(arch)y
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brooklyn heights
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load exceeded
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..dabbling in large format..
naval pursuit
..watching boats float up the east river..
..a lone pedestrian navigating the snowy path..
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snow angel
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bypass the wheel
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bank at bull
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montgomery st
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missed connection
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wet & slushy
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home boy
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hoods / doors
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an instant vacation
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..y’all be careful driving around these roads..
..discussing what to ride next..
at the gates
..shot by wifey..
..what time’s your reservation?
apache down
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horse theives
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not so grand torino
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..college football’s serious business down here in the south..
*shot by wifey
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bargain
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cahaba furniture
*shot by wifey
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st james hotel
..another shot by wifey during the Selma photo walk..
As the only surviving hotel in Selma’s downtown historic district, the St. James Hotel has witnessed much of the dramatic history that has played out in this picturesque Southern city. Built in 1837 atop the banks of the Alabama River, it was a home-away-from-home for visiting plantation owners, business men and even occasional travelers of less illustrious repute. After standing silent for more than a century, the hotel was reborn in 1997 after a $6 million restoration that brought together a group of investors and the community of Selma. One of the last riverfront hotels still standing in the Southeast, the St. James once again welcomes guests with elegant appointments such as solid oak furnishings, vintage lighting, luxurious fabrics and a charming courtyard that evoke an antebellum spirit of gracious hospitality. The hotel anchors the Water Avenue Historic District and offers spectacular views of the river and the historic Edmund Pettus Bridge, made famous in the historic civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery in 1965.(source)
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..how’s that for a title?