Post photos from around your way..

SiGh

Who's there?
Staff member
#1
I was looking at Rukas' twitter and had to google "Melbourne CBD" cuz I didn't know what it was and I clicked on images and it showed a photo of the following:



Then I wonder damn, how nice it must to live where that is.
So I figured since we all live around the world, we must have some sort of nice looking (places) photos from where we are..figure we share them.

It's almost 1am here, figure by tomorrow morning we'll have some nice photos. :D
 

Shadows

Well-Known Member
#4
A couple of stops from my work, you get this...



It's basically the bay by the airport.


This was the view from my High School prom with HipHopLatinaQueen

@ The Hiat Hotel, it's the view of our famous Coronado Bridge




This the entrance to my favorite bay and shop area, "Belmont Park"



This is the exit of it @ Belmont Park




yes, women do walk like that around there...and for most of San Diego for that matter. (Guys usually have open hawain shirts if their white, mexicans wear muscle shirts...etc.
 

Shadows

Well-Known Member
#5
This is the view I see everytime I walk into work from the Parking Lot to work.




Tomorrow, I'll be working at the Sky Fari's



I have to ride it like 8 times during the shift.

This is the inside of my favorite mall in San Diego, Plaza Bonita.
It's beautiful after it was re-constructed.

 

S. Fourteen

Well-Known Member
#10
Twin Cities, Minnesota USA

Despite the "Twin" moniker, the two cities are independent municipalities with defined borders and are quite distinct from each other. Minneapolis is somewhat newer, with modern skyscrapers and broad streets. Saint Paul has been likened to a "European city" with nice neighborhoods, and a vast collection of well preserved late-Victorian architecture. Also of some note is the differing cultural backgrounds of the two cities: Minneapolis being affected by its early (and still influential) Scandinavian/Lutheran heritage, while St. Paul was touched by its early French, Irish and German Catholic roots.
Downtown Minneapolis - looking north on interstate 35W


Downtown Saint Paul - looking north near the Wabasha Street bridge


Minneapolis and St. Paul have competed since they were founded, resulting in some duplication of effort. Both cities have campuses of the University of Minnesota, and after St. Paul completed its elaborate Cathedral in 1915, Minneapolis quickly followed up with the equally ornate Basilica of St. Mary in 1926. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries the rivalry became so intense that an architect practicing in one city was often refused business in the other. The 1890 United States Census even led to the two cities arresting and/or kidnapping each other's census takers, in an attempt to keep either city from outgrowing the other.

there was a brief period in the mid-1960s where the two cities could not agree on a common calendar for daylight saving time, resulting in a period of a few weeks where people in Minneapolis were one hour "ahead" of anyone living or traveling in St. Paul.
Here's one for Casey - First Avenue in Minneapolis


The Twin Cities area is considered by Minnesotans as the capital for the arts of the Upper Midwest

There is a very high per-capita attendance of theatrical, musical, and comedy events across the area, which some believe may be boosted by the cold winters but can be more realistically attributed to the large number of colleges and universities and to a generally strong economy, providing strong supply and demand for arts.

There are more theater seats per capita than in any other American city besides New York City.


Burial mounds in present-day Indian Mounds Park suggest the area was originally inhabited by the Hopewell Native Americans about two thousand years ago. From the early 17th century until 1837 the Mdewakanton Dakota, a tribe of the Sioux, lived near the mounds after fleeing their ancestral home of Mille Lacs Lake from advancing Ojibwe. They called the area I-mni-za ska dan ("little white rock") from the exposed white sandstone cliffs.


Following the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, a U.S. Army officer named Zebulon Pike negotiated for approximately 100,000 acres of land from the local Dakota tribes in 1805 for the establishment of a fort. The territory was located on both banks of the Mississippi River starting from Saint Anthony Falls in present-day Minneapolis to the confluence with the Saint Croix River. Fort Snelling was built on the territory in 1819 at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers, which formed a natural barrier to both Native American nations. The 1837 Treaty with the Sioux ceded all local tribal land east of the Mississippi to the U.S. Government. Taoyateduta (Chief Little Crow V) moved his band at Kaposia across the river to the south. Fur traders, explorers, and missionaries came to the area for the fort's protection. Many of the settlers were French Canadians and lived nearby. However, as a whiskey trade flourished, military officers banned settlers from the fort-controlled lands. Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant, a retired fur trader-turned-bootlegger who particularly irritated officials, set up his tavern, the Pig's Eye, near present-day Lambert's Landing. By the early 1840s, the community had become important as a trading center and a destination for settlers heading west. Locals called the area Pig's Eye (French: L'Oeil du Cochon) or Pig's Eye Landing after Parrant's popular tavern.
Minneapolis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Saint Paul, Minnesota - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Minneapolis – Saint Paul - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

Prize Gotti

Boots N Cats
Staff member
#11
Where I live is a shithole, but any way;

This is Cathedral Square shopping area,


This is the Cathedral


Ferry Meadows Park, this is actually just behind my house


River Nene, we just off this bridge during the summer, we actually jump of alot, but this is our favourite cos there is a nice piece of land where we have BBQs etc.



Other than that, there really isnt anything interesting to show.

Emma can comfirm how shit it is here, she comes here now and then.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#12
My city looks quite meh compared to all of these I guess. Polish cities are not too beautiful - you know, post-communist blocks and such. More modern places are just about casual apartment buildings.
But there's a specific atmosphere about them.

The closest interesting object to my house is a park. I live just by the entrance. It's big so it'd be hard to post pictures of all nice places in it. There's president's main palace there as well as Parliament on the other side of it.







 

keco52

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#15
I live about 20 miles from the city but whatever...I work here.

we have touchdown jesus (not in cincinnati but worth mentioning bc it's LOL)


football stadium to the left
 

Stred

Stank ass bitch
Staff member
#16
I live in Geelong. About an hours drive from Melbourne.

The one and only




Geelong City. I got water skiing with Morgs out here over summer


and yes this really happens

 

Shadows

Well-Known Member
#20
No offence, but Cooper. SO far, your place looks most shit, but I give you props for actually taking the pix yourself.

It still strangely feels nice somehow.

and LMFAO @ Touchdown Jesus.
 

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