Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
CS:GO - DEMOLITION! - Road to Gold COIN - Operation VANGUARD #4
GG WP EZ EZ EZ E ZE ZEE E EZ EZE. derp. Ok ok this is it my friend... 😀 lol Like if it Helped! Comment if you are Confused! Subscribe if you want More! ^-,--,--,...
By: Cashburner
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CS:GO - DEMOLITION! - Road to Gold COIN - Operation VANGUARD #4 - Video
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Demolition chainsaw FAIL
Toto video som vytvoril(-a) pomocou Editora videa YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/editor)
By: Michal Niznik
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Demolition chainsaw FAIL - Video
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Meet the 9/11 Experts-Tom Sullivan-Explosive Demolition
These are short videos from the AE911Truth dvd Meet the Experts. They are included in the 2 dvd set of 9/11 Explosive Experts-Experts Speak Out https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ddz2mw2vaEg.
By: Charles Ewing Smith
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Meet the 9/11 Experts-Tom Sullivan-Explosive Demolition - Video
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Imposanter Abbruch -spectacular demolition tower Herrenberg BayWa-Silo WLZ-Turm,Liebherr Bagger 944
Abbruch des "BayWa"-Gelndes in Herrenberg. Der ehemalige WLZ-Turm fllt. Dezember 2014. Demolition of "BayWa"-area in Herrenberg. The former WLZ tower falls. December 2014. Playlist ...
By: walkoARTVideos
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Imposanter Abbruch -spectacular demolition tower Herrenberg BayWa-Silo WLZ-Turm,Liebherr Bagger 944 - Video
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Minecraft Faux Footage 12 - Glass Slide Demolition
Tearing down the old water slide in the desert. This might be a bit boring to watch, so I sped it up. -- http://racasper.com.
By: R. A. Casper
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Minecraft Faux Footage 12 - Glass Slide Demolition - Video
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
SEALE, Ala. (AP) Demolition has begun on an 85-year-old railroad bridge cursed by truckers who had to drive around it -- or in some cases smashed into it.
The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer reports (http://bit.ly/1ug2Ygh) that the bridge over U.S. 431 in Seale is now being demolished -- years after the highway was rerouted to a new four-lane.
For decades, semis traveling 431 had to turn off the highway in Seale for about a four-block route around the tight underpass and back to the highway on the other side.
Those who missed the turn smashed into the concrete structure, their impact reverberating all over town.
Crews who started the demolition work with hydraulic jackhammers Monday expected to be finished in about two weeks.
Seale is about 16 miles southwest of downtown Columbus, Georgia.
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Information from: Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, http://ledger-enquirer.com
2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Demolition begins on 85-year-old railroad bridge
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Our knockdown ceiling installation process: General guideline
If you #39;re thinking about making that transition from popcorn to knockdown the process includes the following: 1 Cover/protect walls and floor 2. If previousl...
By: Alltimate Painting, llc
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Our knockdown ceiling installation process: General guideline - Video
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
The Glassenberg Gallery at Lyman Allyn Art Museum in New London has been taken over by a swarm of butterflies.
"Catch the Butterflies," a sweet and fun installation by East Lyme artist Brian Keith Stephens, consists of about 100 ceiling-to-floor scrolls made of mirror-bright silver reflective mylar, silkscreened with thousands of butterflies in Day-Glo colors and lit by black lights. One side of each scroll is painted, the other not, so that the unpainted sides reflect all the other scrolls around them, and reflect whoever passes through the gallery.
The effect is half glow-in-the-dark butterfly sanctuary, half hall of funhouse mirrors. "This is pure fantasy and fun," said museum director D. Samuel Quigley. Just be careful to keep family members together: There are so many scrolls, and they hang so closely together, and they are so reflective, it's easy for even an adult to get lost in the gallery and not be able to find the door.
Last year at Christmastime, the 744-square-foot gallery was full of a stampede of glittery unicorns. Now with the butterfly invasion, it is host to another animal-centric, alternative holiday family attraction.
The exhibit continues downstairs with interactive butterfly flash cards, that can be read only if they are brought upstairs into the blacklight. Also downstairs, the Lyman Allyn has re-installed an elaborate dollhouse that was beloved by many children in past years at the museum.
CATCH THE BUTTERFLIES will be at Lyman Allyn Art Museum, 625 Williams St. in New London, through Jan. 4. lymanallyn.org.
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Playful 'Catch The Butterflies' At Lyman Allyn
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Monday, December 8, 2014, by Rachel B. Doyle
Photo by Steve Benisty via Studio Gang Architects
Starchitect Jeanne Gang has unleashed a crystal-studded installation inspired by climate change down in the non-icy environs of Miami. Encircled by 25 giant LCD screens showing photographs of receding glaciers and meltholes by photographer James Balog, the blue-lit "Thinning Ice" installation for Art Basel Miami has an aluminum floor riddled with crystal-filled cracks, and a low fabric ceiling. "I want people to make the connection between the environmentthe idea of what's happening in remote environments, in terms of climate changeand how that connects to Miami as a place," Gang, who also designed tables and chairs reminiscent of melting glaciers for the project, told T:Style. Just like the certified genius' architectural work, the installation is provocative and thoughtful despite having more Swarovski crystals encrusted on it than a socialite's Mercedes.
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Jeanne Gang Wire: Jeanne Gang Made an Icy Installation About Climate Change
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December 9, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
The traveling 20-year retrospective of French Conceptual artist Pierre Huyghe turns the Los Angeles County Museum of Art into a mammoth vivarium a carefully orchestrated, walk-in terrarium-cum-aquarium. The exhibition creates a self-contained ecosystem of plants, sculptures, video projections and installation works, plus a variety of animals.
Those living creatures include bees, tiny invertebrates, a dog, crabs and other spiny sea creatures, puppets, a masked monkey and, yes, even museum visitors themselves. Nature and culture, art and science promiscuously intermingle.
LACMA's Jarrett Gregory organized the retrospective with curators from the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the Ludwig Museum in Cologne, Germany, where it has already been seen. Huyghe (pronounced hweeg) reconfigured each exhibition according to the given situation, perhaps because one cannot step into the same river twice. So don't expect a typical retrospective, where the evolution of an artist's work unfolds in sequence.
Here a visitor wanders adrift, accumulating sensations that are fragments of the whole. Artistic ideas keep turning back in on themselves.
Surprising moments of wonderfully bewildering poetry do pop up, at once reflecting and illuminating our brave new transnational world in which technologically sophisticated, ecologically imperiled lives are now lived. Too often and too easily, however, these moments fall between the sprawling exhibition's cracks.
The show features 51 works, which have been set free in vast, dimly lighted spaces. (Be sure to get the handout map at the entry.) Several are video projections, one set up like a puppet theater, which play intermittently. Many rooms seem empty until something gets turned on.
In one, a sort of Minimalist video game is suspended overhead like an enormous, inverted "Saturday Night Fever" dance floor. A grid of lighted squares crosses a Pong-like diversion that visitors control with joysticks and the kind of cheesy drop ceiling one might find in the basement of a suburban tract house. If only it were all less scrambled and more strange.
One of the most compelling episodes comes near the back of the Resnick Pavilion, just before an outdoor patio installation of overhead machinery producing steady cascades of rain, fog and snow water in its liquid, gaseous and solid states. Titled "Precambrian Explosion," the sculpture is a large aquarium.
The work refers to the billions of years between the Earth's formation and the proliferation of hard-shelled sea creatures that we know from fossil remains. (Biblical literalists will be appalled.) A big chunk of lava rock is suspended inside a large, water-filled glass cube. Exotic sea creatures in shocking pastel hues explore the aquarium floor's sandy terrain and crawl around on the boulder's underside.
It takes a moment to realize that nothing appears to be holding up the massive rock, which protrudes above the water line to create a little landscape of unoccupied terra firma. Visually it floats, suspended within a magical fluid space and conjuring Magritte's renowned 1959 painting "Castle of the Pyrenees," a colossal chunk of rock that the Belgian Surrealist showed hovering over the sea.
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Warm spots in Pierre Huyghe's often chilly Conceptualism at LACMA
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