Created with PhotoShake for Android
來自 instagram
但不是俗,她的皮膚有好幾層味道,your works are not ordinary ,its true! ohhhhhhhh !
朋友觀察(2)
朋友觀察(1) 她是哪種每天花幾個小時收看資訊的人、然後運用二手資訊過生活的人、感覺上很夠格、但面目似糊欸
小時候哪種人死了妳也的都欸接受的感覺很糟
(Source: youtreau, via samportillo)
Kowloon Walled City.
Inspired by another post here on Tumblr, I decided to look into the Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong a bit more, it truly was one of the most amazing and terrifying places on earth. Being slightly smaller than an NFL stadium, the structure was built of 350 smaller interconnected buildings and hosted, at it’s peak, a population density of 5 million people per square mile.
To put those numbers in perspective, this would be like taking the entire population of metro Philadelphia, the 4th largest in the US, and putting it in 1 square mile instead of 1,744.
The area was also largely ungoverned and unregulated. Factories, apartments, schools, temples, churches, shops, cafes, hotels and almost anything else one could imagine were housed within the structure that never had a full blueprint of it done. Buildings were built onto buildings, expanded, rebuilt, and re-purposed as needed without a central authority of any kind.
Within the structure, natural light was almost non-existent, and an unknown number of miles of jury-rigged wires provided electricity to everything. Water constantly dripped down to the lower levels from both rain and leaking pipes, while garbage filled every passage. A constant yellow haze filled the structure and there were never any government safety inspections.
The Kowloon Walled City was demolished in the early 1990s as part of the deal that returned Hong Kong to the Chinese from the British. The entire area is now a park.
I find places like this fascinating, it is just incredible what we, humans, build and live in. This, hive, for lack of a better term, was one of the most interesting structures I’ve yet looked at. Documentary here.
évek óta találkozom ezekkel a képekkel újra és újra, valami egészen elképesztőek.
(via h-edge)
再也回不去了
(Source: pullthecordfromthephone, via isthishardcore)
Lars Hanson and Lillian Gish, The Wind, 1928
via jools-the-kid
(Source: tea-with-theo)
Photo-Transformation, 6/2/76, Unique Polaroid © Lucas Samaras
via Sprueth Magers