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hmshermitcraft · 1 year ago
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Y'know what? Let's add a Scott/ to the Etho/ranchers Esmp S1 Au (I am the one that sent that ask dw I'm not just adding this to someone else's au/ask)
After Scott learned that the Codfather was married, he was horrified as he has been subtly trying to court the Fishman, not knowing that he was taken. Scott obviously stopped immediately, he wasn't a homewrecker! Even if he was a generally flirty person and was very much crushing on the other ruler
Around two weeks after that meeting, Scott had been invited to watch (and maybe participate) the bi-monthly fighting festival that was in the Codlends. Scott of course went, even if he wasnt courting the Codfather now if he can help it, he still would have to go as he had been directly invited.
When Scott had flown there, he had been greeted by the short man that was with Jimmy in the beginning of the last meeting, the one with blond hair and red accessories. The man who he learned was named Tango and was The Codfather's other husband, had excitedly shown Scott around as Scott was apparently the first ruler to have shown up so far.
Scott had primarily watched the fights, after all the way that Codlends citizens fought was truely interesting and in a way that was so fluid. When Scott did participate in a few of the fights, he draw them out ever so slightly but still in a fast and Rivendell like manner. Each time he had stepped out of the sparring arena after he won, he had been shown a good bit of praise and flirting from the citizens??
Aka fighting and how strong you are is seems as a very important thing in the Codlends and the fighting festivals are used as ways to flirt and show off your skills to the people your trying to court. (Cause I hc that polyamory is very common in the Codlends lol)
Jimmy and Tango are both blushing like mad after and during Scott's fights cause wow they didn't expect that with how Scott was built- while Etho just zones in on Scott's fighting style cause it is very unique and not like any other Rivendell elves that participated in these.
related ask!
Scott was trained to fight from a very young age. His parents - ever so diligent - ensured he had a number of tutors from a wide variety of different places. Scott may not be a master in any of the styles he's familiar with, but he can switch between them as needed without missing a step.
It's a skill that has, unfortunately, been useful through the years.
And he has to make sure he puts on a good show for the Codlands people. He's here to represent Rivendell. Scott knows elves are often underestimated as being soft and too haughty to fight. He hopes he's put some of those rumours to bed today.
What he doesn't realise is that he's started a new wave of gossip. Jimmy hasn't stopped talking about Scott's fighting since they retreated into the royal box. Tango feels like he may just melt where he stands. Scott had been so put together when he showed him around earlier! He didn't expect that from him.
Nor did he expect Scott to look so good when slightly dishevelled, pushing long strands of blue hair from his face.
Etho finds Scott fascinating. He did during the meeting as well. He'd like to learn more about the elf, and Rivendell royalty in general. It seems like it's changed a lot since his time.
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misalignments · 1 year ago
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Epic games is the most soulless company ever created
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demoyellow · 2 years ago
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Descargar embird 2003 gratis
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architectnews · 3 years ago
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Allianz Arena: Bayern Munich Football Stadium
Allianz Arena Munich, Bayern Munich Football Stadium, TSV 1860 Building
Allianz Arena : Munich Football Stadium
Bavarian Arena, Germany design by Herzog & de Meuron Architects / ArupSport
23 Jun 2021
Allianz Arena Munich Lighting
Allianz Arena not to be lit in rainbow colours
The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) has declined a request to light up the Allianz Arena in rainbow colours before Germany’s Euro 2020 match against Hungary on Wednesday, report the BBC today.
Allianz Arena photograph from ArupSport
Munich mayor Dieter Reiter made the request in protest against a new law in Hungary that bans the sharing of any content seen as promoting homosexuality and gender change to under-18s.
Uefa says it denied the request because of the “political context”. Mayor Dieter Reiter described Uefa’s decision as “shameful”.
In a statement, European football’s governing body said: “Uefa understands that the intention is also to send a message to promote diversity and inclusion – a cause, which Uefa has been supporting for many years – having joined forces with European clubs, national teams and their players, launching campaigns and plenty of activities all over Europe to promote the ethos that football should be open to everyone.
photo courtesy of pixabay
European football’s governing body has instead proposed alternative dates for the stadium, home to Bayern Munich, to be lit up in rainbow colours.
It suggested either 28 June – the Christopher Street Liberation Day – or 3-9 July which is the Christopher Street Day week in Munich. The events are held in memory of protests by gay people in New York in 1969.
photo courtesy of AP
Video clip from France 24:
youtube
22 Jun 2012
Allianz Arena Munich
A new football stadium for Munich, Germany
Design: Herzog & de Meuron Architects with ArupSport
Introduction
Dramatic, exciting, and iconic architecture enhances and amplifies everyone’s experience. In the modern world, where image is critical, it can also significantly increase the brand values of a stadium and its sporting team. Modern stadia have become complex and sophisticated buildings, providing a range of facilities for spectators, the media, participants, and operators. But although the mix and standard of facilities can have a significant impact on the user’s experience, the key to a stadium’s success is its heart – the viewing bowl.
Allianz Arena photo from ArupSport
The Allianz Arena in Munich sets a new architectural milestone in stadium design. It opened in May 2005, replacing the city’s old Olympic Stadium as the new home to the football clubs Bayern Munich, in 1 Bundesliga, and TSV 1860 Munich, in 2 Bundesliga. Designed and built purely as a football stadium, it will also host the opening ceremony and initial game on 9 June for the 2006 World Cup, as well as five subsequent matches including the second semi-final on 5 July.
In 2001 a design competition was instigated by the two clubs and the city council. ArupSport and the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron joined a team led by Alpine Bau and HVB Immobilien Management GmbH, and secured the job despite strong competition from architects such as German-based Gerkan/Marg (runner-up), Foster, Murphy/Jahn, and Eisenmann.
Allianz Arena photo from ArupSport
The competition called for a 66 000-seat arena with a closing roof, but it was immediately clear that this brief and the budget were not compatible. The design team aimed, therefore, for a visual impact that would be undiminished if the moving roof was not built – of all eight finalists this was the only one with this approach.
Allianz Arena photo from ArupSport
The most striking – and currently unique – feature is the façade, made of ETFE (a polymer of tetrafluoroethylene and ethylene), which can be illuminated in the colours of whichever home team is playing. This simple but very effective idea makes the stadium immediately identifiable. The enclosure design evolved from a basket-like arrangement of woven ribbon elements to diamond-shaped ETFE pillows patterned in similar fashion to the Bavarian flag.
Allianz Arena photo : Ulrich Rossmann-Arup
As the site is some distance from the city centre, and near a major motorway, a huge car park was needed, as well as a rail station. The team decided to conceal the 12 000 parking spaces beneath a planted plaza deck stretching from the rail station to the main entrance (Fig 4). The result is a long, rising, curved plinth that imparts a sense of excitement for spectators as they approach the glowing stadium destination emerging over the horizon. On arrival they encounter another unique architectural feature of the building, the geometrically extremely complex “cascade” of stairs that wrap around the perimeter of the building, just visible behind its glowing, translucent skin.
photograph courtesy of pixabay
ArupSport was jointly responsible for the competition architectural design, design development for the planning submission, and subsequently for the preparation of production information for the viewing bowl. ArupSport was also responsible for the overall structural design for the competition and planning stages, and Arup GmbH for the on-going design of the substructure, frame, and seating bowl.
photograph : Ulrich Rossmann-Arup
The very tight time schedule between winning the project in February 2002 and start of construction the same October led to an early decision to create a “design village” in Munich. While the detailed structural analysis and design were still carried out in Arup offices, the design partners, including the ArupSport team and the contractor, used the design village for co-ordination and meetings, which enabled everyone to contribute far quicker to design solutions. Thus value engineering was exercised from the very outset of the project.
photo : Ulrich Rossmann-Arup
ArupSport’s three-tier design brings spectators as close as possible to the pitch action, and at the same time takes in emergency strategies – the width of escape routes and numbers of vomitories and stair cores being determined to allow for smooth egress should the stadium have to be evacuated. The height of the spectator positions and hence the vertical angle of view of the arena were optimized by balancing the tier sizes and overlaps to create a smoothly flowing bowl form. The design even allows the option of changing some corner areas from seating to standing, still not uncommon in German stadia.
The quality of view for spectators in the lowest tier of a stadium is often compromised, as viewing standards that are appropriate for upper tiers tend to result in poor views of play near the touch and goal lines for those in the first tier. At Munich this has been avoided by lifting the first row of seating slightly, thus making the lower tier steeper than usual. The spectators are happy, though raising the first row even slightly has a significant impact on the overall size and cost of a large stadium.
Allianz Arena photo : Covertex/B Ducke
From the external concourse, a perimeter ‘apron’ to the stadium gives access to the lower and the middle tiers, whilst the upper tier is reached via 15 cascading façade stairs. The VIP and press seating areas have their own dedicated circulation routes.
The brief required the stadium to be designed for a range of games from Bundesliga to the World Cup, and two separate seating layouts and facilities plans were developed to accommodate the very different media numbers and requirements. Also each of the two resident clubs had different requirements for its fans and facilities, and these overlays needed to be added to the design.
Allianz Arena image : Herzog & de Meuron / acadGraph
Design of the seating bowl started with FIFA and UEFA’s requirements for the pitch, the pitch margins, and the now obligatory pitch-side advertising. The form of the seating bowl and the distribution of seating types within determine or influence almost every other aspect of a stadium’s design, from the shape and structure of the roof to the levels and areas of the concourses and premium facilities, from the positions of the giant screens to the amount of sunlight, daylight, and wind reaching the pitch. Even the number, size, and distribution of stairs, lifts, and escalators are effectively set by the bowl design, and the decision to bring most of the spectators into the stadium at the top of the lower tier significantly reduced vertical travel distances and helped separate spectators from the participant, media, and operational facilities.
Allianz Arena image : Herzog & de Meuron / acadGraph
Allianz Arena Munich – Building Information
Client: München Stadion GmbH General Contractor: Alpine Bau Deutschland GmbH Project management and quantity surveyor: HVB Immobilien AG Architects: Herzog & de Meuron Sports architecture: ArupSport – Anthony Day, J Parrish, Roland Reinardy, Eugene Uys
Bowl and roof structural design (competition/scheme): ArupSport – Fergus Begley, Stephen Burrows, Burkhard Miehe, Darren Paine Bowl structural design (construction): Arup GmbH – Aysen Agirbas, Ute Bobzin, Christopher Clifford, Thomas Dossenberger, Konrad Ecker, Jens Eisner, Joachim Guesgen, Sorabh Gupta, Volker Hass, Eva Hinkers, Christiane Kleinke, Patrick Luermann, Volker Luschnitz, Rudiger Lutz, Pieter Moerland, Jochen Ristig, Nina Rutz, Florian Schenk, Ian Thompson, Christian Wrede
Roof structural design (construction): Sailer Stepan and Partner GmbH, Munich Façade structural design: R+R Fuchs, Munich ETFE façade manufacturer: Covertex GmbH, Obing Building services design: TGA-Consulting, Munich Checking engineer: Dr D. Linse, Munich
Illustrations: Ulrich Rossmann-Arup; Herzog & de Meuron; ArupSport; Herzog & de Meuron/acadGraph
Allianz Arena Munich images / information from ArupSport
Munich Stadium
Allianz Arena lit in the colours of TSV 1860 München: Allianz Arena photo from architects
Allianz Arena design : Herzog & de Meuron, architects
Arup
Location: Allianz Arena, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Munich Architecture Developments
Contemporary Munich Buildings
Munich Architecture Design – chronological list
Munich Architecture Walking Tours – architectural walks by e-architect – experienced building guides
Munich Architecture Offices
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German Football Stadium – World Cup Arenas
Olympic Stadium, Munich Frei Otto – Architect / Engineer with Günter Behnisch
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Siemens Munich Headquarters Architecture Competition Henning Larsen Architects Siemens Munich Headquarters Building
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Website: Visit Munich
Comments / photos for the Allianz Arena Munich – German Football Stadium page welcome
Website: www.allianz-arena.de
The post Allianz Arena: Bayern Munich Football Stadium appeared first on e-architect.
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williamemcknight · 7 years ago
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September issue – Pro Landscaper
INFORM
Agenda: Should local authorities be responsible for ensuring parks are protected in the long term?
News: Our monthly roundup of industry news
Pro Landscaper Business Awards: The launch of our brand new awards
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30 Under 30: Previous winners share their experience
Let’s Hear It From: Hugo Bugg and Charlotte Harris of Harris Bugg Studio
Company Profile: Indoor Garden Design
View from the Top: ideverde’s Nick Temple-Heald on the problem of park funding
Making a Statement: Andrew Wilson asks whether politics should be kept out of garden design
Doing More With Less: Despite dramatic cuts, Liverpool’s parks offer is thriving
INSPIRE
Raising Hope: A sensory garden is created beneath the Maggie’s Centre in Oldham
Violet’s Garden: Creating a quiet space for reflection, in memory of a family’s lost daughter
Relocating a Show Garden: How three show gardens were transported and rebuilt elsewhere
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Love Horticulture: Sue Biggs on the joy that horticulture brings her – and so many others
NURTURE
Nurture News: A roundup of news from the UK’s growing sector
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Designer Plants: Camilla Hiley overcomes challenging conditions to deliver a gorgeous scheme
Buzz Words: It’s time to reconsider ‘bee friendly’ plants, says Noel Kingsbury
Nursery Interview: Talking business with Craigmarloch Nurseries Ltd
TGA Update: The Turf Growers Association fills us in
EDUCATE
Straight Talking: Sean Butler’s new miniseries on the professional ethos
Inside Natural Paving Luxigraze: The process behind creating a high-end artificial grass product
Ride-on Mowers: How they’re evolving, and our pick of the products
What I’m Reading: Tamara Bridge on Four Hedges by Clare Leighton
What’s Your Role?: Lauren Paige, Glendale team leader
To view the September issue digitally, please click here.
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hmshermitcraft · 3 years ago
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Foxdove here. Been burnt out lately, but the assassin theme is calling.
Etho was an assassin, and great at his job. When he wasn't causing murder, he was working 7 to 3 at a Cafe.
Every morning, he would see BDubs, and every afternoon, Beef would come in before it was time for him to clock out.
He expressed frustration to his informant, Doc, that he is surrounded by pretty men and social interaction is just too much for him to handle. Doc laughed at him for this...
And promptly set up the 3 way date.
Etho was pissed. He went on the date, and it went...okay. they wanted to see him again so bonus, but he told them about his frustration about "his friend who set this up". They grinned and Told Etho to bring him next time.
And that's how this chaotic relationship started. (He had no clue BDubs was a spy, nor that Beef is a mercenary. Oh how fun).
He still has zero idea what their jobs are but he doesn’t ever really consider asking them
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