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#Yasuo Matsui
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Project: Hope's Hellhole
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/gHkuTah
by kamjcake
Words: 3162, Chapters: 1/23, Language: English
Fandoms: New Dangan Ronpa V3: Everyone's New Semester of Killing
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death
Categories: Gen
Characters: Reiji Enatsu, Shoji Kenshu, Mano Takara, Hano Susumu, Asano Miyuki, Saito Tetsuya, Aiko Sakagami, Kotaro Sakata, Kenji Nagano, Yuri Tanaka, Megumi Mori, Yasuo Matsui, Toru Yoshida, Ryota Tsuji, Naomi Hirata, Hiroko Okano, Seiji Nozaki, Keiko Arakawa
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/gHkuTah
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Wall Street skyscrapers. View looking east from Irving Trust Building. 1938.
The Irving Trust Building  (Trowbridge & Livingston, 1912) is at left, foreground. The 71-story Bank of Manhattan Building at 40 Wall Street (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930) is at center. The 42-story 15 Broad Street Building  (Trowbridge & Livingston, 1927) are at right with the 35-story 100 Wall Street Building (Ely Jacques Kahn, 1930) at background.
Photo: Berenice Abbott.
Source: Yochelson, Bonnie. "Berenice Abbott: Changing New York". New York, The New Press, The Museum of the City of New York. 2008.
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kimberleyspilleruca · 5 years
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Research- Best architecture.
This is a list of some of the best architecture internationally. I am researching architecture because I may use it in my project.
Taj Mahal -India
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Construction started: 1632 Construction completed: 1648
Architects: 
Ustad Ahmed Zahouri
Ustad Isa
Empire State Building -New York
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Construction started: 1930 Construction Completed: 1931
Architects:
William F. Lamb
Yasuo Matsui
Arthur Loomis Harmon
Gregory Johnson
Colosseum- Italy
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Construction started: 70AD Construction completed: 80AD
Architects:
The Romans
Sydney Opera House -Australia
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Construction started: 1959 Construction completed: 1973
Architects:
Jørn Utzon
The Shard -England
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Construction started: 2009 Construction completed: 2013
Architects: 
Renzo Piano
La Sagrada Familia -Spain
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Construction started: 1882 Construction completed: still working on it
Architects:
Antoni Gaudí
Francisco de Paula
Jordi Armengol
Jordi Oller
Frencesc Cardoner
Joan Rubió
Domènec Gras
Francesc Quintana
Lluis Gari
Isidre Boada
Burj Khalifa -Dubai
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Construction started: 2004 Construction completed: 2010
Architects: 
 Adrian Smith
William F. Baker
George J. Efstathiou
Marshall Strabala
St Basil’s Cathedral -Russia
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Construction started: 16th Century Construction completed: 16th Century
Architects:
Postnik Yakovlev
Ivan Barma
The Palace Museum -China
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Construction started: 599 Construction completed: 1420
Architects:
Nguyen An
Kuai Xiang
Cai Xin
Louvre -France
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Construction started: 1190 Construction completed: 1793
Architects:
Jacques Lemercier
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cpw-nyc · 5 years
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Inside the Chrysler Building’s storied past - and uncertain future
By Steve Cuozzo - March 7, 2019
She’s the shimmering queen of Midtown’s night sky — a mirage of brightly lit triangular forms riding sensuous, sculpted layers to a radiant peak. The Chrysler Building after dark seems a feminine foil to the Empire State Building’s muscular lines. A popular postcard by artist Hudson Talbott depicts Chrysler as a sexy lady on the arm of a tuxedo-clad Empire State.
Yet Chrysler’s long-closed, private, top-floor Cloud Club was open only to men. The only woman to use one of the tower’s handful of apartments, Life magazine photographer Margaret Bourke-White, needed office tenant Time Inc. to sign her lease. Landlord Walter P. Chrysler wouldn’t rent to women — not even to Bourke-White, who risked her life to take iconic photos while perched on one of the tower’s 59th-floor gargoyles.
The anti-female attitude was one of many ironies, oddities and calamities in the skyscraper’s roller-coaster, 90-year history. The Chrysler Building’s brief reign as the world’s tallest building inspired others — including the Empire State — to shoot higher in the sky. Yet for all its iconic beauty and influence, the tower was twice in foreclosure and its interior in ruins.
Today it faces a new challenge: It’s up for sale and skyline-lovers and architectural enthusiasts fear for its future.
A legally protected city landmark, Chrysler can’t be torn down. But because it is antiquated compared to modern office skyscrapers, some believe it might not get the $800 million its owners want for it. They worry that it could be partly converted to apartments or a hotel, a long process that could darken the fabulous crown for months or years.
But the Chrysler Building has seen worse times. Its saga is one of unbridled ambition, fortunes lost and made — and enduring resilience.
It rose in an age when visionary captains of industry pursued their dreams — not only on Wall Street but in the sky over Manhattan.
Appropriately, it all started with the creator of Coney Island’s Dreamland.
Developer and politician William H. Reynolds launched the fabled seaside amusement park in 1904. He had bigger ambitions: He hired architect William Van Alen to design the world’s tallest building on land he leased at the northeast corner of Lexington Avenue and 42nd Street in Manhattan.
But after Van Alen drew up ever-taller schemes, Reynolds didn’t have the dough to build. In 1928, he sold the lease and the architect’s design for an 808-foot-tall tower to Walter Chrysler for $2 million (more than $29 million in today’s dollars).
Chrysler wanted a prestigious New York corporate home for the Chrysler Corp., which he founded and owned. He wanted it to be a dynamic symbol of the machine age — and to be the tallest tower on earth.
But his vision was challenged by a planned building far downtown — 40 Wall St., which is today the Trump Building. That project was the brainchild of banker George L. Ohstrom and a team of architects led by Van Alen’s former partner H. Craig Severance. (The actual chief designer of 40 Wall is believed to be Severance’s associate Yasuo Matsui, a Japanese-American architect who was unconscionably placed under house arrest by the US government during World War II.)
Chrysler and Ohstrom vied for two years to come out on top. Each kept announcing plans for a taller tower. Severance finally said 40 Wall would top off at 925 feet; Van Alen said Chrysler, after several height increases, would reach only 850 feet.
https://nypost.com/2019/03/07/inside-the-chrysler-buildings-storied-past-and-uncertain-future/
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stefenturner · 7 years
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♦️The ornate copper Art-Deco pyramidal crown and gothic spire of the Trump Building at 40 Wall Street. 🔻🔻🔻 Designed by H. Craig Severance and Yasuo Matsui in 1929. It was briefly the tallest building in the city until Severance’s rival, William Van Alen completed the Chrysler Building two months later. A year later they were both eclipsed by the Empire State Building. ______________________________ #trumpbuilding #40wallstreet #manhattanbuilding #hcraigseverance #urbanism #artdeco (at Trump Building)
New York City Aerial photography by Stefen Turner
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fytaem · 7 years
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「Get The Treasure」 Music Video Staff (posted in the description of GTT MV) Choreographer : 50 [*]  Cast (alphabetical) : Anna.M, Daiki Kudos, Emiliano Bernardini, Eveline, Jua M’bandja, Kimiaki Tamura, Kosuke Hosomi, Marcus, Marius, Mark Mendoza, Marta Ojandu, Petra Kubik, Pietro, Meiji Nohara, Riccard B, Ricky Devon, Ryoji Son, Sarah Elisa Mercu, Tetsuya Kojima, Yasuo Ichige. Director : Daisuke ”NINO" Ninomiya (IKIOI / CLAKEN) VFX Director : Masaya Kawasaki (GARYU) Chief Editor : Kishi Manami (IMAGICA) Cinematographer : Motoki Kobayashi (Tateoka office) Lighting Designer : Koji Furuyama (BAGS) Production Designer : Takeshi Uesawa Steadicam : Taro Kimura (copain) Digital Imaging Technician : Toru Miura (Spice) 1st assistant camera : Atsushi Sato 1st lighting assistant : Issei Funato Prop : Yuki Ishiyama(Igloo) Carpenter : agir Vehicle Coordinator : Junji Kjawano (VIPS) Grip : Masatoshi Masui, Toshiki Kiyoi, Kohei Kobayashi (Metalwork) Casting : Yu Matsui, Sayaka Toma (M2P) Studio Coordinate : Isamu Mizumura (Kurosawa film studio) Studio : Kurosawa film studio Yokohama CG Art Director : Kaihei Hayano (GARYU) CG Artists : Atsushi Saito, Yu Ishino, Momoka Inoue, Nobuo Eijima, Mariko Sakuma, Tomoki Kasai(GARYU) Post Production Coordinate : Masayoshi Saito (IMAGICA) Editors : Tanno Toyokatsu, Busaka Koji, Ishida Nobuya,Nakano Yusuke, Nakano Issei, Kurozumi Akinobu (IMAGICA) Sound Effect : Maruhashi Ryosuke (IMAGICA) Offline Editor : Oda Mido (IKIOI / KLAKEN) Stylist: YoungEun Won Make-up: JuHee Kim Hair Stylist: JungHo Lim Stylist for cast: Kayo Hosomi Make-up for cast: Michio Chiba Hair Stylist for cast: Tomoyuki Iwashita Producer : Yu Hamashima (Peanuttart) [**] Production assistants: Masao Sugiura, Nanae Takanashi, Yuzo Morota, Kiyomi Kenmochi, Chouei Yamashita, Haruno Ohara Director Manager : Akiha Mido [*] It’s stated that “50″ is the choreographer for Get The Treasure, while SHINee members (x) and an article in M-ON! (x) confirmed that the choreographer has been Rino Nakasone. [**] Yu Hanashima has worked on Galaxy Supernova by SNSD and various releases by BoA and Namie Amuro. (source, via mredwardsanders)
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Genre: Animation, Action, Comedy, Crime
Language: Japanese (Eng-Sub)
IMDb Ratings: 6.8/10
Quality: BluRay
Movie Size: 720p (415MB), 1080p (773MB)
Director: Yasuo Hasegawa, Osamu Kamijô
Movie Cast: Hideyuki Tanaka, Naoko Matsui, Mami Koyama
Download Here -      
Sypnosis: A superhuman outlaw courier and his female partner/manager are framed for the kidnapping of a millionaire's daughter.
Note - Report Dead Or Broken Link With URL 'HERE' (Links Will ReUp Soon) Watch Trailer
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Lower Manhattan’s Financial District skyscrapers. Panoramic view looking west from St. George Hotel in Brooklyn. Summer, 1931.
The 120 Wall Street Building (Ely Jacques Kahn, 1930), with the City Bank Farmers Trust (Cross & Cross, 1931), Irving Trust (Voorhees, Gmelin & Walker, 1931) and Bank of Manhattan (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1931) are at left. The steel skeleton for the future Cities Service Building (Clinton & Russell, 1932) under construction, begin to rises up on the center of this picture. Next is the Singer Building (Ernest Flagg, 1908). Transportation (York & Sawyer, 1927) and Woolworth (Cass Gilbert, 1913) are at right.
Photo: William Frange. 
Source: Richards Tropical Encyclopedia, Vol. 11. New York, The Richards Company, Inc., 1961.
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Lower Manhattan’s Financial District skyscrapers from Brooklyn Bridge in this view looking southwest in May, 1966.
The City Bank Farmers Trust (Cross & Cross, 1931), Cities Service (Clinton & Russell, 1932) and 40 Wall Street (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930) Art Deco towers are at left with the 80 Pine Street (Emery Roth & Sons, 1960) modern glass building. The One Chase Manhattan Plaza (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1961), the steel skeleton of Marine Midland Trust Building (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1967) under construction and the Home Insurance Plaza (Alfred Easton Poor, 1966) are at center of picture.
Photo: Ephraim Zackson.
Photo courtesy of  Saul Zackson/Flickr. 
Link: http://bit.ly/2Frhy5J
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The 71-story Bank of Manhattan Building at 40 Wall Street. Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, architects. 1929-1930. View looking northwest of the Bank of Manhattan tower in spring 1930, showing the steel skeleton of 51-story Irving Trust Building (Voorhes, Gmelin & Walker, 1931) at background, left.
Photo: Bettmann/Corbis. 
Source: Ric Burns, James Sanders, Lisa Ades. "New York, an illustrated history". New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1999.
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Downtown’s Financial District skyscrapers looking southwest from East River with the Brooklyn Bridge on foreground. Spring, 1931. 
Buildings from let are: 120 Wall Street (Ely Jacques Kahn, 1930), City Bank Farmers Trust (Cross & Cross, 1931), the Cities Service (Clinton & Russell, 1932) under construction, and Bank of Manhattan (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930).
Photo: Unknown.
Source: "Visitor's New York Guide. America's Show Place Illustrated". New York. Progressive Publications, Inc. 1965.
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Lower Manhattan’s Financial District skyline in this view looking southwest from East River showing Brooklyn Bridge viaduct on foreground, above. Summer, 1951.
At left is the 120 Wall Street Building (Ely Jacques Kahn, 1930) and City Bank Farmers Trust tower (Cross & Cross, 1931). The Cities Service (Clinton & Russell, 1932) and Bank of Manhattan (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930) at center, dominates the skyline.
Photo: Zardoya. 
Source: "Nuevo Tesoro de la Juventud" Vol. 10. Mexico, W.M. Jackson, Inc./Grolier International, 1973.
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Lower Manhattan’s Financial District skyscrapers. View looking southwest from Brooklyn Bridge. Circa, 1943.
The 120 Wall Street Building (Ely Jacques Kahn, 1930) are at left. The City Bank Farmers Trust (Cross & Cross, 1931) and Cities Service (Clinton & Russell, 1932) are at the center. The Bank of Manhattan Building (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930) are at right.
Photo: Unknown.
Source: “Look at America. New York City". (Cambridge, The Riverside Press, Houghton Mifflin Company. 1948).
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Aerial view looking north of Lower Manhattan’s Financial District skyscrapers. Autumn, 1970.
The Twin Towers of World Trade Center (Minoru Yamasaki & Associates, 1973) under construction, dominates the skyline, at left. 
The One Battery Park Plaza (Emery Roth & Sons, 1970) and the One State Street Plaza (Emery Roth & Sons, 1971) under construction are on foreground, at center, with 1 New York Plaza (William Lescaze Associates-Kahn & Jacobs, 1969). The steel skeleton of U.S. Steel Building (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1972) under construction, the Marine Midland (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1967) and One Chase Manhatan Plaza (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1961) modern towers are at background with the 40 Wall Street (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930), City Bank Farmers Trust (Cross & Cross, 1931) and Cities Service (Clinton & Russell, 1932) Art Deco towers. 
At right are the 2 New York Plaza (Kahn & Jacobs, 1971) nearing completion and the steel skeleton for 55 Water Street (Emery Roth & Sons, 1972) under construction.
Midtown Manhattan skyline are visible above, background with the Empire State Building (Shreve, Lamb & Harmon, 1931).
Photo: Unknown
Source: Enciclopedia General Básica. Vol. 1 (Barcelona, Spain, Ed. Grijalbo, 1978).
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The 67-story Cities Service Building. 70 Pine Street between Pine, Cedar and Pearl streets. Clinton & Russell, 1931-1932.
View looking northwest of the Cities Service tower shortly before its completion. Early, 1932. The Bank of Manhattan (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930) tower are ar left, and the Woolworth Building (Cass Gilbert, 1913) are at right, background.
Photo: Unknown.
Source: "New York Illustrated. Latest Edition" (New York. Manhattan Post Card Publishing Co. 1933).
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Aerial view looking northwest of Lower Manhattan’s Financial District skyscrapers. Early 1960.
The modern and new 64-story One Chase Manhattan Plaza (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1961) at center, and 41-story 80 Pine Street Building (Emery Roth & Sons, 1960), at right, are seen under construction. Surrounding them can be seen the old Art Deco Wall Street area towers with the 50-story Irving Trust (Voorhees, Gmelin & Walker, 1931), 57-story City Bank Farmers Trust (Cross & Cross, 1931) and 71-story 40 Wall Street (Henry Craig Severance-Yasuo Matsui, 1930) towers at left. The 67-story Cities Service Building (Clinton & Russell, 1932) are at right.
Photo: U.S. Steel.
Source: Architectural Record, April 1961.
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