Showing posts with label Buildings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buildings. Show all posts

Monday, September 11, 2017

Remembering 9/11

Re-post
The 9/11…
Remembering this day that was 16 years ago at the World Trade Center
The National September 11 Memorial & Museum, New York City
(NEW YORK CITY Blog Series) 









Wednesday, April 12, 2017

THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ARTS


THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ARTS
National Historic Landmark
(NEW YORK CITY Blog Series)
 
If you love visiting museums and appreciate its arts, then The Metropolitan Museum of Art at 1000 5th Avenue could be one of your best bet around New York City.  My last visit made me in awe; the façade alone is already a treat.  The wide stairways at the entrance provide a good sitting area for the tired and hungry.  There are some Snapple and Hotdogs sellers out front!














Wednesday, March 5, 2014

DOHA: Work In Progress


If you happen to be in Doha at one point, here are some of the glimpse pictures of what has been going in Qatar lately as the country is rushing for huge constructions around ahead of 2022 World Cup.

Big changes had happened in the face of Doha so quickly that longtime resident only to look back at the memories of the past.











Sunday, June 23, 2013

Al Zubarah joins UNESCO World Heritage List

        I just thought that this article deserve a second look from the international and local tourists alike.  I have been living here in Qatar for the last eighteen years and never been in this place.  I’ll wait for the winter season as the scorching hot desert temperature is very unforgiving at this time of the year. Surely, I will not leave any stone unturned when I explore this new world heritage site!

The Al Zubarah Fort - Qatar

DOHA: Al Zubarah Archeological Site, a traditional pearl fishing town located on the north-western coast of Qatar, has entered the Unesco World Heritage List.


It is the first Qatari site to be included in the international register joining the 911 natural and cultural properties worldwide. The decision was announced yesterday at the 37th session of the World Heritage Committee conference in Cambodia.

Al Zubarah is one of the largest and best preserved examples of an 18th-19th century traditional pearl fishing and merchant towns in the Gulf. A coastal town that is now abandoned, Al Zubarah is situated about 100 km north-west of Doha. Founded in the mid-18th century, the town developed into a centre for pearl fishing and international trade, and rose to become the country’s largest and most important settlement. The town was abandoned by the mid-20th century. Al Zubarah Archaeological Site covers an area of 60 hectares with remains of houses, mosques, large fortified buildings and a market.

Entry to the Unesco World Heritage List is a unique opportunity for the country to build local and international awareness for the site and the values of the World Heritage Convention. Other sites that hold this title include the Yellowstone Natural Park in the US and the Pyramids of Giza in Egypt.

Sheikh Hassan bin Mohamed bin Ali Al Thani, vice chairman of the Board of Trustees of Qatar Museums Authority (QMA), who was present at the Unesco event said the decision follows the “enormous effort by Qatar in ensuring the preservation and conservation of this historical site, leading it to be internationally recognised for its human legacy, specially that Al Zubarah is significant to many of Gulf nationals”.

Al Zubarah was first reported as an archaeological site by a Danish-led team of archaeologists in the 1950s, and then excavated by Danish and Qatari teams.

As a result of the studies conducted at the site, a large number of archaeological finds from the 18th-19th centuries are now part of the National Museum of Qatar’s (NMoQ) permanent collection, and will be featured in the museum galleries, QMA said yesterday. - The Peninsula




Tuesday, March 26, 2013

HAMAD INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT - Doha, Qatar


Bird's Eye View of the New HAMAD INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

Hamad International Airport – My “Trial Passenger” Experience

Travelers from around the world will soon experience the “State of the Art” airport facility in Doha as the new airport is about to unfold to the whole world very soon.  The New Doha International Airport (NDIA) or will soon be known to the public as the HAMAD INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT (HIA) will start its commercial flight this April.  The HIA is situated within next to the city of Doha with breathtaking road scenery toward the departure area, and has the longest runway second in the world today.

As any other airport, HIA need to do some test to see its preparedness, so public testing comes to the rescue.  The HIA management invited thousands of people from the member of the public to participate in its testing.  Yours truly has been invited as one of those lucky ones to experience it first.  So, to be able to do so, I leave from work for a day just to be in this historic occasion, so with most others I supposed as it was done on a Monday.

We came as early as 8:30am till around 1pm on the 18th of March 2013.  As it was said at the orientation, we acted as normal passengers undergone the usual a traveler does in an airport, so does with the member of the official airport staff.  This process includes the departure and arrival kind of thing as usual.  I got the Qatar Airways Cairo flight while some of my colleagues got the Sharjah flight.  We cannot get so excited with that one anyway as there is no real plane to embark with to complete the journey, that was sad.  Not to mention that safety equipment they made us wear and that uncomfortable heavy helmet that literally ruined our hair!

After our very exhausting ordeal with the whole process, we finally come into the day’s end.  It was fun and unique experience though.  Only, the usual waiting was really killing as they also pretended that the flight is delayed and there is no other way but to wait.  Having to say all that, of course, we are so anticipating for a sumptuous meal right after, and to our dismay the food was of no special, nothing but a sandwich, a cupcake, some dates and beverage of no other choice… small bottled water!  I was expecting of at least a variety of beverages to quench our thirst after they laid us under the sun at the tarmac during that fire drill stage.  No doubt, their preparation in terms of security preparedness is excellent but they failed us on that entertainment value of the experience. 

Here are some of the limited photos we able to get as there is no picture taking allowed.  We just tried to take some pictures of the beautiful structure to our delight!


The beautiful roads and bridges toward the new airport





 at the orientation arrival lounge

at the fire drill


at arrival area.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Statue Pétrifié 2: Victoria Memorial, LONDON, UK


I wonder why I have this thing for statues; I just love taking photos beside them or literally on them!  Maybe, because each statue has its own interesting historical and geographical significance from the past and it tells about the place where it stands.  Once in a while I publish some of those significant monument or statue from places where I went, in a portion I called in French, “Statue Pétrifié” or Petrified Statue in English.   Please see some photos further below.   




 The Victoria Memorial is a statue in front of Buckingham Palace in London, placed at the centre of The Queen's Gardens.


The golden statue on top is of Queen Victoria facing north-eastward.



Thursday, February 10, 2011

ASIAN CUP Qatar 2011: A forgettable Experience?



 
The unused ticket


The recently concluded AFC Asian Cup 2011 – Doha a dismay to some fans, specially those who denied of entry to the stadium even they got tickets, like myself and other disappointed friends.  Much to the disbeliefs of other fans who did the effort of wearing special costumes for the match with the likes of Australia and Japan’s supporters…not to say they were really true blooded Aussies and Japs.

The Superbowl fans in the US has the recent same experience.
Down hereafter you can find article from the Associated Press (AP), news regarding the awful event, after real action photos I have taken during that forgettable evening!

Also, see some Doha spots in photos around the city along with the action packed football night!

























 
One of the many future stadium being readied in Qatar for the 2022 World Cup




DOHA, Qatar (AP) — Organizers of the Asian Cup acknowledged Sunday that as many as 3,000 fans were denied entry to the final match but insisted that many did not have tickets and those that did should have come earlier.

Scenes of angry spectators holding their tickets outside the stadium during the final between Australia and Japan marred what otherwise had been a successfully organized tournament for Qatar, in its first big rehearsal for the 2022 World Cup.

Jassim al-Rumaihi, operations director at the tournament, said the gates were closed five minutes after the match started and never opened again. The tight security was in place because members of the emirate's royal family were attending the match, he said. Japan won 1-0 after extra time.

"We feel sorry for people without a ticket. I hope it will not give a bad impression of tournament in general," Al-Rumaihi said. "We were hoping we wouldn't have something like this happen but it happened and we will try to solve it. You can't satisfy everyone."

Al-Rumaihi said the decision to the close the gates was made by the security detail for the royal family and was not something organizers could control. But he did criticize many of the fans for showing up at the last minute — despite what he said were repeated warnings in the media to arrive to the final early. He also denied reports that organizers let in fans early without tickets to fill the stadium.

"Some of the people came late and had tickets. Our friend who is doctor at a university came to the gate and said 'Is it possible to get in?' We told him no you came late. He left," Al-Rumaihi said. "Time is very important guys. If you are traveling, you have go to the airport two hours early."

Witnesses — many posting videos and photos of the angry crowd on Twitter and Facebook — described a chaotic scene in which thousands of fans massed behind a fence that encircled the 40,000-seat Khalif Stadium. Some fans who had come from as far away as Australia complained that baton-wielding police roughly pushed the crowd and ordered them to leave because the stadium was sold out, although there were empty seats inside.

Fights reportedly broke out as fans tried to push their way through the gates.

"We came from another country to watch our team but no one is talking to us," said Hedo Nawashimi, a 42-year-old Japanese national who had flown over from Dubai and had tickets. "This is very bad. It is not right to keep us outside. Is that the way to organize Asian Cup? Is that a way to organize a final match?"

When a reporter approached, the crowd of European, South Asian and Gulf Arab fans all held up their tickets, including one woman who had eight. They talked of crowds that reached 5,000 all barred from entering and then spending the next several hours going from gate to gate in an unsuccessful bid to gain entry.

"My father's inside and I can't get to him," said A.J. Smith, a 15-year English fan living in Doha. "There are empty seats everywhere. You can just look at the television for proof. It's not fair."

Sameh Abu Assi, a 33-year-old Saudi national standing nearby, said he had driven 1,500 kilometers (932 miles) from Saudi Arabia to attend the match and spent more than $2,000 on hotels and tickets.

"We should be allowed to enter," Abu Assi said. "How do they expect to organize the 2022 World Cup? They can't even organize this."

After the match, fans also complained they were prevented for an about an hour from leaving the stadium until after a closing ceremony featuring a fireworks show.

Al-Rumaihi said organizers would consider issuing refunds to ticket holders who couldn't get into the match after talking with the Asian Football Confederation.