Black & White

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    Fishing Cone

    $500.00$5,500.00
    The fishing cone catches the last sunlight of the day in Yellowstone Park
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    Flying Saucer

    $350.00$5,000.00
    Space needle peaking out behind the EMP
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    Garrapata Bridge

    $1,000.00$5,000.00
    Route 1 snakes through Garrapata Park
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    Gehry under clouds

    $500.00$5,500.00
    Edge of a Gehry under a unique cloud formation
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    Geometries of Christ

    $350.00$3,000.00
    A Greek church - sunlit
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    Golden Tree

    $350.00$5,000.00
    This turning maple is singing a different tune. The Japanese garden is a statement if harmony between man and nature.
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    Gorge Dam

    $500.00$5,500.00
    The Upper Skagit Indian tribe, which has lived along the Skagit River for at least 8,400 years wants Seattle to remove the Gorge Dam, the lowest of the three dams on the Skagit, and return the river to the section the city de-watered. The tribe says Seattle’s century of hydroelectric work on the Skagit has contributed to a sharp drop in river’s salmon runs, which has ripple effects across the region. The Skagit is the last American river outside of Alaska still home to all five species of wild salmon, although the fish stocks are dwindling: two species are now listed under the Endangered Species Act and a nearby resident killer whale population, which depends on the Skagit River’s salmon for survival, is listed as endangered.
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    Gorge Dam II

    $500.00$5,500.00
    BACK TO CONCRETE PORTFOLIO Gorge Dam under clouds and lines
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    Gorge Dam III

    $500.00$5,500.00
    BACK TO CONCRETE PORTFOLIO Gorge Dam - under clouds
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    Gorge Powerhouse

    $500.00$5,500.00
    Gorge Powerhouse built in 1924 is fed by the Gorge Dam on the Skagit river. The Upper Skagit Indian tribe, which has lived along the Skagit River for at least 8,400 years wants Seattle to remove the Gorge Dam, the lowest of the three dams on the Skagit, and return the river to the section the city de-watered. The tribe says Seattle’s century of hydroelectric work on the Skagit has contributed to a sharp drop in river’s salmon runs, which has ripple effects across the region. The Skagit is the last American river outside of Alaska still home to all five species of wild salmon, although the fish stocks are dwindling: two species are now listed under the Endangered Species Act and a nearby resident killer whale population, which depends on the Skagit River’s salmon for survival, is listed as endangered.
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    Grand Coulee Powerhouse

    $500.00$5,500.00
    BACK TO CONCRETE PORTFOLIO The 6,809MW Grand Coulee hydropower facility located on the Columbia River in Washington, is by far and away the biggest power station in the US. The plant is owned and operated by the US Bureau of Reclamation and has been in operation since 1941, it produced 26.46TWh of electricity in 2012. The hydroelectric project consists of three power plants and a concrete gravity dam 168m high and 1,592m long. The first two power plants comprise of 18 Francis turbines rated at 125MW and three 10MW additional units, commissioned between 1941 and 1950. The third power plant consists of three 805MW units and three 600MW units commissioned between 1975 and 1980. In addition, the power station operates six peak generators totaling 314MW capacity.
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    Grazing Area at the Asylum

    $350.00$5,000.00
    A contained area for grazing at the Northern Asylum mental institution
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