steampunktendencies:

Golden Reel, World’s First Figure-8 Ferris Wheel at Studio City, Macau

Studio City Macau features an Art Deco design inspired by two asteroids shooting through a Gotham City building. The resort was designed by Goddard Group, a Los Angeles-based entertainment design firm also responsible for the design of Cotai’s Galaxy Macau Resort.

The resort’s two hotel towers (The Star Tower and the Celebrity Tower) are connected by the Golden Reel, the world’s first figure-8 ferris wheel. Boarding at the hotel’s 23rd floor, the wheel features 17 cabins holding up to 10 passengers each. The design was developed by the Goddard Group, and the hardware was manufactured by Liechtenstein’s Intamin Amusement Rides.

The 15-minute ride will take guests to a height of 130 meters.

Another attraction is Batman Dark Flight, a flying theater attraction. (Wikipedia)


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melodyandviolence:

Castle Of The Dead by 

Cameron Ba✝hory

(The castle was built in 1866 by the English architect Edward Milner under commission from the Liedekerke-De Beaufort family, who had left their previous home, Vêves Castle, during the French Revolution. However, Milner died before the castle was finished. Construction was completed in 1907 after the clock tower was erected.Their descendants remained in occupation until World War II. A portion of the Battle of the Bulge took place on the property, and it was during that time, the castle was occupied by the Nazis.In 1950, Miranda Castle was renamed “Château de Noisy” when it was taken over by the National Railway Company of Belgium as an orphanage and also a holiday camp for sickly children. It lasted as a children’s camp until the late 1970s.)

steampunktendencies:

The world first kinetic steampunk bar (Video)

Zoly Zelenyak from The 6th-Sense Interiors just sent us their latest steampunk creative interior design:  “The Enigma cafe” is located at Iuliu Maniu, Nr 12, Cluj-Napoca, Romania. 

likeafieldmouse:

Jan Kempenaers – Spomenik: The End of History (2006-9)

There are hundreds of these spomeniks (monuments) scattered throughout villages and rural landscapes in the former Yugoslavia.

“Le Corbusier’s concept of ‘radiant city’ may never have gained much traction in the real world, but some of its tropes, especially the idea of enveloping greenspace, can be found in the Spomenik sites. Some of these structures appear to be actual buildings, though devoid of viable internal living spaces. Others resemble futuristic housing along the lines of a ‘tomorrowland’.”