Oxford
64 galleries
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9 imagesThe Radcliffe Camera, Oxford, England, designed by James Gibbs in the English Palladian style and built in 1737-1749 to house the Radcliffe Science Library.
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13 imagesImages of Florey Building, Queens College, Oxford University, Designed by James Stirling Architect, Completed 1966
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5 imagesArchitectural Photography of the Bridge of Sighs, or Hertford Bridge in Oxford a pedestrian bridge linking together the Old and New Quadrangles of Hertford College. Built 1913. Architect: Sir Thomas Jackson
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2 imagesAerial view of the centre of Oxford, which has a population of 165,000. Many of the buildings are part of Oxford University, the oldest university in the Englishspeaking.world. They are recognisable by the golden Cotswold limestone and private Quads (an abbreviation of quadrangle), used to describe a college court completely surrounded by buildings and approached through a gateway. Oxford, UK, 2004
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12 imagesMagdalen Great Tower is a bell tower in Oxford, England. It is one of the oldest parts of Magdalen College, Oxford, situated directly in the High Street. Built of stone from 1492, when the foundation stone was laid,[1] its bells hung ready for use in 1505, and completed by 1509, it is an important element of the Oxford skyline. At 144 feet (44 m) high to the top of its pinnacles, it is the tallest building in Oxford. It dominates the eastern entrance to the city, towering overMagdalen Bridge and with good views from the Botanic Garden opposite.
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33 imagesOxford University Museum, Oxford University Museum of Natural History, John Ruskin, Victorian, Architecture, Oxford, England, Thomas Newenham Deane, Benjamin Woodward, neo-Gothic, Museum
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5 imagesOxford Shark. Fibreglass shark sculpture erected in 1986, on the 41st anniversary of the dropping of the first atomic bomb. Created by sculptor John Buckley for Bill Heine, who lives in the house. Neighbours tried to force Heine to remove the shark, but after an appeal to the UK's Secretary of State for the Environment, it was allowed to remain. Oxford, England, 2009
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2 imagesArchitectural Photography of All Souls College, North Quadrangle, Oxford Built by 1716-34 by Architect: Nicholas Hawksmoor
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4 galleries
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9 imagesColoured glass fins of the New Oxford University Biochemistry Building, by Hawkins Brown frame views in and out of the building, creating complex and subtle patterns of colour as the light changes. According to the architects the fins reflect the rich red, terracotta, orange, brown and purple of the surrounding buildings though to me they have a refreshingly assertive identity of their own. The brief from the client was for a creative, interactive building that reflected the changing nature of scientific investigation. New Biochemistry was designed to be a transparent building which allowed views directly into the laboratories. Positioning the labs on the outside of the building allowed the write-up areas to become part of the homely social atrium area.
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82 imagesStock images of Oxford Architecture and Oxford University for purchase as rights managed, license, personal use download or as a print.
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7 galleries
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8 galleries
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77 imagesRestoration and servery Architect: Original Field of Architecture, 2019 Architect: William Butterfield, 1878
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