Free Photos (Public Domain Photos),stock Photos, Clipart, images, and Vectors

A large Public Domain photo repository with high resolution free photos and vectors. All copyright free stock photos and royalty free photos, and CC0 Photos. 27000 free and public domain photos, images, clipart, pics and vectors and counting. To view/download a photo in high resolution, please click on the image.

Free Photos (Public Domain Photos),stock Photos, Clipart, images, and Vectors

A large Public Domain photo repository with high resolution free photos and vectors. All copyright free stock photos and royalty free photos, and CC0 Photos. 27000 free and public domain photos, images, clipart, pics and vectors and counting. To view/download a photo in high resolution, please click on the image.


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Oslo building in Barcode district Norway Unique linear design and glass facade. Design inspiration, renovation and unique character. Use of shapes, boxes, angles. Oslo’s Barcode District is a bold, linear, contemporary manifesto in steel, glass, and ambition, stretching beside the fjord like a deliberate architectural sentence. This dense, vertical ensemble of high-rise structures earned its name from the narrow, alternating towers that resemble a barcode—rhythmic, striated, regimented, yet surprisingly poetic. Each building stands slender, rectilinear, and meticulously proportioned, separated by calibrated voids that allow light, air, and sightlines to permeate the urban fabric.

Architecturally, the district is unapologetically modernist and post-industrial, defined by curtain walls, glazed façades, cantilevered volumes, expressed structural frames, and modular grids. The materials are tactile and refined: brushed aluminum, reflective glass, exposed concrete, polished stone, and dark steel accents. These surfaces feel cool, austere, minimalist, and disciplined, yet also luminous, elegant, and quietly luxurious. The towers rise with confident verticality, their fenestration precise, repetitive, and deliberate, creating a measured skyline that feels curated rather than chaotic.

What makes Barcode inspiring is its orchestration of contrast. It is dense yet permeable, monumental yet human-scaled at street level. Pedestrian passages carve through the massing, forming intimate urban canyons lined with cafés, offices, libraries, and cultural institutions. The ground plane is activated, porous, and animated, while the upper levels remain serene, efficient, and contemplative. This layered urbanism demonstrates sophisticated planning, adaptive reuse, and transit-oriented design, integrating seamlessly with Oslo Central Station.

The district engages its context with Scandinavian restraint. It does not shout; it composes. Reflections of sky, water, and weather ripple across façades.
Great close-up view of the Greenwich Prime Meridian marked by the brass strip on the ground with several well known capital cities.
Abstract vector seamless background pattern with font consisting of geometric shapes with grunge texture, shells, trilobites, ammonites on paleontology theme. Wallpaper, ceramic tiles, fabric, design.
The Saraiva Column, an obelisk in Carrara marble, a tribute to Councilor José Antônio Saraiva, in Praça da Bandeira, in the city of Teresina, capital of the state of Piauí, northeastern Brazil
Vector Art of Money Tree in Ceramic Pot with Green Cash and Coins
Des Moines, Iowa, USA with the Capitol Building at dawn.