Print this page or go back to standard view.
LBY4550903: Maison de la Radio, 116 avenue du President Kennedy, Paris 16. Architecture by Henry Bernard, 1953-1963. The construction was decided by General de Gaulle as “the sign of the organization, concentration and cohesion” of radio and television., Bernard, Henry (1912-1994) / Bridgeman Images
MDA4551956: The headquarters of the Caisse d'Epargne, Avenue Willy Brandt, Euralille in Lille, Nord, Nord pas de Calais (Nord-Pas-de-Calais), France. Architecture by Michel Gutmann, Dusapin and Leclercq Architectes, 2008. Photography 15/07/2008, Dusapin, Fabrice (b.1954) & Leclercq, Francois (b.1953) / Bridgeman Images
MDA4552007: The headquarters of the Caisse d'Epargne, Avenue Willy Brandt, Euralille in Lille, Nord, Nord pas de Calais (Nord-Pas-de-Calais), France. Architecture by Michel Gutmann, Dusapin and Leclercq Architectes, 2008. Photography 15/07/2008, Dusapin, Fabrice (b.1954) & Leclercq, Francois (b.1953) / Bridgeman Images
PIX4613272: Spiral galaxy IC 391 in the Giraffe - Spiral galaxy IC 391 in Camelopardalis - Spiral galaxy IC 391 located about 80 million years ago - light in the constellation Giraffe. Image obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). IC 391 lies about 80 million light - years away in the constellation of Camelopardalis (the Giraffe) in the far northern part of the sky. The British amateur observer William Denning discovered it in the late nineteenth century, and described it as faint, small and round. Image taken with the Hubble space Telescope (HST) / Bridgeman Images
PIX4613366: The Small Magellanic Cloud - The Small Magellanic Cloud - The Small Magellanic Cloud galaxy is about 210,000 light years away from Earth in the southern constellation of Toucan. It's one of the closest galaxies of the Lactee Way. Two globular clusters are visible in this image, on the left the Toucan cluster, at the bottom of the galaxy the NGC 362 cluster. The Small Magellanic Cloud is a dwarf irregular galaxy located at a distance of about 210,000 light years; it is one of the Milky Way's nearest neighbors. Two globular clusters are visible: at left NGC 104, better known as 47 Tucanae, at the bottom NGC 362 / Bridgeman Images