This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.
This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.
Das neue Bikeparking ist eine zukunftsweisende Antwort auf die Mobilitätswende und den steigenden Bedarf an Fahrradinfrastruktur in Berlin. Als Teil der Umbaumaßnahmen des Centers bietet es nicht nur eine praktische Funktion für den Arbeitsweg mit dem Rad, sondern integriert sich auch nahtlos in das umliegende Angebot aus Entertainment, Kulinarik und Büroflächen. Damit verbindet es den Regional- und S-Bahnhof Potsdamer Platz mit dem Forum im Center und richtet sich an Mieter:innen sowie Besucher:innen. Von Citybikes und Rennrädern über Lastenräder bis hin zu E-Bikes – hier findet mit 280 Stellplätzen jedes Rad seinen Platz.
Leider sehr wenig genutzt.
This street-level view of Osaka pulses with after-hours life. Caught just outside a busy FamilyMart on a neon-splashed stretch of downtown, the photo channels the distinct sensory rhythm of urban Japan—fast-paced, layered, and quietly orderly. A dense cluster of bicycles dominates the foreground, corralled into a sleek urban rack system, surrounded by cones, railings, and the soft chaos of nighttime logistics.
To the right, glowing vertical signage crawls up the faces of sleek mid-rise buildings, stacked with ramen joints, dental clinics, and karaoke spots. A blue FamilyMart glow anchors the scene in familiarity, while the distant red of a Bic Camera sign hints at late-night consumerism. It’s Osaka in high contrast: corporate signage, street food dreams, and the low-key hum of traffic from the nearby elevated expressway.
The presence of a “No Bicycle Parking” sign—ironically placed in front of a massive row of bikes—adds a layer of lived-in contradiction that’s so distinctly Japanese: rules meet reality, and somehow, it still works.
The image feels like a paused frame from a travel documentary—visually rich but grounded in the ordinary. This isn’t a tourist postcard. It’s what Osaka actually feels like at street level: layered, luminous, and full of motion.