Launch Slideshow
Przemek Kanadys
- Send private message
- Favorite photos (79)
- Share on:
Przemek Kanadys's stats
Przemek Kanadys's tags
- 2004
- 2005
- 2007
- 2009
- Annapolis
- Baltimore
- Chicago
- Dayton
- Denver
- Detroit
- Indianapolis
- Mackinac Bridge
- New York
- Niagara Falls
- Saint Louis
- Washington
- Show all tags (16)
Przemek Kanadys's groups
/user/79735/get_favorite_users?size=16&page=1&type=user
Friends
-
Loading…
Przemek Kanadys's conversations
Road in really good condition :)
more »
This is not the location for this photo. This photo is at red canyon just before you enter Bryce Canyon National Park and it is not Zion National Park.
more »
Very nice picture! :)
more »
Nice picture with coach :)
more »
Very interesting. see this photo.
more »
Greetings from the west coast of Canada. Thanks for the visit Przemek Kanadys.
more »
Excellent view! :)
more »
The Book Tower is an Italian Renaissance styled tower in Detroit, Michigan. Construction began in 1916 as an addition to the original Book Building and finished a decade later. Designed in the Academic Classicism style, it is 475 feet (145 m) and 38 stories tall (not including two basement levels), with two mechanical floors at the top encasing the green copper roof, a roofing style shared by the nearby Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel. Retail and gallery floors used to reside on the first and second floors, with businesses previously occupying the rest.
more »
This freeway, almost always referred to as "the Lodge" rather than by route number or full name, is one of several major highways in metropolitan Detroit running northwesterly from downtown to the Oakland County suburbs. The freeway portion of M-10 ends at "The Mixing Bowl" — the local name for the sprawling interchange of I-696, US-24/Telegraph Rd, the Lodge, Northwestern Hwy, Lahser Rd and Franklin Rd in Southfield. The M-10 designation continues for several miles beyond as a four to six-lane divided highway.
more »
M-10, also known as the John C. Lodge Freeway, and Northwestern Highway is a state trunkline route in the US state of Michigan. The southernmost portion follows Jefferson Avenue in downtown Detroit, and the southern terminus is at the intersection of Jefferson and Randolph Street. The northern terminus is in West Bloomfield at the intersection with Orchard Lake Road. M-10 was built in segments throughout much of the 1950s and 1960s. It carried several different names before the entire route was finally officially named The John C. Lodge Freeway in 1987. M-10 was named after John C. Lodge, an influential Detroiter and mayor of Detroit from 1927-1928.
more »