Woodinville, Washington is home to Woodinville Whiskey Co., a handcrafted small-batch whiskey distillery. Best friends Orlin Sorensen and Brett Carlile created it to be a place where whiskey is produced...
You will need a good warehouse if you have a surplus of products, and if you want to store them until it is time to distribute them. Setting up invent...
Image 1 of 23 from gallery of Bertolotti Vial Machinery and Office Warehouse / Estudio 2(A) DosArquitectas. Photograph by Albano García
Download this Free Photo about Young man working at a warehouse with boxes, and discover more than 50 Million Professional Stock Photos on Freepik. #freepik #photo #warehouseworker #warehousemanagement #storemanager
...Henley Meadows, Tenterden, Kent, UK, 2008 © Adam Taylor Photography 2008 *PLEASE DON'T USE MY IMAGES ELSEWHERE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION*
Caso práctico almacenaje convencional para almacén Carreras Grupo Logístico en Barcelona desarrollado por Mecalux y otros ejemplos de sistemas de almacenaje.
About This limited edition of 10, (#1/10) photograph is signed and editioned on the reverse by the artist and is unframed. It depicts the interior warehouse of the historic Brooklyn Domino Sugar Refinery, with the residue of years of sugar caked along the i-beams and floor. This is the site where the famed Kara Walker "Sugar Baby" Installation was presented. In 2013, Paul Raphaelson received permission from the developers of the Domino site to explore every square foot of the refinery just weeks before its gutting and demolition. Raphaelson is the last photographer given access to the factory. At its peak Domino was the biggest industry in Brooklyn and was responsible for 90 percent of the sugar production in the US. Domino sugar factory was its own ecosystem. For more than a hundred years workers toiled, ate bathed and drank beer (from a bar in the basement) at the enormous compound. By the 1980s Domino had lost its monopolistic grip on the market, and struggled against decades of increasing competition from similar cane refineries, the beet sugar industry, from both non-sugar sweeteners and from corn syrup. The Department of Labor reports that over the same period, manufacturing jobs in Brooklyn fell over 60%. The Domino refinery, which had once employed 4,500 laborers working around the clock, in 1919, was down to a skeleton crew of 220 workers by the time it closed in 2004.
Recent leasing activity indicates continuing momentum in the sector, says Nathan Orbin of Cushman & Wakefield.
Revel in this reclaimed former 19th century factory space, now a shrine to all things performance, event and art-related.