Kirkwood - Structures

Structures

  • Kirkwood (Amtrak station), railroad station in the US state of Missouri
  • Kirkwood Building, historic building (1920) in Kansas City, in the US state of Missouri
  • Kirkwood Community College, post-secondary public educational institution in Cedar Rapids, in the US state of Iowa
  • Kirkwood (Eutaw, Alabama), historic house in Eutaw, in the US state of Alabama
  • Hotel Kirkwood, historic structure in Des Moines, in the US state of Iowa
  • Kirkwood High School, secondary public school in Kirkwood, Missouri
  • Kirkwood Hospice, palliative-care facility in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
  • Joseph Kirkwood House, historic dwelling in Bridgeport, in the US state of Ohio
  • Kirkwood/La Salle Station, railroad station in San Francisco, in the US state of California
  • Kirkwood Observatory, astronomical observatory near Bloomingon, in the US state of Indiana
  • Kirkwood railway station, railway station in Coatbridge, Scotland

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Famous quotes containing the word structures:

    The philosopher believes that the value of his philosophy lies in its totality, in its structure: posterity discovers it in the stones with which he built and with which other structures are subsequently built that are frequently better—and so, in the fact that that structure can be demolished and yet still possess value as material.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    It is clear that all verbal structures with meaning are verbal imitations of that elusive psychological and physiological process known as thought, a process stumbling through emotional entanglements, sudden irrational convictions, involuntary gleams of insight, rationalized prejudices, and blocks of panic and inertia, finally to reach a completely incommunicable intuition.
    Northrop Frye (b. 1912)

    The American who has been confined, in his own country, to the sight of buildings designed after foreign models, is surprised on entering York Minster or St. Peter’s at Rome, by the feeling that these structures are imitations also,—faint copies of an invisible archetype.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)