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The Fram Museum (Norwegian: Frammuseet) is a museum telling the story of Norwegian polar exploration. It is located on the peninsula of Bygdøy in Oslo, Norway. [1] Fram Museum is in an area with several other museums including the Kon-Tiki Museum, the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History, the Viking Ship Museum and the Norwegian Maritime Museum.
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The 'Detroit Non-Motorized Master Plan' was also published which proposed 400 miles (640 km) of bike lanes primarily through road diets. [19] The Rosa Parks bus terminal opened. In 2010, the new 407-foot (124 m)-long Bagley Avenue Pedestrian Bridge re-connected Mexicantown bridging both I-75 and I-96. [20]
It was designed and built by the Scottish-Norwegian shipwright Colin Archer for Fridtjof Nansen's 1893 Arctic expedition in which the plan was to freeze Fram into the Arctic ice sheet and float with it over the North Pole. Fram is preserved as a museum ship at the Fram Museum in Oslo, Norway.
Fram Museum. All expenses were borne by the Fram privateers: each contributed one third of the total. The total cost of the expedition was about 220,000 krones (12,000 pound sterling). [8] [Note 1] Sverdrup wrote almost nothing about the equipment of the expedition, except to say that everything was done as well as possible. Most of the ...
Old Redford Meijer (Northwest Detroit) Detroit Metro Airport Evans Terminal 23.0 miles (37.0 km) 60 75 75 Only services Evans Terminal at Metro Airport 305: Grand River: Wixom Meijer 16.1 miles (25.9 km) 60 60 60 375: Telegraph - Old Redford/Pontiac: Amazon Pontiac: 24.4 miles (39.3 km) 60 60 -Overlaps with 275 from 7 Mile to 12 Mile 405 ...
On Detroit’s west side, there’s a little house that transformed American culture and the music world at large. And so the Motown Museum has become a go-to destination for visitors from across ...
Augustus Woodward's plan for the city following 1805 fire. Detroit, settled in 1701, is one of the oldest cities in the Midwest. It experienced a disastrous fire in 1805 which nearly destroyed the city, leaving little present-day evidence of old Detroit save a few east-side streets named for early French settlers, their ancestors, and some pear trees which were believed to have been planted by ...