Tomorrowland
It is the name that I have given to this photographic collection of the City of Arts and Sciences of Valencia, 
this time at dawn.
Tomorrowland is also a science fiction, fantasy and adventure film directed by Brad Bird, co written and produced by Brad Bird and Damon Lindelof.
The film stars George Clooney, Britt Robertson, Hugh Laurie, Raffey Cassidy, Tim McGraw, Kathryn Hahn, and Keegan-Michael Key.
Walt Disney Pictures originally advertised the film under the name 1952 until the name was changed, sharing the name with Tomorrowland Park.
The film was released on May 22, 2015 in theaters and IMAX but was a box office failure.

Apart from all these arguments, which have nothing to do with my photographs, solely for the fact of being an inspiring place to enjoy a starry night or a calm sunny day, where I can accommodate my most dreamlike photographs of this futuristic urban landscape .
The complex was designed by Santiago Calatrava and Félix Candela, together with the engineers who created the structural design of the L'Oceanografic roofs Alberto Domingo and Carlos Lázaro.
It was inaugurated on June 9, 1998 with the opening of The Hemisferic.
The last major component of the City is the Agora, located between the bridge of l'Assut de l'Or and l'Oceanogràfic.

The City of Arts and Sciences is located at the end of the old Turia riverbed 
(Graden of the Turia river)
a riverbed that became a garden in the 1980s, after the river was diverted by the great flood of Valencia in 1957.
The emblematic Valencian complex was the scene of part of the filming of the Disney science fiction film, in which an intelligent and curious teenager (Robertson) and a former child prodigy (Clooney) dive into a futuristic adventure to reveal the secrets of a enigmatic place in another dimension of time, known as Tomorrowland.
In the scenes you can see the Palau de les Arts, which also appears with the mosaic that is currently under repair, and the city of the future is reminiscent of the constructions of the architect Santiago Calatrava.
L'Hemisfèric (in Spanish, El Hemisférico) was the first building open to the public in the Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències de Valencia (Spain), (City of Arts and Sciences of Valencia) on April 10, 1998.
It is a building designed by Santiago Calatrava with the analogy of an eye, which inside houses a large room with a concave screen measuring 900 m² and 24.4 m in diameter.




Thank you very much for staying to see,



Tomorrowland
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Tomorrowland

Tomorrowland, It is the name that I have given to this photographic collection of the City of Arts and Sciences of Valencia, with daylight. It is Read More

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