www.pedestrians.org Demolition of the Forest Glen Apartments in Silver Spring, Maryland. They will be replaced by new apartments. Produced by John Z Wetmore, producer of "Perils For Pedestrians".
My life and time has been redirected yet enjoyed watching and will come back a little more often for notoriety for your channel! Another good observation of progress and how some go about it!!
Thanks, John. I'm sure those 1947 apartments left a lot to be desired, but it's a shame to loose all that open space. The new plan leaves only a small part of it.
They took down a lot of big trees. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-hT4poi82kdc.html The greater the density on private lots, the more important it is to have good public parks and spaces. There is a park right across the street from the apartments, but it is a 6-lane state highway, and it is a few blocks walk to get to a signal to cross. It is exactly the type of road where most of the pedestrian fatalities take place in this county.
I use a Canon XA-11. It records in 1080P on ordinary SD cards. It has a 20x lens, which comes in handy when there is a long distance from the construction fence to where the excavators are working. It's an obsolete model. Everything has gone to 4K now. I think Canon has a 4K model similar in form to the XA-11, but I plan to keep my old camera going for a while longer.
Thank you. I currently use my phone on 1080P,. You can tell from my videos that long distance isn't really a problem for me. My dad had a Nikon D750, but the camera can only take 30 mins of video. Should I use that instead?
Here is one I shot on my phone (Pixel 3A) when my camera wasn't handy: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-RI_gCojFAGw.html 30 minutes would be a deal killer for me. If I'm filming a demolition all day, I can end up with 4 or 5 hours of video. If the phone is working well for you, stick with it.