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  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-19.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-18.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-17.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-15.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-13.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-12.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-11.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-10.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-09.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-06.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-04.jpg
  • Clean water flows into the Thames from the northern outfall of Thames Water's, Beckton Sewage Treatment Works. Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners is treated on site every day. Barking Creek Tidal Barrier resembling a giant guillotine was  built over a period of four years, being completed in 1983. It is about 60 metres high, and was needed to be this size to allow shipping to reach the Town Quay in Barking further upstream. The barrier crosses the Barking Creek reach of the River Roding, at its confluence with the River Thames.
    ThamesWater_QL-23.tif
  • Clean water flows into the Thames from the northern outfall of Thames Water's, Beckton Sewage Treatment Works. Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners is treated on site every day. Barking Creek Tidal Barrier resembling a giant guillotine was  built over a period of four years, being completed in 1983. It is about 60 metres high, and was needed to be this size to allow shipping to reach the Town Quay in Barking further upstream. The barrier crosses the Barking Creek reach of the River Roding, at its confluence with the River Thames.
    ThamesWater_QL-22.tif
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-16.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-14.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-08.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-07.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-05.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-03.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-02.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-01.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-19.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-18.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-16.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-15.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-14.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-13.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-09.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-08.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-05.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-02.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-01.jpg
  • A Thames water executive points out the northern outfall sewer that connects Abbey Mills pumping station to Beckton Sewage Treatment Works. The plan was produced by London City Council and shows the main sewers in blue, the intercepting sewers in red and the storm relief sewers in green. The system was designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858.
    ThamesWater_QL-09.tif
  • A Thames water executive in Wick lane sewers,  part of the Northern outfall designed by Joseph Bazalgette after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners passes through here every day.
    ThamesWater_QL-14.tif
  • A Thames water executive in Wick lane sewers,  part of the Northern outfall designed by Joseph Bazalgette after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners passes through here every day.
    ThamesWater_QL-12.tif
  • Thames Water executives in the Interior of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A) examining the  modern vertical motors that replaced the original steam beam engine..Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-10.tif
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-17.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-12.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-11.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-10.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-07.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-06.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-04.jpg
  • SS Great Britain passenger steamship designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1843, in the Great Western Dockyard in which she had been built, Bristol, UK. Extensive conservation work began which culminated in the installation of a glass plate across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with two dehumidifiers, keeping the space beneath at 22% relative humidity, sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This was completed, the ship was "re-launched" in July 2005, and visitor access to the dry dock was restored.
    SS_Great_Britain_Bristol_Brunel-03.jpg
  • Melt water pools and jagged peaks on the Greenland Ice cap during a British mountaineering expedition to Knud Rasmussens Land, East Greenland, Arctic, 2006.
    Greenland-15.tif
  • Memorial to Sir William Duff, governer of New South Wales. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • Cross memorial in front of graves. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • Flower bud above a stream in the cloud forest of the Peruvian Andes
    IOH_Flora_QL-11.tif
  • Sedimentation tanks and treatment buildings: a tiny part of the massive complex at Beckton Sewage Treatment Works which treats Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners every day.
    ThamesWater_QL-24.tif
  • Interior of the new New Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station F) designed by Allies and Morrison. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-19.tif
  • A climbing out of Wick lane sewers,  part of the Northern outfall designed by Joseph Bazalgette after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners passes through here every day.
    ThamesWater_QL-15.tif
  • Details of restored metalwork by Benham & Froud on a door of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A). Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-06.tif
  • Remains of one of two large minaret-like chimneys of Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A) that once towered over the engine house leading to the name "The Mosque in the Swamp"  in Victorian times. In WWII the towers were dismantled as their collapse during a bombing raid might damage the engine house. Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-05.tif
  • Details of restored metalwork by Benham & Froud on a door of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A). The cupola can be seen through the window which assisted in providing ventilation for the original steam beam engines. The stone carving shows examples of local flora. Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-04.tif
  • Interior of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A) showing wrought iron metalwork and modern vertical motors that replaced the original steam beam engine..Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-01.tif
  • The remains of one of two Moorish style chimneys at Abbey Mills pumping.station which gave the building a mosque-like appearance. They have not been used.since steam power was replaced by electric motors in 1933. They were demolished.during WWII because they were a landmark for German bombers on raids over the.London docks. London, UK, 2003
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Broken column memorial of Edward & Florence Grainuger from injuries received in the late Redfern Railway Accident 1894. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • Broken column memorial of John & Caroline Starkey. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • Sedimentation tanks and treatment buildings: a tiny part of the massive complex at Beckton Sewage Treatment Works which treats Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners every day.
    ThamesWater_QL-25.tif
  • Interior of the new New Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station F) designed by Allies and Morrison. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-21.tif
  • Control room of the new New Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station F) designed by Allies and Morrison. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-20.tif
  • Exterior detail of the new New Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station F) designed by Allies and Morrison. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-18.tif
  • Exterior of the new New Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station F) designed by Allies and Morrison. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-17.tif
  • High speed pump of the type used in the new New Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station F) designed by Allies and Morrison. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-16.tif
  • Two workers standing in Wick lane sewers,  part of the Northern outfall designed by Joseph Bazalgette after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners passes through here every day.
    ThamesWater_QL-13.tif
  • A man being lowered into Wick lane sewers,  part of the Northern outfall designed by Joseph Bazalgette after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. Sewage from 3.4 million Londoners passes through here every day.
    ThamesWater_QL-11.tif
  • The original cast iron sewage pipes of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A). Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-08.tif
  • The original cast iron sewage pipes of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A). Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-07.tif
  • Looking into the cupola in the centre of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A) which assisted in providing ventilation for the original steam beam engines. Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-03.tif
  • Interior of the old Abbey Mills Pumping Station (Station A) showing wrought iron metalwork and modern vertical motors that replaced the original steam beam engine..Located in Abbey Lane, London E15, the building is a sewerage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver, it was built between 1865 and 1868 after an outbreak of cholera in 1853 and "The Big Stink" of 1858. It was designed in a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as The Cathedral of Sewage. The pumps raise the sewage in the London sewerage system between the two Low Level Sewers and the Northern Outfall Sewer, which was built in the 1860s to carry the increasing amount of sewage produced in London away from the centre of the city.
    ThamesWater_QL-02.tif
  • A man stands on the roof of vila dos pescadores favela, in front of state-built housing blocks, Cubatão
    Cubatao_QL-70.tif
  • People swimming in the weir by Fosfertil fertilser factory, Cubatão
    Cubatao_QL-67.tif
  • Robério gives his horse  a drink, Cubatão
    Cubatao_QL-56.tif
  • Tailani standing in the river after swimming in Cubatão
    Cubatao_QL-09.tif
  • Robéiro washes his horse in Rio Moji, Cubatão
    Cubatao_QL-02.tif
  • Investcorp Building, Middle East Centre<br />
St Anthony's College, Oxford University. Completed May 2015<br />
<br />
Architects: Zaha Hadid Architects. Structural Engineer: AKTII. M & E Engineer: Max Fordham. Façade Supplier: Frener + Reifer. Façade Consultants: Arup Façade Engineering. Contractor: BAM
    Investcorp-Middle-East-Oxford-Zaha-Q...jpg
  • Investcorp Building, Middle East Centre<br />
St Anthony's College, Oxford University. Completed May 2015<br />
<br />
Architects: Zaha Hadid Architects. Structural Engineer: AKTII. M & E Engineer: Max Fordham. Façade Supplier: Frener + Reifer. Façade Consultants: Arup Façade Engineering. Contractor: BAM
    Investcorp-Middle-East-Oxford-Zaha-Q...jpg
  • Investcorp Building, Middle East Centre<br />
St Anthony's College, Oxford University. Completed May 2015<br />
<br />
Architects: Zaha Hadid Architects. Structural Engineer: AKTII. M & E Engineer: Max Fordham. Façade Supplier: Frener + Reifer. Façade Consultants: Arup Façade Engineering. Contractor: BAM
    Investcorp-Middle-East-Oxford-Zaha-Q...jpg
  • Investcorp Building, Middle East Centre<br />
St Anthony's College, Oxford University. Completed May 2015<br />
<br />
Architects: Zaha Hadid Architects. Structural Engineer: AKTII. M & E Engineer: Max Fordham. Façade Supplier: Frener + Reifer. Façade Consultants: Arup Façade Engineering. Contractor: BAM
    Investcorp-Middle-East-Oxford-Zaha-Q...jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-68.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-58.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-59.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-50.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-47.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-42.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-41.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-35.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-36.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-32.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-29.jpg
  • Water End House, Hertfordshire, 2017. Architect: Kirkland Fraser Moor.
    Water-End-KFM-QJEL-27.jpg
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