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  • From the series Pripyat: 21 Years After Chernobyl, 2007. 21 years after the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded these images of Pripyat capture a memory of three traumas: the invisible radiation, the visible looting and the gradual collapse of a ghost town. 1st place International Photography Awards, Architecture Category, 2012. Signed and editioned prints available at 59x42cm, 110x80cm & 155x110cm.
    Pripyat-20.jpg
  • From the series “Pripyat: 21 Years After Chernobyl”, 2007. 21 years after the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded these images of Pripyat capture a memory of three traumas: the invisible radiation, the visible looting and the gradual collapse of a ghost town. 1st place International Photography Awards, Architecture Category, 2012. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42 & 90x90cm.
    Children's gas masks, Pripyat Ghost ..2007
  • Children's gas masks, the silver filter elements removed by looters. They had been issued according to soviet policy in case of nuclear attack from the West.
    Pripyat_QL-09.tif
  • Stonehaven War Memorial, Black Hill, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. In WWI of the Scots who marched away to war, over 26% did not come home. This compares to 12% for the rest of the UK and Ireland.
    351-DowniePoint-Inverbervie-06.jpg
  • Peace Memorial at the former Muchalls Rail Station, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Most unusual among war memorials in actually celebrating peace as opposed to commemorating war.
    350-FindonNess-DowniePoint-07.jpg
  • PBX Switchboard I, Room 27. Comm Ops, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-14.jpg
  • Arriving at night at the innocuous-looking Guardhouse to the former cold war bunker and radar station at RAF Inverbervie, Now Bervie Brow Research Station, Bervie Brow, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-08.jpg
  • Tunnel to bunker I, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-05.jpg
  • Air Conditioning Plant Room, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-14.jpg
  • Senior Officers Accommodation, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-10.jpg
  • Blast doors III, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-08.jpg
  • Tunnel to bunker II, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-05.jpg
  • The innocuous looking Guard House to the former cold war bunker and radar station at RAF Inverbervie, Now Bervie Brow Resarch Station, Bervie Brow, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    351-DowniePoint-Inverbervie-31.jpg
  • Anchor base II, remains of a former US Navy Cold War wireless station, West Murkle, Caithness, Scotland.
    319-Thurso-Dunnet-09.jpg
  • Anchor base I, remains of a former US Navy Cold War wireless station, West Murkle, Caithness, Scotland.
    319-Thurso-Dunnet-07.jpg
  • The final resident, Nellie MacQueen, lived in the house that is now the bothy at Peanmeanach.  She finally moved on during the second world war, unable to survive on wartime rations; one candle a week was simply not enough to see her through the long nights of a Scottish winter.
    267-Peanmeanach-Beasdale-01.jpg
  • Cold War Bunker, Nare Head, Cornwall.
    060-Boswinger-PorthmellinHead-11.jpg
  • The Yomper, by sculptor Philip Jackson, Royal Marines Museum, Portsmouth, Hampshire. It is modelled on a photograph of Corporal Peter Robinson yomping to Sapper Hill during the Falklands War of 1982
    023-Emsworth-Portsmouth-10.jpg
  • Mural commemorating martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988).
    Tehran-Murals-QJEL-08.jpg
  • Mural commemorating martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988).
    Tehran-Murals-QJEL-07.jpg
  • Hardened Aircraft Shelters at Leuchars Airfield built during the cold war to protect Quick Reaction Alert aircraft, Fife, Scotland.
    357-StAndrews-Kingsbarns-09.jpg
  • Blast doors III, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-11.jpg
  • Guardhouse, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-15.jpg
  • Guardhouse and radar plinths, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-16.jpg
  • PBX Switchboard II, Room 27. Comm Ops, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-13.jpg
  • PBX Switchboard I, Room 27. Comm Ops, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-12.jpg
  • Control Room II,  RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-11.jpg
  • Blast doors II, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-07.jpg
  • Control Room I,  RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-09.jpg
  • Blast doors I, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-06.jpg
  • Tunnel to bunker I, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-04.jpg
  • Underground tunnel entrance, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-01.jpg
  • Caution Men Working on Apparatus, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-02.jpg
  • Emergency Accommodation (the entrance tunnel was converted into a dormitory for personnel in the 1980s), RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-03.jpg
  • Stonehaven War Memorial, Black Hill, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    351-DowniePoint-Inverbervie-05.jpg
  • ROC Monitoring Post (Small cold war era underground chamber from where it was intended to monitor radioactive fallout in the event of nuclear attack), Duncansby Head, Caithness, Scotland.
    322-JohnoGroats-Freswick-04.jpg
  • Mast base, remains of a former US Navy Cold War wireless station, West Murkle, Caithness, Scotland.
    319-Thurso-Dunnet-08.jpg
  • Type 24 pillbox by the River Parrett, part of the The Taunton Stop Line, a World War II defensive line in south west England. Bridgwater, Somerset.
    Somerset-Print-15.jpg
  • Type 24 pillbox by the River Parrett, part of the The Taunton Stop Line, a World War II defensive line in south west England. Bridgwater, Somerset.
    091-Bridgwater-BreanDown-02.jpg
  • Air vent, Cold War nuclear bunker, Berry Head, Devon.
    043-Paignton-Kingswear-07.jpg
  • Mural commemorating martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988).
    Tehran-Murals-QJEL-06.jpg
  • Mural commemorating martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988).
    Tehran-Murals-QJEL-05.jpg
  • Mural commemorating martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988). The Martyr Pilots of IRI Army Aviation: Major-General Mansour VatanPour, Major-General Seyed Shahrokh Azin,
    Tehran-Murals-QJEL-03.jpg
  • Mural commemorating martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988). It reads "Martyrdom is the art of the men of God". Imam Khomeini" and "Generals Shiroodi and Keshvari". Tehran, Iran, 2008
    Tehran-Murals-QJEL-01.jpg
  • Emma & Shaun, Farr, Sutherland, Scotland. The boat behind them is a surviving lifeboat from RMS Lusitania  that was converted to a fishing boat. The Lusitania was a UK-registered ocean liner torpedoed by an Imperial German Navy U-boat during the First World War killing 1,195 people including 128 Americans, on May 7, 1915. The disaster set off a chain of events that led to the U.S. entering World War I.
    Sutherland-Print-Collection-10.jpg
  • Emma & Shaun, Farr, Sutherland, Scotland. The boat behind them is a surviving lifeboat from RMS Lusitania  that was converted to a fishing boat. The Lusitania was a UK-registered ocean liner torpedoed by an Imperial German Navy U-boat during the First World War killing 1,195 people including 128 Americans, on May 7, 1915. The disaster set off a chain of events that led to the U.S. entering World War I.
    315-Bettyhill-Brawl-02.jpg
  • Emma & Shaun, Farr, Sutherland, Scotland. The boat behind them is a surviving lifeboat from RMS Lusitania  that was converted to a fishing boat. The Lusitania was a UK-registered ocean liner torpedoed by an Imperial German Navy U-boat during the First World War killing 1,195 people including 128 Americans, on May 7, 1915. The disaster set off a chain of events that led to the U.S. entering World War I.
    315-Bettyhill-Brawl-01.jpg
  • The most identifiable landmark in the village of Painswick is the parish church of St. Mary's dating to the early Norman period. The churchyard's clipped yew trees are another feature of the town...Evidence suggests that the church was built between 1042 and 1066. Looking closely at the tower, you'll see the scars of cannonballs left by a bombardment during the Civil War. Parliamentary troops took refuge in the church, but they were forced out by a combination of cannon fire and burning torches wielded by Royalist soldiers...Passing through the half-timbered lych-gate -- a roofed entry to the churchyard -- is the graveyard, the final resting place of rich wool merchants and the yew trees that draw the most attention. The church is also open for tour...There are two legends surrounding the yews. One legend says that the trees are uncountable, the other, that there are 99 trees, and if a hundredth was to be planted, the devil would pull it out...Every year, on the nearest Sunday to September 19, the "clipping the church" takes place. Local children wear flowers in their hair, join hands and embrace the church.
    Cotswold-Way-5-18.jpg
  • The most identifiable landmark in the village of Painswick is the parish church of St. Mary's dating to the early Norman period. The churchyard's clipped yew trees are another feature of the town...Evidence suggests that the church was built between 1042 and 1066. Looking closely at the tower, you'll see the scars of cannonballs left by a bombardment during the Civil War. Parliamentary troops took refuge in the church, but they were forced out by a combination of cannon fire and burning torches wielded by Royalist soldiers...Passing through the half-timbered lych-gate -- a roofed entry to the churchyard -- is the graveyard, the final resting place of rich wool merchants and the yew trees that draw the most attention. The church is also open for tour...There are two legends surrounding the yews. One legend says that the trees are uncountable, the other, that there are 99 trees, and if a hundredth was to be planted, the devil would pull it out...Every year, on the nearest Sunday to September 19, the "clipping the church" takes place. Local children wear flowers in their hair, join hands and embrace the church.
    Cotswold-Way-5-17.jpg
  • The most identifiable landmark in the village of Painswick is the parish church of St. Mary's dating to the early Norman period. The churchyard's clipped yew trees are another feature of the town...Evidence suggests that the church was built between 1042 and 1066. Looking closely at the tower, you'll see the scars of cannonballs left by a bombardment during the Civil War. Parliamentary troops took refuge in the church, but they were forced out by a combination of cannon fire and burning torches wielded by Royalist soldiers...Passing through the half-timbered lych-gate -- a roofed entry to the churchyard -- is the graveyard, the final resting place of rich wool merchants and the yew trees that draw the most attention. The church is also open for tour...There are two legends surrounding the yews. One legend says that the trees are uncountable, the other, that there are 99 trees, and if a hundredth was to be planted, the devil would pull it out...Every year, on the nearest Sunday to September 19, the "clipping the church" takes place. Local children wear flowers in their hair, join hands and embrace the church.
    Cotswold-Way-5-16.jpg
  • The most identifiable landmark in the village of Painswick is the parish church of St. Mary's dating to the early Norman period. The churchyard's clipped yew trees are another feature of the town...Evidence suggests that the church was built between 1042 and 1066. Looking closely at the tower, you'll see the scars of cannonballs left by a bombardment during the Civil War. Parliamentary troops took refuge in the church, but they were forced out by a combination of cannon fire and burning torches wielded by Royalist soldiers...Passing through the half-timbered lych-gate -- a roofed entry to the churchyard -- is the graveyard, the final resting place of rich wool merchants and the yew trees that draw the most attention. The church is also open for tour...There are two legends surrounding the yews. One legend says that the trees are uncountable, the other, that there are 99 trees, and if a hundredth was to be planted, the devil would pull it out...Every year, on the nearest Sunday to September 19, the "clipping the church" takes place. Local children wear flowers in their hair, join hands and embrace the church.
    Cotswold-Way-5-15.jpg
  • At the top of Wotton Hill are trees surrounded by a stone wall. The plaque on the gates reads: Trees were planted here in 1815 to commemorate the victory at Waterloo. They had become thin by the end of the Crimean War and were felled for a bonfire. This walled enclosure was erected and the site replanted with trees to commemorate the Jubilee of Her late Majesty Queen Victoria (1887), following the burning on this spot of one of a chain of celebration beacons which then spanned the country. Interplanted with new trees in 1952 by subscription of :- The family of the late Rev James Hardyman, the family of the late W J Williams Esq., Mrs A G Bury, Brig & Mrs Alan Durrant, A H Jotcham, Esq., Wotton-under-Edge Traders Association, Wotton-under-Edge Town Trustees.
    Cotswold_Way_England-22.jpg
  • Bow of HMS Alliance, Britain's last surviving Second World War-era submarine, Royal Navy Submarine Museum, Gosport, Hampshire.
    Hampshire-Print -04.jpg
  • HMS Gannet, sloop-of-war 1878. The Historic Dockyard Chatham.
    006-Chatham-Swale-12.jpg
  • Triumphal Arch, Arcul de Triumf, Bucharest. The first, wooden, triumphal arch was built hurriedly, after Romania gained its independence (1878), so that the victorious troops could march under it. Another temporary arch was built on the same site, in 1922, after World War I, which was demolished in 1935 to make way for the current triumphal arch built in 1936 by architect  Petre Antonescu.
    Bucharest-Architecture-22.jpg
  • Mural commemorating martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988). It reads "Martyrdom is the art of the men of God". Imam Khomeini" and "Generals Shiroodi and Keshvari". Tehran, Iran, 2008
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • The communal house is the most important building in a Bahnar village. Traditionally, communal houses serve as meeting halls for the men in the village and as places where rituals, celebrations, and preparation for war or defense of the village take place. This house was built after the model of the 20th century communal house of Kon Rbang village (Vinh Quang commune, Kontum Town, Kontum Province). This model house in Kon Rbang is the only one that maintains the traditional system of building with poles and beams, which has existed for over 70 years in the Central Highlands. In order to create a traditional communal house untouched by modernization, museum researchers worked closely with villagers and consulted old photographs to better understand the traditional model. The form, size, and structure of the museum's communal house replicate those found in the village now, though the house you see here has restored many of the traditional features that have been lost in today's village houses. The roof here is made of straw rather than corrugated iron. The rafters are made of circle-shaped pieces of wood rather than square ones. The floor is made of bamboo rather than wooden planks. The stairs are rounded pieces of wood rather than cement. The wood, bamboo, rattan, and straw used for making the house were brought from the Central Highlands. The diameter of the largest poles is 60cm. The length of the beams is 14-15 m. The height of the roof is nearly 19m including the decorative frame, with each of the principal roof beams about 13m long. The 90m2 floor is elevated 3m above the ground and accessed by four sets of stairs. The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology invited 29 Bahnar people from Kon Rbang to construct the house on the museum grounds. The first poles were erected on April 26, 2003. On June 4, 2003, the house was fully completed. Visitors to the VME now have the rare opportunity of experiencing this unique architectural style first-hand and appreciating the tradition
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-25.jpg
  • The communal house is the most important building in a Bahnar village. Traditionally, communal houses serve as meeting halls for the men in the village and as places where rituals, celebrations, and preparation for war or defense of the village take place. This house was built after the model of the 20th century communal house of Kon Rbang village (Vinh Quang commune, Kontum Town, Kontum Province). This model house in Kon Rbang is the only one that maintains the traditional system of building with poles and beams, which has existed for over 70 years in the Central Highlands. In order to create a traditional communal house untouched by modernization, museum researchers worked closely with villagers and consulted old photographs to better understand the traditional model. The form, size, and structure of the museum's communal house replicate those found in the village now, though the house you see here has restored many of the traditional features that have been lost in today's village houses. The roof here is made of straw rather than corrugated iron. The rafters are made of circle-shaped pieces of wood rather than square ones. The floor is made of bamboo rather than wooden planks. The stairs are rounded pieces of wood rather than cement. The wood, bamboo, rattan, and straw used for making the house were brought from the Central Highlands. The diameter of the largest poles is 60cm. The length of the beams is 14-15 m. The height of the roof is nearly 19m including the decorative frame, with each of the principal roof beams about 13m long. The 90m2 floor is elevated 3m above the ground and accessed by four sets of stairs. The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology invited 29 Bahnar people from Kon Rbang to construct the house on the museum grounds. The first poles were erected on April 26, 2003. On June 4, 2003, the house was fully completed. Visitors to the VME now have the rare opportunity of experiencing this unique architectural style first-hand and appreciating the tradition
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-24.jpg
  • The most identifiable landmark in the village of Painswick is the parish church of St. Mary's dating to the early Norman period. The churchyard's clipped yew trees are another feature of the town...Evidence suggests that the church was built between 1042 and 1066. Looking closely at the tower, you'll see the scars of cannonballs left by a bombardment during the Civil War. Parliamentary troops took refuge in the church, but they were forced out by a combination of cannon fire and burning torches wielded by Royalist soldiers...Passing through the half-timbered lych-gate -- a roofed entry to the churchyard -- is the graveyard, the final resting place of rich wool merchants and the yew trees that draw the most attention. The church is also open for tour...There are two legends surrounding the yews. One legend says that the trees are uncountable, the other, that there are 99 trees, and if a hundredth was to be planted, the devil would pull it out...Every year, on the nearest Sunday to September 19, the "clipping the church" takes place. Local children wear flowers in their hair, join hands and embrace the church.
    Cotswold-Way-5-19.jpg
  • At the top of Wotton Hill are trees surrounded by a stone wall. The plaque on the gates reads: Trees were planted here in 1815 to commemorate the victory at Waterloo. They had become thin by the end of the Crimean War and were felled for a bonfire. This walled enclosure was erected and the site replanted with trees to commemorate the Jubilee of Her late Majesty Queen Victoria (1887), following the burning on this spot of one of a chain of celebration beacons which then spanned the country. Interplanted with new trees in 1952 by subscription of :- The family of the late Rev James Hardyman, the family of the late W J Williams Esq., Mrs A G Bury, Brig & Mrs Alan Durrant, A H Jotcham, Esq., Wotton-under-Edge Traders Association, Wotton-under-Edge Town Trustees.
    Cotswold_Way_England-21.jpg
  • In 1938 Phillipe Serre by J.Ogé and Le Corbusier built a youth hostel. The second world war prevented the completion of this building. In 1952 Jacques Ogé and Le Corbusier worked together with  Prouvé roof to finish the building in 1953. Now it is a bar of the aeroclub and the remainder is a living area that was intended as the youth hostel.
    BrieyQL30.jpg
  • From the series Spaces of Fear: Heyford, 2014. During the Cold War RAF Upper Heyford was a Quick Reaction Alert Facility where crews sat for four hour shifts in nuclear-armed F-111 bombers, engines running in the middle of the Oxfordshire countryside ready to respond to any Soviet threat at a moments notice. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42cm, 80x80cm & 110x110cm.
    RAFUpperHeyford-07.jpg
  • From the series Spaces of Fear: Heyford, 2014. During the Cold War RAF Upper Heyford was a Quick Reaction Alert Facility where crews sat for four hour shifts in nuclear-armed F-111 bombers, engines running in the middle of the Oxfordshire countryside ready to respond to any Soviet threat at a moments notice. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42cm, 80x80cm & 110x110cm.
    RAFUpperHeyford-06.jpg
  • From the series Spaces of Fear: Heyford, 2014. During the Cold War RAF Upper Heyford was a Quick Reaction Alert Facility where crews sat for four hour shifts in nuclear-armed F-111 bombers, engines running in the middle of the Oxfordshire countryside ready to respond to any Soviet threat at a moments notice. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42cm, 80x80cm & 110x110cm.
    RAFUpperHeyford-04.jpg
  • From the series Spaces of Fear: Heyford, 2014. During the Cold War RAF Upper Heyford was a Quick Reaction Alert Facility where crews sat for four hour shifts in nuclear-armed F-111 bombers, engines running in the middle of the Oxfordshire countryside ready to respond to any Soviet threat at a moments notice. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42cm, 80x80cm & 110x110cm.
    RAFUpperHeyford-05.jpg
  • From the series Spaces of Fear: Heyford, 2014. During the Cold War RAF Upper Heyford was a Quick Reaction Alert Facility where crews sat for four hour shifts in nuclear-armed F-111 bombers, engines running in the middle of the Oxfordshire countryside ready to respond to any Soviet threat at a moments notice. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42cm, 80x80cm & 110x110cm.
    RAFUpperHeyford-03.jpg
  • From the series Spaces of Fear: Heyford, 2014. During the Cold War RAF Upper Heyford was a Quick Reaction Alert Facility where crews sat for four hour shifts in nuclear-armed F-111 bombers, engines running in the middle of the Oxfordshire countryside ready to respond to any Soviet threat at a moments notice. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42cm, 80x80cm & 110x110cm.
    RAFUpperHeyford-02.jpg
  • Bow of HMS Alliance, Britain's last surviving Second World War-era submarine, Royal Navy Submarine Museum, Gosport, Hampshire.
    025-Portchester-Gosport-13.jpg
  • Tehran-Murals-QJEL-04.jpg
  • In 1938 Phillipe Serre by J.Ogé and Le Corbusier built a youth hostel. The second world war prevented the completion of this building. In 1952 Jacques Ogé and Le Corbusier worked together with  Prouvé roof to finish the building in 1953. Now it is a bar of the aeroclub and the remainder is a living area that was intended as the youth hostel.
    BrieyQL32.jpg
  • In 1938 Phillipe Serre by J.Ogé and Le Corbusier built a youth hostel. The second world war prevented the completion of this building. In 1952 Jacques Ogé and Le Corbusier worked together with  Prouvé roof to finish the building in 1953. Now it is a bar of the aeroclub and the remainder is a living area that was intended as the youth hostel.
    BrieyQL31.jpg
  • In 1938 Phillipe Serre by J.Ogé and Le Corbusier built a youth hostel. The second world war prevented the completion of this building. In 1952 Jacques Ogé and Le Corbusier worked together with  Prouvé roof to finish the building in 1953. Now it is a bar of the aeroclub and the remainder is a living area that was intended as the youth hostel.
    BrieyQL29.jpg
  • From the series Spaces of Fear: Heyford, 2014. During the Cold War RAF Upper Heyford was a Quick Reaction Alert Facility where crews sat for four hour shifts in nuclear-armed F-111 bombers, engines running in the middle of the Oxfordshire countryside ready to respond to any Soviet threat at a moments notice. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42cm, 80x80cm & 110x110cm.
    RAFUpperHeyford-01.jpg
  • Obscured English text reads "Down with USA & Israel. His excellency the leader: Imam Khomeini's followers are always supporting Palestinians and fight their enemies"
    Tehran-Murals-QJEL-02.jpg
  • In 1938 Phillipe Serre by J.Ogé and Le Corbusier built a youth hostel. The second world war prevented the completion of this building. In 1952 Jacques Ogé and Le Corbusier worked together with  Prouvé roof to finish the building in 1953. Now it is a bar of the aeroclub and the remainder is a living area that was intended as the youth hostel.
    BrieyQL28.jpg
  • Drop Redoubt built in 1808 during the Napoleonic wars. Dover Castle and St. Mary in Castro church behind.
    012-Dover-Folkestone-04.jpg
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