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  • Closed down shop Peacocks on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_005.jpg
  • Closed down shops on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_004.jpg
  • Closing down shops on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_008.jpg
  • Closed down shops on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_006.jpg
  • Closed down shops on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_002.jpg
  • Closed down shops on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_001.jpg
  • Explicit graffiti on the window if a closed down shops on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_009.jpg
  • Closed down shop Peacocks on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_007.jpg
  • Closed down shops on the High Street due to economic downturn and recession on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Bangor high street has struggled over recent years as more and more shops close, but this is now being compounded by the Coronavirus epidemic as retail becomes more difficult to sustain in low population towns. Bangor is a cathedral city and community in Gwynedd, northwest Wales. It is the oldest city in Wales. Historically part of Caernarfonshire.
    20200916_bangor closed shops_003.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_011.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_003.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_001.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_008.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_006.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_004.jpg
  • Port Penrhyn harbour view over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Port Penrhyn is a harbour located just east of Bangor in north Wales at the confluence of the River Cegin with the Menai Strait. It was formerly of great importance as the main port for the export of slate from the Penrhyn Quarry.
    20200916_bangor menai strait_003.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_010.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_009.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_007.jpg
  • Port Penrhyn harbour view over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Port Penrhyn is a harbour located just east of Bangor in north Wales at the confluence of the River Cegin with the Menai Strait. It was formerly of great importance as the main port for the export of slate from the Penrhyn Quarry.
    20200916_bangor menai strait_004.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_002.jpg
  • Garth Pier over the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. Garth Pier is a Grade II listed structure in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales. At 1,500 feet in length, it is the second-longest pier in Wales, and the ninth longest in the British Isles. Designed by J.J. Webster of Westminster, London, the 1,550 feet (470 m) pier has cast iron columns, with the rest of the metal structure made in steel, including the handrails. The wooden deck has a series of octagonal kiosks with roofs, plus street lighting, which lead to a pontoon landing stage for pleasure steamers on the Menai Strait.
    20200916_bangor pier_005.jpg
  • Estate agents signs for properties to let on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom.
    20200916_bangor lettings_002.jpg
  • Slipway into the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. The Menai Strait is a narrow stretch of shallow tidal water about 25 km long, which separates the island of Anglesey from the mainland of Wales.
    20200916_bangor menai strait_001.jpg
  • Estate agents signs for properties to let on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom.
    20200916_bangor lettings_001.jpg
  • Slipway into the Menai Strait on 16th September 2020 in Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom. The Menai Strait is a narrow stretch of shallow tidal water about 25 km long, which separates the island of Anglesey from the mainland of Wales.
    20200916_bangor menai strait_002.jpg
  • A closed down pub on Bethesda high street. Bethesda, Bangor, Wales.
    Wales-Village-Dissused-Pub-4210.jpg
  • A group of people wait wearing red jump suits to fly through the sky across the Penrhyn Quarry outside of Bethesda on Velocity, the longest zip wire in Europe. Bethesda, Bangor, Wales.
    Wales-Exteme-Sports-Zip-Wire-4195.jpg
  • On a dark evening in the Welsh countryside eight ventilated hemispherical glasshouses called Solardomes have been 'painted' with gels and with coloured flash strobes while a torch has streaked whiter light in this scientific facility. Replicating climate change and its effects on plant-life, this experiment run by the University of Aberystwyth has run for 20 years, its research being invaluable to our understanding how rising levels of greenhouse gases (CO2) will affect photosynthesis and therefore plant food growth. By increasing the levels of such gasseous pollutants are we now more sure of how the biology in seminatural grasslands alters. Glowing red, the Solardomes sit like futuristic houses on another planet. Surrounding hills are dark on this evening but there is still detail in the fast-fading sky.
    solardomes_1_1.jpg
  • The River Ogwen , just outside of Bethesda, Bangor, Wales. A potential site for Ynni Ogwen Cyf to produce community owned electricity from a sustainable hydroelectric power source.
    UK-Renewable-Energy-Ogwen-Wales-4198.jpg
  • A view of Penrhyn Slate Quarry in Bethesda, Gwynedd, Wales. It is the largest slate quarry in the UK with a workforce of almost 200.
    UK-Wales-Bethesda-9213.jpg
  • The streets of Bethesda overlooked by the nearby slate quarry and Snowdonia in Gwynedd, Wales. The population of Bethesda is currently around only 4,327 according to a 2001 census.
    UK-Wales-Bethesda-9203.jpg
  • The streets of Bethesda overlooked by the nearby slate quarry and Snowdonia in Gwynedd, Wales. The population of Bethesda is currently around only 4,327 according to a 2001 census.
    UK-Wales-Bethesda-9198.jpg
  • The streets of Bethesda overlooked by the nearby slate quarry and Snowdonia in Gwynedd, Wales. The population of Bethesda is currently around only 4,327 according to a 2001 census.
    UK-Wales-Bethesda-9192.jpg
  • The streets of Bethesda overlooked by the nearby slate quarry and Snowdonia in Gwynedd, Wales. The population of Bethesda is currently around only 4,327 according to a 2001 census.
    UK-Wales-Bethesda-9098.jpg
  • The front of Annies’ Ogwen charity shop on 13 High Street, Bethesda, Gwynedd, Wales.
    UK-Wales-Bethesda-0021.jpg
  • Partially-sighted skiing paralympian from the Sochi Olympics, Kelly Gallagher, Belfast, Northern Ireland. Having the sight of only a few feet and with poor close-up vision she uses her Smartphone that features a still of her downhill racing. From the chapter entitled 'The Law of Gravity' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    kelly_gallagher264-22-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Partially-sighted skiing paralympian from the Sochi Olympics, Kelly Gallagher, Belfast, Northern Ireland. Talking in an interview situation she makes a point using her hands. From the chapter entitled 'The Law of Gravity' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    kelly_gallagher212-22-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Partially-sighted skiing paralympian from the Sochi Olympics, Kelly Gallagher, Belfast, Northern Ireland. Showing us her gold medal under the gaze of a venus statue we see Kelly as a close-up portrait. Kelly Marie Gallagher, MBE is a Northern Irish skier and the first athlete from Northern Ireland to compete in the Winter Paralympics. Gallagher won Britain's first ever Winter Paralympic gold medal during Sochi 2014.
    kelly_gallagher258-22-05-2014_1.jpg
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