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  • A Londoner and squares on the glass screens at a bus stop in Kingston, on 7th November 2019, in London, England.
    kingston_journey-28-07-11-2019.jpg
  • The £18.2m Millennium Bridge (a Thames crossing linking the City of London at St. Paul's Cathedral with the Tate Modern Gallery at Bankside) was London's newest river crossing for 100-plus years and coincided with the Millennium, it was hurriedly finished and opened to the public on 10 June 2000 when an estimated 100,000 people crossed it to discover the structure oscillated so much that it was forced to close 2 days later. Over the next 18 months designers added dampeners to stop its wobble but it already symbolised what was embarrassing and failing in British pride. Now the British Standard code of bridge loading has been updated to cover the swaying phenomenon, referred to as Synchronous Lateral Excitation. Here a surveyor stands with legs spread peering into a tripod-mounted theodolite to measure its 370 metres (1,214 ft) steel length.
    bridge_surveyor04-09-2000_1.jpg
  • Passengers board a London bus at a bus stop in Kingston, on 7th November 2019, in London, England.
    kingston_journey-32-07-11-2019.jpg
  • Londoners and squares on the glass screens at a bus stop in Kingston, on 7th November 2019, in London, England.
    kingston_journey-30-07-11-2019.jpg
  • Places are set for customers inside a geodesic dome of an outdoor restaurant on the Thames waterfront at Kingston, on 7th November 2019, in London, England. A geodesic dome is a hemispherical thin-shell structure lattice-shell based on a geodesic polyhedron.
    kingston_journey-10-07-11-2019.jpg
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