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  • An aerial detail of a diagonal film strip and many coils of undeveloped, generic 35mm film emulsion, collected before disposal. Film is an antiquated analogue technology that has been largely replaced by the remarkable digital mega pixel camera and the process of recording photographic images and their safe-keeping is fast-becoming lost as a skill. The square holes to the top and bottom are for the camera winder to grasp on to, allowing the film to advance to the next frame inside the light-tight camera body. This film is unprocessed, having been removed from its cassette for display.
    film_emulsion05-09-04-2010_1.jpg
  • An aerial detail of many coils of undeveloped, generic 35mm film emulsion, collected before disposal. Film is an antiquated analogue technology that has been largely replaced by the remarkable digital mega pixel camera and the process of recording photographic images and their safe-keeping is fast-becoming lost as a skill. The square holes to the top and bottom are for the camera winder to grasp on to, allowing the film to advance to the next frame inside the light-tight camera body. This film is unprocessed, having been removed from its cassette for display.
    film_emulsion01-09-04-2010_1.jpg
  • Coils of rusting barbed wire in winter snow form a perimeter fence in the Nazi and Soviet Sachsenhausen concentration camp, now known as the Sachsenhausen Memorial and Museum. Sachsenhausen was a Nazi concentration camp in Oranienburg, 35 kilometres (22 miles) north of Berlin, Germany, used primarily for political prisoners from 1936 to the end of the Third Reich in May 1945. After World War II, when Oranienburg was in the Soviet Occupation Zone, the structure was used as an NKVD special camp until 1950. Executions took place at Sachsenhausen, especially of Soviet prisoners of war. 30,000 inmates died there from exhaustion, disease, malnutrition, pneumonia, etc. The remaining buildings and grounds are now open to the public as a museum.
    berlin_sachsenhausen08-06-04-2013_1.jpg
  • Coils of rusting barbed wire in winter snow form a perimeter fence in the Nazi and Soviet Sachsenhausen concentration camp, now known as the Sachsenhausen Memorial and Museum. Sachsenhausen was a Nazi concentration camp in Oranienburg, 35 kilometres (22 miles) north of Berlin, Germany, used primarily for political prisoners from 1936 to the end of the Third Reich in May 1945. After World War II, when Oranienburg was in the Soviet Occupation Zone, the structure was used as an NKVD special camp until 1950. Executions took place at Sachsenhausen, especially of Soviet prisoners of war. 30,000 inmates died there from exhaustion, disease, malnutrition, pneumonia, etc. The remaining buildings and grounds are now open to the public as a museum.
    berlin_sachsenhausen07-06-04-2013_1.jpg
  • Wires hang from the walls and ceiling ready for attachment to new lighting inside the East London Childcare Institute, Stratford, London.
    04-08-03_6146.jpg
  • An amployee for UK Power Networks prepares high-voltage underground cables in central London with reflective corporate backdrop behind. Standing in a sub-pavement level hole on Victoria Street, Westminster the man bends and cuts to size these red coloured protective collars that will deliver efficient power to nearby government and company buildings. reflected in the highly-polished surfaces behind are the fencing and Londoners passing-by.
    electricity_cable07-02-04-2012_1.jpg
  • An amployee for UK Power Networks prepares high-voltage underground cables in central London with reflective corporate backdrop behind. Standing in a sub-pavement level hole on Victoria Street, Westminster the man bends and cuts to size these red coloured protective collars that will deliver efficient power to nearby government and company buildings. reflected in the highly-polished surfaces behind are the fencing and Londoners passing-by.
    electricity_cable08-02-04-2012_1.jpg
  • A Virgin Atlantic Airbus A340 crosses the perimeter fence at Heathrow Airport on its way to an international destination. Seen from below, the passing Jumbo takes-off and climbs under full take-off power over the surrounding airfield security fence. Its razor-wire is an effective deterrent against protesters or terrorists and symbolises the lengths that airport authorities (in this case BAA) need go to to ensure their property is safe. The aircraft is seen almost entangled in the secure wire as if passing through the mesh. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport1053-11-08-2009_1.jpg
  • With coils of barded security wire beneath, a sad-looking English flag on a pole overlooks an industrial yard in south London. This might be a metaphor for the state of the nation today, a dystopian society of pessimism and oppression as if from Orwellian fiction. It may also suggest a country during revolution or quanrantine, closed behind the security fence.
    england_flag11-27-04-2013_1.jpg
  • With coils of barded security wire beneath, a sad-looking English flag on a pole overlooks an industrial yard in south London. This might be a metaphor for the state of the nation today, a dystopian society of pessimism and oppression as if from Orwellian fiction. It may also suggest a country during revolution or quanrantine, closed behind the security fence.
    england_flag06-27-04-2013_1.jpg
  • A coil of electrical wiring cables is next to the walls of the Bank of England on Threadneedle Street - part of ongoing alterations to the highway during the Coronavirus pandemic in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 6th August 2020, in London, England. SRL are the UK’s only manufacturer to sell and hire traffic light equipment and their Urban64 product is the first, and only, permanent technology system to be designed uniquely for temporary installations in the U.K. The Urban64 design allows for simple and quick over-head installation, with the ability to replicate the technology provided by the preceding permanent system, and therefore maintaining traffic flow efficiency.
    city_people10-06-08-2020.jpg
  • A workman drags a coil of heavy piping or cable sleeves through a street in the City of London. Holding the length of red materials, he pulls at the weight across the path on a street corner near the Bank of England. Coincidentally, we see the halving of two circles - the piping as well as the logo on a background doorway.
    city_people08-21-04-2015_1.jpg
  • A coil of electrical wiring cables is above the heads of pedestriansnear Royal Exchange on Threadneedle Street - part of ongoing alterations to the highway during the Coronavirus pandemic in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 30th July 2020, in London, England. SRL are the UK’s only manufacturer to sell and hire traffic light equipment and their Urban64 product is the first, and only, permanent technology system to be designed uniquely for temporary installations in the U.K. The Urban64 design allows for simple and quick over-head installation, with the ability to replicate the technology provided by the preceding permanent system, and therefore maintaining traffic flow efficiency.
    fuji_test32-30-07-2020.jpg
  • A coil of electrical wiring cables is above the heads of pedestriansnear Royal Exchange on Threadneedle Street - part of ongoing alterations to the highway during the Coronavirus pandemic in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 30th July 2020, in London, England.  SRL are the UK’s only manufacturer to sell and hire traffic light equipment and their Urban64 product is the first, and only, permanent technology system to be designed uniquely for temporary installations in the U.K. The Urban64 design allows for simple and quick over-head installation, with the ability to replicate the technology provided by the preceding permanent system, and therefore maintaining traffic flow efficiency.
    fuji_test30-30-07-2020.jpg
  • A gas supply contractors yellow sleeve is coiled on a trailer before instillation under the paths of a residential street in Lambeth, on 30th January 2018, in London, England.
    construction_sleeve-01-30-01-2019.jpg
  • Detail of a BT Openreach van and a coil of yellow broadband fibre cable on the ground and awaiting installation, on 16th February 2017, in the City of London, England. Openreach is a subsidiary of telecommunications company BT Group that owns the pipes and telephone cables that connect nearly all businesses and homes in the United Kingdom to the national broadband and telephone network.
    openreach_cable-01-16-02-2017_1.jpg
  • A junior officer speaks into a walkie-talkie to communicate instructions to an unknown member of the ship's company. With a coil of naval line (rope) to his side, the man is dressed in full naval working white uniform and a combination cap. The insignia on his shoulder rates him as a Lieutenant Junior Grade. We are on-board the USS Winston Churchill designated DDG-81, one of the Navy's stealth warships that was on exercise in British waters in 2001. The Churchill is an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer of the United States Navy. She is the 31st destroyer of a planned 62-ship class. The Churchill is named after the British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill. Her home port is in NS Norfolk, Virginia.
    US_navy_officer-22-08-2001_1.jpg
  • Palm fronds. These pieces fo dry leaf coil and strip away from the main leaves against a blue sky.
    20090917lagrasseH.jpg
  • Palm fronds. These pieces fo dry leaf coil and strip away from the main leaves against a blue sky.
    20090917lagrasseG.jpg
  • Palm fronds. These pieces fo dry leaf coil and strip away from the main leaves against a blue sky.
    20090917lagrasseI.jpg
  • A gas contractor uncoils piping collars from a giant reel, on 28th February 2017, in London, England.
    street_roadworks-07-27-02-2017.jpg
  • A twisted blue electric recharging cable is plugged in to a white car on a central London street, on 16th April 2018, in London, England.
    recharging_car-05-16-04-2018.jpg
  • Yellow hosepipe streched across road with coincidental double-yellow lines. Watering an unseen feature in this urban landscape, we see the repetition of colour across the road and into the distance. The picture suggests a quirky urban humour - a coincidence of lines and color.
    yellow_hose02-18-01-2015_1.jpg
  • A twisted blue electric recharging cable is plugged in to a white car on a central London street, on 16th April 2018, in London, England.
    recharging_car-04-16-04-2018.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028362cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028344cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028337cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028363cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028354cc_1.jpg
  • A pile of assorted ropes and fibrous cord and fishing pots await removal from the coastal landscape, having been collected by volunteers from a beach on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. The amount of rubbish found dumped on UK beaches rose by a third last year, according to a new report. More than 8,000 plastic bottles were collected by the Marine Conservation Society’s annual beach clean-up at seaside locations from Orkney to the Channel Islands on one weekend in September 2016. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindisfarne-05-27-09-2017.jpg
  • A pile of assorted ropes and fibrous cord and fishing pots await removal from the coastal landscape, having been collected by volunteers from a beach on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. The amount of rubbish found dumped on UK beaches rose by a third last year, according to a new report. More than 8,000 plastic bottles were collected by the Marine Conservation Society’s annual beach clean-up at seaside locations from Orkney to the Channel Islands on one weekend in September 2016. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindisfarne-04-27-09-2017.jpg
  • Portrait of  Kayaw ethnic minority woman carrying a basket on her head on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032672cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayaw ethnic minority woman wearing brass leg rings on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032685cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayaw ethnic minority woman processes millet on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032646cc_1_1.jpg
  • Ethnic Kayaw women adjusting their brass leg rings in the village of Yo Co Pra on 27th March 2016 in Kayah State in Myanamar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    DSCF6783cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayaw ethnic minority woman holding a handful millet on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032665cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayaw ethnic minority woman processes millet on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032638cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayaw ethnic minority woman holds millet on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    DSCF3190cc_1_1.jpg
  • An ethnic Kayaw woman feeding her baby chewed rice in a traditional way on 27th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups with over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the Kayah region. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032888cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of  Kayaw ethnic minority woman wearing traditional clothing on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032700cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of  Kayaw ethnic minority girl on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032677cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayaw ethnic minority woman processes millet on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032655cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of  Kayaw ethnic minority girl on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032676cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayaw ethnic minority woman processes millet on 19th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032662cc_1_1.jpg
  • Coils of plastic cable casings and roadworks signs all tidied away behind fencing in a London side street, Southwark. As part of stringent Health and Safety rules that contractors need to adhere to, the materials and tools of workers are behind the correct screens or barriers. The street is off Lordship Lane in south London's East Dulwich  where ongoing improvements for telecommunications and gas utility connections plague local residents and traffic.
    roadworks01-11-01-2012.jpg
  • A Nepalese factory worker rotates the metal frame which coils the wool yarn and feeds it through dye mixture, which is heated from below by the fire. It is just one part of the rug making process at R.C rug factory in the Narayanthan area of Kathmandu, Nepal. The company export rugs and carpets to Europe the U.S and Canada, and rely on the GoodWeave certificate of approval to boast excellent quality and fair conditions for its workers, as the carpet factory industry in Nepal is notorious for providing poor working conditions and forcing young children into labour.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-Carpet-Factory-5415_...jpg
  • Coils of dried snake used to treat arthritis displayed at a traditional Chinese medicine market in Bozhou, Anhui Province, China on 02 August, 2011. The birth place of legendary doctor Hua Tuo, Bozhou is now one of the four major trading centers in China for traditional Chinese medicine.
    QS110802Bozhou042.jpg
  • A Nepalese factory worker rotates the metal frame which coils the wool yarn and feeds it through dye mixture, which is heated from below by the fire. It is just one part of the rug making process at R.C rug factory in the Narayanthan area of Kathmandu, Nepal. The company export rugs and carpets to Europe the U.S and Canada, and rely on the GoodWeave certificate of approval to boast excellent quality and fair conditions for its workers, as the carpet factory industry in Nepal is notorious for providing poor working conditions and forcing young children into labour.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-Carpet-Factory-5439_...jpg
  • A Nepalese factory worker rotates the metal frame which coils the wool yarn and feeds it through dye mixture, which is heated from below by the fire. It is just one part of the rug making process at R.C rug factory in the Narayanthan area of Kathmandu, Nepal. The company export rugs and carpets to Europe the U.S and Canada, and rely on the GoodWeave certificate of approval to boast excellent quality and fair conditions for its workers, as the carpet factory industry in Nepal is notorious for providing poor working conditions and forcing young children into labour.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-Carpet-Factory-5432_...jpg
  • Mosquito coils prepared for the audiences who will watch the Kun Ju opera "Peony Pavilion" in Shanghai, China, on 07 August, 2010. The modern adaptation of a traditional love story involves performance in a real Chinese garden together with soundtracks by renowned Chinese musician Tan Dun.
    QS100807Shanghai097.jpg
  • Coils of rusting barbed wire in winter snow form a perimeter fence in the Nazi and Soviet Sachsenhausen concentration camp, now known as the Sachsenhausen Memorial and Museum. Sachsenhausen was a Nazi concentration camp in Oranienburg, 35 kilometres (22 miles) north of Berlin, Germany, used primarily for political prisoners from 1936 to the end of the Third Reich in May 1945. After World War II, when Oranienburg was in the Soviet Occupation Zone, the structure was used as an NKVD special camp until 1950. Executions took place at Sachsenhausen, especially of Soviet prisoners of war. 30,000 inmates died there from exhaustion, disease, malnutrition, pneumonia, etc. The remaining buildings and grounds are now open to the public as a museum.
    berlin_sachsenhausen15-06-04-2013_1.jpg
  • A Nepalese factory worker rotates the metal frame which coils the wool yarn and feeds it through dye mixture, which is heated from below by the fire. It is just one part of the rug making process at R.C rug factory in the Narayanthan area of Kathmandu, Nepal. The company export rugs and carpets to Europe the U.S and Canada, and rely on the GoodWeave certificate of approval to boast excellent quality and fair conditions for its workers, as the carpet factory industry in Nepal is notorious for providing poor working conditions and forcing young children into labour.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-Carpet-Factory-5408_...jpg
  • Man listening to mp3 music walks past a sunglasses shop featuring three hats suspended from the store window ceiling. The male consumer passes the dark window selling summer eyewear in London's Long Acre, a street near the capital's Covent Garden, Westminster. With red headphones covering his ears - and with a red coil of wiring down his chest, we see the three white hats that symbolise a London summer, hanging in clear space above the woman's head.
    hats_window04-17-06-2014_1.jpg
  • A worker at the Copper Industries factory in Northern Ireland soldeers a copper hot water tank for use with the Willis Renewables Solar Syphone. Copper Industries are the company that manufacture the Solar Syphon for Willis Renewables.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-1349.jpg
  • A woman washing dishes in hot water provided by a Willis Renewables Solar Syphon system. Willis Renewables, inventor and distributor of the Solar Syphon. They are based in Belfast, Northern Irleand.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-0904.jpg
  • A worker at the Copper Industries factory in Northern Ireland bends copper sheeting for the manufacture of hot water tanks for use with the Willis Renewables Solar Syphone. Copper Industries are the company that manufacture the Solar Syphon for Willis Renewables.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-1332.jpg
  • A stack of half completed Willis Renewables Solar Syphons at the Copper Iindustries factory in Northern Ireland.  Copper Industries manufacture the Solar Syphon for Willis Renewables.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-1156.jpg
  • A factory worker cuting a whole in the lagging on a copper hot water tank for use with a Willis Renewables Solar Syphon.  Copper Industries are the company that manufacture the Solar Syphon for Willis Renewables.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-1099.jpg
  • A Willis Renewables Solar Syphon in position next to the original water tank.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder.  Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-0848.jpg
  • As part of Art in the City in the City of London, the artwork entitled Temple 2008 by Damien Hirst occupies a space in Lime Street near a coil of plastic pipe collars, a visual pun about the resemblance of intestines in the heart of the capitals financial district, the City of London, the capitals financial district aka The Square Mile, on 26th March, 2018, in London, England.
    sculpture_pipes-03-26-03-2018.jpg
  • Workman feed yellow plastic tubing through an under pavement shaft to clear a subterranean blockage, working beneath a round pastry post ad. The works are outside a corner shop (store) in the south London district of Waterloo (celebrating the famous battle victory by Wellington over Napoleon in 1815) and the site is half-covered by a barrier that prevents pedestrians from falling down the opened manhole cover on the pavement (sidewalk). The two men force-feed the plastic piping to free whatever is obstructing the route to another site 50 metres down the street. The visual pun of the coiled cabling and the swirls of the Danish pastries make for a humorous scene.
    cable_works03-19-03-2012_1.jpg
  • Soldering a part of the Willis Renewables Solar Syphon at the Copper Industires factory in Northern Ireland.  Copper Industries are the company that manufacture the Solar Syphon for Willis Renewables.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-1240.jpg
  • A worker in the Copper Industries factory in Northern Ireland soldering a copper pipe for part of a Willis Renewables Solar Syphon. Copper Industries are the company that manufacture the Solar Syphon for Willis Renewables.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-1176.jpg
  • A worker at the Copper Industries factory in Northern Ireland pressure tests the heat exchanger of a Willis Renewables Solar Syphon. Copper Industries are the company that manufacture the Solar Syphon for Willis Renewables.  Willis Renewables are the inventors and distributors of the Solar Syphon, and are based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  The Solar Syphon system is a simple ‘add-on’ heat exchange unit which provides a lower cost installation alternative to the traditional twin coil solar cylinder. Willis Renewables won an Ashden Award in 2010 for its inspiring sustainable energy solutions.
    10-willis-1249.jpg
  • A parked Smart car recharges electric power at an EDF charging point in central London. Its yellow coiled cable stretching from charging point to car. Source London is now the capital’s largest charging network. It has significantly boosted existing numbers of charge points operated by a range of different localised schemes. By 2013, Source London will total at least 1,300 charge points, more than the number of petrol stations currently in London, ensuring the infrastructure is in place for significantly more people and businesses to buy an electric vehicle. The creation of an electric vehicle network is in line with the Mayor’s pledge to promote quality of life by reducing pollution and CO2 emissions.
    electric_car02-28-03-2014.jpg
  • Street cleaner from contractor Veolia winds up hose after hosing down waste bin in Oxford Street, central London. <br />
Coiling up the lengths of piping, the employee tucks the end into the machinery. Environmental solutions contractor Veolia provides a comprehensive range of waste, water and energy management services designed to build the circular economy and preserve scarce raw materials.
    contract_cleaner01-04-03-2015_1.jpg
  • A cyclist passes a parked Smart car recharges electric power at an EDF charging point in central London. Its yellow coiled cable stretching from charging point to car. Source London is now the capital’s largest charging network. It has significantly boosted existing numbers of charge points operated by a range of different localised schemes. By 2013, Source London will total at least 1,300 charge points, more than the number of petrol stations currently in London, ensuring the infrastructure is in place for significantly more people and businesses to buy an electric vehicle. The creation of an electric vehicle network is in line with the Mayor’s pledge to promote quality of life by reducing pollution and CO2 emissions.
    electric_car04-28-03-2014.jpg
  • A parked Smart car recharges electric power at an EDF charging point in central London. Its yellow coiled cable stretching from charging point to car. Source London is now the capital’s largest charging network. It has significantly boosted existing numbers of charge points operated by a range of different localised schemes. By 2013, Source London will total at least 1,300 charge points, more than the number of petrol stations currently in London, ensuring the infrastructure is in place for significantly more people and businesses to buy an electric vehicle. The creation of an electric vehicle network is in line with the Mayor’s pledge to promote quality of life by reducing pollution and CO2 emissions.
    electric_car03-28-03-2014.jpg
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