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  • Construction landscape outside the Tate Britain art gallery on London's Southbank. The promise of more space for visitors is proclaimed by gallery owners whose new wing will allow more comfort for those appreciating the Arts. There is no-one in this landscape but there is a repetition of red and white colours alternating around the corner of the road junction - a curve of industrial building barriers to help control traffic and stop pedestrians entering this work zone.
    lomdon_walk11-02-02-2016_1.jpg
  • The chairs for the next Torbay Carnival Princess and Queen competition winners awaits their newest occupants during the seaside town’s fair in Devon, England. A crown, hat and two bouquets of flowers are for the young girls too and the sash has the words ‘Princess for a Day’ across the material. The theme of the stage is blue, with matching colours on both cushions and the backing curtain (drapes). There is no one in this landscape but we get a sense of the tacky and old-fashioned nature of the carnival and of its princess competition.
    carnival_queen_chairs01-21-07-1993_1.jpg
  • Barclays Cycle Superhighways are safe, fast, direct routes from outer London into central London. Here the CS7 route is one of the first two routes which opened on 19th July 2010, with 10 more in construction or planning. Cycling in London is becoming increasingly popular and the Cycle Superhighway will make it far safer for cyclists on London's busy streets.
    20100628cycle superhighwayZ.jpg
  • Barclays Cycle Superhighways are safe, fast, direct routes from outer London into central London. Here the CS7 route is one of the first two routes which opened on 19th July 2010, with 10 more in construction or planning. Cycling in London is becoming increasingly popular and the Cycle Superhighway will make it far safer for cyclists on London's busy streets.
    20100628cycle superhighwayO.jpg
  • Barclays Cycle Superhighways are safe, fast, direct routes from outer London into central London. Here the CS7 route at Southwark is one of the first two routes which opened on 19th July 2010, with 10 more in construction or planning. Cycling in London is becoming increasingly popular and the Cycle Superhighway will make it far safer for cyclists on London's busy streets.
    20100628cycle superhighwayN.jpg
  • Barclays Cycle Superhighways are safe, fast, direct routes from outer London into central London. Here the CS7 route at Southwark is one of the first two routes which opened on 19th July 2010, with 10 more in construction or planning. Cycling in London is becoming increasingly popular and the Cycle Superhighway will make it far safer for cyclists on London's busy streets.
    20100628cycle superhighwayH.jpg
  • Barclays Cycle Superhighways are safe, fast, direct routes from outer London into central London. Here the CS7 route at Southwark is one of the first two routes which opened on 19th July 2010, with 10 more in construction or planning. Cycling in London is becoming increasingly popular and the Cycle Superhighway will make it far safer for cyclists on London's busy streets.
    20100628cycle superhighwayAR.jpg
  • Barclays Cycle Superhighways are safe, fast, direct routes from outer London into central London. Here the CS3 route at Limehouse is one of the first two routes which opened on 19th July 2010, with 10 more in construction or planning. Cycling in London is becoming increasingly popular and the Cycle Superhighway will make it far safer for cyclists on London's busy streets.
    20100623cycle superhighwayD.jpg
  • Garden table and chairs are tidily propped up awaiting its owners to return to the grassy car park from the races during Ladies Day at Royal Ascot racing week. Cans of lager, a fruit bowl and some Pringles hint at the snacks already eaten. Royal Ascot is held every June and is one of the main dates on the sporting calendar and social season. Over 300,000 people make the annual visit to Berkshire during Royal Ascot week, making this Europe’s best-attended race meeting. There are sixteen group races on offer, with at least one Group One event on each of the five days. The Gold Cup is on Ladies' Day on the Thursday. There is over £3 million of prize money on offer.
    ascot_races09-21-06-1993_1.jpg
  • Street roadworks barriers and retail shop hoarding in Rue de Rivoli, Paris. With a prominent No Entry sign, a person's shadow and the green barriers in the foreground, we see in the distance large flowers adorning the side of a new store for the Spanish footwear company, Camper. Rue de Rivoli (French pronunciation: [ʁy də ʁivɔli]) is one of the most famous streets of Paris, a commercial street whose shops include the most fashionable names in the world. It bears the name of Napoleon's early victory against the Austrian army, at the battle of Rivoli, fought January 14 and 15, 1797. The rue de Rivoli marked a transitional compromise between an urbanism of prestige monuments and aristocratic squares, and the forms of modern town planning by official regulation.
    paris_street03-17-08-2012.jpg
  • Arid and barren desert dune landscape at al-Galamun, near Dahkla Oasis, Western Desert, Egypt. The Western Desert covers an area of some 700,000 km2, thereby accounting for around two-thirds of Egypt's total land area. Dakhla Oasis is one of the seven oases of Egypt's Western Desert (part of the Libyan Desert). It lies in the New Valley Governorate, 350 km (220 mi.) and measures approximately 80 km (50 mi) from east to west and 25 km (16 mi) from north to south.
    egypt453-08-03-2016_1.jpg
  • A desert highway road sign for the Egyptian town of Bagdad (not to be confused with Baghdad, Iraq) between Luxor and al-Kharga, Western Desert, Egypt. The Western Desert covers an area of some 700,000 km2, thereby accounting for around two-thirds of Egypt's total land area. Dakhla Oasis is one of the seven oases of Egypt's Western Desert (part of the Libyan Desert). It lies in the New Valley Governorate, 350 km (220 mi.) and measures approximately 80 km (50 mi) from east to west and 25 km (16 mi) from north to south.
    egypt410-07-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Rock formations eroded by wind over millions of years at al-Galamun, near Dahkla Oasis, Western Desert, Egypt. The Western Desert covers an area of some 700,000 km2, thereby accounting for around two-thirds of Egypt's total land area. Dakhla Oasis is one of the seven oases of Egypt's Western Desert (part of the Libyan Desert). It lies in the New Valley Governorate, 350 km (220 mi.) and measures approximately 80 km (50 mi) from east to west and 25 km (16 mi) from north to south.
    egypt463-08-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Arid and barren desert dune landscape at al-Galamun, near Dahkla Oasis, Western Desert, Egypt. The Western Desert covers an area of some 700,000 km2, thereby accounting for around two-thirds of Egypt's total land area. Dakhla Oasis is one of the seven oases of Egypt's Western Desert (part of the Libyan Desert). It lies in the New Valley Governorate, 350 km (220 mi.) and measures approximately 80 km (50 mi) from east to west and 25 km (16 mi) from north to south.
    egypt454-08-03-2016_1.jpg
  • A desert highway road sign for the Egyptian town of Bagdad (not to be confused with Baghdad, Iraq) between Luxor and al-Kharga, Western Desert, Egypt. The Western Desert covers an area of some 700,000 km2, thereby accounting for around two-thirds of Egypt's total land area. Dakhla Oasis is one of the seven oases of Egypt's Western Desert (part of the Libyan Desert). It lies in the New Valley Governorate, 350 km (220 mi.) and measures approximately 80 km (50 mi) from east to west and 25 km (16 mi) from north to south.
    egypt409-07-03-2016_1.jpg
  • An aerial view of central Macau, looking down on high-rise apartments and poorer housing in this ex-Portuguese colony. Macau is now administered by China as a Special Economic Region (SER). Taken from a tall apartment block that overloooks the Rua do Almirant e Costa Cabral, we can view the tightly-packed cities of one of the most densely-populated conurbations in the world, this area is a packed warren of houses, businesses and tower blocks, home to a population of mainland 95% Chinese, primarily Cantonese, Fujianese as well as some Hakka, Shanghainese and overseas Chinese immigrants from Southeast Asia and elsewhere. The remainder are of Portuguese or mixed Chinese-Portuguese ancestry, the so-called Macanese, as well as several thousand Filipino and Thai nationals. The official languages are Portuguese and Chinese.
    aerial_city01-08-07-1994_1.jpg
  • Set among summer fields of tall corn, is the WW1 Somme cemetery of Redan Ridge, Serre Road, near Serre-Les-Puisieux, France. Surrounded by summer crops, the scene is peaceful and idyllic with a setting sun, a landscape of rural France - far from the horrors of the battle fought here almost 100 years ago. The battle was one of the largest of World War I, in which more than 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed, making it one of humanity's bloodiest battles.
    WW1_cemetery05-20-08-2003_1_1_1.jpg
  • Set among summer fields of tall corn, is the WW1 Somme cemetery of Redan Ridge, Serre Road, near Serre-Les-Puisieux, France. Surrounded by summer crops, the scene is peaceful and idyllic, a landscape of rural France - far from the horrors of the battle fought here almost 100 years ago. The battle was one of the largest of World War I, in which more than 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed, making it one of humanity's bloodiest battles.
    WW1_cemetery03-20-08-2003_1_1_1.jpg
  • Set among summer fields of tall corn, is the WW1 Somme cemetery of Redan Ridge, Serre Road, near Serre-Les-Puisieux, France. Surrounded by summer crops, the scene is peaceful and idyllic with a setting sun, a landscape of rural France - far from the horrors of the battle fought here almost 100 years ago. The battle was one of the largest of World War I, in which more than 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed, making it one of humanity's bloodiest battles.
    WW1_cemetery04-20-08-2003_1_1_1.jpg
  • Set among summer fields of tall corn, is the WW1 Somme cemetery of Redan Ridge, Serre Road, near Serre-Les-Puisieux, France. Surrounded by summer crops, the scene is peaceful and idyllic with a setting sun, a landscape of rural France - far from the horrors of the battle fought here almost 100 years ago. The battle was one of the largest of World War I, in which more than 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed, making it one of humanity's bloodiest battles.
    WW1_cemetery02-20-08-2003_1_1_1.jpg
  • WW1 Ovillers cemetery, the resting place of allied and commonwealth war dead from the Somme, France. Surrounded by summer corn fields, the scene is peaceful and idyllic, a landscape of rural France - far from the horrors of the battle fought here almost 100 years ago.<br />
There are now 3,440 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in the cemetery. 2,480 of the burials are unidentified but there are special memorials to 24 casualties believed to be buried among them. The battle was one of the largest of World War I, in which more than 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed, making it one of humanity's bloodiest battles.
    WW1_cemetery01-20-08-2003_1_1_1.jpg
  • St Mary's hospital NHS trust building complex in Paddington, London. Looking upwards to the sky and the tall building, we see the information sign telling outpatients the whereabouts of the NHS departments of Obstretrics and gynaecology. Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust was created on October 1, 2007 by merging St Mary’s NHS Trust and Hammersmith Hospitals NHS Trust and integrating with the faculty of medicine at Imperial College London. Now one of the largest NHS trusts in the country, we have come together with the College to establish one of the UK’s first academic health science centres (AHSCs).
    royal_baby_wait25-22-07-2013_1.jpg
  • Hundreds of union jack flag bunting stretches back downhill through woods towards the local station during the annual Royal Ascot horseracing festival in Berkshire, England. Royal Ascot is one of Europe's most famous race meetings, and dates back to 1711. Queen Elizabeth and various members of the British Royal Family attend. Held every June, it's one of the main dates on the English sporting calendar and summer social season. Over 300,000 people make the annual visit to Berkshire during Royal Ascot week, making this Europe’s best-attended race meeting with over £3m prize money to be won.
    royal_ascot71-19-06-2013_1.jpg
  • Apartment balconies of new Housing Association accomodation in the 2012 Olympic development zone built by contractor Armore. This is in east London, a kilometre south of the 2012 London Olympic Park and stadium site. Purple colour themed balconies look both modern and attractive to poorer residents in this otherwise downtrodden borough of Newham and designed and built by contractor, Ardmore for Genesis Housing Association, 150 High Street, Stratford, 704 homes, in five new residential blocks, one of which, at over 132 metres, will be one of the highest residential towers in London.
    olympic_stratford06-15-03-2012.jpg
  • Cottages in the remote bay at Kintra, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The lights are on in the nearest home and a puddle nearby reflects their warmth amid the otherwise bleak winter evening. Kintra is a small settlement on the north coast of the Ross of Mull. The name comes from the Gaelic for 'end of the beach', 'Ceann Tràgha'. It was founded by the 5th Duke of Argyll to provide an income for himself and his tenants through fishing. Originally cottages with thatched roofs did not have gable ends or chimneys but this one has one gable and with a chimney attached.
    isle_of_mull119-18-11-2011_1.jpg
  • The privately-maintained Court Lane Gardens SE21 in Dulwich Village, Southwark during mid-winter snow. During a prolonged cold spell of bad weather, snow fell continuously on the capital, rendering local streets into a Narnia-like scene. Court Lane Gardens is one of the most sought after roads in Dulwich with the properties set back from Court Lane behind private gardens which are solely for the use of the residents. Victorian and Edwardian era homes fetch between £1.5 and £2m Pounds. The first documented evidence of Dulwich is as a hamlet outside London in 967AD, granted by King Edgar to one of his thanes Earl Aelfheah.
    dulwich_snow21-21-01-2013_1.jpg
  • The remains of the former Hôtelissimo Les Relais Bleus Hotel, where the Air France Concorde airliner crashed on 25 July 2000. Now a flattened site, it is screened off from passers-by from a nearby road near Le Bourget airport - where the pilots of the stricken supersonic aircraft were trying to make for before it stalled and fell on this spot. One hundred passengers and nine crew members on board the flight died. On the ground, four people were killed and one seriously injured.
    concorde_site01-29-07-2002_1_1.jpg
  • A corner of One Canada Square is seen soon after its completion in the early-1990s. A street light has just been turned on in the early evening and the offices inside the tower also start to brighten the corporate spaces. Canary Wharf is the product of the 1980s financial boom when during the office of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, huge building projects such as the Docklands consortium saw vast changes in London's landscape. One Canada Square (often incorrectly called Canary Wharf, after its location) is a skyscraper in Canary Wharf, London. It was the tallest building in the United Kingdom from 1990 to 2010, standing at 235 metres (770 ft) above ground level and containing 50 storeys.
    canary_wharf_lights-13-08-1991_1.jpg
  • 2012 Olympic wasteland and PR fantasy on a hoarding near the sports arenas in Stratford, East London. A landscape of utopian harmony and nature is viewed on the construction site board that surrounds a vacant plot a kilometre south of the Olympic Park and stadium site. In the background is a new housing tower block by design and build contractor, Ardmore for Genesis Housing Association, 150 High Street, Stratford, 704 homes, in five new residential blocks, one of which, at over 132 metres, will be one of the highest residential towers in London. This landscape is more dystopian however as the reality of the empty lot is not what is promised by the imagery on the hoarding.
    2012_stratford13-08-03-2012_1.jpg
  • A female rail traveller walks along the platform at Loughborough Junction railway station where a Samaritans poster urges those with mental health issues, or even thoughts of suicide, to seek help from the registered charity aimed at providing emotional support to anyone in emotional distress, struggling to cope, or at risk of suicide throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland, often through their telephone helpline, on 27th February 2021, in London, England.
    samaritans_poster04-27-02-2021.jpg
  • A train is stopped at Loughborough Junction railway station where a Samaritans poster urges those with mental health issues, or even thoughts of suicide, to seek help from the registered charity aimed at providing emotional support to anyone in emotional distress, struggling to cope, or at risk of suicide throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland, often through their telephone helpline, on 26th February 2021, in London, England.
    samaritans_poster02-26-02-2021.jpg
  • According to the governments Covid social distance restrictions, tables and chairs from a closed restaurant business Laduree are stacked and tied together in the Covent Garden Piazza during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 3rd February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_covent_garden18-03-02-20...jpg
  • According to the governments Covid social distance restrictions, tables and chairs from a closed restaurant business Laduree are stacked and tied together in the Covent Garden Piazza during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 3rd February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_covent_garden17-03-02-20...jpg
  • Although Londoners largely remain working at home, a government NHS National Health Service sign placed on a tree in an empty plaza, advises Londoners about another rise in Covid infections, during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, aka The Square Mile, on 2nd February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city37-02-02-2021.jpg
  • Two Uber rental bikes have been discarded by their rider, left in the middle of a deserted pedestrian street during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus  pandemic, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 10th February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city17-10-02-2021_1.jpg
  • A government NHS National Heath Service advert displaying the face of a Covid patient, is at the top of steps at a deserted Blackfriars rail station during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, aka The Square Mile, on 2nd February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city03-02-02-2021.jpg
  • A government NHS National Heath Service advert displaying the face of a Covid patient, is at the top of steps at a deserted Blackfriars rail station during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, aka The Square Mile, on 2nd February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city01-02-02-2021.jpg
  • A construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign01-08-03-2021.jpg
  • A deserted cityscape of London Wall in the City of London, the capitals financial district during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 9th March 2021, in London, England.
    city_landscape03-09-03-2021.jpg
  • Unearthed and rusting WW1 shells from the Somme battlefield, piled up at Le Tommy Bar, Pozieres, France. On a sign in front, we see the statistics showing the amount of ordnance launched by an Australian artillery division during the notorious 1916 offensive. The Battle of the Somme was a battle of the First World War fought by the armies of the British and French empires against the German Empire. It took place between 1 July and 18 November 1916 on either side of the River Somme in France. The battle was one of the largest of World War I, in which more than 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed, making it one of humanity's bloodiest battles.
    WW1_battlefield01-20-08-2003_1_1_1.jpg
  • A map and exterior of the £105m Siberian Pine Velodrome curved roof during the London 2012 Olympics. The London Velopark is a cycling centre in Leyton in east London. It is one of the permanent Olympic and Paralympic venues for the 2012 Games. The Velopark is at the northern end of Olympic Park. It has a velodrome and BMX racing track, which will be used for the Games, as well as a one-mile (1.6 km) road course and a mountain bike track.[2] The park replaces the Eastway Cycle Circuit demolished to make way for it. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village.
    olympic_park40-10-08-2012.jpg
  • Exterior of the £105m Siberian Pine Velodrome curved roof during the London 2012 Olympics. The London Velopark is a cycling centre in Leyton in east London. It is one of the permanent Olympic and Paralympic venues for the 2012 Games. The Velopark is at the northern end of Olympic Park. It has a velodrome and BMX racing track, which will be used for the Games, as well as a one-mile (1.6 km) road course and a mountain bike track.[2] The park replaces the Eastway Cycle Circuit demolished to make way for it. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village.
    olympic_park35-10-08-2012.jpg
  • Exterior of the £105m Siberian Pine Velodrome curved roof during the London 2012 Olympics. The London Velopark is a cycling centre in Leyton in east London. It is one of the permanent Olympic and Paralympic venues for the 2012 Games. The Velopark is at the northern end of Olympic Park. It has a velodrome and BMX racing track, which will be used for the Games, as well as a one-mile (1.6 km) road course and a mountain bike track.[2] The park replaces the Eastway Cycle Circuit demolished to make way for it. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village.
    olympic_park37-10-08-2012.jpg
  • Exterior of the £105m Siberian Pine Velodrome curved roof during the London 2012 Olympics. The London Velopark is a cycling centre in Leyton in east London. It is one of the permanent Olympic and Paralympic venues for the 2012 Games. The Velopark is at the northern end of Olympic Park. It has a velodrome and BMX racing track, which will be used for the Games, as well as a one-mile (1.6 km) road course and a mountain bike track.[2] The park replaces the Eastway Cycle Circuit demolished to make way for it. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village.
    olympic_park20-10-08-2012.jpg
  • A No Contract sign in the window of a new PureGym, on 2nd March 2017, in Camberwell, London borough of Southwark, England. PureGym Limited is a chain of no frills fitness clubs in the United Kingdom. The chain is based in Leeds and has gyms across the UK. It is Britains largest gym chain by membership with about 450,000 members currently signed up and has plans to open 300 gyms by 2020.
    no_contract-07-02-03-2017_1.jpg
  • Vacant tables await customers within social distance street barriers where Fortnum & Masons have set up an outdoor restaurant and bar in front of the Royal Exchange at Bank, in the City of London, during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, and when the capital is designated by the government as a Tier 2 restriction, on 20th October 2020, in London, England.
    fortnum_and_mason04-20-10-2020.jpg
  • A transport Museum sign welcomes visitors back and empty seating awaits bar and restaurant customers on a wet and rainy day in Covent Garden during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic and when the capital is designated by the government as a Tier 2 restriction, on 21st October 2020, in London, England.
    covent_garden05-21-10-2020-2.jpg
  • Empty seating awaits bar and restaurant customers on a wet and rainy day in Covent Garden during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic and when the capital is designated by the government as a Tier 2 restriction, on 21st October 2020, in London, England.
    covent_garden01-21-10-2020.jpg
  • A single person crosses a pedestrian crossing that otherwise leads nowhere in Stratford during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th November 2020, in London, England. Stratford was the home iof the London 2012 Olympics where industrial estates centred around Carpenters Road were demolished to make way for sports venues  and now, after 8 years, for extensive housing.
    coronavirus_stratford01-26-11-2020.jpg
  • An empty urban landscape of a pedestrian crossing that leads nowhere in Stratford during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th November 2020, in London, England. Stratford was the home iof the London 2012 Olympics where industrial estates centred around Carpenters Road were demolished to make way for sports venues  and now, after 8 years, for extensive housing.
    coronavirus_stratford02-26-11-2020.jpg
  • The day after the government introduced a third Coronavirus pandemic national lockdown, effectively a Tier 5 restriction, a locked up tourist trinket kiosk remains closed on Westminster Bridge as the capital experiences a grim post-Christmas and millions of Britons are told to stay at home, on 5th January 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown3_20-05-01-2021.jpg
  • The face of a customer who is working out at a fitness business is seen through the screen of a closed gym during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city07-26-10-2020.jpg
  • With empty tables outside an Aldwych bar, a government ad advises Londoners about the high alert level during the capital's Tier 2 restrictions, during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city01-26-10-2020.jpg
  • The One Canada Square is seen soon after its completion in the early-1990s. Seen from a low angle inside the dome of Cabot Square shopping mall, we see the tall building rising above us. Canary Wharf is the product of the 1980s financial boom when during the office of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, huge building projects such as the Docklands consortium saw vast changes in London's landscape. One Canada Square (often incorrectly called Canary Wharf, after its location) is a skyscraper in Canary Wharf, London. It was the tallest building in the United Kingdom from 1990 to 2010, standing at 235 metres (770 ft) above ground level and containing 50 storeys.
    canary_wharf-13-08-1991_1.jpg
  • Local signpost showing nearby village milage and the ruins of Cistercian Byland Abbey. Located near Coxwold and Oldstead and on the edge of the North Yorkshire Moors, Byland Abbey was described in the late 12th century as one of the shining lights of northern monasticism. The abbey rose to be one of the largest of the Savigniac order in Britain and the remains of the buildings, particularly the great church, are significant in the development of northern architecture in the second half of the 12th century. Sacked by a Scots army after the battle of Shaws Moor in 1322, it was destroyed in the Dissolution of abbeys and monasteries by Henry VIII in 1538; the buildings then became ruinous and a source of building stone for local people.
    byland_abbey05-30-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Blackfriars property development marketing suite hoarding landscape. A visual pun of the crane's structure that echoes that of the plant's texture shows us a humourous landscape. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, will be a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    blackfriars_property07-18-02-2015_1 ...jpg
  • Blackfriars property development marketing suite hoarding landscape. A visual pun of the crane's structure that echoes that of the plant's texture shows us a humourous landscape. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, will be a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    blackfriars_property07-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • Blackfriars property development marketing suite hoarding landscape. A visual pun of the crane's structure that echoes that of the plant's texture shows us a humourous landscape. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, will be a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    blackfriars_property03-18-02-2015_1 ...jpg
  • Blackfriars property development marketing suite hoarding landscape. A visual pun of the crane's structure that echoes that of the plant's texture shows us a humourous landscape. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, will be a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    blackfriars_property03-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • With non-essential shops still closed, a sign urges the public to keep socially distanced and to take care of belongings during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 22 February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_street03-22-02-2021.jpg
  • A detail view of In and Out markings clearly marked out on the ground, at the entrance and exit of a corporate address during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus  pandemic, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 10th February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city14-10-02-2021_1.jpg
  • One week after the terrorist attack in the UK capital, Londoners and visitors to Britain pay their respects to the scene where flower memorials are left on Westminster Bridge where pedestrians were mown down by a car and outside the Palace of Westminster where armed police now guard the location where a police officer was killed, on 28th March 2017, London, England.
    westminster_terrorism-09-28-03-2017.jpg
  • Internal lighting seen in a still vacant office space in the City of London, UK. Artwork has been placed on one rear wall to show local views of the City outside. Before the completion of these new corporate floors, currently unoccupied by the tenant or owner and with fixtures, fittings and furnishings still to be fitted by the property's management. Work has yet to be completed before the hundreds or thousands of employees can move in to this building in the heart of the UK capital's financial district, founded by the Romans in AD43.
    vacant_offices09-06-01-2014_1_1.jpg
  • Red-tinted landscape against green grass caused by the Serpentine Gallery's Pavilion. Divided in half red and half green, late afternoon sunshine is backlit to reveal the shape and form of this building in one of London's most imminent of green spaces. The Serpentine's 40th Anniversary—the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion is designed by world-renowned French architect Jean Nouvel. The entire design is rendered in a vivid red that, in a play of opposites, contrasts with the green of its park setting. In London, the colour reflects the iconic British images of traditional telephone boxes, post boxes and London buses. The building consists of bold geometric forms, large retractable awnings and a sloped freestanding wall that stands 12m above the lawn. Striking glass, polycarbonate and fabric structures create a versatile system of interior and exterior spaces.
    serpentine_pavillion02-11-10-2010_1_...jpg
  • Hawk jets of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team practice display using an old ship wreck as display datum (centre). Looking out to the Mediterranean Sea from the Akrotiri Peninsular, Cyprus, we see the elite team, practising their display, a show-stopping manoeuvre of their 25-minute air show display routine. A rusted and crumbling hulk of a ship lies in the shallow surf and the Hawk jets used by the Red Arrows fan out above it using red, white and blue smoke. The shipwreck's remains provide a sad foreground to the dynamic flying beyond making a graphic landscape. 'Datum' is an axis on which the Red Arrows focus their displays, from where the whole show is visible at the crowd's centre. 'The Wreck' is but one of a series of datum points selected by the team leader at short notice to simulate diverse geographical features and wind directions
    Red_Arrows044_RBA.jpg
  • A corporate landscape of construction hoardings made by developers for the project known as The Corniche in the London borough of Lambeth. A false juxtapostion of nature and leaves greeney with the incongruous setting of the urban landscape. The homes going up here will " .. offer a selection of luxurious one, two and three bedroom apartments and penthouses boasting magnificent views of some of London's most iconic landmarks.."
    property_hoarding04-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • A corporate landscape of construction hoardings made by developers for the project known as The Corniche in the London borough of Lambeth. A false juxtapostion of nature and leaves greeney with the incongruous setting of the urban landscape. The homes going up here will " .. offer a selection of luxurious one, two and three bedroom apartments and penthouses boasting magnificent views of some of London's most iconic landmarks.."
    property_hoarding01-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • An urban landscape zigzag of shadows from the steps and handrails of Alameda Metro station, on 14th July 2016, in Lisbon, Portugal. One the sunny side are the distorted lines  of the well-trodden stairs at this main transport merge of underground train lines as a lone pigeon walks along the top and persons legs look the same in the far right corner.
    portugal_lisbon-103-14-07-2016.jpg
  • The word NO stencilled on a section of resurfaced tarmac in south London, on 13th January 2017 in London, England.
    no_pavement-01-13-01-2017.jpg
  • Public phone box at New Lanark, the industrial revolution community village managed by social pioneer Robert Owen. New Lanark is on the River Clyde, approximately 1.4 miles (2.2 kilometres) from Lanark, in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. It was founded in 1786 by David Dale, who built cotton mills  and housing for the mill workers. Dale built the mills there to take advantage of the water power provided by the river. Under the ownership of a partnership that included Dale's son-in-law, Robert Owen, a Welsh philanthropist and social reformer, New Lanark became a successful business and an epitome of utopian socialism. The New Lanark mills operated until 1968 and is now one of five UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Scotland.
    new_lanark29-29-07-2010-2.jpg
  • Public phone box and car headlights in a street at New Lanark, the industrial revolution community village managed by social pioneer Robert Owen. New Lanark is on the River Clyde, approximately 1.4 miles (2.2 kilometres) from Lanark, in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. It was founded in 1786 by David Dale, who built cotton mills  and housing for the mill workers. Dale built the mills there to take advantage of the water power provided by the river. Under the ownership of a partnership that included Dale's son-in-law, Robert Owen, a Welsh philanthropist and social reformer, New Lanark became a successful business and an epitome of utopian socialism. The New Lanark mills operated until 1968 and is now one of five UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Scotland.
    new_lanark31-29-07-2010-1.jpg
  • Terraced mill workers' homes at New Lanark, the industrial revolution community village managed by social pioneer Robert Owen. New Lanark is on the River Clyde, approximately 1.4 miles (2.2 kilometres) from Lanark, in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. It was founded in 1786 by David Dale, who built cotton mills  and housing for the mill workers. Dale built the mills there to take advantage of the water power provided by the river. Under the ownership of a partnership that included Dale's son-in-law, Robert Owen, a Welsh philanthropist and social reformer, New Lanark became a successful business and an epitome of utopian socialism. The New Lanark mills operated until 1968 and is now one of five UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Scotland.
    new_lanark17-29-07-2010-1.jpg
  • Medieval streets of Montresor in the French Indre-et-Loire region. 50 kilometres southeast of Tours, Montrésor is listed as one of the 'Most beautiful villages in France'. It stands on the banks of the Indrois which reflects the remains of the double enclosure walls of this old fortress and its Renaissance castle. In the village, the houses with their white tufa walls or half-timbering mix with semi-cave dwellings. Montrésor is a commune lying on the right bank of the Indrois, in the Indre-et-Loire department in central France.
    montresor_village02-08-07-2014_1.jpg
  • Rusting billboard showing a faded advert landscape at the Reading Services on the M4 motorway. This rural landscape shows us the state of old advertising in this location at this rest-stop on one of Britain's main motorways running from east/west: between London and Wales. Its rusting surface shows older ad campaigns visible to passing traffic after leaving the motorway.
    M4_billboard01-24-12-2015.jpg
  • Roadside kerb landscape in front of an incongruous panoramic scene of a luxury apartment with a view over central London. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, will be a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    luxury_development01-20-05-2015_1.jpg
  • The Abbey of Sante-Marie DOrbieu in the pretty French medieval walled village of Lagrasse on the River Orbieu, on 24th May, 2017, in Lagrasse, Languedoc-Rousillon, south of France. Lagrasse is listed as one of Frances most beautiful villages and lies on the famous Route 20 wine route in the Basses-Corbieres region dating to the 13th century.
    lagrasse_france-64-24-05-2017.jpg
  • A construction hoarding showing the future skyscraper being built by housing developer Barratt at Blackfriars Circus at the southern end of Blackfriars Bridge Road, south London borough of Southwark. The merging of the future and the present make for a confusing landscape with a dark sky in the distance. In the foreground is the image of the obelisk that occupies the junction, was built in 1771. Local opposition groups object to this new landmark, one of many futuristic buildings going up to dominate the south London landscape. Typically, property in these developments are owned by foreign non-residents.
    development_hoarding03-27-04-2016.jpg
  • As financial district workers are still working from home, a rope cordon and a broom is wrapped around door handles of a closed wine bar during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_closed_business02-26-10-...jpg
  • Stones and wall fortifications of the medieval La Calahorra Castle and modern town below. With our backs to the main walls of the Castillo, we see the large stone blocks of the outer fortification remains, the line of the wall itself, falling away to reveal the outskirts of modern Calahorra below. Homes and businesses are nestled below a hill that rises above the town. La Calahorra Castle-Palace is one of the most important Works of the firs Spanish Renaissance. It was constructed on the remains of a preceding fortification of the medieval period dating from the beginning of the 16th century, probably between 1509 and 1512. Calahorra, La Rioja, Spain is a municipality in the comarca of Rioja Baja, near the border with Navarre on the right bank of the Ebro. During ancient Roman times, Calahorra was a municipium known as Calagurris.
    calhorra_castile-2-14-April-2011_1.jpg
  • Cones and a hoarding showing the Thames River, Millennium Bridge and Tate Modern. We see a visual pun between the cones and severed stripe-wrapped tree that blends together with the tower of the Tate - a former electricity generating power station. The future skyscraper is 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    blackfriars_regeneration02-17-08-201...jpg
  • Blackfriars property development marketing suite hoarding and construction materials. Plastic sleeves for cabling plus a pile of sand ballast is seen in the foreground, in front of an incongruous panoramic scene of a luxury apartment with a view over central London. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, will be a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    blackfriars_property11-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • Blackfriars property development marketing suite hoarding and construction materials. Plastic sleeves for cabling plus a pile of sand ballast is seen in the foreground, in front of an incongruous panoramic scene of a luxury apartment with a view over central London. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, will be a mixed-use development approved for construction at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development make make up a 52-storey tower of a maximum height of 170m and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail. In addition a new public space will be created.
    blackfriars_property10-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • The main entrance of 'Haus 1' the ministerial headquarters of the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany, the GDR. Built in 1960, the complex now known as the Stasi Museum. Before the fall of the Wall, it was a 22-hectare complex of espionage whose centrepiece is the office and working quarters of the former Minister of State Security, Erich Mielke who considered their role as the 'shield and sword of the party', conducting one of the world's most efficient spying operations against its political dissenters during its 40-year old socialist history. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy.
    berlin_stasi_museum05-07-04-2013_1.jpg
  • New apartment balconies in recently completed housing in Stratford, a short distance from the 2012 Olympic Park. Developers are building 4m sq ft of offices and 350 homes. Inter Ikea, proposed 1,200 homes and up to 500,000 sq ft of commercial space at a 26-acre site just 500 metres south of the Olympic Park. Houses close to the Olympic Park in Stratford have increased in value by £800 a month meaning average house prices have increased by £60,000, or 30pc. Also, short-term rentals in London in July 2012 is £2,858 per week, an increase of 444pc one year before the Games.
    2012_stratford10-08-03-2012_1.jpg
  • Brightly painted buildings in central London. Part of a new architectural development in central London.
    20100313coloured buildingsA.jpg
  • Hill landscape looking from Sutton Bank to distant North Yorkshire fields below. From a high altitude, we look westwards down on faraway woodland, fields of farms and villages, located on the edge of the North Yorkshire Moors National Park. Sutton Bank, also known as Roulston Scar, is a hill in the Hambleton District of the North York Moors National Park, North Yorkshire in England. The hill is the site of one of the most important prehistoric monuments in the region—a massive hillfort built in the Iron Age, around 400 BC. It was the approximate location of the attack of the Scots in a major victory Battle of Old Byland they defeated the forces of King Edward II and John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond.
    yorkshire_landscape01-30-09-2014_1.jpg
  • A peeling billboard reveals older layers of Primesight street advertising incl the dystopian message "It's a wonderful world." The differences between dream and dystopia make for a comical, if slightly sad landscape in this south London street called Coldharbour Lane SW9, the home for housing estates and problem families in the borough of Lambeth. Peeling sheets of past ad campaigns after rainfall has helped tear the top layer to reveal others underneath. <br />
Primesight is one of the UK's leading Outdoor advertising companies with ownership of a diverse portfolio of products in a range of environments.
    wonderful_world02-28-04-2012_1_1.jpg
  • The Museo Storico Navale, a naval history museum in the Castello district of Venice, near the Venetian Arsenal. The museum was established by the Regia Marina in 1919. The Museo Storico Navale is one of Venice's less-visited museums, and is open only in the mornings. Situated in the Castello district, near the Arsenale, Venice's historic shipyard, it is devoted to naval and nautical history, with exhibits covering five floors of the building.
    venice_84-22-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Ageing 80s technology of the Thames Barrier on the River Thames near Woolwich in east London. As daylight fades to become a purple hue, we see the waters of the Thames flowing on the tide. Operational in 1982, the Thames Barrier is one of the largest movable flood barriers in the world, managed by the UK's Environment Agency. The barrier spans 520 metres across the River Thames near Woolwich, and it protects 125 square kilometres of central London from flooding caused by tidal surges.  The barrier has closed over 80 times since the year 2000 with ‘at least 800,000 homes and businesses have protected from tidal surges.
    thames_barrier-12-04-1989_1.jpg
  • One Blackfriars property development marketing suite hoarding landscape, symbolising increasing private ownership of London's public urban space. Increasingly, the UK capital is becoming privatised tracts of land where consortium corporates have developed large areas where the public either cannot access or where strict codes and security and even dress codes have been introduced. Foreign money has come from China and the Middle-East meaning that London is now largely owned by foreign companies. Ownership of flats and apartments then attracts non-domicile occupiers, turning these estates into ghost towns.
    st_george_blackfriars02-13-05-2015_1.jpg
  • Whilst many English seaside piers are in decline, Southwold Pier is enjoying renewed popularity. The pier sign is at the Suffolk seaside town's seafront. Southwold Pier was built in 1900, and, at 247 metres (about 810 feet) was long enough to accommodate the Belle steamers which carried trippers along the coast. In World War 2, it was weakened by having two breaches blown in it: one by the Royal Engineers to hinder a possible German invasion, and the other by a loose sea-mine. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    southwold_pier03-25-07-2012_1_1.jpg
  • Schloss (Castle) Trostburg above the south Tyrol village of Widbruck, Italy. Castel Forte or Castel Trostburg, one of the most famous and splendid castles of South Tyrol, is located on an eastern hillside on a natural rocky promontory. The castle dates back to the 12th century and mentioned for the first time in 1173 as place of residence of a certain “Cunrat de Trosperch” (Konrad von Trostberg), descending from the Lords of Castelrotto. In 1981 the castle was passed on into the hands of the “Südtiroler Burgeninstitut” and thus was saved from decay.
    schloss_trostburg01-14-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Gothic architecture ruins of the Cistercian order's Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire. Tall columns, pillars and arches rise majestically from the green grass that  for centuries, was the home for successive monks and abbots who endured piety through hardship. Rievaulx was one of the first Cistercian abbeys to be founded in England. Surrounded by a massive agricultural and industrial estate, staffed by lay brothers, it was intended as the focus of a substantial family of daughter houses throughout northern Britain. Destroyed by the commissioners of King Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the abbeys and monasteries in 1538, the shattered abbey ruins became a popular subject for Romantic artists in the 18th and 19th centuries.
    rievaulx_abbey14-29-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Gothic architecture ruins of the Cistercian order's Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire. Tall columns, pillars and arches rise majestically from the green grass that  for centuries, was the home for successive monks and abbots who endured piety through hardship. Rievaulx was one of the first Cistercian abbeys to be founded in England. Surrounded by a massive agricultural and industrial estate, staffed by lay brothers, it was intended as the focus of a substantial family of daughter houses throughout northern Britain. Destroyed by the commissioners of King Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the abbeys and monasteries in 1538, the shattered abbey ruins became a popular subject for Romantic artists in the 18th and 19th centuries.
    rievaulx_abbey12-29-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Gothic architecture ruins of the Cistercian order's Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire. Tall columns, pillars and arches rise majestically from the green grass that  for centuries, was the home for successive monks and abbots who endured piety through hardship. Rievaulx was one of the first Cistercian abbeys to be founded in England. Surrounded by a massive agricultural and industrial estate, staffed by lay brothers, it was intended as the focus of a substantial family of daughter houses throughout northern Britain. Destroyed by the commissioners of King Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the abbeys and monasteries in 1538, the shattered abbey ruins became a popular subject for Romantic artists in the 18th and 19th centuries.
    rievaulx_abbey10-29-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Gothic architecture ruins of the Cistercian order's Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire. Tall columns, pillars and arches rise majestically from the green grass that  for centuries, was the home for successive monks and abbots who endured piety through hardship. Rievaulx was one of the first Cistercian abbeys to be founded in England. Surrounded by a massive agricultural and industrial estate, staffed by lay brothers, it was intended as the focus of a substantial family of daughter houses throughout northern Britain. Destroyed by the commissioners of King Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the abbeys and monasteries in 1538, the shattered abbey ruins became a popular subject for Romantic artists in the 18th and 19th centuries.
    rievaulx_abbey02-29-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Gothic architecture ruins of the Cistercian order's Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire. Tall columns, pillars and arches rise majestically from the green grass that  for centuries, was the home for successive monks and abbots who endured piety through hardship. Rievaulx was one of the first Cistercian abbeys to be founded in England. Surrounded by a massive agricultural and industrial estate, staffed by lay brothers, it was intended as the focus of a substantial family of daughter houses throughout northern Britain. Destroyed by the commissioners of King Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the abbeys and monasteries in 1538, the shattered abbey ruins became a popular subject for Romantic artists in the 18th and 19th centuries.
    rievaulx_abbey08-29-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Hawk jets of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team practice display using an old ship wreck as display datum (centre). Looking out to the Mediterranean Sea from the Akrotiri Peninsular, Cyprus, we see the elite team, practising their display, a show-stopping manoeuvre of their 25-minute air show display routine. A rusted and crumbling hulk of a ship lies in the shallow surf and the Hawk jets used by the Red Arrows fan out above it using red, white and blue smoke. The shipwreck's remains provide a sad foreground to the dynamic flying beyond making a graphic landscape. 'Datum' is an axis on which the Red Arrows focus their displays, from where the whole show is visible at the crowd's centre. 'The Wreck' is but one of a series of datum points selected by the team leader at short notice to simulate diverse geographical features and wind directions
    Red_Arrows318_RBA.jpg
  • Hawk jets of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team practice display using an old ship wreck as display datum (centre). Looking out to the Mediterranean Sea from the Akrotiri Peninsular, Cyprus, we see the elite team, practising their display, a show-stopping manoeuvre of their 25-minute air show display routine. A rusted and crumbling hulk of a ship lies in the shallow surf and the Hawk jets used by the Red Arrows fan out above it using red, white and blue smoke. The shipwreck's remains provide a sad foreground to the dynamic flying beyond making a graphic landscape. 'Datum' is an axis on which the Red Arrows focus their displays, from where the whole show is visible at the crowd's centre. 'The Wreck' is but one of a series of datum points selected by the team leader at short notice to simulate diverse geographical features and wind directions
    Red_Arrows317_RBA.jpg
  • Hawk jets of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team practice display using an old ship wreck as display datum (centre). Looking out to the Mediterranean Sea from the Akrotiri Peninsular, Cyprus, we see the elite team, practising their display, a show-stopping manoeuvre of their 25-minute air show display routine. A rusted and crumbling hulk of a ship lies in the shallow surf and the Hawk jets used by the Red Arrows fan out above it using red, white and blue smoke. The shipwreck's remains provide a sad foreground to the dynamic flying beyond making a graphic landscape. 'Datum' is an axis on which the Red Arrows focus their displays, from where the whole show is visible at the crowd's centre. 'The Wreck' is but one of a series of datum points selected by the team leader at short notice to simulate diverse geographical features and wind directions
    Red_Arrows283_RBA.jpg
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