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  • A construction hoarding showing London's Shard skyscraper and Give Way triangle at a road junction in south London. As a visual rhyme, we see the echoes of shapes and geometry, a repeating of triangles and diagonals - a geometric shape and a skyscraper with scale and perspective. Standing 306 metres (1,004 ft) high, the Shard is currently the tallest building in the European Union, by Italian architect Renzo Piano that dominates this borough of Southwark in south London.
    shard_triangles02-27-04-2015_1.jpg
  • A construction hoarding showing London's Shard skyscraper and Give Way triangle at a road junction in south London. As a visual rhyme, we see the echoes of shapes and geometry, a repeating of triangles and diagonals - a geometric shape and a skyscraper with scale and perspective. Standing 306 metres (1,004 ft) high, the Shard is currently the tallest building in the European Union, by Italian architect Renzo Piano that dominates this borough of Southwark in south London.
    shard_triangles08-27-04-2015_1.jpg
  • A construction hoarding showing London's Shard skyscraper and Give Way triangle at a road junction in south London. As a visual rhyme, we see the echoes of shapes and geometry, a repeating of triangles and diagonals - a geometric shape and a skyscraper with scale and perspective. Standing 306 metres (1,004 ft) high, the Shard is currently the tallest building in the European Union, by Italian architect Renzo Piano that dominates this borough of Southwark in south London.
    shard_triangles05-27-04-2015_1.jpg
  • Aerial landscape of road diversion sign and road triangle markings. This is a detail of street and road markings, the geometry of shapes and linear design with the triangular points meeting at a diagonal post, the parallel lines in the road and the arrow of a diversion sign. The street is in Waterloo, called The Cut in the borough of Lambeth.
    road_geometry03-20-05-2015_1.jpg
  • A young boy plays billiards in Avebury Manor, an early 16th-century manor house in the village of the same name, built within the Neolithic henge site of Avebury, Wiltshire. The house is a living museum, its renovation funded by the BBC as part of a TV series about heritage restoration and now owned by the National Trust. The young boy pauses to think of his next move, holding the cue across the green baized table to make a triangle - echoing the shapes of overhead lamp shades above his head.
    avebury_billiards01-27-10-2015_1.jpg
  • Discarded traffic signs lie in a corner of a construction hoarding at Nine Elms, south London, currently the largest construction site in Europe creating 13,000 square feet of residential and retail space, on 27th January 2020, in London, England.
    battersea-05-27-01-2020.jpg
  • A sign warning passers-by of chemical and biological landfill dangers on property owned by Waste Management, Offham, Kent. The sign has been placed on a wooden fence on private land at the side of a village road in this rural area of southern England. A substantial lock has been placed through the fence and gate deterring those wishing to take a shortcut through to nearby woods. Places like Offham were chosen for London’s rubbish and for many years gigantic ARC lorries left London for the villages in order to fill the quarries with metropolitan waste.
    landfill_sign01-15-01-2012.jpg
  • Workmen fix triangular-shaped cladding to the exterior of a part of the One Blackfriars residential tower, on 27th October 2017, in Southwark, London, England. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, is a mixed-use development at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development is a 52-storey 170m tower and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail.
    one_blackfriars-23-27-10-2017.jpg
  • Workmen fix triangular-shaped cladding to the exterior of a part of the One Blackfriars residential tower, on 27th October 2017, in Southwark, London, England. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, is a mixed-use development at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development is a 52-storey 170m tower and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail.
    one_blackfriars-10-27-10-2017.jpg
  • Workmen fix triangular-shaped cladding to the exterior of a part of the One Blackfriars residential tower, on 27th October 2017, in Southwark, London, England. 1 Blackfriars or One Blackfriars, is a mixed-use development at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Stamford Street at Bankside, London. The development is a 52-storey 170m tower and two smaller buildings of 6 and 4 stories respectively. Uses include residential flats, a hotel and retail.
    one_blackfriars-12-27-10-2017.jpg
  • Union Jack bunting hangs over a British summer fete bringing the local community together and to celebrate their important public space, on 24th June 2017, in Ruskin Park, the south London borough of Lambeth, England. Bunting is a festive decoration made of fabric, or of plastic, paper or even cardboard in imitation of fabric. Typical forms of bunting are strings of colorful triangular flags and lengths of fabric in the colors of national flags gathered and draped into swags or pleated into fan shapes. The term is also used to refer to a collection of flags, and particularly those of a ship. The officer responsible for raising signals using flags is known as bunts, a term still used for a ships communications officer.
    fete_bunting-01-24-06-2017.jpg
  • Union Jack bunting hangs over a British summer fete bringing the local community together and to celebrate their important public space, on 24th June 2017, in Ruskin Park, the south London borough of Lambeth, England. Bunting is a festive decoration made of fabric, or of plastic, paper or even cardboard in imitation of fabric. Typical forms of bunting are strings of colorful triangular flags and lengths of fabric in the colors of national flags gathered and draped into swags or pleated into fan shapes. The term is also used to refer to a collection of flags, and particularly those of a ship. The officer responsible for raising signals using flags is known as bunts, a term still used for a ships communications officer.
    fete_bunting-03-24-06-2017.jpg
  • A discarded broken umbrella and a person walking past with a brolley shop bag in Charing Cross Road, central London. Coincidentally, the woman carries a shopping bag for a London branch of Hackett whose logo is a bowler hat and pair of crossed umbrellas, the sign of quality and Britishness. Someone has thrown the item on the ground, partially-collapsed but now forgotten - the remnant of a person's wet day in the capital. Transport continues too and the red London bus edges past in heavy traffic in the borough of Westminster.
    street_umbrella05-09-12-2015_1.jpg
  • Discarded traffic signs lie in a corner of a construction hoarding at Nine Elms, south London, currently the largest construction site in Europe creating 13,000 square feet of residential and retail space, on 27th January 2020, in London, England.
    battersea-04-27-01-2020.jpg
  • Architecture students carry awkward plywood cut-out shapes as part of their course at University College London UCL, on 3rd August 2017, in London, England.
    students-05-03-08-2017.jpg
  • Union Jack bunting hangs over a British summer fete bringing the local community together and to celebrate their important public space, on 24th June 2017, in Ruskin Park, the south London borough of Lambeth, England. Bunting is a festive decoration made of fabric, or of plastic, paper or even cardboard in imitation of fabric. Typical forms of bunting are strings of colorful triangular flags and lengths of fabric in the colors of national flags gathered and draped into swags or pleated into fan shapes. The term is also used to refer to a collection of flags, and particularly those of a ship. The officer responsible for raising signals using flags is known as bunts, a term still used for a ships communications officer.
    fete_bunting-02-24-06-2017.jpg
  • A discarded broken umbrella and side of a bus in Charing Cross Road, central London. The broken brolly sits upright on the pavement as daily life in the capital carries on around it. Someone has thrown the item on the ground, partially-collapsed but now forgotten - the remnant of a person's wet day in the capital. Transport continues too and the red London bus edges past in heavy traffic in the borough of Westminster.
    street_umbrella02-09-12-2015_1.jpg
  • Architecture students carry awkward plywood cut-out shapes as part of their course at University College London UCL, on 3rd August 2017, in London, England.
    students-02-03-08-2017.jpg
  • Union Jack bunting hangs in the trees of a London park, on 24th June 2017, in Ruskin Park, the south London borough of Lambeth, England. Bunting is a festive decoration made of fabric, or of plastic, paper or even cardboard in imitation of fabric. Typical forms of bunting are strings of colorful triangular flags and lengths of fabric in the colors of national flags gathered and draped into swags or pleated into fan shapes. The term is also used to refer to a collection of flags, and particularly those of a ship. The officer responsible for raising signals using flags is known as bunts, a term still used for a ships communications officer.
    fete_bunting-04-24-06-2017.jpg
  • Man looks at the triangular map in the space known as Bank Triangle in the City of London on 28th January 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. The City of London is a historic financial district, home to both the great banking buildings. Modern corporate skyscrapers tower above the vestiges of medieval alleyways below.
    20200128_city bank triangle_001.jpg
  • A yellow triangle on the side of a closed business in central London is matched by a smaller version on the far left warning of wet paint. Double-yellow no parking lines are on the road at the bottom. It appears the business here is either closed or soon to reopen given the fresh paint. It is an urban sign or geometric shapes - large black square and rectangle plus the triangle.
    yellow_triangle01-13-01-2016.jpg
  • "Best Six Sticks" - tying up with raffia.  David Brook and John Smiles preparing rhubarb for the 82nd Annual Rhubarb Show, Caldergrove, Wakefield. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 29-7_1.jpg
  • Graham Oldroyd selecting rhubarb sticks for the 82nd Annual Rhubarb Show, Caldergrove, Wakefield. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 27-12_1.jpg
  • "Right little bit of cooking oil gives it a bit of a shine". Graham Oldroyd selecting rhubarb sticks for the 82nd Annual Rhubarb Show, Caldergrove, Wakefield. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 24-18_1.jpg
  • Freshly pulled rhubarb for the 82nd Annual Rhubarb Show, Caldergrove, Wakefield. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 24-07_1.jpg
  • David Brook filling forcing sheds with 2 year old rhubarb roots from the fields, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 42-4_1.jpg
  • Stuart Asquith filling forcing sheds with 2 year old rhubarb roots from the fields, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 40-02_1.jpg
  • Stephen Askin and Nicol McKay lifting rhubarb roots to go into the forcing shed, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 37-7_1.jpg
  • David Brook coming out of the forcing shed with rhubarb selected for showing at the 82nd Annual Rhubarb Show, Caldergrove, Wakefield. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 27-11_1.jpg
  • Valko Sariyski, trimming rhubarb in the packhouse, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 12-6_1.jpg
  • Grading room at E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 09-05_1.jpg
  • Boxes of forced rhubarb at E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, stacked ready to be sent out to supermarkets. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 08-16_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Graham Oldroyd whilst pulling rhubarb in the forcing shed by candlelight, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 3-14_1.jpg
  • David Brook filling forcing sheds with 2 year old rhubarb roots from the fields, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 42-9_1.jpg
  • Rhubarb growing in the forcing sheds in darkness, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 6-9_1.jpg
  • Graham Oldroyd pulling rhubarb by candlelight, E. Oldroyd and sons Ltd, Carlton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK. February is high season for the forced rhubarb of the so-called 'Rhubarb Triangle' formed by Wakefield, Rothwell and Morley. These intensely flavoured plants with pink stems and yellow leaves - grown by candlelight and tended by hand in huge, heated forcing sheds - are one of the first culinary delights of the British winter.
    Rhubarb 5-23_1.jpg
  • City workers in front of the Victorian columns of the Royal Exchange, enjoy sunshine in Bank Triangle during an unusual autumn heatwave on 13th September 2016, in the City of London, England.
    leica_city-20-13-09-2016.jpg
  • Royal Exchange and the WW1 war memorial at Bank Triangle in the City of London on 5th February 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. The City of London is a city, county and a local government district that contains the historic centre and the primary central business district CBD of London.
    20200205_city of london street_009.jpg
  • Untypical overflowing rubbish and litter collects over bins and recycling receptacles in Bank Triangle in the City of London - the capitals financial district aka The Square Mile, on 19th April 2018, in London, England.
    city_litter-13-19-04-2018.jpg
  • Untypical overflowing rubbish and litter collects over bins and recycling receptacles in Bank Triangle in the City of London - the capitals financial district aka The Square Mile, on 19th April 2018, in London, England.
    city_litter-02-19-04-2018.jpg
  • Untypical overflowing rubbish and litter collects over bins and recycling receptacles in Bank Triangle in the City of London - the capitals financial district aka The Square Mile, on 19th April 2018, in London, England.
    city_litter-06-19-04-2018.jpg
  • A gentleman commuter wearing a flat cap walks across Bank Triangle in the Square Mile,the capitals oldest district and financial centre, on 9th February 2017, outside the Bank of England, in the City of London, England. Traditional City bowler hats and pinstripe suits are now rare, even among older bankers and financiers.
    city_commuters-02-09-02-2017.jpg
  • Office Graphitti on a white board  perhaps hinting at a love triangle, ofice in Leeds. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    608tdwaterhouse_32_207_1.jpg
  • City workers in front of the Victorian columns of the Royal Exchange and the Bank of England, enjoy sunshine in Bank Triangle during an unusual autumn heatwave on 13th September 2016, in the City of London, England.
    leica_city-19-13-09-2016.jpg
  • 'Disabled People Against the Cuts (DPAC)', 'Black Triangle Campaign' and Never Again Ever!' gather today in outside Parliament to remember the disabled victims of the Nazi Holocaust. The groups want to highlight current injustices such as the 1,300 sick and disabled people who died after being deemed fit to work under this Government's austerity regime. Westminster, London.
    15-NeverAgainEver-8137.jpg
  • 'Disabled People Against the Cuts (DPAC)', 'Black Triangle Campaign' and Never Again Ever!' gather today in outside Downing Street to remember the disabled victims of the Nazi Holocaust. The groups want to highlight current injustices such as the 1,300 sick and disabled people who died after being deemed fit to work under this Government's austerity regime. Westminster, London
    15-NeverAgainEver-8083.jpg
  • An elderly gentleman wearing a traditional bowler hat and carrying an umbrella, pauses to read the headlines in the London Evening Standard newspaper, before making his way home from Bank Triangle, outside the Bank of England. He is one of the last examples of a bygone age, when many in London's financial district wore such work clothes - a way of typifying a cretain breed of Englishness and class system, known all over, and still expected, around the world. Sadly, gents like this are very rare after modern fashions, lower standards and changed attitudes in the workplace meant that younger men no longer wanted to wear a stuffy outfit to work. The days of the bowler are fast disappearing.
    RB_087-18-04-1993.jpg
  • A boarded up central London mini cab business and an End of works triangle sign on a Holborn corner. The visual pun plays off the triangular sign that tells us that work has ended, a message we also understand from the plyboard attached to the former business premises, securing it from vandals, squatters or illegal occupation. A security light burns 24/7 and the old cab office's details along with the property agent's.
    no_work02-22-11-2012.jpg
  • An elderly gentleman wearing a traditional bowler hat and carrying a folded newspaper descends the steps from the bright daylight to the dark of the London Underground, before making his way home from Royal Exchange at Bank Triangle by tube. He is one of the last examples of a bygone age, when many in London's financial district wore such work clothes - a way of typifying a breed of Englishness and class system, known all over, and still expected, around the world. Sadly, gents like this are very rare after modern fashions, lower standards and changed attitudes in the workplace meant that younger men no longer wanted to wear a stuffy outfit to work. The days of the bowler are fast disappearing. Behind him are the tall and solid Corinthian pillars of the 3rd Royal Exchange built in 1842 by Sir William Tite.
    city_bowler_gent-25-06-1993_1.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers enjoy warm summer sunshine beneath the Duke of Wellingtons statue that stands opposite the Bank of England right at Bank triangle in the City of London, the capitals financial district aka the Square Mile, on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-31-22-08-2019.jpg
  • Untypical overflowing rubbish and litter collects over bins and recycling receptacles in Bank Triangle in the City of London - the capitals financial district aka The Square Mile, on 19th April 2018, in London, England.
    city_litter-18-19-04-2018.jpg
  • Untypical overflowing rubbish and litter collects over bins and recycling receptacles in Bank Triangle in the City of London - the capitals financial district aka The Square Mile, on 19th April 2018, in London, England.
    city_litter-11-19-04-2018.jpg
  • 'Disabled People Against the Cuts (DPAC)', 'Black Triangle Campaign' and Never Again Ever!' gather today in outside Downing Street to remember the disabled victims of the Nazi Holocaust. The groups want to highlight current injustices such as the 1,300 sick and disabled people who died after being deemed fit to work under this Government's austerity regime. Westminster, London
    15-NeverAgainEver-8102.jpg
  • The hand of a judge leaning on a table whilst judging at the 82nd Annual Rhubarb Show, Cedar Court Hotel, Caldergrove, Wakefield.
    Rhubarb 34-7_1.jpg
  • A pile of lunchtime litter overspills on top of a litter bin outside the Bank of England during the 2018 heatwave in the City of London, the capitals historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England.
    city_people-35-02-08-2018.jpg
  • A pile of lunchtime litter is added to by a City worker outside the Bank of England during the 2018 heatwave in the City of London, the capitals historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England.
    city_people-33-02-08-2018.jpg
  • A pile of lunchtime litter is added to by a City worker outside the Bank of England during the 2018 heatwave in the City of London, the capitals historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England.
    city_people-32-02-08-2018.jpg
  • City people shelter from rain in the privacy of a dark corner to check messages, by Cornhill in the City of London, the capitals financial district, 7th March 2018, in London England.
    city_people-07-06-03-2018.jpg
  • A lone walker rests on a bench at Emmanuel Head on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. 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-11-27-09-2017.jpg
  • Central Hill Estate on 24th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP04130.jpg
  • A mother with her young daughter at Central Hill Estate on 24th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP04107.jpg
  • Central Hill Estate on 24th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03963.jpg
  • Central Hill Estate on 24th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03996.jpg
  • Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03299.jpg
  • A man making a protest banner on Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03251.jpg
  • Tenants at Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03207.jpg
  • Tenants at Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03214.jpg
  • A family on Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03186.jpg
  • A family on Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03201.jpg
  • Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03175.jpg
  • Ronald Cray with dog Killy at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP_5881.jpg
  • Ronald Cray, with dogs Mitch and Killy, at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP_5860.jpg
  • Ronald Cray, with dogs Mitch and Killy, at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP_5849.jpg
  • Ronald Cray at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP_5821.jpg
  • London Street Orchestra at Central Hill event, Open Garden Estates, organised by ASH Architects for Social Housing at Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    OpenGardenEstates-5603.jpg
  • Ronald Cray, with dogs Mitch and Killy, at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    CentralHill134.jpg
  • Open Garden Estates event organised by ASH Architects for Social Housing at Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    CentralHill108.jpg
  • Open Garden Estates event organised by ASH Architects for Social Housing at Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    CentralHill100.jpg
  • London Street Orchestra at Central Hill event, Open Garden Estates, organised by ASH Architects for Social Housing at Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    CentralHill117.jpg
  • Central Hill Estate on 24th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    Central Hill Estate014.jpg
  • A young family recently moved into Central Hill Estate on 24th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom.  Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    Central Hill004.jpg
  • Andrew Mellows, a pensioner, walks through Central Hill Estate on 24th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom.  Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    Central Hill001.jpg
  • Mounted City Police officers make their presence known while on their horses in spring sunshine at Royal Exchange in the heart of the capital's financial district, on 19th April, in the City of London, England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    city_people-42-19-04-2017.jpg
  • An elderly gentleman wearing a bow tie walks past the Bank of England, in the Square Mile, the capitals oldest district and financial centre, on 9th February 2017, in the City of London, England. Traditional City bowler hats and pinstripe suits are now rare, even among older bankers and financiers.
    city_commuters-05-09-02-2017.jpg
  • Lunchtime at a call centre in Cape Town in South Africa, From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    609_3isoloutions_2_307_1.jpg
  • A Man at Work sign at Elephant Park, as new development at Elephant & Castle, on 4th January, London borough of Southwark, England. Southwark Council’s development partner, Lendlease is regenerating over 28 acres across three sites at the heart of Elephant & Castle, in what is the latest major regeneration opportunity in zone 1 London. The vision for the £1.5 billion regeneration is to build on the area’s strengths and vibrant character in order to re-establish Elephant & Castle as one of London’s most flourishing urban quarters. The Elephant & Castle regeneration is of a scale rarely seen in central London and includes almost 3,000 new homes, plus office, retail, community, leisure and restaurant space.
    southwark_estate-10-04-01-2017.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers, including a woman smoking, enjoy sunshine near the Bank of England during an unusual autumn heatwave on 13th September 2016, in the City of London, England.
    city_people-06-13-09-2016.jpg
  • A No Pedestrians entry sign on the red door of a local garage business. Seen as a detail, we look at the surface of the wooden door painted red but peeling on the bottom part. The triangular-shaped sign looks handmade with the shop-bought sign on the top.
    no_entry01-19-12-2015.jpg
  • A detail of a Victorian house gable in the Essex seaside town of Frinton-on-Sea. Ornate blue painted woodwork looks fresh and clean despite it being 100 years old. The name of the property reads as Essex House and the date of its construction as 1896. A gable is the generally triangular portion of a wall between the edges of a sloping roof. The shape of the gable and how it is detailed depends on the structural system used (which is often related to climate and availability of materials) and aesthetic concerns. Thus the type of roof enclosing the volume dictates the shape of the gable. A gable wall or gable end more commonly refers to the entire wall, including the gable and the wall below it.
    essex_house01-12-06-1992_1.jpg
  • The Lord Mayor's carriage arrives at Mansion House during the Lord Mayor's Show in the City of London. Alderman and Rt Hon The Lord Mayor of London, Roger Gifford, a merchant banker with Swedish bank SEB is the 685th in the City of London’s ancient history. The new Mayor’s procession consists of a 3-mile, 150-float parade of commercial and military organisations going back to medieval times. This is the oldest and longest civic procession in the world that has survived the Plague and the Blitz, today one of the best-loved pageants. Henry Fitz-Ailwyn was the first Lord Mayor (1189-1212) and ever since, eminent city fathers (and one woman) have taken the role of the sovereign’s representative in the City – London’s ancient, self-governing financial district. The role ensured the King had an ally within the prosperous enclave.
    lord_mayors_show15-10-11-2012.jpg
  • The Lord Mayor's carriage parades through Cornhill during the Lord Mayor's Show in the City of London. Alderman and Rt Hon The Lord Mayor of London, Roger Gifford, a merchant banker with Swedish bank SEB is the 685th in the City of London’s ancient history. The new Mayor’s procession consists of a 3-mile, 150-float parade of commercial and military organisations going back to medieval times. This is the oldest and longest civic procession in the world that has survived the Plague and the Blitz, today one of the best-loved pageants. Henry Fitz-Ailwyn was the first Lord Mayor (1189-1212) and ever since, eminent city fathers (and one woman) have taken the role of the sovereign’s representative in the City – London’s ancient, self-governing financial district. The role ensured the King had an ally within the prosperous enclave.
    lord_mayors_show13-10-11-2012.jpg
  • Lifeguards parade past Cornhill during the Lord Mayor's Show in the City of London. Alderman and Rt Hon The Lord Mayor of London, Roger Gifford, a merchant banker with Swedish bank SEB is the 685th in the City of London’s ancient history. The new Mayor’s procession consists of a 3-mile, 150-float parade of commercial and military organisations going back to medieval times. This is the oldest and longest civic procession in the world that has survived the Plague and the Blitz, today one of the best-loved pageants. Henry Fitz-Ailwyn was the first Lord Mayor (1189-1212) and ever since, eminent city fathers (and one woman) have taken the role of the sovereign’s representative in the City – London’s ancient, self-governing financial district. The role ensured the King had an ally within the prosperous enclave.
    lord_mayors_show12-10-11-2012.jpg
  • New social distance bollards have widened the pavement to allow for social distancing in Threadneedle Street during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    city_verticals03-26-10-2020.jpg
  • New social distance bollards have widened the pavement to allow for social distancing in Threadneedle Street during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    city_verticals02-26-10-2020.jpg
  • A family on Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03191.jpg
  • A family on Central Hill Estate on 17th May 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP03189.jpg
  • Ronald Cray, with dogs Mitch and Killy, at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP_5901.jpg
  • Ronald Crays dog Killy, at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP_5874.jpg
  • Ronald Cray at his home in Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Mr Cray has been a council tenant for 50 years and lived at Central Hill Estate for about two years. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    SMP_5824.jpg
  • Street artist at Central Hill Estate on 18th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. Central Hill is a low-rise estate of more than 450 homes in Crystal Palace in South London and has been recommended for demolition under Lambeth Council estate regeneration plan. The housing scheme, built between 1966 and1974, was designed by Rosemary Stjernstedt under Lambeth Council’s director of architecture, Ted Hollamby.
    CentralHill135.jpg
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