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A lone passenger gazes out from the departure lounge at Charles de Gaulle/Roissy airport terminal to where airliners are parked. It is late evening and blue light outside makes the orange interior look warm. Designed by Paul Andreu, Charles de Gaulle became a symbol for airport modernity - a Le Corbusier concept of rail stations and ?autodromes.? Charles de Gaulle?s role as airport and rail station fuses into one, thus becoming an ?Aérogare? where trains and planes whisk the new world traveller of the late ?60s, away beyond an ever-extending horizon. From here, the Air France Concorde crashed on the aviation employment town of Gonesse on July 25th 2000. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903. .

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aviation_corbis30-27-07-2000.jpg
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© Richard Baker. No copying, screen grabbing, transmission or publication without permission.
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5345x5353 / 13.0MB
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traveller traveler transportation transport flight travel aviation air traveller air travel air transport terminal hub Charles de Gaulle everyday experience schedule floor tourism tourist tour holiday vacation recreation leisure visitor mass-tourism on the move population looking down destinations departs waiting patience passengers delay departure airport commercial global aerogare architecture design modernist alone single window view airliners airline commercial aviation gateway turnararound Boeing international scheduled flight Richard Baker photographer jet jet aircraft aircraft lifestyle airliner fuselage civil transcontinental
Contained in galleries
Worlds of Travel, Plane Pictures
A lone passenger gazes out from the departure lounge at Charles de Gaulle/Roissy airport terminal to where airliners are parked. It is late evening and blue light outside makes the orange interior look warm. Designed by Paul Andreu, Charles de Gaulle became a symbol for airport modernity - a Le Corbusier concept of rail stations and ?autodromes.? Charles de Gaulle?s role as airport and rail station fuses into one, thus becoming an ?Aérogare? where trains and planes whisk the new world traveller of the late ?60s, away beyond an ever-extending horizon. From here, the Air France Concorde crashed on the aviation employment town of Gonesse on July 25th 2000. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903. .
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