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  • An employee of New England Seafoods, importers of fish products, leaves by the main entrance under a model sailfish
    new_england52-27-11-2007.jpg
  • Insurance businessmen enter the former classical entrance to Lloyds of London on Leadenhall Street in the City of London - the capital's financial district, on 10th October 2018, in London, England.
    lloyds_entrance-02-10-10-2018.jpg
  • Insurance businessmen enter the former classical entrance to Lloyds of London on Leadenhall Street in the City of London - the capital's financial district, on 10th October 2018, in London, England.
    lloyds_entrance-05-10-10-2018.jpg
  • Insurance businessmen enter the former classical entrance to Lloyds of London on Leadenhall Street in the City of London - the capital's financial district, on 10th October 2018, in London, England.
    lloyds_entrance-03-10-10-2018.jpg
  • Entrance of the newly-finished Blackfriars mainline Station in the City of London. A larger and more accessible Blackfriars Underground station reopened for public service to accommodate more than 40,000 passengers every day.
    blackfriars_station07-23-02-2012.jpg
  • Messages and doodles on the dirty glass at the entrance of a vacant office property on Sun Street in the City of London, the capital's financial district - aka the Square Mile, on 8th August, in London, England.
    british_people-40-08-08-2019.jpg
  • Messages and doodles on the dirty glass at the entrance of a vacant office property on Sun Street in the City of London, the capital's financial district - aka the Square Mile, on 8th August, in London, England.
    british_people-39-08-08-2019.jpg
  • The entrance of Quadrant Arcade on Regent Street, on 30th May 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-17-30-05-2019.jpg
  • Two women talk outside the rear Artists' Entrance of the Royal Festival Hall on the Southbank, on 2nd May 2019, in London, England.
    southbank-03-02-05-2019.jpg
  • A man passes-by the entrance of the Europa Hotel, on 23rd June 2018, in Celje, Slovenia.
    slovenia-267-23-06-2018.jpg
  • Beneath the Atlantes figure by the sculptor H.A. Pegram (1896) at the entrance of Drapers' Hall livery company in Throgmorton Street, a gatekeeper stoops to pick up dropped keys outside Drapers Hall in Throgmorton Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district aka the Square Mile, on 15th May 2018, in London, UK. The Drapers’ Company is a Livery Company in the City of London whose roots go back to the 13th century, when as its name indicates, it was involved in the drapery trade. While it is no longer involved in the trade, the Company has evolved acquiring a new relevance. Its main role today is to be the trustee of the charitable trusts that have been left in its care over the centuries. The Company also manages a thriving hospitality business. The first Drapers’ Hall was built in the 15th century in St Swithin’s Lane.  It bought a Hall on the present site in Throgmorton Street in 1543 from King Henry VIII for £1,200 (about £350,000 in today’s money). The Hall that the Company purchased from King Henry VIII in 1543 had been the private residence of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex until his execution in 1540, when it was confiscated by the Crown.
    drapers_hall-02-15-05-2018.jpg
  • The Atlantes figure by the sculptor H.A. Pegram (1896) at the entrance of Drapers' Hall livery company in Throgmorton Street in the City of London, the capital's financial district aka the Square Mile, on 15th May 2018, in London, UK. The Drapers’ Company is a Livery Company in the City of London whose roots go back to the 13th century, when as its name indicates, it was involved in the drapery trade. While it is no longer involved in the trade, the Company has evolved acquiring a new relevance. Its main role today is to be the trustee of the charitable trusts that have been left in its care over the centuries. The Company also manages a thriving hospitality business. The first Drapers’ Hall was built in the 15th century in St Swithin’s Lane.  It bought a Hall on the present site in Throgmorton Street in 1543 from King Henry VIII for £1,200 (about £350,000 in today’s money). The Hall that the Company purchased from King Henry VIII in 1543 had been the private residence of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex until his execution in 1540, when it was confiscated by the Crown.
    drapers_hall-01-15-05-2018.jpg
  • Step ladders are propped up against a wall, at the rear staff entrance of the Tate Modern art gallery, on 13th November 2017, in London, England.
    tate_ladders-02-13-11-2017.jpg
  • Tourist in cafe entrance inside the covered Procuratie Nuovo in Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy.
    venice_54-21-07-2015.jpg
  • South London youth walks past the site entrance of the regeneration project at Elephant & Castle, London borough of Southwark.
    elephant_and_castle22-22-04-2015.jpg
  • The entrance/exit pillar and gate to Dulwich Park in the south London borough of Southwark.
    dulwich_park05-19-11-2013.jpg
  • The entrance/exit pillar and gate to Dulwich Park in the south London borough of Southwark.
    dulwich_park03-19-11-2013.jpg
  • Police officers from Humberside in the North east of England stand in front of the main entrance to the Olympic Park as a visible presence during the London 2012 Olympics. More than 230 officers from across the Humber region travelled to London to help police the Olympic Games. Holidays were restricted, training reduced and special constables  drafted in to provide cover in Hull and the East Riding as officers were sent to London to police the city while the Games are on. Senior officers say they have been working hard to ensure "core policing" across Hull and the East Riding is not weakened.
    olympic_park03-10-08-2012.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee22-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Messages and doodles on the dirty glass at the entrance of a vacant office property on Sun Street in the City of London, the capital's financial district - aka the Square Mile, on 8th August, in London, England.
    british_people-41-08-08-2019.jpg
  • Two women talk outside the rear Artists' Entrance of the Royal Festival Hall on the Southbank, on 2nd May 2019, in London, England.
    southbank-02-02-05-2019.jpg
  • Step ladders are propped up against a wall, at the rear staff entrance of the Tate Modern art gallery, on 13th November 2017, in London, England.
    tate_ladders-01-13-11-2017.jpg
  • A businessman walks past an Atlantes figure by the sculptor H.A. Pegram (1896) at the entrance of Drapers' Hall livery company in Throgmorton Street, on 17th Juy 2017, in the City of London, England. The Drapers’ Company is a Livery Company in the City of London whose roots go back to the 13th century, when as its name indicates, it was involved in the drapery trade. While it is no longer involved in the trade, the Company has evolved acquiring a new relevance. Its main role today is to be the trustee of the charitable trusts that have been left in its care over the centuries. The Company also manages a thriving hospitality business. The first Drapers’ Hall was built in the 15th century in St Swithin’s Lane.  It bought a Hall on the present site in Throgmorton Street in 1543 from King Henry VIII for £1,200 (about £350,000 in today’s money). The Hall that the Company purchased from King Henry VIII in 1543 had been the private residence of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex until his execution in 1540, when it was confiscated by the Crown.
    city_people-12-17-07-2017.jpg
  • Girl checks messages outside the entrance of the Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana in the covered Procuratie Nuovo of Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy.
    venice_53-21-07-2015.jpg
  • South London youth walks past the site entrance of the regeneration project at Elephant & Castle, London borough of Southwark.
    elephant_and_castle21-22-04-2015.jpg
  • Entrance of the federal City of New York Buildings Department, on Broadway, Manhattan.
    tim_lynch586-24-05-2014.jpg
  • The entrance/exit pillar and gate to Dulwich Park in the south London borough of Southwark.
    dulwich_park07-19-11-2013.jpg
  • The entrance/exit pillar and gate to Dulwich Park in the south London borough of Southwark.
    dulwich_park02-19-11-2013.jpg
  • The entrance/exit pillar and gate to Dulwich Park in the south London borough of Southwark.
    dulwich_park01-19-11-2013.jpg
  • Concrete and fence landscape at the entrance of the former nuclear weapons-era airfield occupied by US Air force personnel during the Cold War and now vacant, awaiting re-landscaping and returning to common parkland for the public to use. Opened in 1942, it was used by both the Royal Air Force and United States Army Air Forces during World War II and the United States Air Force during the Cold War. After the Cold War ended, it was closed in 1993. The airfield was also known for the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp held outside its gates in the 1980s. In 1997 Greenham Common was designated as public parkland.
    greenham_common01-19-03-2003.jpg
  • Entrance architecture of the notorious secret police (Stasi) Hohenschonhausen prison. The Berlin-Hohenschönhausen Memorial is now a museum and memorial located in Berlin's north-eastern Lichtenberg district. Hohenschönhausen was a very important part of the Socialist GDR's (German Democratic Republic) system of political and artistic oppression. Although torture (including Chinese water torture) and physical violence were commonly employed at Hohenschönhausen (especially in the 1950s), psychological intimidation was the main method of political repression and techniques including sleep deprivation, total isolation, threats to friends and family members. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy. The Hohenschonhausen prison's existence was largely unknown to locals - another blank on the map. During Hitler's Third Reich, the Gestapo had one agent for every 2,000 citizens whereas the Stasi had approximately an spy for every 6.5. German media called East Germany 'the most perfected surveillance state of all time' - administered from this complex of offices.
    hohenschonhausen_stasi_prison10-05-0...jpg
  • Police officers from Humberside in the North east of England stand in front of the main entrance to the Olympic Park as a visible presence during the London 2012 Olympics. More than 230 officers from across the Humber region travelled to London to help police the Olympic Games. Holidays were restricted, training reduced and special constables  drafted in to provide cover in Hull and the East Riding as officers were sent to London to police the city while the Games are on. Senior officers say they have been working hard to ensure "core policing" across Hull and the East Riding is not weakened.
    olympic_park02-10-08-2012.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee16-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee25-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee26-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Entrance of the newly-finished Blackfriars mainline Station in the City of London. A larger and more accessible Blackfriars Underground station reopened for public service to accommodate more than 40,000 passengers every day.
    blackfriars_station03-23-02-2012.jpg
  • Entrance of the newly-finished Blackfriars mainline Station in the City of London. A larger and more accessible Blackfriars Underground station reopened for public service to accommodate more than 40,000 passengers every day.
    blackfriars_station02-23-02-2012.jpg
  • The faces of theatre-goers mix with the actors at the entrance of the Vaudeville in London's Strand where Arthur Miller's Broken Glass is playing. The actors' faces of the production's starring roles  are seen in their characters during the Miller's play. Bob Hiskins, Tara FitzGerald and Antony Sher all share the limelight in this story focusing on a couple in New York City in 1938, the same time of Kristallnacht, in Nazi Germany. The play's title is derived from Kristallnacht, which is also known as the Night of Broken Glass.
    theatre_faces3-21-09-2011.jpg
  • The faces of theatre-goers mix with the actors at the entrance of the Vaudeville in London's Strand where Arthur Miller's Broken Glass is playing. The actors' faces of the production's starring roles  are seen in their characters during the Miller's play. Bob Hiskins, Tara FitzGerald and Antony Sher all share the limelight in this story focusing on a couple in New York City in 1938, the same time of Kristallnacht, in Nazi Germany. The play's title is derived from Kristallnacht, which is also known as the Night of Broken Glass.
    theatre_faces1-21-09-2011.jpg
  • Artwork at entrance of British Airways Galleries First Class lounge at Heathrow airport's terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport907-10-08-2009.jpg
  • The entrance of Quadrant Arcade on Regent Street, on 30th May 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-16-30-05-2019.jpg
  • A businessman walks past an Atlantes figure by the sculptor H.A. Pegram (1896) at the entrance of Drapers' Hall livery company in Throgmorton Street, on 17th Juy 2017, in the City of London, England. The Drapers’ Company is a Livery Company in the City of London whose roots go back to the 13th century, when as its name indicates, it was involved in the drapery trade. While it is no longer involved in the trade, the Company has evolved acquiring a new relevance. Its main role today is to be the trustee of the charitable trusts that have been left in its care over the centuries. The Company also manages a thriving hospitality business. The first Drapers’ Hall was built in the 15th century in St Swithin’s Lane.  It bought a Hall on the present site in Throgmorton Street in 1543 from King Henry VIII for £1,200 (about £350,000 in today’s money). The Hall that the Company purchased from King Henry VIII in 1543 had been the private residence of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex until his execution in 1540, when it was confiscated by the Crown.
    city_people-14-17-07-2017.jpg
  • The entrance/exit pillar and gate to Dulwich Park in the south London borough of Southwark.
    dulwich_park06-19-11-2013.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee18-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee21-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Entrance of the newly-finished Blackfriars mainline Station in the City of London. A larger and more accessible Blackfriars Underground station reopened for public service to accommodate more than 40,000 passengers every day.
    blackfriars_station01-23-02-2012.jpg
  • Security guard employees wearing face shields at the National Gallery stand at the bottom of steps leading into a small entrance of the National Gallery during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th August 2020, in London, England,
    gallery_security03-29-08-2020.jpg
  • Beneath the Trocadero is London Underground's roundel, located at the entrance to Piccadilly Circus underground station, on 22nd November 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    piccadilly_circus-04-22-11-2019.jpg
  • A security guard stands in sunlight at the entrance of a City loading bay in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 14th March 2018, in London England.
    city_security-02-14-03-2018.jpg
  • The entrance of the arcade outside The Ritz with Union Jack flags and distant architecture on Piccadilly, on 7th February 2018, in London, England.
    the_ritz-04-07-02-2018.jpg
  • The entrance of the arcade outside The Ritz with Union Jack flags and distant architecture on Piccadilly, on 7th February 2018, in London, England.
    the_ritz-02-07-02-2018.jpg
  • Old wrought iron gates and no entry sign at the entrance of the privately-owned de Merode Castle, out of bounds for locals, on 25th March, in Everberg, Brabant, Belgium. de Merode castle was built in the 16th century and contains three separate buildings: the residence, a building for the animals, a building for employees and the stabling of carriages. Everberg is a town in the Belgian province Flemish-Brabant and is part of the municipality of Kortenberg.
    everberg_landscape-03-25-03-2017.jpg
  • Rusting wrought iron gates of private property at the entrance of an old estate, on 25th March, in Everberg, Brabant, Belgium.
    belgium_land-03-25-03-2017.jpg
  • The entrance to Minet Library and Archives in the London borough of Lambeth, closing due to council cuts on April 1st 2016.
    minet_library03-01-04-2016.jpg
  • A women tourist walks along the Avenue of the Sphinxes towards the ancient Egyptian Colossi at the entrance to Court of Ramses II, Luxor Temple, Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt.
    egypt85-02-03-2016.jpg
  • Fading bunting strung along the wall of a local church side entrance in south London.
    church_bunting01-24-09-2015.jpg
  • Cyclists pedal past an office foyer entrance featuring dots and circles on exterior windows in the City of London.
    city_spots04-15-04-2014.jpg
  • Architectural detail of a missile silo door entrance at the former nuclear weapons-era airfield occupied by US Air force personnel during the Cold War and now vacant, awaiting re-landscaping and returning to common parkland for the public to use. Opened in 1942, it was used by both the Royal Air Force and United States Army Air Forces during World War II and the United States Air Force during the Cold War. After the Cold War ended, it was closed in 1993. The airfield was also known for the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp held outside its gates in the 1980s. In 1997 Greenham Common was designated as public parkland.
    greenham_common04-19-03-2003.jpg
  • Soldiers of the Rifles regiment in the British army stand guarding the entrance to  the volleyball venue in central London next to the IOC rings logo on day 4 of the London 2012 Olympic Games. A total of 18,000 defence personel were called upon to make the Games secure following the failure by security contractor G4S to provide enough private guards. G4S to provide enough private guards. The extra personnel have been drafted in amid continuing fears that the private security contractor's handling of the £284m contract remains a risk to the Games.
    olympics_westminster10-31-07-2012.jpg
  • Cyclists with soldiers the Royal Artillery regiment in the British army stand guarding the entrance to  the volleyball venue in central London next to the IOC rings logo on day 4 of the London 2012 Olympic Games.  A total of 18,000 defence personel were called upon to make the Games secure following the failure by security contractor G4S to provide enough private guards. The extra personnel have been drafted in amid continuing fears that the private security contractor's handling of the £284m contract remains a risk to the Games.
    olympics_westminster08-31-07-2012.jpg
  • The entrance to the RSPB's bird and wildlife reserve at Rainham Marshes, Essex.
    electricity388-03-02-2008 .jpg
  • A full-scale mock-up of a multinational 50.5 meter-high European Space Agency's (ESA) Ariane 5 rocket is lit by floodlights in an early tropical evening at the main entrance to Guiana Space Centre, Kourou, French Guiana, South America. Glowing orange by the warm lighting, it makes an impressive model against the fading equatorial sky. Seen in scale, a lone human figure stands at the foot of the launcher that in reality, sends massive 8,000 kg payloads into orbit for a variety of communications and International Space Station purposes. Powered by Snecma-made Vulcain engines and boosted by Europropulsion solid motors, these rockets are launched from this facility on the Guiana coast. The building to the left are the CNES offices belong to the French Space Agency.
    esa_guiana23515-08-2007.jpg
  • A National Health Service (NHS) banner thanks the public for keeping their distance in local areas during the Coronavirus pandemic, at the entrance to Dulwich Park in south London, on 8th December 2020, in London, England.
    dulwich_park03-08-12-2020.jpg
  • A National Health Service (NHS) banner thanks the public for keeping their distance in local areas during the Coronavirus pandemic, at the entrance to Dulwich Park in south London, on 8th December 2020, in London, England.
    dulwich_park01-08-12-2020.jpg
  • The locked entrance of the closed Debenhams department store in London's Oxford Street as the second lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic comes to a end, and a day before London enters the Tier 2 restriction when retailers will be allowed to once again re-open for the run-up to Christmas, on 1st December 2020, in London, England. 12,000 jobs are said to be at risk after financial negotiations failed the day after Topshop owner Arcadia fell into administration.
    debenhams_closure21-01-12-2020.jpg
  • The locked entrance of the closed Debenhams department store in London's Oxford Street as the second lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic comes to a end, and a day before London enters the Tier 2 restriction when retailers will be allowed to once again re-open for the run-up to Christmas, on 1st December 2020, in London, England. 12,000 jobs are said to be at risk after financial negotiations failed the day after Topshop owner Arcadia fell into administration.
    debenhams_closure22-01-12-2020.jpg
  • The locked entrance of the closed Debenhams department store in London's Oxford Street as the second lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic comes to a end, and a day before London enters the Tier 2 restriction when retailers will be allowed to once again re-open for the run-up to Christmas, on 1st December 2020, in London, England. 12,000 jobs are said to be at risk after financial negotiations failed the day after Topshop owner Arcadia fell into administration.
    debenhams_closure23-01-12-2020.jpg
  • A construction hoarding shows visitors what will be the new north entrance to St Paul's Cathedral in the City of London, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    st_paul's_hoarding01-26-10-2020.jpg
  • A construction hoarding shows visitors what will be the new north entrance to St Paul's Cathedral in the City of London, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    st_paul's_hoarding02-26-10-2020.jpg
  • Security guard employees wearing face shields at the National Gallery stand at the bottom of steps leading into a small entrance of the National Gallery during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th August 2020, in London, England,
    gallery_security04-29-08-2020.jpg
  • Security guard employees wearing face shields at the National Gallery stand at the bottom of steps leading into a small entrance of the National Gallery during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th August 2020, in London, England,
    gallery_security02-29-08-2020.jpg
  • With a further 154 covid deaths reported in the last 24hrs, bringing the total to 43,081 in the UK during the Coronavirus pandemic, seating and social distancing markers on the floor of a business address entrance in Conduit Street in Mayfair, on 24th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_westend-18-24-06-2020.jpg
  • With a further 154 covid deaths reported in the last 24hrs, bringing the total to 43,081 in the UK during the Coronavirus pandemic, seating and social distancing markers on the floor of a business address entrance in Conduit Street in Mayfair, on 24th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_westend-17-24-06-2020.jpg
  • Accompanied by an adult, a young boy steps onto the next spherical object, part of the architecture at the entrance of an office complex in Charing Cross in Central London, on 6th March 2020, in London, England.
    cornavirus-18-06-03-2020.jpg
  • Beneath the Trocadero is London Underground's roundel, located at the entrance to Piccadilly Circus underground station, on 22nd November 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    piccadilly_circus-03-22-11-2019.jpg
  • A day after British Prime Minister Boris Johnson successfully asked the Queen to suspend (prorogue) Parliament in order to manoeuvre his Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, two tourists peer through the railings Royal Entrance at the base of Victoria Tower at the Houses of Parliament, on 29th August 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    parliament_gates-01-29-08-2019.jpg
  • The London Underground roundels outside the newest entrance to Victoria underground station, on 11th March 2019, in London, England.
    victoria_underground-14-11-03-2019.jpg
  • Commuters and the London Underground roundels outside the newest entrance to Victoria underground station, on 11th March 2019, in London, England.
    victoria_underground-15-11-03-2019.jpg
  • A caution sign for a wet floor, after the cleaning of the entrance and stairs of a Westminster pub on Charlotte Street, on 16th January 2019, in London, England.
    trip_hazard-02-16-01-2019.jpg
  • A caution sign for a wet floor, after the cleaning of the entrance and stairs of a Westminster pub on Charlotte Street, on 16th January 2019, in London, England.
    trip_hazard-01-16-01-2019.jpg
  • A security guard stands in sunlight at the entrance of a City loading bay in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 14th March 2018, in London England.
    city_security-01-14-03-2018.jpg
  • Edwardian period entrance of the re-opened Carnegie Library on Herne Hill in south London which has opened its doors for the first time in almost 2 years, on 15th February 2018, in London, England. Closed by Lambeth council and occupied by protesters for 10 days in 2016, the library bequeathed by US philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has been locked ever since because, say Lambeth austerity cuts are necessary. A gym that locals say they don't want or need has been installed in the listed basement and actual library space a fraction as before and it's believed no qualified librarians will be present to administer it. Protesters also believe this community building will ultimately sold off by Lambeth council for luxury homes.
    carnegie_library-51-15-02-2018.jpg
  • Edwardian period entrance of the re-opened Carnegie Library on Herne Hill in south London which has opened its doors for the first time in almost 2 years, on 15th February 2018, in London, England. Closed by Lambeth council and occupied by protesters for 10 days in 2016, the library bequeathed by US philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has been locked ever since because, say Lambeth austerity cuts are necessary. A gym that locals say they don't want or need has been installed in the listed basement and actual library space a fraction as before and it's believed no qualified librarians will be present to administer it. Protesters also believe this community building will ultimately sold off by Lambeth council for luxury homes.
    carnegie_library-52-15-02-2018.jpg
  • Edwardian period entrance of the re-opened Carnegie Library on Herne Hill in south London which has opened its doors for the first time in almost 2 years, on 15th February 2018, in London, England. Closed by Lambeth council and occupied by protesters for 10 days in 2016, the library bequeathed by US philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has been locked ever since because, say Lambeth austerity cuts are necessary. A gym that locals say they don't want or need has been installed in the listed basement and actual library space a fraction as before and it's believed no qualified librarians will be present to administer it. Protesters also believe this community building will ultimately sold off by Lambeth council for luxury homes.
    carnegie_library-53-15-02-2018.jpg
  • Edwardian period entrance of the re-opened Carnegie Library on Herne Hill in south London which has opened its doors for the first time in almost 2 years, on 15th February 2018, in London, England. Closed by Lambeth council and occupied by protesters for 10 days in 2016, the library bequeathed by US philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has been locked ever since because, say Lambeth austerity cuts are necessary. A gym that locals say they don't want or need has been installed in the listed basement and actual library space a fraction as before and it's believed no qualified librarians will be present to administer it. Protesters also believe this community building will ultimately sold off by Lambeth council for luxury homes.
    carnegie_library-47-15-02-2018.jpg
  • Entrance of the re-opened Carnegie Library on Herne Hill in south London which has opened its doors for the first time in almost 2 years, on 15th February 2018, in London, England. Closed by Lambeth council and occupied by protesters for 10 days in 2016, the library bequeathed by US philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has been locked ever since because, say Lambeth austerity cuts are necessary. A gym that locals say they don't want or need has been installed in the listed basement and actual library space a fraction as before and it's believed no qualified librarians will be present to administer it. Protesters also believe this community building will ultimately sold off by Lambeth council for luxury homes.
    carnegie_library-43-15-02-2018.jpg
  • Entrance of the re-opened Carnegie Library on Herne Hill in south London which has opened its doors for the first time in almost 2 years, on 15th February 2018, in London, England. Closed by Lambeth council and occupied by protesters for 10 days in 2016, the library bequeathed by US philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has been locked ever since because, say Lambeth austerity cuts are necessary. A gym that locals say they don't want or need has been installed in the listed basement and actual library space a fraction as before and it's believed no qualified librarians will be present to administer it. Protesters also believe this community building will ultimately sold off by Lambeth council for luxury homes.
    carnegie_library-42-15-02-2018.jpg
  • Entrance of the re-opened Carnegie Library on Herne Hill in south London which has opened its doors for the first time in almost 2 years, on 15th February 2018, in London, England. Closed by Lambeth council and occupied by protesters for 10 days in 2016, the library bequeathed by US philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has been locked ever since because, say Lambeth austerity cuts are necessary. A gym that locals say they don't want or need has been installed in the listed basement and actual library space a fraction as before and it's believed no qualified librarians will be present to administer it. Protesters also believe this community building will ultimately sold off by Lambeth council for luxury homes.
    carnegie_library-41-15-02-2018.jpg
  • The entrance of the arcade outside The Ritz with Union Jack flags, a Routemaster bus and distant architecture on Piccadilly, on 7th February 2018, in London, England.
    the_ritz-07-07-02-2018.jpg
  • The entrance of the arcade outside The Ritz with Union Jack flags, a Routemaster bus and distant architecture on Piccadilly, on 7th February 2018, in London, England.
    the_ritz-06-07-02-2018.jpg
  • The entrance of the arcade outside The Ritz with Union Jack flags, a Routemaster bus and distant architecture on Piccadilly, on 7th February 2018, in London, England.
    the_ritz-05-07-02-2018.jpg
  • The entrance of the arcade outside The Ritz with Union Jack flags and distant architecture on Piccadilly, on 7th February 2018, in London, England.
    the_ritz-01-07-02-2018.jpg
  • Blurred commuters enter the Underground Station entrance at Bank, on the corner of Lombard and King William Streets in the heart of the Square Mile, the capital's historical and financial centre, on 1st November 2017, in the City of London, England.
    bank_underground-09-01-11-2017.jpg
  • Blurred commuters enter the Underground Station entrance at Bank, on the corner of Lombard and King William Streets in the heart of the Square Mile, the capital's historical and financial centre, on 1st November 2017, in the City of London, England.
    bank_underground-07-01-11-2017.jpg
  • Blurred commuters enter the Underground Station entrance at Bank, on the corner of Lombard and King William Streets in the heart of the Square Mile, the capital's historical and financial centre, on 1st November 2017, in the City of London, England.
    bank_underground-06-01-11-2017.jpg
  • Blurred commuters enter the Underground Station entrance at Bank, on the corner of Lombard and King William Streets in the heart of the Square Mile, the capital's historical and financial centre, on 1st November 2017, in the City of London, England.
    bank_underground-05-01-11-2017.jpg
  • Blurred commuters enter and pass-by the Underground Station entrance at Bank, on Threadneedle Street in the heart of the Square Mile, the capital's historical and financial centre, on 1st November 2017, in the City of London, England.
    bank_underground-03-01-11-2017.jpg
  • Blurred commuters enter and pass-by the Underground Station entrance at Bank, on Threadneedle Street in the heart of the Square Mile, the capital's historical and financial centre, on 1st November 2017, in the City of London, England.
    bank_underground-02-01-11-2017.jpg
  • Blurred commuters enter and pass-by the Underground Station entrance at Bank, on Threadneedle Street in the heart of the Square Mile, the capital's historical and financial centre, on 1st November 2017, in the City of London, England.
    bank_underground-01-01-11-2017.jpg
  • The entrance plaque of Drapers' Hall livery company in Throgmorton Street, on 17th Juy 2017, in the City of London, England. The Drapers’ Company is a Livery Company in the City of London whose roots go back to the 13th century, when as its name indicates, it was involved in the drapery trade. While it is no longer involved in the trade, the Company has evolved acquiring a new relevance. Its main role today is to be the trustee of the charitable trusts that have been left in its care over the centuries. The Company also manages a thriving hospitality business. The first Drapers’ Hall was built in the 15th century in St Swithin’s Lane.  It bought a Hall on the present site in Throgmorton Street in 1543 from King Henry VIII for £1,200 (about £350,000 in today’s money). The Hall that the Company purchased from King Henry VIII in 1543 had been the private residence of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex until his execution in 1540, when it was confiscated by the Crown.
    drapers_hall-01-17-07-2017.jpg
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