manuel cohen

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  • Parisian rooftop view at dusk with Montmartre Hill and Basilique du Sacre Coeur silhouetted beneath a stormy sky, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC105.jpg
  • Parisian cityscape with Notre Dame de Paris and Sainte Chapelle silhouetted  at dawn, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC112.JPG
  • Parisian rooftop view at dusk with Montmartre Hill and Basilique du Sacre Coeur silhouetted beneath a stormy sky, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC111.jpg
  • Parisian cityscape from Pont Alexandre III showing the river Seine, floodlit Pont des Invalides and Eiffel Tower at twilight, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC151.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. In the background a man is branding the hams with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_14.jpg
  • Yves Le Guel, owner of Doumbea, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_18.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_08.jpg
  • Yves Le Guel, owner of Doumbea, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_19.jpg
  • Yves Le Guel, owner of Doumbea, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_16.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. In the background a man is branding the hams with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_15.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_12.jpg
  • Branding the hams with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp, in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_09.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_01.JPG
  • Raw hams in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_20.jpg
  • Yves Le Guel, owner of Doumbea, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_17.jpg
  • Ham branded with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp, in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_11.jpg
  • Branding the hams with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp, in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_04.jpg
  • Branding the hams with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp, in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_02.jpg
  • Quai de Jemmapes and the Le Barboteur, a bar and cultural venue on a boat which tours Parisian canals, on the Canal Saint-Martin, in the 10th arrondissement of Paris, France. The Canal Saint-Martin is a 4.6km long waterway between the Canal de l'Ourcq and river Seine, built 1802-25 to provide a fresh water source to the city and provide a trade route for canal barges. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0930.JPG
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_13.jpg
  • Branding the hams with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp, in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_10.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_07.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_06.jpg
  • Ham makers at work in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_05.jpg
  • Branding the hams with the Eiffel Tower Prince de Paris stamp, in the kitchens of Doumbea, owned by Yves Le Guel, the last remaining producer of 'jambon a l'ancienne' or traditional ham and 'jambon de Paris' or Parisian ham, within Paris, at the Rue de Chaconne in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France, photographed on 12th February 2019. Doumbea produces several salt cured ham products of the highest quality, which are sought after by the finest chefs. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    12022019_Doumbea_Jambon_MC_03.jpg
  • Parisian filling their flask at a fountain of the Paris Plage banks of the river Seine, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC192.jpg
  • Parisian filling their flask at a fountain of the Paris Plage banks of the river Seine, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC193.jpg
  • Parisian filling their flask at a fountain of the Paris Plage banks of the river Seine, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC189.jpg
  • The Minister of the Economy, Finances and Industry (Ministere de l'Economie, des Finances et de l'Industrie) at sunrise, called the Minister of Finance for short or simply "Bercy", 1988, Paul Chemetov and Borja Huidobro, 139 rue de Bercy, 12th arrondissement, Paris, France. Pont de Bercy, 19th century in the foreground with railway viaduct, the only one of the Parisian system to be made of stone. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC088.jpg
  • The Minister of the Economy, Finances and Industry (Ministere de l'Economie, des Finances et de l'Industrie) at sunrise, called the Minister of Finance for short or simply "Bercy", 1988, Paul Chemetov and Borja Huidobro, 139 rue de Bercy, 12th arrondissement, Paris, France. Pont de Bercy, 19th century in the foreground with railway viaduct, the only one of the Parisian system to be made of stone. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC081.jpg
  • Parisian filling their flask at a fountain of the Paris Plage banks of the river Seine, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC190.jpg
  • Parisian filling their flask at a fountain of the Paris Plage banks of the river Seine, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC191.jpg
  • Parisian public bus in Avenue de France, Paris 13th arrondissement, France. Bibliotheque Nationale de France (National Library of France), 1989-96, Dominique Perrault visible in the background. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC131.jpg
  • The Minister of the Economy, Finances and Industry (Ministere de l'Economie, des Finances et de l'Industrie) at dusk, called the Minister of Finance for short or simply "Bercy", 1988, Paul Chemetov and Borja Huidobro, 139 rue de Bercy, 12th arrondissement, Paris, France. Pont de Bercy, 19th century in the foreground with railway viaduct, the only one of the Parisian system to be made of stone. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC140.jpg
  • Winter Parisian atmosphere at sunset in Tuileries Gardens, (Jardin des Tuileries), 1664, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_PARIS_11_MC154.jpg
  • Dramatic Parisian skies at twilight, with statue of Jardin des Tuileries and Eiffel Tower silhouetted, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_PARIS_11_MC153.jpg
  • Tuileries Gardens, (Jardin des Tuileries), 1664, with three green chairs in the foreground and Great Ferris Wheel of La Concorde in the distance, beneath dramatic Parisian skies at twilight, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_PARIS_11_MC155.jpg
  • Street in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France, with a view to the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichye. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0664.jpg
  • Disused railway tracks of the Petite Ceinture on the Pont National, a rail bridge over the river Seine, built 1852-53, with tramlines of tram route 3a, between the 12th and 13th arrondissements of Paris, France. In the distance are the apartment buildings in the quartier de la Gare. The Petite Ceinture was a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1416.jpg
  • Gardens of the Rue Paturle, in the Porte de Vanves district of the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. The road is named after French politician Jacques Paturle, 1779-1858. It borders the Petite Ceinture, a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages, and developed from 2013 into a park managed by the Direction des Espaces Verts et de l'Environnement (DEVE). Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1380.jpg
  • New law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1364.jpg
  • Cyclist at the Porte de Clichy on the Boulevards des Marechaux, with behind, the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1360.jpg
  • Pont de la Rue du Bastion, at the Porte de Clichy on the Boulevards des Marechaux, with behind, the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1358.jpg
  • Apartment blocks and boardwalk beside a pond at the Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. In the distance on the left is the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1346.jpg
  • New law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1367.jpg
  • Runner on the Petite Ceinture, a 1.3km long linear public park and path along a disused railway line in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, France. The Petite Ceinture was a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages. The park was developed from 2013 and is managed by the Direction des Espaces Verts et de l'Environnement (DEVE). Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1255.jpg
  • Runner on the Petite Ceinture, a 1.3km long linear public park and path along a disused railway line in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, France. The Petite Ceinture was a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages. The park was developed from 2013 and is managed by the Direction des Espaces Verts et de l'Environnement (DEVE). Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1254.jpg
  • New law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building, with planted terraces on each roof. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1168.JPG
  • Room reserved for magistrates and justice personnel, for relaxation, cooking and eating, on the second floor terrace of the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0730.jpg
  • Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. In the distance is the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0725.jpg
  • Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. In the centre is the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0723.jpg
  • Cafe leading to the first floor terrace, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0717.JPG
  • New law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building, with planted terraces on each roof. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0727.jpg
  • New law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. In the foreground is the Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0726.jpg
  • New law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. In the foreground is the Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0724.jpg
  • Ernie LaPointe, b. 1948, great-grandson of Sitting Bull, chief of the Hunkpapa Lakota tribe, holding a drum, on the terrace of Diane Jos' 'Paris avec toits', where bees are kept in hives on Parisian rooftops, Paris, France. Ernie LaPointe is a Native American sun dancer, speaker, writer and founding president of the Sitting Bull Family Foundation. He follows a traditional Lakota life in South Dakota, using oral traditions to perpetuate the history of Sitting Bull. Photographed on 20th May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200519_ErnieLapointe_MC04.jpg
  • Ernie LaPointe, b. 1948, great-grandson of Sitting Bull, chief of the Hunkpapa Lakota tribe, holding a drum, on the terrace of Diane Jos' 'Paris avec toits', where bees are kept in hives on Parisian rooftops, Paris, France. Ernie LaPointe is a Native American sun dancer, speaker, writer and founding president of the  Sitting Bull Family Foundation. He follows a traditional Lakota life in South Dakota, using oral traditions to perpetuate the history of Sitting Bull. Photographed on 20th May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200519_ErnieLapointe_MC02.jpg
  • Robert Badinter Library, a reading room for magistrates named after the French lawyer and politician b.1928, on the 30th floor of the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling and bookshelves, with parquet floor and white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0169.jpg
  • Civil courtroom, used primarily for cases against minors, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0166.jpg
  • Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, the main lobby, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0160.jpg
  • Robert Badinter Library, a reading room for magistrates named after the French lawyer and politician b.1928, on the 30th floor of the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling and bookshelves, with parquet floor and white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0157.jpg
  • Light well providing a view of the building's exterior, in the ceiling of the Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, the main lobby, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0154.jpg
  • Sign on the beech wall before entering criminal courtroom 2.01, Salle Victor Hugo, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0152.jpg
  • Civil courtroom, used primarily for cases against minors, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0144.jpg
  • Civil courtroom, used primarily for cases against minors, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0143.jpg
  • Disused railway tracks of the Petite Ceinture on the Pont National, a rail bridge over the river Seine, built 1852-53, with tramlines of tram route 3a, between the 12th and 13th arrondissements of Paris, France. In the distance are the apartment buildings in the quartier de la Gare. The Petite Ceinture was a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1415.jpg
  • Villa du Bel Air, a street between the Avenue de Saint-Mande and the Sentier de la Lieutenance, with houses along one side, along the Petite Ceinture, in the quartier du Bel Air, in the 12th arrondissement of Paris, France. The Petite Ceinture was a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages. The park was developed from 2013 and is managed by the Direction des Espaces Verts et de l'Environnement (DEVE). Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1378.jpg
  • Apartment blocks and boardwalk beside a pond at the Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. In the distance on the left is the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1370.jpg
  • Apartment blocks beside a pond at the Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. In the distance on the left is the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1349.jpg
  • Cyclist at the Porte de Clichy on the Boulevards des Marechaux, with behind, the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1357.jpg
  • Pedestrians walking along the Petite Ceinture, a 1.3km long linear public park and path along a disused railway line in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, France. The Petite Ceinture was a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages. The park was developed from 2013 and is managed by the Direction des Espaces Verts et de l'Environnement (DEVE). Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1257.jpg
  • View from the second terrace of the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building, with planted terraces on each roof. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0729.jpg
  • Robert Badinter Library, a reading room for magistrates named after the French lawyer and politician b.1928, on the 30th floor of the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling and bookshelves, with parquet floor and white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0719.jpg
  • View over Paris, with the Batignolles cemetery, seen from the panoramic lift on the 18th floor of the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building, with planted terraces on each roof. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0718.jpg
  • View from the first terrace looking up at the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building, with planted terraces on each roof. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0714.jpg
  • Computer with plan of the courtroom, on the desk of the clerk of the court, in a criminal courtroom, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The courtroom is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0707.jpg
  • Quotation from the criminal code, on the wall of a criminal courtroom, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The courtroom is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0708.jpg
  • Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, the main lobby, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. In the roof are light wells, allowing natural light to flood the building. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0698.jpg
  • Home page of the electronic welcome stations on the ground floor of the Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, the main lobby, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0697.jpg
  • Ernie LaPointe, b. 1948, great-grandson of Sitting Bull, chief of the Hunkpapa Lakota tribe, holding a drum, on the terrace of Diane Jos' 'Paris avec toits', where bees are kept in hives on Parisian rooftops, Paris, France. Ernie LaPointe is a Native American sun dancer, speaker, writer and founding president of the Sitting Bull Family Foundation. He follows a traditional Lakota life in South Dakota, using oral traditions to perpetuate the history of Sitting Bull. Photographed on 20th May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200519_ErnieLapointe_MC12.jpg
  • Ernie LaPointe, b. 1948, great-grandson of Sitting Bull, chief of the Hunkpapa Lakota tribe, holding a drum, on the terrace of Diane Jos' 'Paris avec toits', where bees are kept in hives on Parisian rooftops, Paris, France. Ernie LaPointe is a Native American sun dancer, speaker, writer and founding president of the Sitting Bull Family Foundation. He follows a traditional Lakota life in South Dakota, using oral traditions to perpetuate the history of Sitting Bull. Photographed on 20th May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200519_ErnieLapointe_MC05.jpg
  • Ernie LaPointe, b. 1948, great-grandson of Sitting Bull, chief of the Hunkpapa Lakota tribe, holding a drum, on the terrace of Diane Jos' 'Paris avec toits', where bees are kept in hives on Parisian rooftops, Paris, France. Ernie LaPointe is a Native American sun dancer, speaker, writer and founding president of the Sitting Bull Family Foundation. He follows a traditional Lakota life in South Dakota, using oral traditions to perpetuate the history of Sitting Bull. Photographed on 20th May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200519_ErnieLapointe_MC06.jpg
  • Ernie LaPointe, b. 1948, great-grandson of Sitting Bull, chief of the Hunkpapa Lakota tribe, holding a drum, on the terrace of Diane Jos' 'Paris avec toits', where bees are kept in hives on Parisian rooftops, Paris, France. Ernie LaPointe is a Native American sun dancer, speaker, writer and founding president of the Sitting Bull Family Foundation. He follows a traditional Lakota life in South Dakota, using oral traditions to perpetuate the history of Sitting Bull. Photographed on 20th May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200519_ErnieLapointe_MC03.jpg
  • Ernie LaPointe, b. 1948, great-grandson of Sitting Bull, chief of the Hunkpapa Lakota tribe, holding a drum, on the terrace of Diane Jos' 'Paris avec toits', where bees are kept in hives on Parisian rooftops, Paris, France. Ernie LaPointe is a Native American sun dancer, speaker, writer and founding president of the Sitting Bull Family Foundation. He follows a traditional Lakota life in South Dakota, using oral traditions to perpetuate the history of Sitting Bull. Photographed on 20th May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200519_ErnieLapointe_MC01.jpg
  • Robert Badinter Library, a reading room for magistrates named after the French lawyer and politician b.1928, on the 30th floor of the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling and bookshelves, with parquet floor and white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0170.jpg
  • Criminal courtroom 2.01, Salle Victor Hugo, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0167.jpg
  • Civil courtroom, used primarily for cases against minors, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0165.jpg
  • Cafe in the Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, the main lobby, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0161.jpg
  • Light wells in the ceiling of the Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, the main lobby, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0159.jpg
  • Criminal courtroom 2.01, Salle Victor Hugo, with the dock on the right, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0146.jpg
  • Criminal courtroom 2.01, Salle Victor Hugo, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The room is lined with beech panelling, with a parquet floor and sleek white furniture. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0145.jpg
  • Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, the main lobby, looking through a glass wall into the cafe, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0172.JPG
  • Front cover of issue no. 469 of Historia, a monthly history magazine, published January 1986, featuring an article by Alain Decaux entitled Offenbach or Parisian life. Historia was created by Jules Tallandier and published 1909-37 and again from 1945. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_HISTORY_MC_0447.jpg
  • Aerial view of the Parc Zoologique de Paris, with the Grande Voliere or new aviary and the Great Glasshouse, and Parisian flats on the right, new Parc Zoologique de Paris or Zoo de Vincennes, (Zoological Gardens of Paris or Vincennes Zoo), which reopened April 2014, part of the Musee National d'Histoire Naturelle (National Museum of Natural History), 12th arrondissement, Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    PZP14_Museum_MC071.jpg
  • PARIS, FRANCE - JUNE 26 : A detail of a reflection of the Clock Tower of the Gare de Lyon, on June 26, 2008, in the 12th arrondissement of Paris. The station, one of the six main Parisian termini, was built in Art Nouveau style for the World Exhibition in 1900. The Clock Tower stands prominently in the corner of the front courtyard and is similar in style to Big Ben in London. This reflection with a bold summer evening sky captures its grandeur. (Photo by Manuel Cohen)
    DPARIS080544.JPG
  • Apartment blocks beside a pond at the Parc Clichy-Batignolles - Martin Luther-King, a new development of parkland and buildings developed since 2007 and set to cover 10 hectares in size, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The area has been developed from a large railway freight yard district and is a sustainable development with green space, many natural ecosystems and renewable energy sources. In the distance is the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_168.jpg
  • Disused railway tracks of the Petite Ceinture on the Pont National, a rail bridge over the river Seine, built 1852-53, between the 12th and 13th arrondissements of Paris, France. In the distance are the apartment buildings in the quartier de la Gare. The Petite Ceinture was a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1417.jpg
  • Apartment buildings on the Rue Giordano Bruno, in the Porte de Vanves district of the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. The road is named after the Italian philosopher Giordano Bruno, who was burned as a heretic in 1600 for converting to Calvinism. It borders the Petite Ceinture, a circular railway track completed in 1869 under Napoleon III, connecting all the Parisian villages, and developed from 2013 into a park managed by the Direction des Espaces Verts et de l'Environnement (DEVE). Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1382.jpg
  • Tram at the Porte de Clichy on the Boulevards des Marechaux, with behind, the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1359.jpg
  • New law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy, in the Batignolles area of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. It contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1351.jpg
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