manuel cohen

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  • Construction work on the main central tower of the Chateau Frontenac designed by William Sutherland Maxwell, photograph, 1922, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_217.jpg
  • Construction work on the main central tower of the Chateau Frontenac designed by William Sutherland Maxwell, photograph, 1922, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_216.jpg
  • Preparation for construction work on the front wing of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1920, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_208.jpg
  • Construction of the side wing of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_204.jpg
  • Construction of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_203.jpg
  • Construction work on the front wing of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_201.jpg
  • Construction of the central section of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_199.jpg
  • Construction work on the front wing of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_194.jpg
  • Preparation for construction work on the front wing of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1920, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_202.jpg
  • Construction of the side wing of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_200.jpg
  • Construction of the side wing of the Chateau Frontenac, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_198.jpg
  • Construction of Strasbourg cathedral, Alsace, France, engraving after a pen and ink drawing by Theopile Schuler, 1821-78, French Romantic illustrator and painter. Strasbourg Cathedral or the Cathedral of Our Lady of Strasbourg was begun in the 11th century and completed in 1439. The drawing shows the flying buttresses outside the nave and many medieval construction processes. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_FRANCE_MC0657.jpg
  • Stone cutter on the building site in the courtyard, with lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1310.jpg
  • Workers on the building site in the courtyard, with lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1284.jpg
  • Workers on the building site in the courtyard, with lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1285.jpg
  • View of the spires and construction cranes at La Sagrada Familia, unfinished Roman Catholic church designed by Catalan Modernist architect Antoni Gaudi, 1852–1926, seen from the Hospital de Sant Pau or Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, with its Gothic style cross on the left, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Construction began on the church in 1882 and Gaudi worked on it until his death. The project is due to be completed in 2026. It has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC313.jpg
  • Construction work on the roof of the Chateau Frontenac, seen from the Dufferin Terrace, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_210.jpg
  • Construction work on the roof of the Chateau Frontenac, seen from the Dufferin Terrace, photograph, 1921, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_205.jpg
  • Construction of Notre-Dame cathedral in 1829, stained glass window designed by Jean-Baptiste Lagace and made by Francois Chigot of Limoges, France, in the nave of the Basilique Notre-Dame de Montreal, built in 1823 in Gothic Revival style by James O'Donnell, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The windows were commissioned in 1929 by the priest Olivier Maurault to celebrate the centenary of the basilica. The depict the history of Montreal. The basilica is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_267.jpg
  • View of La Sagrada Familia, unfinished Roman Catholic church designed by Catalan Modernist architect Antoni Gaudi, 1852–1926, seen from the Hospital de Sant Pau or Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Construction began on the church in 1882 and Gaudi worked on it until his death. The project is due to be completed in 2026. It has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC292.jpg
  • View of La Sagrada Familia, unfinished Roman Catholic church designed by Catalan Modernist architect Antoni Gaudi, 1852–1926, seen from the Hospital de Sant Pau or  Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Construction began on the church in 1882 and Gaudi worked on it until his death. The project is due to be completed in 2026. It has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC299.jpg
  • View of La Sagrada Familia, unfinished Roman Catholic church designed by Catalan Modernist architect Antoni Gaudi, 1852–1926, seen from the Hospital de Sant Pau or Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Construction began on the church in 1882 and Gaudi worked on it until his death. The project is due to be completed in 2026. It has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC300.jpg
  • Clotilde at the construction site of her church at Les Andelys, with donors below, lancet C, from the stained glass window of the Life of St Clotilde, c. 1540, in the Collegiale Notre Dame des Andelys, built 1225 - 17th century, in Les Andelys, Eure, Normandy, France. The Church of Our Lady of the Andelys was built around a college of canons at the Chapter, on the ruins of a women's abbey founded in 511 AD by Clotilde, wife of Clovis I. The church is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_FRANCE_MC_0271.jpg
  • Section of the Berlin Wall including Touch The Wall by Christine Kuhn (left) and Vorsicht by Rodolfo Ricalo (right), part of the East Side Gallery, a 1.3km long section of the Wall on Muhlenstrasse painted in 1990 on its Eastern side by 105 artists from around the world, Berlin, Germany. Many of the artworks are now damaged by graffiti. In the background is a new high-rise building under construction. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0171.jpg
  • Side view of the Chateau Frontenac before the central tower was built in 1920-24, photograph, from the Archives of the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The Chateau Frontenac opened in 1893 and was designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR. It was extended in 1924 by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Copyright Archives Chateau Frontenac / Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_206.jpg
  • Site foreman Florian Renucci with a builder, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1321.jpg
  • Site foreman Florian Renucci talking with a builder, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. Behind them is the lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1320.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, seen from above, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC05.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the mast of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC01.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC06.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC07.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, seen from above, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC08.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the mast of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC02.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC09.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC10.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, seen from above, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC04.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC11.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, seen from above, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC03.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC12.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC13.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC14.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, seen from above, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC16.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, seen from above, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC17.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, in the cab of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC18.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, next to the cab of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC19.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, next to the cab of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC20.jpg
  • Hexagonal panel with carved relief representing Architecture, with men building a stone wall, by the Master of Armor, a collaborator of Andrea Pisano, 1334-36, on Giotto's campanile, a freestanding bell tower in Florentine Gothic style designed by Giotto di Bondone, c. 1267-1337, on the Piazza del Duomo next to the Duomo, or Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore, built 1296-1436, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy. The historic centre of Florence is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ITALY_MC_309.jpg
  • Jennifer Fassel, trainee crane operator, on the jib of the training crane R337M, at the AFPA (Association pour la Formation Professionnelle des Adultes) Training Centre, in Egletons, Correze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The training campus was established in 1970 and trains over 2000 people per year. It is set on an 18 hectare site and is equipped to train vehicle operators, drivers, site managers and logistics personnel. Photographed 22nd May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    220519_JenniferFassel_Grutiere_MC15.jpg
  • Worker carrying out maintenance on the lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1324.jpg
  • Lifting gear with squirrel cage and double drum, an early form of crane, lifting a palette of stones, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1313.jpg
  • Men shovelling sand to make mortar, and behind, the lifting gear with squirrel cage and double drum, an early form of crane, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1319.jpg
  • Men breaking rubble with pick axes on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1318.jpg
  • Lifting gear with squirrel cage and double drum, an early form of crane, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1317.jpg
  • Man walking in the squirrel cage of the lifting gear with double drum, an early form of crane, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1314.jpg
  • Worker pulling on a rope to steady a palette of stones being winched by the lifting gear with squirrel cage and double drum, an early form of crane, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1312.jpg
  • Man walking in the squirrel cage of the lifting gear with double drum, an early form of crane, on the building site in the courtyard at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1311.JPG
  • Wheelbarrow in the building site at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1272.jpg
  • The Humboldt Box, a futuristic temporary exhibition space and viewing platform for the Berlin Palace Humboldt Forum construction project and to inform the public about its future use, designed by KSV Kruger Schuberth Vandreike and opened in 2011, Schlossplatz, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The Box is seen from the balcony of Berlin Cathedral or the Berliner Dom. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0534.jpg
  • Pergamon Museum, built 1910-30 by Alfred Messel and Ludwig Hoffmann, under renovation since 2012, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The Pergamon Museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited art museum in Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0028.jpg
  • Construction workers finishing off the sea lion pool in the 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_MC121.jpg
  • Builder on the scaffolding lowering a crate using a lifting device, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1290.jpg
  • Builders climbing up the scaffolding erected in the moat trench, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1316.jpg
  • Builders and carpenters working on the wooden scaffolding in the courtyard, with the North Range or Logis Seigneurial and the Chapel Tower behind, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1289.jpg
  • Builders on a Corner Tower, using an A-frame plumb line, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. The Guedelon project was begun in 1997 by Michel Guyot, owner of the nearby Chateau de Saint-Fargeau, with architect Jacques Moulin. It is an educational and scientific project with the aim of understanding medieval building techniques and the chateau should be completed in the 2020s. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1286.jpg
  • Reconstruction of a section of the facade of the Berlin City Palace or Stadtschloss, which is currently being rebuilt on Spree Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The original palace dates from the 15th century and was largely rebuilt in Baroque style in the 18th century by Andreas Schluter, but was largely destroyed in the Second World War. The rebuilding began in 2013 and is scheduled to be completed in 2019. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0979.jpg
  • Prussian eagle on a reconstruction of a section of the facade of the Berlin City Palace or Stadtschloss, which is currently being rebuilt on Spree Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The original palace dates from the 15th century and was largely rebuilt in Baroque style in the 18th century by Andreas Schluter, but was largely destroyed in the Second World War. The rebuilding began in 2013 and is scheduled to be completed in 2019. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0998.jpg
  • Reconstruction of a section of the facade of the Berlin City Palace or Stadtschloss, which is currently being rebuilt on Spree Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The original palace dates from the 15th century and was largely rebuilt in Baroque style in the 18th century by Andreas Schluter, but was largely destroyed in the Second World War. The rebuilding began in 2013 and is scheduled to be completed in 2019. Behind is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower, built 1965-69. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1065.jpg
  • Botsow Brewery building, originally opened 1885, under redevelopment, beginning 2013, to create a complex of shops, offices, leisure and cultural facilities and the Otto Bock Future Lab, Friedrichshain, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0526.jpg
  • Glasshouses, Jardin des Plantes, Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France. General view of renovation work showing the<br />
Desert and Arid Lands Glasshouse, 1930s, the Tropical Rainforest Glasshouse (formerly Le Jardin d'Hiver or Winter Gardens), 1936, René Berger, the New Caledonia Glasshouse (formerly The Mexican Hothouse), 1830s, Charles Rohault de Fleury, and in the distance the Plant History Glasshouse (formerly Australian Glasshouse), 1830s, Rohault de Fleury.
    _MG_2202.jpg
  • Passion facade (right) and construction of the Tower of the Virgin Mary (left), Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0848.jpg
  • Bell towers, completed 1977, with the word Sanctus or Holy, and sculpture of the Ascension of Christ, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0827.jpg
  • Jesus' first fall while carrying the cross, by Josep Maria Subirachs, 1927-2014, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0834.jpg
  • Kiss of Judas, sculpture by Josep Maria Subirachs, 1927-2014, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0835.jpg
  • Veronica with her cloth with the face of Jesus, and soldiers, from a sculptural group of Golgotha or Calvary, by Josep Maria Subirachs, 1927-2014, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0843.jpg
  • Bell towers, completed 1977, with the word Sanctus or Holy, and sculpture of the Ascension of Christ, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0845.jpg
  • Resurrection, sculptural group with Mary Magdalene, Mary Cleophas, Mary Salome and the Angel, by Francesc Fajula, on the terrace between the stained glass window and the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at night, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0846.JPG
  • Star of the Virgin Mary, installed 29th November 2021 atop the Tower of the Virgin Mary, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0853.jpg
  • Passion facade, Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0819.jpg
  • Pinnacles designed as fruit on the gables of the apse, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0820.JPG
  • Bell towers and Tree of Life on the Nativity facade, built 1894-1930, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0821.jpg
  • Statues on the new facade of the nave, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0822.jpg
  • Bell tower with Sanctus written 9 times on its walls, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0823.jpg
  • Pinnacle with star, Amen, JHS and ceramic relief of grapes, atop of the western sacristy, completed 2016, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0824.jpg
  • Gables of the western sacristy, with words Honore (honour) and Poder (power), catalan invocations fo the apocalypse, completed 2016, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0825.jpg
  • Western sacristy, with words Accio de Gracies, or thanksgiving, 2012, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0826.jpg
  • Passion facade, built 1954-2018, detail of crown of thorns above columns of the pyramidal pediment, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0828.jpg
  • Bell towers, completed 1977, with the word Sanctus or Holy, and sculpture of the Ascension of Christ, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0829.jpg
  • Soldier (left) and (right) Veronica with her cloth with the face of Jesus, from a sculptural group of Golgotha or Calvary, by Josep Maria Subirachs, 1927-2014, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0830.jpg
  • Pinnacles with trencadis decoration on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0831.jpg
  • Veronica with her cloth with the face of Jesus, from a sculptural group of Golgotha or Calvary, by Josep Maria Subirachs, 1927-2014, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0832.jpg
  • Resurrection, sculptural group with Mary Magdalene, Mary Cleophas, Mary Salome and the Angel, by Francesc Fajula, on the terrace between the stained glass window and the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0833.jpg
  • Lion of Judah sculpture, on the pediment of the portico of the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0836.jpg
  • Pinnacle with star and ceramic relief of grapes, atop of the western sacristy, completed 2016, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0837.jpg
  • Gables of the western sacristy, with words Honore (honour) and Forca (force), catalan invocations fo the apocalypse, completed 2016, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0838.jpg
  • Veronica with her cloth with the face of Jesus, from a sculptural group of Golgotha or Calvary, by Josep Maria Subirachs, 1927-2014, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0840.jpg
  • Cross, installed July 2018 and bell towers, completed 1977, with the word Sanctus or Holy, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0839.jpg
  • Gables of the western sacristy, with words Honore (honour), Poder (power) and Force (force), catalan invocations fo the apocalypse, completed 2016, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0841.jpg
  • Passion facade, built 1954-2018, with fruit pinnacles and the words Sursum Corda or Lift up your Hearts, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0842.jpg
  • Cross, installed July 2018 and bell towers, completed 1977, with the word Sanctus or Holy, on the Passion facade, built 1954-2018, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0844.jpg
  • Star of the Virgin Mary, installed 29th November and first illuminated 8th December 2021, atop the Tower of the Virgin Mary, at the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, an unfinished catholic church designed in Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Modernist style by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and begun in 1882 by Francisco de Paula del Villar, continued from 1883 by Gaudi, consecrated 2010 and still undergoing construction, in Eixample, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The basilica is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed 2021. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0847.JPG
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