manuel cohen

Show Navigation
  • Portfolio
  • Search (in english)
  • Reportages
  • Fine Art Prints
  • About
  • Contact
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • PicRights

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 136 images found }

Loading ()...

  • 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_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_MC10.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, 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, 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 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, 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_MC15.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, 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
  • Chief Crane, Potawatomi Indian chief, holding a tomahawk, and an unidentified Native American man, in delegation to Washington DC in 1855 and 1865, photograph, in the Anasazi Heritage Center, an archaeological museum of Native American pueblo and hunter-gatherer cultures, Dolores, Colorado, USA. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_230.jpg
  • Grue Titan de Nantes, a Titan crane built in 1954, now disused, formerly part of the Dubigeon shipyards, made by Joseph Paris of Nantes, on the Ile de Nantes, in Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. The crane forms part of the Parc des Chantiers, a 13 hectare public park on the industrial heritage site of the former shipyards, which closed in 1987. The crane is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0261.jpg
  • Crane, seen against Tour First (CB31, Tour Assur, Tour UAP, Tour AXA), La Defense, Courbevoie, France. The tower was initially built in 1974 by Bouygues with architects Michel Stenzel, Pierre Dufau, Jean Pierre Dacbert. In 2007 began a large-scale renovation by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF) and SRA Architects that was completed in 2011 with the currently tallest skyscraper in France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC027.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
  • 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
  • Four-faced Hamat’sa Mask, c. 1938, by George Walkus, Canadian, c. 1890-1950, made from wood, paint, string and cedar bark, bought through the Native Arts Acquisition Fund, in the Denver Art Museum, Denver, Colorado, USA. Native Americans on the North West Coast use masks in feasts called potlatches, held to celebrate clan status. This mask represents a bird monster called Galokwudzuwis, or Crooked Beak, and is worn by a member of the Hamat’sa Society. Above the crooked beak is the head of a crane, while two raven heads project from the back of the mask. By pulling strings, parts of the mask move to create sound and movement during the dance. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_176.jpg
  • Cart pulled by a horse transporting building materials, and behind, scaffolding on the curtain walls and lifting gear with double drum squirrel cage, an early form of crane, 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_1325.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
  • View of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, with the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, designed in Baroque style by Christopher Wren, 1632-1723, and buildings along the North bank of the Thames, London, England, UK. Cranes pepper the skyline in the City of London (right) with many new skyscrapers under construction. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_133.jpg
  • View of the City of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, with several new skyscrapers under construction and cranes across the skyline, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_138.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
  • Building works with several cranes at Kupfergraben and Schlossplatz, with the Fernsehturm or TV Tower and the Berliner Dom or Cathedral in the distance, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0058.jpg
  • Unloading shipping containers from vessels at Barcelona Industrial Port, part of the Port of Barcelona, aerial view, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. This is Europe's 9th largest container port. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1044.jpg
  • Ceiling fresco, detail of birds and bamboo, in the main ground floor room in the Casa Ferrer Bataller, an Indianos mansion in Begur on the Costa Brava, Emporda, Catalonia, Spain. Vicenc Ferrer Bataller emigrated to Cuba in 1856 and worked in the flour and tobacco industries, returning here in 1888 to build his Modernist mansion. There are many of these opulent private homes in the town, built by local people who emigrated to Cuba to escape poverty, then returned with their newly made fortunes. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0775.jpg
  • Cathedrale Notre-Dame de Paris, or Notre-Dame cathedral, with renovation work taking place, photographed on 6th February 2020 after the fire of 16th April 2019, on the Ile de la Cite in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, France. The cathedral was built 1163-1345 in French Gothic style. The fire caused the destruction of the spire, the collapse of the roof and the damage of the upper walls of the cathedral nave. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_169.jpg
  • Rooftop view of Palermo, Sicily, Italy. Palermo was founded in 734 BC by the Phoenicians, and was settled by the Carthaginians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs and Normans. Its Arab and Norman centre is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ITALY_MC_012.jpg
  • Cathedrale Notre-Dame de Paris, or Notre-Dame cathedral, with renovation work taking place, photographed on 30th November 2019 after the fire of 16th April 2019, on the Ile de la Cite in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, France. The cathedral was built 1163-1345 in French Gothic style. The fire caused the destruction of the spire, the collapse of the roof and the damage of the upper walls of the cathedral nave. A reconstruction programme is currently in the planning stages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_002.jpg
  • Cathedrale Notre-Dame de Paris, or Notre-Dame cathedral, with renovation work taking place, photographed on 30th November 2019 after the fire of 16th April 2019, on the Ile de la Cite in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, France. The cathedral was built 1163-1345 in French Gothic style. The fire caused the destruction of the spire, the collapse of the roof and the damage of the upper walls of the cathedral nave. A reconstruction programme is currently in the planning stages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_001.jpg
  • Gargoyles and chimeras around the top of the 69m high North Tower, built 1235-50, at the Cathedrale Notre-Dame de Paris, or Notre-Dame cathedral, built 1163-1345 in French Gothic style, on the Ile de la Cite in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, France. The gargoyles serve to direct rainwater through their gaping mouths away from the cathedral walls, but the chimeras and strange mythical creatures also protect the cathedral by warding off evil. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0221.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
  • View of the City of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, including left-right, the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, the Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe, designed by Norman Foster, opened 2004), the Cheesegrater (122 Leadenhall St, designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners, opened 2014), and Blackfriars Bridge, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_140.jpg
  • View of the City of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, including left-right, the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, the Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe, designed by Norman Foster, opened 2004), the Cheesegrater (122 Leadenhall St, designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners, opened 2014), the Walkie Talkie (20 Fenchurch Street, designed by Rafael Vinoly, opened 2015), Blackfriars Bridge and the Oxo Tower, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_187.jpg
  • View of the City of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, including left-right, the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, the Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe, designed by Norman Foster, opened 2004), the Cheesegrater (122 Leadenhall St, designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners, opened 2014), the Walkie Talkie (20 Fenchurch Street, designed by Rafael Vinoly, opened 2015),  and Blackfriars Bridge, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_190.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Worker throwing cut stones onto piles at the quarry, and behind, the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, 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_1296.jpg
  • Worker throwing cut stones onto piles at the quarry, and behind, the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, 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_1294.jpg
  • Worker throwing cut stones onto piles at the quarry, and behind, the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, 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_1292.jpg
  • Lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, in front of the Corner Tower (left), Chapel Tower, North Range or Logis Seigneurial and Great Tower or Tour Maitresse (right), seen across a footbridge over 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_1260.jpg
  • North Range or Logis Seigneurial in the centre, completed 2010, with Corner Towers and Great Tower or Tour Maitresse on the right, still under construction, lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, and footbridges over 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_1258.jpg
  • Lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum and behind, the Chapel Tower and tiled roof of the North Range or Logis Seigneurial, completed 2010, 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_1257.jpg
  • Lifting gear or squirrel cage with single drum in the courtyard of 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_1246.jpg
  • North Range or Logis Seigneurial in the centre, completed 2010, with the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse on the right, still under construction, and footbridge over 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_1242.jpg
  • Lifting gear or squirrel cage with single drum and behind, the crenellated curtain walls, in the courtyard of 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_1238.jpg
  • Tour guide and miller Yohann Mateo Albaladejo, dressed in medieval costume, taking visitors on a guided tour 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_1230.jpg
  • North Range or Logis Seigneurial in the centre, completed 2010, with the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse on the right, and Corner Tower in the centre, still under construction, lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, and footbridges over 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_1226.jpg
  • North Range or Logis Seigneurial in the centre, completed 2010, with Corner Towers and Great Tower or Tour Maitresse on the right, still under construction, lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, and footbridges over 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_1221.jpg
  • Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. In the foreground is the stone quarry with cut stones from which the building is constructed. 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_1216.jpg
  • Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. In the foreground is the stone quarry with cut stones from which the building is constructed. 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_1214.jpg
  • Beach and city of Le Havre, seen from Sainte Adresse, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France. In the centre is the tower of the Eglise Saint-Joseph or St Joseph's Church, built 1951-58 as a memorial to the 5000 citizens of the town who died during the Second World War, designed by Auguste Perret, 1874-1954, and Raymond Audigier. Either side are the apartment blocks at Porte Oceane, completed 1956, also designed by Perret, with the docks of the port behind. Perret led the reconstruction of Le Havre in the 1950s, after the town was completely destroyed in WWII. The centre of Le Havre is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_FRANCE_MC_0597.jpg
  • View of Ivry sur Seine, Val-de-Marne, with its high rise apartment blocks and smoking factory chimneys, seen from the Grand Rocher or Great Rock 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
    LC14_Paris_MC043.JPG
  • The octagonal stained glass skylight and iron belfry of the Church of Reparacion, built 1899 by Joan Abril i Guanyabens, seen through a window in the old town or Casc Antic of Tortosa, Tarragona, Spain. Tortosa is an ancient town situated on the Ebro Delta which has a rich heritage dating from Roman times. In recent years, many buildings in the old town have been abandoned and fallen into disrepair. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN13_MC092.jpg
  • Plant History Glasshouse (formerly Australian Glasshouse), 1830s, Rohault de Fleury, Jardin des Plantes, Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France. Detail of window cleaners in a cherry-picker washing the glass and metal wall through which may be seen the luxuriant vegetation.
    Mnhn_GS_MCohen_291.jpg
  • Plant History Glasshouse (formerly Australian Glasshouse), 1830s, Rohault de Fleury, Jardin des Plantes, Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France. Detail of window cleaners in a cherry-picker washing the glass and metal wall.
    _MG_8200.jpg
  • Leopard in a river and wild animals, detail, tapestry in the Tapestry Gallery, designed 1677 by Andrea Biffi, since 1886 housing a series of Flemish tapestries c. 1565, made by the workshop of Pieter Coecke van Aalst in Brussels, from cartoons by Michael Coxie and Willen Tons, in the Palazzo Borromeo, built 1632-1948 by the Borromeo family, on Isola Bella, in the Isole Borromee or Borromean Islands, on Lake Maggiore, Piedmont, Italy. The tapestries are theological, with animals illustrating evil, sin and redemption. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_ITALY_MC_0088.jpg
  • Leopard in a river and wild animals, detail, tapestry in the Tapestry Gallery, designed 1677 by Andrea Biffi, since 1886 housing a series of Flemish tapestries c. 1565, made by the workshop of Pieter Coecke van Aalst in Brussels, from cartoons by Michael Coxie and Willen Tons, in the Palazzo Borromeo, built 1632-1948 by the Borromeo family, on Isola Bella, in the Isole Borromee or Borromean Islands, on Lake Maggiore, Piedmont, Italy. The tapestries are theological, with animals illustrating evil, sin and redemption. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_ITALY_MC_0087.jpg
  • Dock workers, stained glass window, by Paule and Max Ingrand, in the Palais Consulaire or Consular Palace, built 1937 in art deco style, which houses the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, on the Quai de Lattre de Tassigny in Perpignan, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_1379.jpg
  • Memorial de l'Abolition de l'Esclavage, or Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery, inaugurated 25th March 2012, on the Quai de la Fosse, a port quay along the right bank of the river Loire in the centre of Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. In the ground are set 2000 glass plates by Emmanuel Barrois and Krzysztof Wodiczko, commemorating elements of the slave trade. Nantes was an important trading port, profiting from the slave trade from 17th - 19th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0050.jpg
  • Palazzo Vecchio, or Old Palace, the town hall of Florence, built from 1299 by  Arnolfo di Cambio, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy. The historic centre of Florence is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ITALY_MC_251.JPG
  • Cathedrale Notre-Dame de Paris, or Notre-Dame cathedral, with renovation work taking place, photographed on 30th November 2019 after the fire of 16th April 2019, on the Ile de la Cite in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, France. The cathedral was built 1163-1345 in French Gothic style. The fire caused the destruction of the spire, the collapse of the roof and the damage of the upper walls of the cathedral nave. A reconstruction programme is currently in the planning stages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_003.jpg
  • Cathedrale Notre-Dame de Paris, or Notre-Dame cathedral, with renovation work taking place, photographed in July 2019 after the fire of 16th April 2019, on the Ile de la Cite in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, France. The cathedral was built 1163-1345 in French Gothic style. The fire caused the destruction of the spire, the collapse of the roof and the damage of the upper walls of the cathedral nave. A reconstruction programme is currently in the planning stages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1472.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_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
  • 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 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
  • Carole Dumont Georges and Jean Francois Dumont, associate artistic directors of Faiencerie Georges, in their Georges pottery showroom in Nevers, France, photographed on 5th August 2017. Founded by Emile Georges in 1898, the pottery business is now run by its fourth generation, where traditional techniques are married with contemporary design. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    050817_GeorgesPottery_MC001.jpg
  • Carole Dumont Georges and Jean Francois Dumont, associate artistic directors of Faiencerie Georges, in their Georges pottery showroom in Nevers, France, photographed on 5th August 2017. Founded by Emile Georges in 1898, the pottery business is now run by its fourth generation, where traditional techniques are married with contemporary design. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    050817_GeorgesPottery_MC003.jpg
  • View of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, with the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, designed in Baroque style by Christopher Wren, 1632-1723, and buildings along the North bank of the Thames, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_134.jpg
  • View of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, including left-right, the Oxo Tower, One Blackfriars (designed by Simpson Haugh and Partners, opened 2017), Southbank Tower (designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox, opened 2015) and The Shard (designed by Renzo Piano, opened 2013), London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_135.jpg
  • View of the London seen from Waterloo Bridge, including left-right, Blackfriars Bridge, the Oxo Tower, One Blackfriars (designed by Simpson Haugh and Partners, opened 2017), Southbank Tower (designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox, opened 2015) and The Shard (designed by Renzo Piano, opened 2013), London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_136.jpg
  • View of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, with the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, designed in Baroque style by Christopher Wren, 1632-1723, and buildings along the North bank of the Thames, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_137.jpg
  • View of the City of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, with the Walkie Talkie (20 Fenchurch Street, designed by Rafael Vinoly, opened 2015), Blackfriars Bridge and the Oxo Tower, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_139.jpg
  • View of the City of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, including left-right, the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, the Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe, designed by Norman Foster, opened 2004), the Cheesegrater (122 Leadenhall St, designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners, opened 2014), the Walkie Talkie (20 Fenchurch Street, designed by Rafael Vinoly, opened 2015), Blackfriars Bridge and the Oxo Tower, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_188.jpg
  • View of the City of London seen from Waterloo Bridge, including left-right, the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, the Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe, designed by Norman Foster, opened 2004), the Cheesegrater (122 Leadenhall St, designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners, opened 2014), the Walkie Talkie (20 Fenchurch Street, designed by Rafael Vinoly, opened 2015), and Blackfriars Bridge, London, England, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_189.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
  • Worker throwing cut stones onto piles at the quarry, and behind, the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, 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_1295.jpg
  • Worker throwing cut stones onto piles at the quarry, and behind, the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, 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_1293.jpg
  • Workers cutting blocks of stone at the quarry, and behind, the Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, 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_1291.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
  • 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
  • Great Tower or Tour Maitresse, Chapel Tower and Corner Tower (left-right), still under construction, at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France. In the foreground is the stone quarry with cut stones from which the building is constructed. 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_1266.jpg
  • Group of visitors at the Chateau de Guedelon, a castle built since 1997 using only medieval materials and processes, photographed in 2017, in Treigny, Yonne, Burgundy, France, with lifting gear or squirrel cage with double drum, and (left-right) the Corner Tower, Chapel Tower, North Range or Logis Seigneurial and Great Tower or Tour Maitresse. 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_1262.JPG
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x