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Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,town centre,Greater Manchester,Andy Burnham,bus station,transport interchange,public transport hub,pedestrian entrance,bee symbol,Stockport,England,United Kingdom,modern architecture,travel,commuting,sustainable transport,winter,winter daylight,blue sky,Greater Manchester transport,Bee Network branding,public transport investment,urban mobility,commuter travel,accessibility and inclusion,transport policy,town centre renewal,civic infrastructure,modern UK towns,editorial illustration,documentary travel image,Transport for Greater Manchester,TfGM,public transport,bus services,passenger concourse,accessibility,step free access
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3DM985E - A clean, documentary exterior view of the pedestrian entrance to Stockport Interchange, showing the modern curved glass frontage and prominent Bee Network branding on the doors. The yellow bee emblems are highly visible and act as an immediate location and organisation cue, making the image useful for editors who need a clear, neutral illustration of Greater Manchester's integrated transport network. The building design reads as contemporary civic infrastructure, with pale cladding, wide glazing, and a rounded upper level that gives the entrance a modern, purpose-built feel.
The light suggests a cold-season day with clear winter sunshine and a blue sky, producing crisp reflections in the glass and sharp edges on the fa??ade. The framing stays focused on the entrance and signage rather than crowds or vehicles, which keeps the image versatile for multiple contexts, including travel guidance, transport service updates, accessibility information, and regeneration coverage. As a location identifier, the combination of the Bee Network logos and the recognisable interchange architecture makes the scene unmistakably about public transport in Stockport town centre.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,town centre,Greater Manchester,Bee Network,bus station,transport interchange,public transport hub,Stockport,England,United Kingdom,railway viaduct,winter,winter sun,golden hour,double decker bus,urban transport,192,Greater Manchester transport,integrated transport network,Bee Network branding,public transport investment,urban planning,mobility,commuting,clean travel,regeneration project,UK infrastructure,civic design,transport policy,northern England,travel editorial,place identity,city break Manchester area,TfGM,Transport for Greater Manchester,commuter travel,sustainable transport,public transport infrastructure
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3DM985P - A wide, atmospheric winter sunset view across Stockport Interchange, looking down into the modern bus station bowl as a yellow double decker bus pulls away from the stands. The low sun sits just above the horizon and breaks through the scene, creating warm golden light, long shadows, and a small flare, while the sky remains a clean cold blue. Fresh road markings and empty bays emphasise the scale of the interchange and the calm between peaks, with the sweeping upper walkway framing the top of the bus station like a balcony.
Beyond the interchange, the brick arches of the Stockport railway viaduct stretch across the background, tying the new transport hub to the town's older industrial infrastructure. The contrast is the story: contemporary public transport design and town-centre regeneration in the foreground, Victorian engineering and city heritage behind it. The winter feel comes through in the low angle light and crisp clarity, suggesting a dry, cold evening rather than rain.
This image is well suited to editorial coverage of the Bee Network, public transport investment, commuting, and sustainable urban mobility in Greater Manchester. It also works for broader themes such as regeneration, modern civic infrastructure, and the relationship between transport interchanges and the reshaping of town centres. Stockport Interchange is a key Bee Network project delivered with partners including Stockport Council and TfGM, and the location is immediately identifiable through the combination of the interchange form and the iconic viaduct arches.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,town centre,Greater Manchester,Stockport Interchange sign,public transport hub,transport interchange,transport centre,Stockport,England,United Kingdom,wayfinding sign,Bee Network branding,modern signage,Wellington Road,Stockport town centre,winter,Greater Manchester transport,integrated transport network,public transport investment,levelling up,clean air travel,low carbon travel,commuting,mobility,urban planning,transport policy,accessibility,editorial,documentary,destination marketing,Stockport regeneration,UK infrastructure,public transport,local buses,regional bus network,passenger interchange,travel infrastructure,urban regeneration
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3DM9867 - A clean, contemporary exterior view of Stockport Interchange in Greater Manchester, featuring prominent Bee Network branding and the large Stockport Interchange name mounted on modern cladding. The yellow bee emblem, strongly associated with Greater Manchester identity and the Bee Network transport system, provides an instantly recognisable visual anchor for editorial and commercial uses. The photo is taken in crisp winter conditions, with bright low sunlight and a clear blue sky that gives the scene a fresh, high-contrast look and picks out surface textures and edges on the sign and building fa??ade.
The composition focuses on wayfinding and place identity rather than crowds, making it especially useful as a neutral, non-controversial illustration for stories about public transport, bus network operations, transport investment, and town-centre regeneration. The interchange is presented as a modern piece of civic infrastructure, the type of hub designed to make switching between services simpler for commuters, shoppers, and visitors. The absence of vehicles in the frame keeps attention on the signage and branding, which is often exactly what editors need to represent a transport organisation or location without tying the image to a specific incident.
This picture can support coverage of the Bee Network and Transport for Greater Manchester initiatives, integrated ticketing and information points, accessibility improvements, and wider debates about sustainable urban mobility. It also works well for general Stockport location coverage, with the winter light and calm atmosphere providing a professional, documentary feel suitable for news, policy, and transport features.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,town centre,Greater Manchester,public house,traditional pub,Heaton Lane,Stockport,SK4 1AR,England,United Kingdom,Stockport Viaduct,under the viaduct,Victorian brick arch,streetscape,winter,winter sunlight,North West England,Northern England,pub culture,British drinking culture,hospitality,visitor economy,community pub,documentary editorial,travel UK,architecture and infrastructure,Victorian engineering,city break Manchester area,local business,place identity,CAMRA pub,cask ale,beer pub,British pub,historic pub,local landmark,chimney pots,painted facade
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3DM987K - A wide, documentary winter view of The Crown Inn on Heaton Lane in Stockport, a classic North West England pub set hard against the dramatic brick arches of the railway viaduct. The pub's pale painted frontage and traditional multi-chimney roofline sit in sharp contrast to the deep red viaduct masonry towering immediately to the right of frame. The main fascia sign clearly reads Crown Inn, with Boddingtons Beer also visible, anchoring the image in familiar Northern pub history and branding. The scene is lit by low, bright winter sun under a clear blue sky, giving crisp shadows and a clean, cold-weather feel rather than rain or snow.
Outdoor benches and simple railings line the frontage, suggesting a spot where regulars and visitors can sit out when the weather behaves, while the street-level perspective keeps the composition grounded in everyday urban life. The close proximity of the viaduct creates a strong sense of place: a pub that feels shaped by infrastructure, with Victorian engineering looming overhead and the building tucked into the shadow of the arches. It is the kind of location that reads immediately as real rather than curated, with honest materials, working-city textures, and a slightly gritty beauty.
Editorially, the photograph is useful for stories about British pub culture, real ale, community hospitality, and the changing fortunes of traditional pubs in Greater Manchester. It also supports broader themes of industrial heritage and the relationship between historic transport structures and local neighbourhood businesses. The combination of readable signage, recognisable setting, and winter atmosphere makes it a strong general illustration for Stockport, Northern England streetscapes, and heritage pubs beneath the railway lines.

Description
Keywords: HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,London,bar boat London,Paddington Basin bar boat,canal bar London,canal boat bar,urban leisure London,waterside nightlife,urban regeneration London,reuse of waterways,canal culture revival,floating leisure venues,post-industrial transformation,night-time economy,waterside placemaking,informal social spaces,adaptive reuse infrastructure,Paddington Basin London W2 1TR,Grand Union Canal Paddington,West London canal,floating hospitality,leisure boat London,canal-side seating,evening socialising,modern London canals,mixed-use regeneration,editorial image,daytime exterior,hospitality,alternative,drinks,cocktails,autumn,evening
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3DCX6C3 - A brightly decorated bar boat moored at Paddington Basin on the Grand Union Canal in west London, photographed at Paddington Basin, London W2 1TR. The floating venue features seating, lighting and decorative elements designed for socialising, with the canal and surrounding modern buildings forming a distinctive urban backdrop.
Paddington Basin is part of a wider regeneration area that has transformed former industrial and transport-related land into a mixed-use district combining offices, housing, restaurants and public spaces. The presence of bar boats and leisure craft reflects a broader revival of London's historic canal network, which once played a crucial role in freight transport but is now increasingly associated with recreation, tourism and lifestyle uses.
The Grand Union Canal, one of the longest canals in the UK, runs through west and north London, linking the capital with the Midlands. In areas such as Paddington Basin, the canal has become a focal point for waterside placemaking, where floating caf??s, bars and cultural venues add vibrancy to the public realm and encourage informal social interaction.
Scenes like this are often used editorially to illustrate themes of urban regeneration, adaptive reuse of infrastructure, the growth of waterside leisure economies and changing patterns of city life. Photographed in daylight with people, seating and moored boats visible, the image captures the canal as a lived-in urban space rather than a purely historic relic.
The photograph offers strong editorial value for subjects including London waterways, floating hospitality, contemporary urban leisure, tourism and the reinvention of post-industrial environments, making it suitable for travel features, lifestyle coverage and urban studies publications.

Description
Keywords: HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,funny,humour,humor,sports education project,community education hub,Bury Market Hall area,urban regeneration UK,Greater Manchester town centre,civic development,community regeneration,education through sport,social mobility initiatives,town centre renewal,post-industrial towns UK,skills and aspiration,public investment in education,inclusive growth,civic pride,everyday urban Britain,Bury Market BL9 0SW,Bury Greater Manchester,Lancashire town centre,education and sport initiative,community learning project,market regeneration scheme,pedestrianised shopping area,everyday town life,social infrastructure,editorial image,daytime exterior,sunny,day,Greater Manchester,England,UK.,BL9,BL9 0SW
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3DCX6C1 - A street-level view of The Football University Programme building adjacent to Bury Market in Bury town centre, photographed at Bury BL9 0SW, Greater Manchester. The scene shows members of the public moving through the pedestrianised market area, with seating, shoppers and everyday activity visible in the foreground.
The Football University Programme is an educational initiative that uses football and sport as engagement tools to support learning, personal development and aspiration, particularly among young people who may be disengaged from traditional education routes. Its location close to Bury Market places it within a busy civic environment, reinforcing links between education, community life and town-centre regeneration.
Bury Market has long been a focal point of the town's economic and social activity, and recent regeneration efforts have sought to broaden its role beyond retail, incorporating leisure, education and community uses. Projects such as the Football University Programme are often cited in policy and media discussions as examples of place-based regeneration, where social infrastructure is embedded directly into everyday urban settings.
The image captures a cross-section of daily life in a northern English town centre, illustrating how education initiatives coexist with markets, caf??s and public seating. Photographed in daylight with people of different ages visible, the scene offers strong editorial value for themes including community regeneration, education and sport, social inclusion, town-centre renewal and contemporary life in Greater Manchester.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,England,integrated,Platform B,east,&,Manchester,UK,Manchester Metrolink,Piccadilly Metrolink,Platform B Metrolink,eastbound Metrolink,tram platform Manchester,light rail UK,public transport Manchester,Metrolink signage,Greater Manchester transport,urban transport infrastructure,Metrolink platform signage,Platform B Piccadilly,trams to Ashton under Lyne,Etihad Campus tram,Manchester tram system,accessible transport UK,yellow safety rails,modern station design,commuter transport,city centre travel,Transport for Greater Manchester,northern England transport,public transit signage,tram network,infrastructure,Platform B signage,at,Piccadilly Metrolink stop,eastbound
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CGCJRX - This photograph shows Platform B at the Piccadilly Metrolink stop in Manchester city centre, part of the city's extensive light rail network operated by Manchester Metrolink. The bright yellow platform signage clearly indicates eastbound services to Ashton under Lyne and the Etihad Campus, two key destinations on the eastern side of Greater Manchester.
The image highlights the clean, functional design of the Metrolink system, with high contrast signage, tactile surfaces, and yellow safety rails supporting accessibility and passenger safety. Piccadilly Metrolink forms a major interchange point, linking tram services with Manchester Piccadilly railway station, buses, and wider city centre travel routes.
Metrolink plays a central role in Manchester's public transport network, supporting daily commuting, leisure travel, and access to major employment, residential, and sporting destinations. The reference to the Etihad Campus underlines the system's importance during major events, including football matches and concerts, while the Ashton under Lyne route serves a mix of town centre, residential, and commercial areas.
Taken indoors under artificial lighting, the photograph functions as both a documentary record of modern urban transport infrastructure and a practical illustration of wayfinding design in a busy metropolitan transit system. It reflects Manchester's long term investment in light rail as a sustainable alternative to private car use and a core element of city region connectivity.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Greater Manchester,England,Castlefield,footbridge,bridge,walkway,Deansgate,pedestrian,tram,tramstop,to,Northern,BR,connection,access,city,centre walkway,urban,infrastructure,centre,regeneration,cityscape,skyline,blue,sky,sunny,summer,weather,connectivity,sustainable,walking,route,modern
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CGCK21 - An elevated pedestrian walkway at Castlefield, Manchester, providing a direct connection between the Metrolink tram network and National Rail services at Deansgate Station. The image was taken on a warm summer evening, with clear blue skies and strong, low-angle sunlight creating a calm, open atmosphere across the city centre.
Castlefield is widely regarded as the birthplace of the industrial city, home to some of the world's earliest canals, railway infrastructure and surviving Victorian warehouses. Deansgate Station itself, formerly known as Knott Mill, has served rail passengers since the nineteenth century and remains an important gateway between Manchester's historic industrial core and its modern city centre.
The steel-framed walkway represents a contemporary layer in this long transport history, designed to support sustainable urban movement and seamless interchange between tram, rail and pedestrian routes. From the bridge, the view opens towards Manchester's rapidly expanding skyline, where clusters of glass and steel residential towers now dominate the horizon, reflecting the city's shift towards high-density urban living.
The contrast between the heavy industrial heritage of Castlefield, the red-brick railway buildings below, and the modern skyscrapers beyond encapsulates Manchester's continuing evolution. In summer conditions such as these, the walkway functions not only as vital infrastructure but also as a vantage point over a city shaped by transport, regeneration and reinvention. The image is well suited to editorial use covering urban development, public transport integration, regeneration, sustainable mobility and the lived experience of contemporary British cities.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Ireland,centre,apartment block,public housing,council housing,local authority housing,apartment building,flats,housing estate,residential building,urban housing,multi storey housing,modernist housing,affordable housing,rented housing,Dublin,documentary photography,AHB,housing,urban streetscape,residential street,city suburb,post war housing,1960s architecture,1970s architecture,balconies,communal living,inner city housing,housing density,social infrastructure,public,sector,neighbourhood life,street scene,Taylors Ln
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CPAXPY - A multi-storey social housing apartment block located on Taylors Lane in The Liberties, an inner city area of Dublin, Ireland. The building features a functional modernist design with uniform balconies and reflects post-war local authority housing provision in the Irish capital. The image captures everyday residential life in one of Dublin's historic neighbourhoods and highlights broader themes of affordable housing, urban density, and the continuing role of public sector housing within established inner city communities.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,wayfinding,pedestrian signpost,directional signs,Manchester city centre,urban signage,walking routes,heritage area,tourist signage,public realm,Manchester landmarks,cultural,quarter,documentary photography,editorial image,attraction,attractions,Manchester Central,Bridgewater Hall,Great Northern Warehouse,Museum of Science and Industry,Roman Gardens,Castlefield Youth Hostel,pedestrian route,urban planning,walking,history,historic district,city wayfinding,everyday Britain,North West England,tourism infrastructure,street photography,contemporary Britain,blue,grey sky
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CPAX8F - Pedestrian wayfinding signs in the Castlefield area of Manchester city centre, England, directing walkers towards major cultural, civic, and visitor destinations including Manchester Central, Bridgewater Hall, the Museum of Science and Industry, Roman Gardens, the Great Northern Warehouse, and Castlefield Youth Hostel. Castlefield is recognised as Manchester's first designated urban heritage park and is known for its Roman origins, canal basins, and surviving industrial infrastructure.
The blue and white signposts form part of the city's pedestrian navigation system, designed to encourage walking between transport hubs, cultural venues, historic sites, and leisure areas. The signs reflect the layered character of Castlefield, where Roman archaeology, Victorian canals and railways, and modern cultural buildings coexist within a compact city-centre district.
The image highlights themes of urban wayfinding, heritage-led regeneration, and the role of public realm infrastructure in supporting tourism, everyday movement, and accessibility in major British cities. It also illustrates how Manchester promotes walkability and connects historic neighbourhoods with contemporary cultural and commercial centres.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Castlefield,rail,City Centre,England,UK,to,entrance,history,historic,archeology,Castlefield Viaduct,Castlefield Viaduct Manchester,National Trust sign,Manchester sky park,Victorian railway viaduct,industrial heritage Manchester,urban regeneration Manchester,National Trust urban project,heritage signage,visitor information sign,wayfinding sign,adaptive reuse railway,Manchester industrial revolution,Castlefield conservation area,repurposed infrastructure,public attraction Manchester,tourism Manchester,northern England landmark,sustainable regeneration,urban green space,welcome,entry,teal
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CPAX8X - This photograph shows a National Trust visitor sign reading Welcome to Castlefield Viaduct, mounted at the entrance to the Castlefield Viaduct in Manchester city centre. The sign marks the public access point to a former nineteenth-century railway viaduct that has been repurposed as an elevated urban park and walking route.
The Castlefield Viaduct was originally constructed in the 1890s to carry rail traffic into Manchester during the peak of the city's industrial expansion. After decades of disuse, the structure was restored and reopened by the National Trust as an experimental urban regeneration project, allowing the public to explore a significant piece of Manchester's industrial infrastructure from a new perspective.
The contemporary sign design contrasts deliberately with the historic ironwork of the viaduct, reflecting the project's blend of heritage conservation and modern interpretation. Clear visitor signage plays an important role in reintroducing former industrial spaces as accessible public places, helping frame the site not just as a relic of the past but as a living part of the modern city.
Taken in daylight, the image documents the interface between historic infrastructure and present-day cultural use. It illustrates Manchester's wider approach to heritage-led regeneration, where Victorian engineering, environmental enhancement, and public engagement are brought together to create new urban experiences in the city centre.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Castlefield,rail,City Centre,England,UK,metal,history,historic,archeology,Castlefield Manchester,Castlefield inscription,cast iron inscription,industrial heritage Manchester,Victorian engineering,Manchester industrial revolution,rusted metal texture,iron lettering,heritage detail,historic Manchester,National Trust Castlefield Viaduct,industrial typography,weathered metal,corrosion texture,oxidised iron,urban heritage detail,Victorian infrastructure,railway heritage Manchester,close up texture,material culture,post industrial city,northern England history,conservation area Manchester,M3 4JR,M3
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CPAXE7 - This image shows a close up view of a cast iron inscription reading Castlefield, formed into a metal surface that has developed a rich rusted patina over time. The lettering is characteristic of Victorian industrial typography, designed to be both durable and legible within the heavy engineering environments that once defined this part of Manchester.
Castlefield is widely recognised as one of the most historically significant industrial areas in the city, closely associated with canals, railways, warehouses, and early transport infrastructure that supported Manchester's growth during the industrial revolution. Cast iron was a defining material of this period, used extensively for bridges, viaducts, columns, and signage because of its strength, mouldability, and relative affordability.
The surface corrosion visible in the image reflects decades of exposure to weather and urban conditions, creating a textured finish that is now valued as part of the area's historic character. Rather than being removed, such patina is often retained in conservation and regeneration projects, where material ageing is seen as evidence of authenticity and continuity.
Taken in natural daylight, the photograph functions both as a documentary record of industrial heritage and as a strong abstract study of texture, lettering, and material decay. It illustrates how small details within Manchester's historic infrastructure help tell the wider story of the city's industrial past and its ongoing relationship with conservation, regeneration, and place identity.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,history,historic,archeology,new,building,skyscraper,on,railway,tram,metrolink,rail,rails,line,lines,bridge,at,area,city,centre,with,high rise,in,the,background,buildings,Manchester graffiti,Castlefield Manchester,railway tracks Manchester,railway bridge graffiti,urban street art,Manchester skyline,city centre Manchester,industrial Manchester,rail infrastructure,modern Manchester skyline,graffiti mural,urban regeneration Manchester
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CPAXFA - This photograph shows a graffiti-covered railway bridge in the Castlefield area of Manchester city centre, with active railway tracks running through the foreground and a cluster of modern high-rise buildings forming the skyline in the background. The steel bridge structure is part of the historic rail infrastructure that cuts through Castlefield, an area closely associated with Manchester's industrial and transport heritage.
The graffiti mural spans the length of the bridge and features bold lettering and bright colours typical of contemporary British street art. Set against the muted grey steelwork, the artwork creates a strong visual contrast between informal urban expression and formal Victorian-era engineering. The presence of overhead electrification lines and multiple tracks underlines the continued operational importance of the rail corridor.
Behind the bridge, modern residential and commercial towers rise above the tracks, reflecting Manchester's rapid redevelopment and densification over the past two decades. The juxtaposition of graffiti, heavy rail infrastructure, and glass-and-steel skyscrapers captures a distinctive Manchester cityscape, where industrial legacy, street culture, and modern urban growth exist side by side.
Taken in daylight under broken cloud and blue sky, the image highlights the layered character of central Manchester. Castlefield, now a conservation area, remains a key transition zone between the city's industrial past and its contemporary identity as a growing European city, with this scene illustrating the tension and balance between heritage, infrastructure, creativity, and regeneration.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Aviva Studios,Factory International,cultural venue,arts venue,creative industries,urban culture,modern building,city centre Manchester,North West England,British culture,documentary photography,bench,outside,Manchester city centre,St Johns,urban regeneration,creative economy,glass facade,interior lighting,modern design,public seating,picnic benches,colourful benches,leisure space,cultural infrastructure,evening lights,social space,city life,everyday Britain,European city,tourism,architectural detail,street photography,contemporary Britain
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CPAXM2 - Aviva Studios, the home of Factory International, photographed at the St John's development in Manchester city centre, England. The image shows a contemporary cultural venue with a large glazed facade revealing interior lighting and activity, alongside brightly coloured picnic-style benches used as informal public seating. Opened as a flagship arts space, Aviva Studios was developed to host large-scale theatre, music, dance, exhibitions, and international festivals, reinforcing Manchester's reputation as a major centre for culture and the creative industries. The building forms a central part of the St John's regeneration scheme, a former industrial area transformed into a mixed-use district focused on arts, leisure, and public realm. The scene reflects modern approaches to cultural infrastructure, where landmark venues are designed to be accessible and integrated into everyday urban life, highlighting wider themes of urban regeneration, investment in culture, and the changing character of post-industrial British city centres.

Description
Keywords: HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,city,centre,Manchester vinyl records,Manchester music culture,independent music retailer,vinyl revival UK,Manchester record shop,urban music heritage,vinyl,music,releases,independent retail survival,cultural infrastructure,grassroots music economy,vinyl resurgence,anti-mainstream culture,DIY music scenes,creative industries UK,cultural resistance,nostalgia and modernity,analogue media,music collectors,subculture identity,Manchester M1 2BA,city centre,9""?11,Paton Street,M1 2BA,M1,red,exterior,punk and post-punk culture,indie,scene,N4Q
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3DCX6FJ - Clampdown Records is an independent record shop located at 9?11 Paton Street, Manchester M1 2BA, in Manchester city centre. The venue is part of the city's long-standing tradition of independent music retail, occupying a niche space away from mainstream high-street chains and reflecting Manchester's deep-rooted alternative music culture.
The shop's signage, prominently displaying the name Clampdown Records, references a confrontational, anti-establishment aesthetic closely associated with punk, post-punk and politically engaged music cultures. Such naming conventions have historically signalled alignment with underground scenes rather than commercial chart music, positioning shops like Clampdown as cultural hubs rather than purely retail outlets.
Independent record shops have played a crucial role in Manchester's music history, acting as meeting points for musicians, fans, collectors and promoters, and serving as informal distribution centres for local and international underground releases. In an era of digital streaming and declining physical retail, stores such as Clampdown Records are often cited as symbols of the vinyl revival and the persistence of analogue music formats valued for their tactile, collectible and cultural qualities.
Paton Street sits close to areas historically associated with Manchester's music and nightlife economy, and the presence of an independent record shop here contributes to wider discussions about urban regeneration, cultural survival and the future of independent high streets in UK cities. The image captures not only the physical storefront but also the broader cultural significance of independent music retail within Manchester's identity as a city shaped by sound, subculture and creative resistance.
Photographed in close-up with architectural details and signage clearly visible, the image offers strong editorial value for themes including music heritage, independent business, cultural economics and the continuing relevance

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Trans Pennine Trail,TransPennine Trail,cycle route sign,walking route sign,shared use path,Latchford,Warrington,wayfinding sign,pedestrian and cycle route,long distance trail,National Cycle Network,outdoor recreation,active travel,Cheshire,North West England,documentary photography,editorial image,West East sign,trail signage,cycling infrastructure,walking and cycling,public rights of way,leisure cycling,commuter cycling,regional trail,transport signage,urban green route,everyday Britain,local travel,outdoor lifestyle,fitness and leisure,street,west,riding,walk,walking
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3CPAX2W - Directional signage for the Trans Pennine Trail photographed in the Latchford area of south Warrington, Cheshire, England. The blue wayfinding signs indicate west and east routes along the long-distance trail and display symbols for both cyclists and pedestrians, highlighting the shared-use nature of the path. The Trans Pennine Trail is a major national route stretching coast to coast across northern England, designed to promote walking, cycling, and sustainable travel through a mix of urban, suburban, and rural landscapes.
In towns such as Warrington, the trail forms part of local active-travel infrastructure, connecting residential neighbourhoods with green corridors, waterways, employment areas, and nearby towns. The signage reflects consistent national trail branding and supports navigation for leisure users as well as commuters. The image illustrates broader themes of sustainable transport, public investment in cycling and walking infrastructure, and the integration of long-distance recreational routes into everyday urban environments across contemporary Britain.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Southern,Republic,EU,Dublin,traffic,Ireland,double,decker,double-decker,eco,bus congestion,city traffic,public transport,double decker buses,urban transport,Irish buses,city centre congestion,Bus Eireann,Dublin Bus,commuter traffic,rush hour,city streets,sustainable transport,urban mobility,traffic management,modern Ireland,capital city,street scene,transport network,bus lane,car traffic,city congestion,European city transport,travel Ireland,infrastructure pressure,daylight,spring summer
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 3BR177E - A busy scene of Transport for Ireland (TFI) double-decker buses and city traffic moving slowly around Parnell Square in Dublin city centre, Ireland. Multiple green and yellow Dublin Bus and Bus ??ireann vehicles are visible, reflecting the colour scheme used across Ireland's integrated public transport network.
Parnell Square is a key traffic junction on the north side of Dublin's city centre, bordered by Georgian red-brick terraces and major cultural and civic institutions. The image captures congestion caused by high bus volumes, private cars, and constrained road space, illustrating the daily pressures on Dublin's urban transport infrastructure.
Public buses play a central role in Dublin's transport system, supporting commuting, tourism, and city-centre accessibility. However, increasing demand, roadworks, and competing uses of limited street space have contributed to recurring congestion in areas such as Parnell Square.
This photograph is suitable for editorial use illustrating urban transport challenges, public transport policy, city congestion, sustainable mobility debates, infrastructure capacity, and everyday street life in Ireland's capital.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,LS1,centre,city,stations,West Yorkshire,Yorkshire,England,LS1 4DY,to,poster,tourist,public transport England,British railways,Network Rail,station concourse,urban transport,commuter travel,passenger rail,city gateway,colourful signage,modern station design,travel infrastructure,rail network,northern England,tourism Leeds,station branding,railway architecture,travel destination signage,phone,letters,toilet,WC,50
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2X2CG2W - This image shows a large, colourful LEEDS sign mounted within the interior of Leeds railway station in West Yorkshire, England. The sign uses bold lettering across a series of bright, patterned panels, creating a distinctive visual identity that clearly announces the city to arriving and departing passengers. Positioned above the station concourse area, the sign forms part of the station's wayfinding and branding, reinforcing Leeds as a major regional destination.
Leeds railway station is one of the busiest stations outside London and a key transport hub in the north of England. Serving the East Coast Main Line and numerous regional routes, it provides vital connections between Leeds, London, Manchester, Sheffield, York, the North East, and Scotland. The station plays a central role in daily commuter travel as well as long-distance intercity services, reflecting Leeds' importance as a commercial, financial, cultural, and educational centre.
The modern interior setting, combined with contemporary graphic design, reflects ongoing investment in passenger experience and urban transport infrastructure. This image is suitable for editorial and commercial use relating to rail travel, public transport, city identity, tourism, urban regeneration, and the role of major railway stations as gateways to UK cities.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,YO19 5UF,YO19,5UF,City of York,York,city of,sign,signage,North Yorkshire,England,Yorkshire,urban,villages,DVLR,Yorkshire Museum of Farming,Danelaw Centre for Living History and the Derwent Valley,parish,history,historic,heritage,Murton,bus stop sign,public transport,village life,City of York Council,rural mobility,village transport,public bus service,countryside transport,community services,local travel,bus signage,transport infrastructure,North Yorkshire villages,sustainable transport,rural England,documentary photography
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2X2CG2K - A weathered bus stop sign for Murton Village photographed on Murton Lane in the village of Murton, near York, North Yorkshire, England. The sign features the traditional bus symbol and the City of York crest mounted above the pole, identifying the stop as part of the local authority-managed public transport network.
Murton is a small rural village located to the east of the city of York, surrounded by agricultural land and characterised by a close-knit community and limited local services. Bus stops such as this provide an essential connection between rural settlements and nearby urban centres, supporting access to employment, education, healthcare, and shopping.
Rural bus services in North Yorkshire have faced increasing pressure in recent years due to funding constraints, changing travel patterns, and population shifts. As a result, village bus stops like Murton's have become symbolic of wider debates around rural mobility, social inclusion, and the sustainability of public transport outside major towns and cities.
This image is suitable for editorial use illustrating rural transport in England, village life, public transport infrastructure, accessibility issues, community services, countryside living, and the challenges and importance of maintaining bus services in rural areas.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,transport,trains,platform,platforms,carriages,unreliable,at,Scotland,UK,Princes St,EH1 1BE,EH1,intercity train,UK rail travel,passenger train,long distance rail,British railways,train at platform,Edinburgh Waverley,railway platform,station interior,modern train,rail transport UK,commuter travel,business travel,public transport,rail operator branding,urban transport,travel infrastructure,UK railway network,Pendo,Pendolino,West Coast Main Line,WCML train
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2X2CG2G - This image shows an Avanti West Coast passenger train standing at a platform inside Edinburgh Waverley railway station in Edinburgh, Scotland. The photograph captures the side of the modern intercity train, clearly displaying Avanti West Coast branding, with carriage windows reflecting the historic stone architecture of the station surroundings. Platform markings, tactile paving, and station infrastructure are visible, situating the scene firmly within a busy city-centre transport hub.
Edinburgh Waverley is Scotland's principal mainline railway station and one of the busiest stations in the United Kingdom outside London. Located between the Old Town and New Town, the station sits within a dramatic valley setting and plays a vital role in connecting Scotland's capital with destinations across England. Avanti West Coast operates long-distance services on the West Coast Main Line, linking Edinburgh with Glasgow, Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, and London Euston.
The image reflects contemporary UK rail travel, combining modern rolling stock with historic station architecture. It illustrates themes of intercity transport, public infrastructure, business and leisure travel, and the ongoing importance of rail connectivity between major UK cities. The photograph is suitable for editorial and commercial use relating to transport, travel, railway operations, urban mobility, and the British rail network.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Yorkshire,rail,railway,Metro,stations,transport,Northern,WYPTE,West Yorkshire,LS13 4DU,LS13,sign,platform,platforms,Leeds-Bradford,line,lines,part,of the,network,Bradford,service,link,links,infrastructure,suburban,district,area,signage,public,council,and,Stanningley
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2T2841X -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Yorkshire,rail,railway,Metro,services,stations,public transport,transport,Northern,WYPTE,West Yorkshire,LS13 4DU,LS13,sign,platform,platforms,Leeds-Bradford,line,lines,part,of the,network,due,to,on,the,criminal,damage,theft,infrastructure,suburban,district,area,signage,public
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2T2841Y -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Yorkshire,rail,railway,Metro,services,stations,transport,Northern,WYPTE,West Yorkshire,LS13 4DU,LS13,sign,platform,platforms,Leeds-Bradford,line,lines,part,of the,network,infrastructure,urban,suburban,district,area,signage,public,council,and,Stanningley,Brameleia,Bramelei.
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2T28420 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,site,railway station,Central Birmingham,West Midlands,England,UK,B4 7XG,Rishi Sunak,cancellation,cancelled,to,Leeds,HS2,high speed,two,works,at,construction,leg,scrapped,train,trains,infrastructure,project,rest of,announcement,city,centre,white elephant,fail,failed,failure,Levelling Up,fence,plant,skyline,landmarks
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2T00PD2 - High Speed 2 (HS2) is a planned high-speed railway line and network of passenger train services in England. It will consist of a new railway line between the West Midlands and London, with a branch to Birmingham, and a network of train services that will use the new line and existing conventional track to reach their destinations in the Midlands, Northern England, and Scotland. HS2 will be Britain's second purpose-built high-speed line, the first being High Speed 1, which connects London to the Channel Tunnel. The majority of the project is planned to be completed between 2029 and 2033. A 2019 review of the project, as then planned, estimated that it would cost up to ?87 billion
however, this is estimated to have risen to approximately ?100 billion in 2023.
The new line will run between London Euston railway station and Fradley in southern Staffordshire, with stations at Old Oak Common, in northwest London, and Birmingham Interchange, near Solihull. There will be spurs to a planned station in central Birmingham and a junction with the West Coast Main Line (WCML) at Handsacre, near Lichfield. The rolling stock will run at a maximum speed of 360 km/h (225 mph) and will operate on both HS2 track and existing conventional track
On 4 October 2023 the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced that Phase 2 would be abandoned and that responsibility for the Euston connection would be removed from HS2 Ltd

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,site,railway station,Central Birmingham,West Midlands,England,UK,B4 7XG,Rishi Sunak,cancellation,cancelled,to,Leeds,HS2,high speed,two,works,at,construction,leg,scrapped,train,trains,infrastructure,project,rest of,announcement,Levelling Up,gate,gates,contractors,sub-contracting,PLC,private,road,secure,security
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2T00PD4 - High Speed 2 (HS2) is a planned high-speed railway line and network of passenger train services in England. It will consist of a new railway line between the West Midlands and London, with a branch to Birmingham, and a network of train services that will use the new line and existing conventional track to reach their destinations in the Midlands, Northern England, and Scotland. HS2 will be Britain's second purpose-built high-speed line, the first being High Speed 1, which connects London to the Channel Tunnel. The majority of the project is planned to be completed between 2029 and 2033. A 2019 review of the project, as then planned, estimated that it would cost up to ?87 billion
however, this is estimated to have risen to approximately ?100 billion in 2023.
The new line will run between London Euston railway station and Fradley in southern Staffordshire, with stations at Old Oak Common, in northwest London, and Birmingham Interchange, near Solihull. There will be spurs to a planned station in central Birmingham and a junction with the West Coast Main Line (WCML) at Handsacre, near Lichfield. The rolling stock will run at a maximum speed of 360 km/h (225 mph) and will operate on both HS2 track and existing conventional track
On 4 October 2023 the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced that Phase 2 would be abandoned and that responsibility for the Euston connection would be removed from HS2 Ltd

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,site,railway station,Central Birmingham,West Midlands,England,UK,B4 7XG,Rishi Sunak,cancellation,cancelled,to,Leeds,HS2,high speed,two,works,at,construction,train,trains,infrastructure,project,rest of,announcement,gate,gates,contractors,sub-contracting,PLC,private,road,secure,security
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2T00PD5 - New Canal Street
In preparation for the construction of HS2 Curzon Street station, there will be a partial closure on New Canal Street, Birmingham city centre.
New Canal Street, between Curzon Street and Fazeley Street, will be closed to all traffic, cyclists and pedestrians from 13 August 2023.
There are recommended walking and cycling diversions routes.
If you are travelling from Millenium Point, BCU and Eastside City Park the most direct diversion route follows the footpath around Masshouse Lane or the Clayton Hotel. Then it continues along Moor Street Queensway, around to the left to Moor Street and Park Street back on to New Canal Street.
There is also a diversion route along Curzon Street, around Curzon Circle roundabout and onto Lawley Middleway to Montague Street. You then follow Montague Street to the junction of Fazeley Street.
Travel tips
You will still be able to get to where you need to go, but consider the following:
Plan ahead and leave more time for your journey. If you travel around New Canal Street you may need to allow more time for your journey.
Think about your options. The partial closure of New Canal Street will mean that you may need to plan an alternative route. Please familiarise yourself with recommended walking and cycling diversion routes.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,site,railway station,Central Birmingham,West Midlands,England,UK,B4 7XG,Rishi Sunak,cancellation,cancelled,to,Leeds,HS2,high speed,two,works,at,construction,train,trains,infrastructure,project,rest of,announcement,Levelling Up,closed,disruption,HS2 Works,Woodman,pub,disrupted,sign,signs,no entry,closure
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2T00PD7 - New Canal Street
In preparation for the construction of HS2 Curzon Street station, there will be a partial closure on New Canal Street, Birmingham city centre.
New Canal Street, between Curzon Street and Fazeley Street, will be closed to all traffic, cyclists and pedestrians from 13 August 2023.
There are recommended walking and cycling diversions routes.
If you are travelling from Millenium Point, BCU and Eastside City Park the most direct diversion route follows the footpath around Masshouse Lane or the Clayton Hotel. Then it continues along Moor Street Queensway, around to the left to Moor Street and Park Street back on to New Canal Street.
There is also a diversion route along Curzon Street, around Curzon Circle roundabout and onto Lawley Middleway to Montague Street. You then follow Montague Street to the junction of Fazeley Street.
Travel tips
You will still be able to get to where you need to go, but consider the following:
Plan ahead and leave more time for your journey. If you travel around New Canal Street you may need to allow more time for your journey.
Think about your options. The partial closure of New Canal Street will mean that you may need to plan an alternative route. Please familiarise yourself with recommended walking and cycling diversion routes.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,UK,England,Warrington,WA4 2GW,WA4,canals,canal,canalside,bridge,bridges,Cheshire,history,historic,local,under,Thelwall Underbridge,Bridgewater Canal,canal bridge,historic canal,waterways,industrial heritage,canal signage,canal infrastructure,historic transport,British canals,inland waterways,cast iron sign,weathered sign,canal history,civil engineering,rural Cheshire,village landmarks,walking route,towpath,heritage transport,documentary photography
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2X5K8GW - A close-up image of a weathered metal sign reading Thelwall Underbridge mounted on a stone bridge structure along the Bridgewater Canal in Thelwall, Warrington, Cheshire, England. The sign shows signs of age, with worn paint and surface marks, reflecting the long operational history of the canal.
The Bridgewater Canal, opened in the eighteenth century, is regarded as one of the most significant waterways of the Industrial Revolution, enabling the efficient transport of goods between Manchester, Liverpool, and surrounding areas. Underbridges such as this allowed roads and tracks to pass beneath the canal, forming an integral part of early canal engineering.
Thelwall is a historic village located on the south bank of the River Mersey, later incorporated into Warrington, and the canal remains a prominent local feature used today for leisure walking, cycling, and boating. The simple functional signage captured here reflects the practical design language of Britain's canal network.
This image is suitable for editorial use illustrating British canal heritage, industrial history, inland waterways, civil engineering landmarks, rural and village environments, and the enduring legacy of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century transport infrastructure in England.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,centre,Cymru,Wales,Welsh,UK,studio,HQ,media,Cardiff Bay,building,broadcasting centre,modern,broadcasting,architecture,BBC Cymru Wales,sign,public service,broadcasting UK,media headquarters Wales,contemporary,office,buildings,radio,TV,national,industry,television and radio production,urban,street,photography,people,pedestrians,walking,city,infrastructure
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RFJ3CM - This photograph shows the BBC Cymru Wales headquarters building at Central Square in Cardiff city centre, home to the national broadcaster for Wales. The modern structure features a combination of pale stone cladding and large vertical glass panels, with prominent BBC Cymru Wales signage clearly visible on the upper facade. The building forms a key part of Cardiff's Central Square regeneration area, adjacent to Cardiff Central railway station.
The image was taken after rainfall, with wet road surfaces and pavements creating reflective textures across the foreground. Traffic lights glow against the damp streets, while a small number of pedestrians move through the scene, dressed for cool, unsettled weather. The sky is overcast with patches of lighter cloud, suggesting changeable conditions typical of the Welsh climate.
BBC Cymru Wales operates television, radio, and digital services in both Welsh and English, and the Central Square development represents a significant investment in modern broadcasting infrastructure and urban renewal. The surrounding streetscape, street furniture, and planting reinforce the contemporary civic character of the area.
The photograph captures both the architectural presence of a major public service broadcaster and the everyday atmosphere of a working city following rain, blending modern media infrastructure with the rhythms of urban life in Cardiff.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,UK,England,M3,art,new,home,of,sunny,M3 4JQ,summer,Factory,cultural space,Manchester International Festival,MIF,Rem Koolhaas,OMA,performing arts venue,exhibition space,live music venue,theatre venue,arts and culture UK,regeneration,St Johns district,St Johns Manchester,urban regeneration,new development Manchester,architectural detail,geometric facade,modern building design,UK cultural infrastructure,North West England,Manchester skyline,River Irwell area,creative industries,public realm,blue sky clouds
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RG8YFX - Aviva Studios, the permanent home of Factory International, photographed on Water Street in Manchester city centre, postcode M3 4JQ. The building occupies a prominent position within the St John's regeneration area, close to the River Irwell and the historic former Granada Television studios site, marking a significant phase in Manchester's ongoing urban and cultural redevelopment.
Designed as a highly flexible cultural venue, Aviva Studios accommodates large-scale exhibitions, live music, theatre, dance, and immersive performance, supporting both international productions and UK-based creative work. The bold, angular exterior and industrial-scale form reflect Manchester's post-industrial identity, combining contemporary architectural language with references to the city's manufacturing and broadcasting heritage.
Opened as a flagship investment in the city's cultural infrastructure, Factory International and Aviva Studios play a strategic role in positioning Manchester as a leading European centre for the arts and creative industries. The surrounding public realm and adjacent developments underline wider regeneration ambitions for the St John's district, transforming former brownfield land into a mixed-use cultural and commercial quarter.
The image shows the building in daylight under a blue sky with scattered cloud, highlighting the metallic cladding, sharp lines, and contrasting textures of the fa??ade, with neighbouring high-rise development visible in the background. The photograph documents a key contemporary landmark in modern Manchester and the continuing evolution of the city's built environment.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,centre,Lothian,tram at Newhaven,UK,at,terminus,Edinburgh Trams,editorial transport,regeneration Leith,overhead wires,public transport infrastructure,city transport Scotland,sustainable transport,articulated tram,EH6 4DF,Newhaven Terminus,Newhaven Place,Leith,modern tram,low floor tram,low emission transport,daytime exterior,waterfront transport,urban mobility,tram tracks,Edinburgh Tram,Newhaven tram stop,Newhaven,Edinburgh,public transport,tramway,light rail,urban transport,Scotland transport
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2REGJ8M - An Edinburgh Tram stopped at the Newhaven terminus on Newhaven Place, Edinburgh, postcode EH6 4DF. The image shows a modern articulated tram operating on street-level tracks with overhead power lines, part of the city's expanding light rail network serving the north of Edinburgh.
The Newhaven extension connects Leith and the waterfront districts with Edinburgh city centre, improving access to employment, housing, and visitor destinations. The tram system plays a key role in the city's sustainable transport strategy, offering a reliable alternative to private car use and supporting reductions in congestion and emissions.
Newhaven forms part of the historic port area of Leith, which has seen significant residential and mixed-use redevelopment in recent years. The introduction of tram services reflects wider investment in public transport and urban regeneration along Edinburgh's northern corridor.
Photographed in daylight under overcast skies, the image documents everyday public transport in operation and is suitable for editorial use covering urban mobility, transport infrastructure investment, sustainable cities, and contemporary life in Edinburgh.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,centre,Lothian,tram at Newhaven,UK,at,terminus,Edinburgh Trams,Newhaven Terminus,Newhaven Place,EH6 4DF,Leith,modern tram,articulated tram,low floor tram,sustainable transport,low emission transport,city transport Scotland,public transport infrastructure,tram tracks,overhead wires,urban mobility,regeneration Leith,waterfront transport,editorial transport,daytime exterior,Edinburgh Tram,Newhaven tram stop,Newhaven,Edinburgh,public transport,tramway,light rail,urban transport,Scotland transport
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2REGJB0 - An Edinburgh Tram stopped at the Newhaven terminus on Newhaven Place, Edinburgh, postcode EH6 4DF. The image shows a modern articulated tram operating on street-level tracks with overhead power lines, part of the city's expanding light rail network serving the north of Edinburgh.
The Newhaven extension connects Leith and the waterfront districts with Edinburgh city centre, improving access to employment, housing, and visitor destinations. The tram system plays a key role in the city's sustainable transport strategy, offering a reliable alternative to private car use and supporting reductions in congestion and emissions.
Newhaven forms part of the historic port area of Leith, which has seen significant residential and mixed-use redevelopment in recent years. The introduction of tram services reflects wider investment in public transport and urban regeneration along Edinburgh's northern corridor.
Photographed in daylight under overcast skies, the image documents everyday public transport in operation and is suitable for editorial use covering urban mobility, transport infrastructure investment, sustainable cities, and contemporary life in Edinburgh.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Beasain,Basque Country,Edinburgh Trams,Edinburgh Airport tram,light rail Scotland,public transport infrastructure,modern tram,public transport,tram platform,electric tram,sustainable transport,Scottish public transport,urban mobility,passenger transport,city transport system,street running tram,transport investment,documentary photography,stopped,Annfield,Leith,Edinburgh,EH6 4UD,EH8,Edinburgh Tram at Newhaven Terminus,Newhaven Place,Edinburgh EH6 4DF,low emission transport,city transport Scotland,public transport Scotland,tram network,transport infrastructure,passengers boarding,editorial transport,daytime exterior
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2REGJBA - Edinburgh Tram stopped at the Newhaven terminus on Newhaven Place, Edinburgh, postcode EH6 4DF. The image shows a modern low-floor tram at the platform with overhead power lines and passenger facilities, illustrating contemporary urban public transport infrastructure in the north of the city.
The Newhaven extension forms part of the Edinburgh Trams network linking the city centre with Leith and the waterfront areas, significantly improving public transport connectivity between residential districts, employment areas, and key visitor destinations. The tram system is designed to support sustainable travel by providing a reliable alternative to private car use.
Newhaven has a long maritime and industrial history as part of the wider Leith area, and the arrival of the tram represents a major investment in regeneration and urban mobility. The integration of modern light rail vehicles into existing streetscapes highlights the balance between historic urban environments and contemporary transport needs.
Photographed in daylight under overcast skies, the image documents everyday tram operations and is suitable for editorial use relating to public transport policy, sustainable cities, urban infrastructure investment, and life in modern Edinburgh.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Edinburgh tram network,Newhaven extension,Edinburgh,tram,network,Ocean Terminal Edinburgh,Leith waterfront,new apartments Edinburgh,mixed-use development,regeneration area,sustainable transport,electric tram,street-running tram,housing development,waterfront regeneration,Scottish capital transport,city infrastructure,contemporary urban landscape,documentary photography,route,routes,award-winning,light,rail,award,awards,winner,winning,pay,tap in,tap out,new,flats,newbuild
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2REGJD7 - An Edinburgh Trams service passes through the Ocean Terminal stop in Leith, showing a modern low-floor tram manufactured by Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles (CAF). The image captures the tram operating along the Newhaven extension, which reconnects the waterfront districts of north Edinburgh to the city's light-rail network.
The background of newly built apartment blocks highlights the close relationship between transport investment and urban regeneration in Leith, where former docklands and retail areas have been redeveloped for residential and mixed-use purposes. The tram line provides a fixed, electric public-transport link between the waterfront, the city centre and Edinburgh Airport, supporting lower-carbon travel and higher-density urban living.
Photographed in daylight during normal service, the image documents contemporary public transport operating within a changing urban environment. It is suitable for editorial use relating to sustainable transport, housing development, regeneration policy, and modern city infrastructure in Scotland.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,Cheshire,cash machine,Barclays ATM,blue,logo,corporate,finance,personal,banking signage,branding,high street,banking UK,loss,balances,use,losing,branch,branches,31 High Street,Northwich,CW9 5BW,CW9,blue eagle logo,identity,banking,financial,services,retail banking,infrastructure,cash withdrawal point,decline of bank branches,everyday financial services,urban streetscape
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RCDJ32 - This image shows a Barclays cash machine set into the exterior wall of a building on High Street in Northwich, Cheshire. Above the ATM is the distinctive blue Barclays eagle logo, a long-established element of the bank's corporate branding, clearly identifying the cashpoint as part of the Barclays retail banking network.
Cash machines such as this form a visible and practical layer of everyday financial infrastructure on UK high streets, providing access to cash even as traditional bank branch services have reduced or moved online. In many towns, ATMs remain one of the last physical touchpoints between major banking institutions and the public, particularly important for older residents, small businesses, and cash-based transactions.
The photograph focuses on branding and placement rather than people, highlighting how corporate identity is embedded into the built environment. The clean, functional design of the ATM contrasts with the textured wall surface and soft daylight shadows, reinforcing the sense of routine, everyday use rather than spectacle.
In the wider context of Northwich town centre, the image reflects ongoing changes in high-street banking, where full-service branches have been rationalised but cash access points continue to play a key role. As a documentary image, it records both a recognisable global banking brand and a specific local location, making it relevant to themes of finance, retail banking, urban change, and the persistence of cash in an increasingly digital economy.

Description
Keywords: 2023,July,British,UK,England,GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,people carrier trailer,Grand Prix,F1,Silverstone Woodlands,tractor trailer transport,spectator transport,race weekend logistics,motorsport fans,summer event,Northamptonshire,accessibility support,reducing walking distance,festival transport,rural setting,countryside event,spectators boarding transport,leisure travel,outdoor event infrastructure,motorsport logistics,large sporting event operations,sunny weather,blue sky,editorial photography,documentary image,shuttle,bus,fan,fans,tractors
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RCC5PT - This photograph shows a tractor-pulled trailer transporting spectators from the Silverstone Woodlands camping area towards the main entrance gates of Silverstone Circuit during the Formula One British Grand Prix weekend. The improvised shuttle service provides a practical alternative to long walks across the expansive site, particularly valuable during busy arrival and departure periods.
The use of agricultural tractors and covered trailers reflects the rural setting of Silverstone and the temporary infrastructure required to support one of the UK's largest annual sporting events. Such transport solutions are common during major race weekends, helping manage pedestrian flow, improve accessibility, and reduce fatigue for campers carrying bags and supplies.
Passengers are seen boarding and disembarking in casual summer clothing under clear blue skies, reinforcing the relaxed, festival-style atmosphere that now surrounds modern Formula One events. The scene highlights the blend of countryside practicality and international motorsport spectacle that characterises the British Grand Prix.
Well suited for editorial use, this image documents event logistics, spectator experience, and the behind-the-scenes transport arrangements that enable large numbers of fans to move efficiently between camping areas and circuit facilities at Silverstone.

Description
Keywords: 2023,July,British,UK,England,GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Silverstone Circuit,Formula One,British Grand Prix,Silverstone GP,motorsport safety,Ford car,race weekend,Northamptonshire,summer event,crowd control,F1 safety operations,motorsport medical support,emergency services at events,Silverstone medical team,public safety vehicle,on-site medical response,sporting event safety,crowd management,pedestrian access routes,fans walking,race spectators,major sporting event,outdoor summer weather,blue sky,sunny conditions,UK motorsport,event infrastructure,risk management,duty of care,editorial photography
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RCC5T1 - This image shows a Silverstone Formula One Medical Response Unit vehicle parked adjacent to pedestrian access routes during a British Grand Prix weekend at Silverstone Circuit in Northamptonshire. The clearly marked medical response car forms part of the extensive safety and emergency planning required to manage one of the UK's largest annual sporting events.
Formula One race weekends at Silverstone attract very large crowds over several days, placing significant emphasis on spectator welfare, rapid emergency response, and effective crowd management. Dedicated medical vehicles and trained response teams are strategically positioned around the circuit to ensure fast access to both trackside incidents and public areas used by fans.
The photograph captures spectators walking past the medical unit under clear summer skies, reinforcing the visible presence of safety infrastructure within the wider event environment. Temporary fencing, controlled access routes, and speed restriction signage illustrate the layered approach to risk management that underpins large-scale motorsport events.
Beyond the racing itself, the image highlights the operational realities of hosting international sporting events, where emergency preparedness, duty of care, and public safety are as critical as sporting spectacle. It is well suited for editorial use covering motorsport safety, event management, emergency services, and crowd protection at major UK sporting venues.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,Knutsford Railway Station,rail,station,Knutsford,United Kingdom,Knutsford railway station,Knutsford station,Northern Rail,British railway,Northern trains,regional rail network,station entrance,red brick railway architecture,blue station signage,Network Rail infrastructure,pedestrian access ramp,urban greenery,shrubs and planting,accessibility ramp,handrails,transport hub,commuter travel,public transport UK,North West England railways,town centre station,Canute Place Knutsford,travel and transport,railway signage,daytime,overcast sky,local transport
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RAP38E - Knutsford Railway Station, located on Adams Hill in Knutsford, Cheshire, is shown here with its distinctive blue station signage and red brick buildings, framed by landscaped greenery and pedestrian access ramps. The station is operated by Northern and serves the town on the Mid-Cheshire Line, providing rail connections to destinations including Manchester, Altrincham, and Chester.
The image highlights everyday British railway infrastructure, including accessibility features such as handrails and ramps, alongside mature planting that softens the station approach. Knutsford is a historic Cheshire market town, and the station plays an important role in supporting local commuting, tourism, and regional travel across North West England.
This photograph is suitable for editorial use relating to UK public transport, regional rail services, accessibility in transport, commuter travel, and town-centre railway stations.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,city,centre,Northern Ireland,UK,BT13,bus stop,on,northbound,County Antrim,BT13 1AA,southbound,citybound,public,buses,bus,transport,stand,stop,Antrim Road,1,11,&,and,Crumlin,Road,Rd,service,for,network,plan,Belfast Metropolitan Transport Plan,area,Metropolitan,rapid,transit,services,Translink,infrastructure
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R9J0C1 - In the 19th Century due to suburbanization omnibuses became in to use and in 1869 were recorded running hourly on the Malone Road, Lisburn Road, Antrim Road, County Down Road to Sydenham hourly. Belfast is a now a relatively car-dependent city, by European standards, with an extensive road network including the ten lane M2 motorway. A recent survey of how people travel in Northern Ireland showed that people in Belfast made 77% of all journeys by car, 11% by public transport and 6% on foot. It also showed that Belfast has 0.70 cars per household compared to figures of 1.18 in the East and 1.14 in the West of Northern Ireland.
Most public transport in Northern Ireland is operated by the subsidiaries of Translink. Bus services in the city proper and the nearer suburbs are operated by Translink Metro, with services focusing on linking residential districts with the City Centre on twelve quality bus corridors running along main radial roads, resulting in poor connections between different suburban areas. More distant suburbs are served by Ulsterbus. A small number of private operators are also present, including Aircoach who operate a non-stop route from Belfast to Dublin City, via Dublin Airport which competes with services offered by Translink.
Black taxis are common in the city, operating on a share basis in some areas. Separate associations serving nationalist and unionist areas operate throughout Belfast. During the Troubles, nationalist taxi drivers in West Belfast and Ardoyne became targets for loyalist assassination campaigns. Today black taxis take tourists on tours of the city's sectarian murals. They are now outnumbered by private hire minicabs

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,NI,Northern Ireland,UK,centre,signposting,Belfast,directions,direction sign,pedestrian,cycle,walking,tour,tourism,visitor,guide,guides,signage,navigation,waterfront,public,realm,infrastructure,cityscape,orientation,system,visitor navigation,blue sky clouds,summer weather,bright daylight,architecture,docklands redevelopment,travel directions,public transport,link,links
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RFJ39P - This image shows a modern wayfinding signpost in Belfast's Titanic Quarter, providing directional information for key destinations including Titanic Belfast, the Titanic Trail, SS Nomadic, Belfast Metropolitan College and the city centre. The yellow and grey signage incorporates symbols for pedestrians and cyclists, reflecting contemporary urban design focused on walkability and active travel.
Set against a vivid blue sky with scattered clouds, the photograph appears to have been taken in bright summer conditions, with strong daylight enhancing colour contrast and legibility. The surrounding built environment includes modern regeneration architecture associated with the redevelopment of Belfast's former docklands.
The Titanic Quarter is one of Northern Ireland's most significant regeneration projects, closely linked to the city's maritime and industrial heritage, particularly the construction of the RMS Titanic. Clear, multilingual-style visual signage plays an important role in managing tourism flows and connecting cultural attractions with education, transport and the wider city centre.
The image captures how modern urban wayfinding supports tourism, regeneration and everyday navigation, blending practical infrastructure with Belfast's evolving post-industrial identity.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,NI,Northern Ireland,UK,centre,Translink,service,services,Belfast,Belfast bus,articulated bus,rapid transit,Northern Ireland transport,urban bus,mass transit,Glider Belfast,bus rapid transit,BRT system,articulated vehicle,sustainable transport,low emission transport,city transport Belfast,public transport Northern Ireland,urban mobility,modern bus design,dedicated bus corridor,road transport,infrastructure investment,UK transport policy,editorial transport,daytime exterior,city street,sunny,summer,day
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RFJ3B1 - A Translink Glider articulated bus travelling along a dedicated corridor in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The Glider service forms the backbone of the city's bus rapid transit system, designed to provide high-capacity, frequent public transport along key east?west routes.
Introduced as a major investment in Belfast's transport infrastructure, the Glider uses long articulated vehicles to increase passenger capacity while maintaining flexibility compared with fixed rail systems. The service aims to reduce congestion, support sustainable travel, and improve connectivity between residential areas, the city centre, and key employment and retail destinations.
The distinctive purple-liveried buses are a prominent feature of Belfast's streetscape and represent a shift towards modern, integrated public transport provision in Northern Ireland. Dedicated lanes and priority measures allow the Glider to operate more efficiently than conventional bus services.
Photographed in daylight with trees and urban surroundings visible, the image documents contemporary public transport in use and is suitable for editorial coverage of urban mobility, infrastructure investment, sustainable transport, and public services in Belfast.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,cycling,bike,bikes,National Cycle Network sign,County Londonderry,Derry,Northern Ireland,sustainable transport,travel,tourism,cycle network marker,Sustrans route sign,National Cycle Network 93,NCN 93,bicycle route signpost,distance sign,wayfinding sign,outdoor signage,painted metal sign,roadside sign,travel distances,cycling tourism,cycle trail Northern Ireland,transport infrastructure,public realm,urban streetscape,local navigation,bicycle travel,eco transport,town cycling route,Limavady,Port Stewart,Bushmills
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RAP34A - A blue-painted National Cycle Network route sign located in Coleraine, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland. The distinctive cast-metal waymarker displays the route number National Cycle Network 93 and provides cycling distances to nearby destinations including Castlerock, Limavady, Portstewart, and Bushmills, reflecting Coleraine's position as a hub for cycle routes along the Causeway Coast region.
The sign forms part of Northern Ireland's cycling infrastructure, designed to support recreational cycling, commuting, and sustainable transport. Its traditional fingerpost-style design and durable painted metal construction are characteristic of National Cycle Network signage found throughout the UK and Ireland.
Photographed in natural daylight, the image documents everyday public transport infrastructure and wayfinding systems that encourage active travel and tourism. It highlights the growing emphasis on cycling networks, low-carbon transport, and accessible outdoor recreation within towns and rural areas across Northern Ireland. Visible Text :-
National Cycle Network 93
Castlerock 6 m
Limavady 20 m
Portstewart 4? m
Bushmills 15 m

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Northern Ireland,United Kingdom,Coleraine Bus and Rail Centre,Translink Northern Ireland,Northern Ireland public transport,Translink signage,integrated transport hub,bus and train interchange,County Londonderry transport,Ulster railway,regional transport centre,station entrance,civic architecture,cream painted building,arched entrance,hanging flower baskets,accessibility entrance,commuters,passengers waiting,public transport infrastructure,travel Northern Ireland,rail and bus integration,town centre station,daytime,overcast sky,transport building exterior,Coleraine Bus and Rail Centre in County Londonderry,operated by Translink,serving as a combined bus and railway interchange for,interchange,interchanges,infrastructure,NI Translink
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RAP36R - Coleraine Bus and Rail Centre, located on Railway Road in Coleraine, County Londonderry, is shown here with its distinctive curved frontage and prominent Translink branding. The centre functions as a fully integrated bus and rail interchange, providing an important transport hub for the north coast and wider north-west of Northern Ireland.
Operated by Translink, the facility connects local and regional bus services with rail routes serving destinations including Derry~Londonderry, Belfast, and Portrush. The architecture combines practical modern transport design with traditional elements such as arched entrances and decorative hanging baskets, reflecting its role as a civic gateway to the town.
The image captures everyday public transport activity, with passengers visible at the entrance, and is suitable for editorial use covering Northern Ireland transport policy, regional connectivity, sustainable travel, commuting, and public infrastructure.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Northern Ireland,United Kingdom,Located adjacent to Coleraine railway station and the Bus &,Coleraine signal box,railway signal box,Northern Ireland railways,Translink railway,railway signalling,historic signal box,mechanical signal box,semaphore signals,level crossing barrier,railway crossing,Ulster rail network,County Londonderry railway,rail infrastructure,transport heritage,British railway architecture,brick signal box,control tower,railway operations,rail safety,junction control,regional rail hub,Northern Ireland transport,cloudy sky,daytime,town railway,urban rail environment,Coleraine railway signal box,beside Coleraine station,in County Londonderry,controlling rail movements and level crossings
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RAP36X - This image shows the Coleraine signal box, a traditional brick-built railway control structure located on Railway Road, Coleraine, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland. Positioned next to the station and adjacent to the bus and rail interchange, the signal box plays a key role in managing train movements, signalling, and level crossings on this important section of the Northern Ireland rail network.
The structure features classic railway architecture, with an elevated glazed operating room providing clear sightlines over the tracks, along with visible barrier mechanisms and signalling equipment. A British railway crossing arm and associated safety infrastructure are prominent, illustrating the continued operational importance of the site.
Coleraine is a strategic rail junction, linking services between Belfast, Derry~Londonderry, and the north coast, and the signal box represents both the heritage and ongoing functionality of the region's rail system. The image is suitable for editorial use relating to rail transport, signalling systems, infrastructure management, public transport history, and Northern Ireland rail operations.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,advert,More Than an,airport,staff,interchange,bus,station,train,rail,railway,WH Smith,WH,Smith,message,messaging,initiative,England,UK,M90 1QX,M90,flights,infrastructure,comms,communication,CSR Strategy,CSR,Strategy,responsibility,noisy,and,disruptive,noise,volunteers,volunteering
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RD738G - More at https://www.manchesterairport.co.uk/community/
Manchester Airport has developed a strong partnership with the local communities neighbouring the site. Key to our success has been our public commitment to community programmes and to maintaining mutually beneficial relationships with our neighbours. Find out more about Manchester Airport's commitment to building on our past success, with the intent of making our immediate community a key part of any future success going forward.
For an overview of our work of the last year please see our 2020-2021 Corporate Social Responsibility Report and see our Summer Community News for seasonal updates. If you would like to receive our newsletter direct to your inbox please click here.
In celebration of our 80th Birthday Manchester Airport has produced its own children's book
called Reach For The Sky. The book, aimed at Primary School children, tells an enchanting story about travel, determination and achieving your dreams. We published 5,000 and these have been distributed to support children's reading across our catchment area.
Learn about our School Eco-Garden Competition.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,SE1,Waterloo Station,London,SE1 8SW,rail,train,BR,railway,mainline,busy,crowded,Waterloo Road,outlets,shop,store,Victorian,infrastructure,commuters,passenger,city,centre,London Waterloo,South West Main Line,WAT,times,displays,information,hanging,suspended,ticket,tickets,price,prices
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RBXAM5 - Waterloo station also known as London Waterloo, is a central London terminus on the National Rail network in the United Kingdom, in the Waterloo area of the London Borough of Lambeth. It is connected to a London Underground station of the same name and is adjacent to Waterloo East station on the South Eastern Main Line. The station is the terminus of the South West Main Line to Weymouth via Southampton, the West of England main line to Exeter via Salisbury, the Portsmouth Direct line to Portsmouth Harbour which connects with ferry services to the Isle of Wight, and several commuter services around west and south-west London, Surrey, Hampshire and Berkshire.
The station was opened in 1848 by the London and South Western Railway, and it replaced the earlier Nine Elms as it was closer to the West End. It was never designed to be a terminus, as the original intention was to continue the line towards the City of London, and consequently the station developed in a haphazard fashion, leading to difficulty finding the correct platform. The station was rebuilt in the early 20th century, opening in 1922, and included the Victory Arch over the main entrance, which commemorated World War I. Waterloo was the last London terminus to provide steam-powered services, which ended in 1967. The station was the London terminus for Eurostar international trains from 1994 until 2007, when they were transferred to St. Pancras.
Waterloo is the busiest railway station in the UK, handling 41 million passengers in the year to March 2022. It is also the UK's largest station in terms of floor space and has the greatest number of platforms.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,SE1,Waterloo Station,London,SE1 8SW,rail,train,BR,railway,mainline,busy,crowded,Waterloo Road,outlets,shop,store,Victorian,infrastructure,commuters,passenger,city,centre,London Waterloo,South West Main Line,WAT,times,displays,information,hanging,suspended,ticket,tickets,price,prices
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RBXAM8 - Waterloo station also known as London Waterloo, is a central London terminus on the National Rail network in the United Kingdom, in the Waterloo area of the London Borough of Lambeth. It is connected to a London Underground station of the same name and is adjacent to Waterloo East station on the South Eastern Main Line. The station is the terminus of the South West Main Line to Weymouth via Southampton, the West of England main line to Exeter via Salisbury, the Portsmouth Direct line to Portsmouth Harbour which connects with ferry services to the Isle of Wight, and several commuter services around west and south-west London, Surrey, Hampshire and Berkshire.
The station was opened in 1848 by the London and South Western Railway, and it replaced the earlier Nine Elms as it was closer to the West End. It was never designed to be a terminus, as the original intention was to continue the line towards the City of London, and consequently the station developed in a haphazard fashion, leading to difficulty finding the correct platform. The station was rebuilt in the early 20th century, opening in 1922, and included the Victory Arch over the main entrance, which commemorated World War I. Waterloo was the last London terminus to provide steam-powered services, which ended in 1967. The station was the London terminus for Eurostar international trains from 1994 until 2007, when they were transferred to St. Pancras.
Waterloo is the busiest railway station in the UK, handling 41 million passengers in the year to March 2022. It is also the UK's largest station in terms of floor space and has the greatest number of platforms.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,SE1,Waterloo Station,London,SE1 8SW,rail,train,BR,railway,mainline,busy,crowded,Waterloo Road,outlets,shop,store,Victorian,infrastructure,commuters,passenger,city,centre,London Waterloo,South West Main Line,WAT,times,displays,information,hanging,suspended,ticket,tickets,price,prices
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RBXANH - Waterloo station also known as London Waterloo, is a central London terminus on the National Rail network in the United Kingdom, in the Waterloo area of the London Borough of Lambeth. It is connected to a London Underground station of the same name and is adjacent to Waterloo East station on the South Eastern Main Line. The station is the terminus of the South West Main Line to Weymouth via Southampton, the West of England main line to Exeter via Salisbury, the Portsmouth Direct line to Portsmouth Harbour which connects with ferry services to the Isle of Wight, and several commuter services around west and south-west London, Surrey, Hampshire and Berkshire.
The station was opened in 1848 by the London and South Western Railway, and it replaced the earlier Nine Elms as it was closer to the West End. It was never designed to be a terminus, as the original intention was to continue the line towards the City of London, and consequently the station developed in a haphazard fashion, leading to difficulty finding the correct platform. The station was rebuilt in the early 20th century, opening in 1922, and included the Victory Arch over the main entrance, which commemorated World War I. Waterloo was the last London terminus to provide steam-powered services, which ended in 1967. The station was the London terminus for Eurostar international trains from 1994 until 2007, when they were transferred to St. Pancras.
Waterloo is the busiest railway station in the UK, handling 41 million passengers in the year to March 2022. It is also the UK's largest station in terms of floor space and has the greatest number of platforms.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,trains,SE1,Waterloo station,London,SE1 8SW,at,SWR,platforms,travellers,terminus,South,Western,rail,train,platform,service,services,public,transport,infrastructure,electrified,modern,carriages,carriage,terminal,Portsmouth Direct Line,busiest,interchange,WAT,south west,main line,mainline
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RBXAPE - Waterloo station also known as London Waterloo, is a central London terminus on the National Rail network in the United Kingdom, in the Waterloo area of the London Borough of Lambeth. It is connected to a London Underground station of the same name and is adjacent to Waterloo East station on the South Eastern Main Line. The station is the terminus of the South West Main Line to Weymouth via Southampton, the West of England main line to Exeter via Salisbury, the Portsmouth Direct line to Portsmouth Harbour which connects with ferry services to the Isle of Wight, and several commuter services around west and south-west London, Surrey, Hampshire and Berkshire.
The station was opened in 1848 by the London and South Western Railway, and it replaced the earlier Nine Elms as it was closer to the West End. It was never designed to be a terminus, as the original intention was to continue the line towards the City of London, and consequently the station developed in a haphazard fashion, leading to difficulty finding the correct platform. The station was rebuilt in the early 20th century, opening in 1922, and included the Victory Arch over the main entrance, which commemorated World War I. Waterloo was the last London terminus to provide steam-powered services, which ended in 1967. The station was the London terminus for Eurostar international trains from 1994 until 2007, when they were transferred to St. Pancras.
Waterloo is the busiest railway station in the UK, handling 41 million passengers in the year to March 2022. It is also the UK's largest station in terms of floor space and has the greatest number of platforms.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,trains,SE1,Waterloo station,London,SE1 8SW,at,SWR,platforms,travellers,terminus,South,Western,rail,train,platform,service,services,public,transport,infrastructure,electrified,modern,carriages,carriage,terminal,Portsmouth Direct Line,busiest,interchange,WAT,south west,main line,mainline
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RBXAPN - Waterloo station also known as London Waterloo, is a central London terminus on the National Rail network in the United Kingdom, in the Waterloo area of the London Borough of Lambeth. It is connected to a London Underground station of the same name and is adjacent to Waterloo East station on the South Eastern Main Line. The station is the terminus of the South West Main Line to Weymouth via Southampton, the West of England main line to Exeter via Salisbury, the Portsmouth Direct line to Portsmouth Harbour which connects with ferry services to the Isle of Wight, and several commuter services around west and south-west London, Surrey, Hampshire and Berkshire.
The station was opened in 1848 by the London and South Western Railway, and it replaced the earlier Nine Elms as it was closer to the West End. It was never designed to be a terminus, as the original intention was to continue the line towards the City of London, and consequently the station developed in a haphazard fashion, leading to difficulty finding the correct platform. The station was rebuilt in the early 20th century, opening in 1922, and included the Victory Arch over the main entrance, which commemorated World War I. Waterloo was the last London terminus to provide steam-powered services, which ended in 1967. The station was the London terminus for Eurostar international trains from 1994 until 2007, when they were transferred to St. Pancras.
Waterloo is the busiest railway station in the UK, handling 41 million passengers in the year to March 2022. It is also the UK's largest station in terms of floor space and has the greatest number of platforms.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,rural,multiple pipelines,pipeline easement,wayleave sign,C27 pipeline marker,underground utilities,energy infrastructure UK,countryside utilities,agricultural land,farmland Cheshire,rural England,utility corridor,pipeline safety sign,no digging sign,land management,infrastructure and agriculture,environmental impact,countryside regulation,utility access,engineering infrastructure,farm,farmer,farmers,fields,arable,crop,crops,C27,evening,Pipeline marker posts indicating multiple buried pipelines crossing farmland near,Cheshire,flat field,plain,Cheshire Plain
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R5PP0B - This image shows pipeline marker posts and warning signage indicating the presence of multiple buried pipelines crossing open farmland near Grappenhall, Cheshire. The white marker labelled C27, together with the warning notice fixed to the field gate, identifies a protected underground pipeline corridor running beneath the agricultural land.
Such markers are used across rural England to alert landowners, farmers, contractors, and walkers to the presence of underground gas, oil, or utility pipelines, where excavation, planting, or heavy machinery use may be restricted. Pipeline wayleaves allow critical national infrastructure to pass through farmland while maintaining agricultural use at surface level.
The image highlights the intersection of countryside landscapes and hidden energy infrastructure, illustrating themes of land management, utility regulation, rural planning, safety awareness, and the unseen systems supporting modern life. It is suitable for editorial use covering energy policy, infrastructure, utilities, agriculture, environmental planning, and rural England.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,summer,blue sky,blue skies,dock,landing,light,buoy,E7,cityscape,skyline,maritime,safety,navigation,rusty,channel,England,UK,docks,Mersey estuary,Liverpool waterfront,port of Liverpool,maritime safety,nautical marker,harbour infrastructure,coastal navigation aid,industrial patina,rust texture,shipping and ferries,docklands regeneration,urban waterfront,sea transport,British maritime heritage,editorial photography,documentary image,history,Woodside,ferry
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R64MHX - This image shows the E7 navigation buoy, a weathered green light buoy positioned on the Birkenhead side of the River Mersey, with the modern Liverpool skyline visible across the water in the background. The buoy is heavily rusted, displaying layers of corrosion and patina that reflect long exposure to salt air, tides, and industrial river traffic.
Navigation buoys such as this play a critical role in maritime safety, marking shipping channels and guiding vessels through busy and often confined waterways. The River Mersey remains one of the UK's most significant estuaries, serving the Port of Liverpool and accommodating ferries, commercial shipping, and leisure craft.
The contrast between the industrial, utilitarian buoy in the foreground and the contemporary high-rise buildings of Liverpool behind highlights the changing character of the Mersey waterfront. Birkenhead and Liverpool share a long maritime and industrial history, with navigation aids forming part of the everyday but largely unnoticed infrastructure that underpins port operations.
Photographed in clear daylight under blue skies, the image works well as editorial material illustrating British maritime heritage, port infrastructure, coastal navigation, and the visual relationship between historic working waterways and regenerated urban skylines.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Wirral,Merseyrail,underground station platform,centre,City,Region,transport,rail,electric,travel,public transport,England,UK,tube,way out,exit,yellow,platform,Merseyrail signage,travel information boards,station wayfinding,yellow station walls,underground railway,commuter rail,urban transport system,Wirral Line,train timetable display,platform information,UK rail infrastructure,passenger information system,everyday commuting,transport hub,editorial photography,documentary image,CH41 6JW,CH41
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R64MP8 - This image shows platform signage and passenger information displays at Hamilton Square station, part of the Merseyrail underground network serving the Wirral and Liverpool City Region. The distinctive yellow wall panels, station name sign, and clearly presented travel information boards reflect the consistent visual identity used across the Merseyrail system.
Hamilton Square is one of the busiest stations on the Wirral Line and plays a key role in commuter travel between Birkenhead, Liverpool city centre, and surrounding areas. As an underground station, it forms part of a network that combines deep-level sections with surface rail, providing frequent, high-capacity services for daily travel.
The image highlights practical elements of rail infrastructure, including wayfinding, timetables, and platform guidance, all essential to the smooth operation of a high-frequency suburban rail system. The signage also illustrates how passenger information is prioritised in busy urban stations to support accessibility and efficient movement.
Photographed in even interior lighting with no passengers visible, the image provides a neutral, documentary view of modern UK suburban rail infrastructure. It is well suited for editorial use covering public transport, urban mobility, commuter rail systems, and the everyday operation of the Merseyrail network.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,London,city,centre,central,housing repairs,maintenance contractor,MPS Housing,contractor van,housing association,property maintenance,building maintenance,London housing,UK social housing,service vehicle,Orbit,reactive,maintenance,housing repairs contractor,responsive repairs,planned maintenance,estates maintenance,public sector housing,affordable housing,housing services,subcontractor,utilities work,ladders on van roof,branded vehicle,street scene,residential area,London suburb,documentary photography,editorial image,UK infrastructure,everyday work
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R3WMRC - This image shows a branded contractor van used by Orbit Building Communities, displaying the logo and web address of MPS Housing, one of its housing repairs and maintenance partners. The white service vehicle is equipped with roof-mounted ladders, indicating use for building maintenance and on-site repair work.
Orbit Building Communities is a major UK housing association providing social and affordable housing across England. Contractors such as MPS Housing deliver frontline services including responsive repairs, planned maintenance, and compliance-related works within occupied residential properties. Vehicles like this are a familiar sight on housing estates and residential streets, representing the operational backbone of social housing delivery.
The photograph was taken in daylight in a residential London setting, with brick housing visible in the background. The clear branding highlights the increasingly professionalised and outsourced nature of housing maintenance services within the UK social housing sector, where housing associations rely on specialist contractors to meet regulatory standards and tenant expectations.
This image is suitable for editorial use covering social housing, housing maintenance, public sector contracting, property repairs, urban living, and the day-to-day infrastructure that supports affordable housing provision in London and across the UK.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,British,English,public safety notice,rail travel,UK railway,passenger safety,warning sign,British rail signage,transport safety,air turbulence warning,hazard notice,yellow warning sign,station infrastructure,overhead line equipment,electrified railway,commuter safety,public transport,travel risk,railway rules,safety message,documentary photography,editorial image,UK transport,electric,cables,WCML,Warrington,high speed,trains,express,air turbulence
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R55J5X - This image shows a yellow railway safety sign mounted on a station platform in the United Kingdom, clearly instructing passengers to Keep back from the platform edge. The accompanying message warns that passing trains can cause air turbulence, highlighting a common but often underestimated risk in busy railway environments.
Such signage forms part of the UK rail network's wider approach to passenger safety, particularly on platforms used by high-speed or non-stopping trains. The sign's bold black text on a yellow background follows established safety-design conventions intended to ensure high visibility and immediate comprehension.
Overhead line equipment and electrical infrastructure are visible in the background, reinforcing the operational context of a modern electrified railway. Together, these elements underline the importance of clear safety communication in public transport settings where large numbers of people move through confined spaces.
Photographed under natural light, the image is well suited to editorial use covering rail safety, public transport infrastructure, passenger behaviour, risk awareness, and the everyday experience of travelling by train in the UK.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,British,English,West Coast Main Line,railway departure board,train information display,passenger information system,long distance trains,intercity rail,platform sign,Avanti,Mainline,Main Line,standard,late,railway station,British rail network,train timetable,service information,calling at stations,first class and standard class,commuter travel,business travel,public transport,transport infrastructure,digital signage,amber LED display,platform canopy,travel delays,expected time,documentary photography,editorial image,UK transport
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R55J76 - This image shows an electronic passenger information display at a UK railway station, advertising a service to London Euston operated by Avanti West Coast on the West Coast Main Line. The sign provides key travel details including departure time, destination, expected running time, intermediate calling points, and carriage class layout.
London Euston is one of Britain's principal long-distance rail termini, serving routes linking London with the Midlands, North West England, and Scotland. Digital information boards such as this are a central feature of modern railway operations, helping passengers navigate complex timetables and manage delays or platform changes.
The amber LED display is mounted beneath a station canopy, with steel and timber roof structures visible above, situating the scene firmly within a traditional British railway environment. The combination of historic station architecture and contemporary digital signage reflects the layered evolution of the UK rail network.
Photographed indoors under ambient station lighting, the image is well suited to editorial use covering rail transport, public infrastructure, commuting, long-distance travel, business journeys, and the everyday experience of Britain's railway stations.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,British,English,CW1,carriages,pano,panorama,trains,livery,Avanti West Coast,green Pendolino,Class 390,Pendolino train,Crewe station,eco livery,sustainability branding,UK intercity train,long wide panoramic image,railway platform,Italian design train,tilting train,passenger rail UK,modern rolling stock,climate message,environmental awareness,Our Planet Means The World To Us,station platform view,side profile train,panoramic railway photo,transport infrastructure,rail travel,documentary photography,editorial image,UK transport,public transport
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R55J7D - This long, wide panoramic image shows a green-liveried Avanti West Coast Class 390 Pendolino standing at Crewe railway station, one of the most important junctions on the West Coast Main Line. The train carries prominent environmental branding reading Our Planet Means The World To Us, reflecting Avanti West Coast's sustainability and carbon-reduction messaging.
The Class 390 Pendolino fleet forms the backbone of high-speed electric intercity services linking London with the North West, West Midlands, North Wales, and Scotland. Known for their tilting capability, Pendolinos are designed to maintain higher speeds on curving mainline routes while remaining fully electric, reinforcing rail's role as a lower-carbon alternative to road and air travel.
The image's wide, side-on composition emphasises the length of the train and the bold green graphics applied across multiple carriages, making it particularly suitable for layouts requiring panoramic or banner-style imagery. The platform environment and partial station architecture situate the scene within an active mainline railway setting.
Photographed in daylight at platform level, the image is well suited to editorial use covering UK rail transport, sustainable travel, rolling-stock branding, climate messaging in public transport, and modern intercity rail operations.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,grids,grid,grid cover,metal street grid,diamond pattern,historic street infrastructure,city,cities,detail,Woodrow,foundry,Victorian metalwork,industrial heritage,street drainage cover,pavement grid,textured metal surface,embossed lettering,weathered iron,rust patina,geometric pattern,square studs,public works infrastructure,municipal utilities,UK streetscape,close up detail,typographic metal,documentary photography,editorial image,cast,square,squares
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RA23AD - This image shows a close-up view of a cast iron street grid cover manufactured by A C Woodrow & Co of London. The grid features a distinctive diamond-shaped layout with raised square studs and embossed lettering reading A C Woodrow & Co and London, identifying the foundry responsible for its production.
Street grids and covers of this type form part of London's historic municipal infrastructure, typically used for drainage, ventilation, or access to underground services beneath pavements and roadways. The robust cast iron construction reflects the emphasis on durability and longevity characteristic of late nineteenth and early twentieth century urban engineering.
The surface displays heavy weathering, rust, and patina from prolonged exposure to foot traffic, vehicles, and the elements. These marks of wear give the grid both functional character and visual interest, highlighting the material history embedded in everyday street furniture.
Photographed tightly to emphasise texture, typography, and geometric design, the image works well as editorial material illustrating British industrial heritage, historic foundry work, and the overlooked details of urban infrastructure that underpin city life in London.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,London,England,UK,Ham Baker & Co Ltd MWB Fire Hydrant 5635 ND,iron,London street furniture,cast iron street plate,MWB fire hydrant,Westminster street detail,British infrastructure,urban detail,London streets,public safety,infrastructure,rusty,identification plate,water mains access,municipal infrastructure,Victorian industrial heritage,utilities marking,embossed lettering,weathered metal,patina,close up detail,typographic signage,emergency services infrastructure,UK street scene,documentary photography,editorial image,history,heritage,historic,cast,castiron
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RA23AH - This image shows a close-up view of a cast iron street plate marking the location of a fire hydrant in London. The embossed text reads Ham Baker & Co Ltd MWB Fire Hydrant 5635 ND Makers Westminster SW, identifying both the manufacturer and the hydrant reference number used by water and fire authorities.
Such plates form part of London's long-established municipal infrastructure, providing essential information for emergency services by indicating the position of underground water mains and hydrants. The initials MWB refer to the Metropolitan Water Board, which managed London's water supply for much of the twentieth century, placing the plate firmly within the capital's historic public utilities system.
The textured metal surface, worn edges, and oxidised colouring reflect decades of exposure to traffic, weather, and footfall, giving the plate a distinctive patina. Foundry-made street furniture like this is a characteristic but often overlooked element of London's streetscape, combining functional engineering with durable industrial design.
Photographed tightly to emphasise lettering, texture, and material detail, the image works well as editorial illustration of urban infrastructure, historic utilities, emergency services support systems, and the layered history embedded in everyday London street surfaces. It is particularly suited to features on British industrial heritage, public works, and the hidden systems that support city life.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,London,England,UK,mobile phone mast,steel lattice tower,mobile network infrastructure,telecoms mast,radio mast,mobile communications,UK telecommunications,wireless technology,cellular antenna,microwave dish antenna,mobile phone antennas,4G mast,5G infrastructure,radio communications equipment,signal transmission,data backhaul,multi operator mast,rural telecommunications,infrastructure engineering,steel framework tower,telecoms engineering,digital communications,technology landscape,4G,5G,Steel,lattice,telecommunications,towers,rural,provision
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RA23AK - This image shows a tall steel lattice telecommunications tower supporting multiple antennas and microwave dishes, commonly used as part of the UK's mobile phone and wireless communications network. The self-supporting lattice structure allows for significant height and load-bearing capacity, making it suitable for hosting equipment from multiple operators and technologies.
Panel antennas mounted at various levels are used to provide mobile phone coverage, typically supporting a combination of 2G, 3G, 4G, and increasingly 5G services. The presence of circular microwave dish antennas indicates point-to-point radio links, which are used to transmit large volumes of data between sites, particularly in rural or semi-rural locations where fibre-optic connections may be limited or used as backup resilience.
Lattice masts of this type are a common feature of national telecommunications infrastructure and are often upgraded repeatedly over time as mobile technology evolves. Their open steel framework design offers durability, ease of maintenance, and flexibility for adding new equipment as network demand increases.
Photographed from ground level against a partly cloudy blue sky, the image emphasises the height, complexity, and industrial character of modern communications infrastructure. It is well suited for editorial use illustrating mobile network expansion, digital connectivity, telecommunications engineering, rural broadband provision, and the physical structures that underpin everyday wireless communication in the UK.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,infrastructure,wires,cables,cabling,cherry-picker,access,platform,&,and,home,lines,works,in,a,street,urban,added,by,for,OpenReach,Cheshire,UK,Grappenhall,Warrington,England,WA4 2PI,van,vehicle,pole,telephone,telegraph,tower wagon,mobile,crane
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R0MKE3 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,infrastructure,wires,cables,cabling,cherry-picker,access,platform,&,and,home,lines,works,in,a,street,urban,added,by,for,OpenReach,Cheshire,UK,Grappenhall,Warrington,England,WA4 2PI,van,vehicle,pole,telephone,telegraph,tower wagon,mobile,crane
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R0MKE6 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,infrastructure,wires,wiring,cables,cabling,cherry-picker,access,platform,&,and,home,lines,works,in,a,street,urban,added,by,for,OpenReach,Cheshire,UK,Grappenhall,Warrington,England,WA4 2PI,van,vehicle,pole,telephone,telegraph,tower wagon,mobile,crane
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R0MKEF -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,terminal,England,UK,airport,transport,M90 1QX,infrastructure,doorway,scamchester,airports,Manchester airport,welcomes,you,passengers,passenger,Ringway,part,of MAG,greater Manchester,entrance,door,doors,entry,gateway,to,the,world,MAN,MCR,billboard,sign,Terminal 1,Terminal One,outdoors,travel,hotpix.org.uk
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2PYBH4D -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,terminal,England,UK,airport,transport,M90 1QX,infrastructure,staff,at,checking,in,bag,drop,terminal2,2,uniform,uniforms,desk,desks,waiting,airports,employee,Jet2 staff,Jet2 employees,red,fleece,fleeces,check-in,check in,counter,Manchester Airport,terminal two,terminal 2,customer service,customer services
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2PYBH4T - Jet2 plc (formerly Dart Group plc) is a British multinational airline company based in Leeds, England.
Its head office is located in the Low Fare Finder House on the grounds of Leeds Bradford Airport, England. Subsidiary Jet2.com has its head office in the same building.
The company's name for most of its existence was derived from the type of aircraft that it first flew, the Handley Page Dart Herald. After selling off other units, the company rebranded as Jet2 in 2020. The stock ticker symbol also changed to Jet2 to reflect the name change
In 2002, four Boeing 737 aircraft were purchased with two becoming 737 QC (Quick change) aircraft and two as passenger aircraft. From February 2003, the Jet2 low-cost airline began flying from Leeds Bradford Airport to mainland Europe destinations. Fowler-Welch and Coolchain merged to become Fowler-Welch Coolchain Ltd in 2003. Eight Boeing 737-300 aircraft (of which five were passenger aircraft) were purchased in 2003 to bring the total to 12. In 2004, six more Boeing 737-300 passenger aircraft were purchased, and routes from Belfast International Airport started in April and from Manchester Airport in December. In 2005, routes began from Newcastle Airport in October and two Boeing 757-200 aircraft were purchased. In 2006, six more Boeing 757-200 passenger aircraft were bought and the Channel Express Portsmouth distribution base was sold to Ferryspeed C.I. Ltd in June. A package holiday company, Jet2holidays, was formed in January 2007.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,terminal,England,UK,airport,transport,M90 1QX,infrastructure,airports,A,Royal,Celebration,coronation,150g,for,at,?11.99,shop,store,dutyfree,20% off,heirloom,Shortbread Tin,of,souvenir,150grams,English,monarchy,Scotland,grams,potential,gift,special-edition,Royal Deeside,King Charles III,tourist,butter,collectors
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2PYBH6K -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,Yorkshire,EV charger,street charger,Heptonstall,West Yorkshire,public charging point,EV,charger,charging,tackling climate change,EV infrastructure,electric mobility,low carbon transport,climate change action,public infrastructure,urban technology,rural charging,green transport,UK electric vehicles,charging bollards,safety barriers,metal bollards,pavement installation,editorial technology,daylight exterior,public,infrastructure,roadside,road side,EBGO electric vehicle street charger,charging station
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RG1TWA - A public electric vehicle street charger manufactured by EBGO, photographed in the village of Heptonstall, Calderdale, West Yorkshire. The charger is mounted on a pavement edge and protected by metal bollards, designed to prevent accidental vehicle impact and ensure safe public use.
Street-level EV charging points such as this form an increasingly important part of the UK's transition towards low-emission transport. Installed in residential and village locations, they support drivers without access to private driveways, enabling overnight and short-stay charging for electric cars and vans.
Heptonstall is a small Pennine village above the Calder Valley, and the presence of modern EV infrastructure reflects the spread of sustainable transport technology beyond major towns and cities into rural communities. The charger's compact, upright design and digital interface demonstrate the integration of smart technology into everyday streetscapes.
Photographed in daylight with surrounding greenery and pavement visible, the image documents the practical reality of electric vehicle infrastructure at a local level. It is suitable for editorial use relating to climate policy, electric vehicles, rural sustainability, public infrastructure investment, and the decarbonisation of transport in the UK.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,Yorkshire,local bus service,Yorkshire village,bus travel,UK buses,passenger bus,YD63VEL,cobbled,cobble,street,streets,Heptonstall village,Calderdale,West Yorkshire,Hebden Bridge area,rail station connection,bus to train station,rural mobility,village transport,public transport UK,bus network,local services,accessibility,sustainable transport,northern England,stone village street,cobbled road,modern bus,transport infrastructure,editorial transport,daytime exterior
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RG1W1F - A local bus operating route 596 travels through the village of Heptonstall in Calderdale, West Yorkshire, providing a scheduled public transport link to the nearby rail station. The bus is photographed on a narrow village street lined with traditional Yorkshire stone buildings, highlighting the contrast between modern public transport and historic rural architecture.
Rural and village bus services such as this play a vital role in maintaining connectivity for communities in upland areas of northern England. They support access to rail services, employment, education, healthcare, and local amenities, particularly for residents without access to private cars and for older or mobility-restricted passengers.
Heptonstall sits above the Calder Valley near Hebden Bridge, where steep terrain and dispersed settlements make public transport provision both essential and operationally challenging. The continuation of local bus routes reflects wider debates around funding, accessibility, and the sustainability of rural transport networks in the UK.
Photographed in daylight under overcast conditions, the image documents everyday transport infrastructure in use and serves as an editorial illustration of rural mobility, community services, and the integration of bus and rail travel in West Yorkshire.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,Yorkshire,Victorian water supply,Heptonstall,West Yorkshire,stone structure,rural infrastructure,Calderdale,Hebden Bridge area,Yorkshire Pennines,public utilities,nineteenth century engineering,stone arch,iron water tap,cast iron pipework,historic utility building,clean water history,British infrastructure,heritage engineering,rural services,editorial heritage,daylight exterior,history,historic,heritage,arch,grid,pump,pumps,claen,water,pipe,pipes,well
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RG1W3A - Heptonstall is a small village and civil parish within the Calderdale borough of West Yorkshire, England, historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire. The population of Heptonstall, including the hamlets of Colden and Slack Top, is 1,448, increasing to 1,470 at the 2011 Census. The town of Hebden Bridge lies directly to the south-east. Although Heptonstall is part of Hebden Bridge as a post town, it is not within the Hebden Royd town boundaries.
The village is on the route of the Calderdale Way, a 50-mile (80 km) circular walk around the hills and valleys of Calderdale
The place-name 'Heptonstall' is first recorded as Heptonstall in the 1274 Wakefield Court Rolls, and in 1316 in the Feudal Aids. The name means the stall or stable in Hebden. The name 'Hebden' means rose-hip dene or valley
Heptonstall was the site of a battle during the early part of the English Civil War in 1643.
Historically a centre for hand-loom weaving, Heptonstall's cottages and terraced houses are characterised by large first-floor windows to maximise the light for weaving
In the mid-1980s the paving on a road through Heptonstall was removed, revealing the original stone setts. Although there was a plan to remove the setts, local protests convinced the council to restore them. At the same time the existing concrete street lights were replaced with late 19th-century cast-iron gas lamps. Both developments acted as a traffic calming measure.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,ironworks,and,West Yorkshire,street infrastructure,public utilities,drainage cover,utility access,road surface,tarmac,rust texture,weathered metal,typography lettering,British streets,local industry,Victorian industrial legacy,engineering detail,close up,overhead view,pattern and texture,editorial infrastructure,UK streetscape,manhole cover,iron cover,Milner,Holmfirth,Yorkshire,street detail,urban texture,industrial heritage,cast iron,circular cover,Yorks
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2RG1WB5 - A close-up view of a circular cast-iron street grid or manhole cover bearing the name Milner, photographed in Holmfirth, West Yorkshire. The cover is set flush into a tarmac road surface and shows significant surface wear, oxidation, and patina, highlighting the texture and ageing of the metal.
Cast-iron covers such as this are a common feature of British streets and reflect the country's long industrial and engineering heritage. Manufacturers' names were traditionally cast directly into utility covers, leaving behind a durable record of local or regional foundries and engineering firms that supplied municipal infrastructure during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Holmfirth, historically associated with textile production and industrial activity in the West Yorkshire Pennines, contains many surviving examples of this everyday industrial legacy embedded within the public realm. While often overlooked, street furniture and utility covers form an essential part of urban infrastructure, providing access to drainage, sewerage, and underground services.
Photographed from directly above, the image emphasises the circular form, radial patterning, and raised lettering of the ironwork, making it suitable for editorial use illustrating British infrastructure, industrial history, urban textures, and the material culture of streets and public utilities.
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Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Wales,town,Vale of Glamorgan,South Wales,Cymru,UK,railway,rail,Keolis,transport,infrastructure,connections,visit,tourism,tourist,Cardiff Central,branch,line,lines,south,docks,port,public transport,network,train,British Rail,British Railways,sign,signs,entrance,centre,central,link,links,gorsaf
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2P91TPX -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Germany,plane,planes,Boeing,Airbus,Lufthansa,aircraft,at,apron,flight,Frankfurt,Hesse,747-830,747,Boeing747,German,Star Alliance,member,HQ,Headquarters,accident,incident,issue,jets,jet,flights,European,Europe,infrastructure,EU,airports,luggage,parked
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2NK3DAA -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Germany,plane,planes,Boeing,Airbus,Lufthansa,aircraft,at,apron,flight,Frankfurt,Hesse,747-430,747,luggage,cans,canister,canisters,German,Star Alliance,member,HQ,Headquarters,accident,incident,issue,airports,EU,European,Europe,infrastructure,flights,jet,jets
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2NK3DE7 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,midlands,England,UK,DY1,Black Country,West Midlands,enters,entering,mouth,of,Birmingham New Road,entry,tourism,tour,experience,the,Portal,Building,canals,tunnels,waterway,waterways,caverns,and,entrance,to,start,attraction,history,historic,infrastructure,navigation,green boats,barge
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2NAWFTM -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Merseyside,England,UK,L3 9BP,building,architecture,office,Littlewoods,mainframe,Honeywell,COBOL,centre,curved,mirror,mirrored,glass,fa??ade,facade,server building,facility,computer,ICT,IT,hardware,kit,room,black,dark,computer centre,retail,operations,GMS,Group Management Services
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2MGWK0F -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,British,Britain,WA4,MSC,MSCC,disused,Cheshire Lines,railway,Victorian,bridge,in,stormy,storm,winter,violent,serious,Cheshire,WA4 1NN,wet,lock,locks,transport,line,infrastructure,atmospheric,history,historic,storms,at,drama,dramatic
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R15NEG -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,British,Britain,WA4,MSC,MSCC,disused,Cheshire Lines,railway,Victorian,bridge,in,stormy,storm,winter,violent,serious,Cheshire,WA4 1NN,wet,lock,locks,transport,line,infrastructure,atmospheric,history,historic,storms,at,drama,dramatic
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R15NET -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,city,centre,Scotland,transport,airport,962,terminates,terminus,at,stop,CRSmith,CR,Smith,St Andrews,Sq,Square,night tram,part,of,Lothian,safe,keeping,passengers,infrastructure,Scottish,UK,costs,ticket,ticketing,budget,Ltd,extended line,ridership target,tramway,hotpix.org.uk
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2M369GH - Edinburgh Trams is a tramway in Edinburgh, Scotland, operated by Edinburgh Trams Ltd. It is a 14-kilometre (8.7 mi) line between St Andrew Square in the New Town and Edinburgh Airport, with 15 stops.
Construction began in June 2008, and after encountering delays it opened on 31 May 2014. The scheme had an initial estimated cost of ?375 million in 2003, but by May 2008, when contracts were signed, the cost had risen to ?521 million. The final cost after delays was ?776 million.
After running for two years, the scheme had achieved pre-tax profitability (excluding maintenance and infrastructure costs) and exceeded the original ridership targets. It has run at an operating loss since 2018 (e.g. ????9.4 million in 2018). On 14 March 2019, Edinburgh Council voted to approve the extension of the existing line from York Place to Newhaven. The extended line is due to be operational by early 2023

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Avanti West Coast,tickets to everywhere,train tickets,WCML,rail travel UK,card,contactless,cash,payment,collect,collection,tickets,UK,ticket vending machine,TVM,passenger ticketing,buy tickets machine,collect tickets,debit card payment,credit card payment,cashless ticketing,singles and returns,British rail fares,public transport technology,modern rail infrastructure,documentary photography,editorial image,stations,increase,increases,fare,fares,out of order
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R59X75 - This image shows a self-service railway ticket machine operated by Avanti West Coast at Warrington Bank Quay railway station in Cheshire. Branded with the slogan Tickets to everywhere, the machine allows passengers to purchase and collect train tickets for journeys across the UK rail network.
The ticket vending machine supports the purchase of single and return fares, as well as ticket collection for journeys booked online, reflecting the growing shift toward automated and cashless ticketing in British railway stations. Card payment facilities, on-screen instructions, and integrated printers are designed to reduce queues at staffed ticket offices and improve passenger convenience.
Warrington Bank Quay is a major interchange station on the West Coast Main Line, serving long-distance intercity services linking London with the North West, North Wales, and Scotland. Self-service machines like this play an important role in managing high passenger volumes, particularly during peak travel periods.
Photographed indoors under station lighting, the image is well suited to editorial use covering UK rail transport, passenger services, ticketing technology, public transport modernisation, and the everyday experience of travelling by train on Britain's mainline railway network.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Yorkshire Water,water,utilities,public,covers,cast iron grid,metal utility cover,public utilities,England,UK,Yorkshire Water Services,water company UK,utility access cover,drainage grid,pavement infrastructure,municipal services,weathered metal,rust texture,industrial surface,embossed lettering,street furniture,civil engineering,public works,infrastructure maintenance,environmental services,close up detail,abstract texture,editorial,photography,documentary image,drain,supply,freshwater,waste,wastewater,York,Yorkshire
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R59X4D - This image shows a close-up view of a cast iron utility grid embossed with the words Yorkshire Water. The surface displays heavy rusting and weathering, with strong geometric patterns and raised lettering visible across the metal.
Grids and covers of this type form part of the underground water and drainage infrastructure managed by Yorkshire Water, one of the regional water and wastewater providers in England. Such access points allow inspection and maintenance of buried systems that support clean water supply and wastewater management.
The visible corrosion and patina reflect long-term exposure to weather, foot traffic, and vehicle loads, highlighting both the durability of cast iron and the ageing condition of much UK utility infrastructure. Although largely unnoticed by the public, these installations are essential to everyday urban and suburban life.
Photographed tightly to emphasise texture, typography, and material decay, the image works well as editorial material illustrating public utilities, infrastructure resilience, industrial design, and the often-overlooked physical fabric of water services in Britain.

Description
Keywords: West Midlands,England,UK,GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,railway,rail,station,works,work,building,trams,tramway,line,light,delay,delayed,Pipers Row,Peter Cushing,plaza,key piece of infrastructure,infrastructure,WV1 1LE,WV1,development,improvement,improvements,public,transport,public transport,Wolverhampton Station,light rail,extending,extension,Midlands Metro Alliance
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K5470M - Catastrophe for Wolverhampton' as Metro extension is delayed again until spring 2023
line extension work at Pipers Row earlier this year - trams won't be running until at least spring 2023
The Metro extension to Wolverhampton Railway Station will not be completed until spring 2023 due to unforeseen supply chain constraints delaying the project another five months.
The ?35 million project was originally meant to be completed in 2020 but was delayed by 18 months due to construction work at the railway station. Metro bosses then hoped the 720-metre extension would be ready for the Commonwealth Games in July but pushed back the opening date until autumn 2022.
Deputy leader of Wolverhampton Council Councillor Stephen Simkins has called the latest delay a catastrophe.
Midlands Metro Alliance director Peter Cushing blamed complexities of installing the systems needed to run the trams down Pipers Row and supply chain problems.

Description
Keywords: West Midlands,England,UK,GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,railway,rail,station,works,work,building,trams,tramway,line,light,delay,delayed,Pipers Row,Peter Cushing,plaza,key piece of infrastructure,infrastructure,WV1 1LE,WV1,development,improvement,improvements,public,transport,public transport,Wolverhampton Station,light rail,extending,extension,Midlands Metro Alliance
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K5470N - Catastrophe for Wolverhampton' as Metro extension is delayed again until spring 2023
line extension work at Pipers Row earlier this year - trams won't be running until at least spring 2023
The Metro extension to Wolverhampton Railway Station will not be completed until spring 2023 due to unforeseen supply chain constraints delaying the project another five months.
The ?35 million project was originally meant to be completed in 2020 but was delayed by 18 months due to construction work at the railway station. Metro bosses then hoped the 720-metre extension would be ready for the Commonwealth Games in July but pushed back the opening date until autumn 2022.
Deputy leader of Wolverhampton Council Councillor Stephen Simkins has called the latest delay a catastrophe.
Midlands Metro Alliance director Peter Cushing blamed complexities of installing the systems needed to run the trams down Pipers Row and supply chain problems.
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Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,Marple grand aquaduct,grand,river,Benjamin Outram,Thomas Brown,William Broadhead,Bethel Furness,William Anderson,canal and river trust,SK6,SK6 5LD,railway line,railway,line,rail,Transport Trust,red plaque,red,plaque,Transport Heritage Site,tallest,masonry-arch,Aqueduct,industrial archaeology,infrastructure,navigation,waterway,waterways,bridges,bridging,canals,Goyt
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2M4CAFT -
--Marple--Stockport--Cheshire--England--UK--SK6-5LD-2M4CAG1.jpg)
Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,Marple grand aquaduct,grand,river,Benjamin Outram,Thomas Brown,William Broadhead,Bethel Furness,William Anderson,canal and river trust,SK6,SK6 5LD,railway line,railway,line,rail,masonry-arch,Aqueduct,industrial archaeology,infrastructure,navigation,waterway,waterways,bridges,bridging,canals,Goyt,Marple grand Aqueduct,Marple grand Aquaduct,Greater Manchester,impressive,tourist,tourism,attraction
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2M4CAG1 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,named,cast,rust,rusty,metal,services,sewage,drainage,maintenance,urban,man-hole,covered,English,SED ltd,West Yorkshire,UK,village,electric,cover,steel,live,manhole,Yorkshire,rusted,cable,grid,caution,H&S,health,and,&,safety,infrastructure
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K1NRHN -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,rail,railway,train,trains,signalbox,sign,monochrome,historic,north,box,signals,signalling,age,heritage,centre,Crewe Railway Age,signal boxes,system,systems,control,mechanical,electromechanical,electro,mechanics,infrastructure,preservation,museum,piece,pieces,remember,past,pastimes
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JWGT63 - Crewe Heritage Centre is a railway museum located in Crewe, England. Managed by the Crewe Heritage Trust, the museum is located between the railway station and the town centre
the site was the location of the 'Old Works' which was demolished in the early 1980s.
History
The centre was established in the old London, Midland and Scottish Railway yard, which was once part of Crewe Works, between the junction to Chester and the West Coast Main Line. It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, on 24 July 1987. It was renamed in 1992 as Crewe Railway Age by the owning registered charity but, after the management of the centre was taken over by a new group of volunteers, the museum returned to its original name of Crewe Heritage Centre in early 2008.
Exhibits
The centre has a series of exhibits, ranging from the only surviving APT-P train, miniature railways, three open signal boxes (Crewe Station A, Crewe North Junction and Exeter West) and a varied collection of standard gauge steam, diesel and electric locomotives, as well as occasional visiting locomotives. The Main Exhibition Hall features many artefacts and exhibits associated with Crewe, from its locomotive and carriage construction to its famous junction railway station. Brake Van rides are available to the public during special events.
Advanced Passenger Train
APT No.370 003/006 at Crewe Heritage Centre
Built by British Rail (BR) the 1970s and 1980s, this Class 370 Advanced Passenger Train (APT) is the only surviving APT set. Numbered 370 003/006, it is open at all times with an occasional cafe run from the original buffet car (selected days only). The APT-P museum can be found inside one of the carriages, with photographs on display from the APT project

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,rail,railway,train,trains,signalbox,historic,signalling,age,north,sign,monochrome,box,heritage,centre,signals,Crewe Railway Age,signal boxes,system,systems,control,mechanical,electromechanical,electro,mechanics,infrastructure,preservation,museum,piece,pieces,remember,past,pastimes
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JWGT65 - Crewe Heritage Centre is a railway museum located in Crewe, England. Managed by the Crewe Heritage Trust, the museum is located between the railway station and the town centre
the site was the location of the 'Old Works' which was demolished in the early 1980s.
History
The centre was established in the old London, Midland and Scottish Railway yard, which was once part of Crewe Works, between the junction to Chester and the West Coast Main Line. It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, on 24 July 1987. It was renamed in 1992 as Crewe Railway Age by the owning registered charity but, after the management of the centre was taken over by a new group of volunteers, the museum returned to its original name of Crewe Heritage Centre in early 2008.
Exhibits
The centre has a series of exhibits, ranging from the only surviving APT-P train, miniature railways, three open signal boxes (Crewe Station A, Crewe North Junction and Exeter West) and a varied collection of standard gauge steam, diesel and electric locomotives, as well as occasional visiting locomotives. The Main Exhibition Hall features many artefacts and exhibits associated with Crewe, from its locomotive and carriage construction to its famous junction railway station. Brake Van rides are available to the public during special events.
Advanced Passenger Train
APT No.370 003/006 at Crewe Heritage Centre
Built by British Rail (BR) the 1970s and 1980s, this Class 370 Advanced Passenger Train (APT) is the only surviving APT set. Numbered 370 003/006, it is open at all times with an occasional cafe run from the original buffet car (selected days only). The APT-P museum can be found inside one of the carriages, with photographs on display from the APT project

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,rail,railway,train,trains,signal,box,Signalbox,displays,status,point,points,signals,131a,131b,lever,levers,brown,indicator,town,infrastructure,heritage,history,historic,equipment,electro,mechanical,Crewe Railway Age,signal boxes,system,systems,control
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JWGTD3 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,rail,railway,train,trains,at,a,red,yellow,big,old,inside,interior,heritage,technology,signal boxes,system,systems,control,mechanical,electromechanical,electro,mechanics,infrastructure,preservation,museum,piece,pieces,remember,past,pastimes,hotpix.org.uk
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JWGTD4 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,rail,railway,train,trains,re,British Rail,wagon,waggon,carriage,set,Pway,P-way,permanent way,mobile,repair,repairs,maintenance,infrastructure,maintainers,engineering,safety-critical,safety,critical,track,technology,workshop,reactive,plant,materials,rails
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JWGTDG -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,station,train,trains,historic,hub,on,history,transport,spelt,railway,PWAY,permanent way,Crewe North Junction,Crewe North,junction,rail,heritage,infrastructure,town,works,rails,system,systems,engineering,control,controls,controling,freight,traffic,public
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JX2WJ2 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,rust,unsafe,road,rail,railway,bridge,lock,locks,canal,ship,Grappenhall,Peel Ports,MSCC,A50,Cheshire,England,UK,WA4,swing,rusted,painting,investment,repaint,repainting,traffic,delay,delays,hydraulic,steel,riveted,rivets,Victorian,infrastructure,travel,transport
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JTR44J -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Wales,welsh,Llangollen station,signal,signals,UK,system,transport,sign,board,lever,levers,point,points,gauges,warning,warnings,diagram,map,schematic,Denbighshire,Cymru,British,Railways,croeso,I,reilffordd,infrastructure,history,historic,boxes,inside,interior,frame,line,lines
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JRA4FH -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Wales,welsh,Llangollen station,signal,signals,UK,system,transport,sign,board,lever,levers,point,points,gauges,warning,warnings,diagram,map,schematic,Denbighshire,Cymru,British,Railways,croeso,I,reilffordd,infrastructure,history,historic,boxes,inside,interior,frame,line,lines,hotpix.org.uk
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JRA4FK -

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Wales,welsh,Llangollen station,signal,signals,UK,system,transport,sign,board,man,signalman,volunteer,worker,railwayman,waistcoat,watch,chain,pocket watch,old,lever,levers,point,points,gauges,warning,warnings,Denbighshire,Cymru,British,Railways,infrastructure,engineering,safety,history,historic,heritage
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JRA4FR -

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Keywords: HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,evening,services,funding,subsidy,from,railway,train,planning,tourist,connections,connection,infrastructure,express,blue,enhance,enhanced,enhancements,to rural,alterations,dusk,at,local,frequency,of,service,route,routes,night,late,safety,passenger,numbers,passengers,connectivity,joined up,integrated
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JPB8PG -

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,London,Westminster,England,UK,entrance,in,front,with,of,the,palace,SW1,jack,GB,British,United Kingdom,toilet,toilets,public,govt,government,HOC,HOL,House of Commons,House Of Lords,interchange,commute,commuting,exit,urban,transportation,infrastructure,roundel,Big Ben,BigBen,Keir Starmer,Nigel Farage
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2M07A7R - Westminster is a London Underground station in the City of Westminster. It is served by the Circle, District and Jubilee lines. On the Circle and District lines, the station is between St James's Park and Embankment, and on the Jubilee line it is between Green Park and Waterloo. It is in Travelcard Zone 1. The station is located at the corner of Bridge Street and Victoria Embankment and is close to the Houses of Parliament, Westminster Abbey, Parliament Square, Whitehall, Westminster Bridge, and the London Eye. Also close by are Downing Street, the Cenotaph, Westminster Millennium Pier, the Treasury, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and the Supreme Court.
The station is in two parts: sub-surface platforms opened in 1868 by the District Railway (DR) as part of the company's first section of the Inner Circle route and deep level platforms opened in 1999 as part of the Jubilee line extension from Green Park to Stratford. A variety of underground and main line services have operated over the sub-surface tracks, but the original station was completely rebuilt in conjunction with the construction of the deep level platforms and Portcullis House, which sits above the station.
The station was opened as Westminster Bridge on 24 December 1868 by the steam-operated District Railway (DR) (now the District line) when the railway opened the first section of its line from South Kensington.
As part of the Transported by Design programme of activities, on 15 October 2015, after two months of public voting, Westminster tube station was elected by Londoners as one of the 10 favourite transport design icons.
The station is in London fare zone 1. On the District and Circle lines, the station is between St James's Park and Embankment, and, on the Jubilee line, it is between Green Park and Waterloo.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,London,England,UK,dining,shopping,passengers,interesting,light,at,Camden,N1C 4DQ,lights,lighting,new,entrances,architecture,design,rainbow,red,colour,color,passenger,tunnels,tunnel,passageway,passageways,Google HQ,office,offices,St Pancras Square,office development,developments,improvement,improvements,infrastructure,investment
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2M108HH -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,TFL,transport,infrastructure,platform,at,underground,metro,subway,Transport For London,TfL,empty,High Barnet,Edgware,tunnel,N1,N1 2AR,map,schematic,ad,ads,advertising,promotions,adverts,clean,tidy,black,line,deep-level,interior,signs,tracks,track
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K16ATA - The Northern line is a London Underground line that runs from North London to South London. It is printed in black on the Tube map. The Northern line is unique on the Underground network in having two different routes through central London, two southern branches and two northern branches. Despite its name, it does not serve the northernmost stations on the Underground, though it does serve the southernmost station at Morden, the terminus of one of the two southern branches.
The line's northern termini, all in the London Borough of Barnet, are at Edgware and High Barnet
Mill Hill East is the terminus of a single-station branch line off the High Barnet branch. The two main northern branches run south to join at Camden Town where two routes, one via Charing Cross in the West End and the other via Bank in the City, continue to join at Kennington in Southwark. At Kennington, the line again divides into two branches, one to each of the southern termini at Morden, in the borough of Merton, and Battersea Power Station in Wandsworth.

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,LU,transport,metro,infrastructure,classic,building,Camden,London,NW1 8NH,NW1,Zone,two,2,northern line,station,TFL,Camden at night,attraction,tour,cities,Greater,British,English,Britain,seedy,North London,front,outside,exterior,Victorian,history,historic
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K16ATY -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,UK,London,NW1 8AF,NW1,168,tourist,north,London bus,red,bus,no,service,to,busy,crowded,crowds,Camden Lock,bridge,with,visitors,rail,famous,icon,iconic,market,Chalk Farm Road,British,infrastructure,transport,town,centre,service 168,route 168
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K16AY7 -

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Runcorn old town,bus,station,town,public,links,infrastructure,in,historic,routes,passenger,passengers,Proud to support Widnes Vikings,WA7,Halton,Cheshire,England,UK,WA7 1LX,transport,service,services,stand,stands,vehicle,vehicles,mini-bus,mini-buses,facility,subsidy,blue,Arriva,Arriva buses,company,operator
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K1419B -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Runcorn old town,bus,station,town,public,links,infrastructure,in,historic,routes,passenger,passengers,Proud to support Widnes Vikings,WA7,Halton,Cheshire,England,UK,WA7 1LX,transport,service,services,stand,stands,vehicle,vehicles,mini-bus,mini-buses,facility,subsidy,blue,Arriva,Arriva buses,company,operator
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K141AW -

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Runcorn old town,bus,station,town,public,links,infrastructure,in,historic,routes,passenger,passengers,Proud to support Widnes Vikings,WA7,Halton,Cheshire,England,UK,WA7 1LX,transport,service,services,stand,stands,vehicle,vehicles,mini-bus,mini-buses,facility,subsidy,blue,Arriva,Arriva buses,company,operator
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2K141EE -

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Greater Manchester,England,Lancs,Lancashire,bus,buses,transport,links,infrastructire,town,centre,WN7,Transport For greater Manchester,First,deregulated,deregulation,company,companies,profit,profiteering,branded,branding,FirstBus,Manchester,First Bus,double-decker,double decker,double,deck,decker,not,in,service
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JH06TM -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Greater Manchester,England,Lancs,Lancashire,bus,buses,transport,links,infrastructire,town,centre,WN7,Bus 596,bus company,WBC,to,YJ13HKE,YJ13 HKE,deregulated,deregulation,company,companies,profit,profiteering,branded,branding,Warringtons,own,council,public,service,Warrington,King Street
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JH06TR - Warrington's Own Buses is a municipal bus company which operates a network of services within the Borough of Warrington and the surrounding area, including Altrincham, Leigh, Earlestown, Wigan, Halton, Bolton and Northwich.
The company previously traded as Warrington Borough Transport up until 2006 and as Network Warrington between 2006 and 2018. With the launch of the 'Cheshire Cats' brand in 2018 the company rebranded as Warrington's Own Buses.
In 2006, the company was rebranded and became known as Network Warrington, with a new livery designed by Samantha Beeley. However, this did lead to a streamlining of other routes, both long distance and in the town centre, which were operated with increased frequencies to shorten journey times.
Budget cuts by Warrington Borough Council resulted in evening services being reduced and Sunday evening services being completely withdrawn from 27 June 2010, as these services no longer received any subsidy from the council.
In April 2018, the company was rebranded as Warrington's Own Buses
Warrington's Own Buses operate 89 routes across the Warrington borough, Cheshire and Greater Manchester. With 40 of them being school/college contract routes.
Warrington's Own Buses offer a wide range of ticket options for passengers, including singles, returns and all day tickets. Smartcard ticketing is also available for periods up to one year.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Greater Manchester,England,Lancs,Lancashire,bus,buses,links,infrastructire,town,centre,WN7,Transport For greater Manchester,blue,Diamond,Bolton,MX20KYJ,leaves,north Manchester,interchange,bus services,bus service,sunny,blue skies,blue sky,summer,the,Wigan & Leigh,Wigan,council,stand,stands,coach,coaches,route,operators
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JH06TT -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Greater Manchester,England,Lancs,Lancashire,bus,buses,transport,links,infrastructire,town,centre,WN7,guided bus,Bus V1,Leigh,Tyldesley,Salford,Manchester Royal Infirmary,TFGM,Transport For greater Manchester,guided busway,busway,deregulated,deregulation,company,companies,profit,profiteering,branded,branding,guided,First,operated,Vantage bus,Say Yellow,Bee Network
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JH070E -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@hotpixUK,Hotpixuk,England,UK,planning,site,home,houses,flat,flats,scaffold,being built,under,Heys,Homes England,Cheshire,land,part,finished,plan,controversial,development,issues,plans,local,regional,infrastructure,essential,ukHousing,housing,Northern Powerhouse,South Warrington,consultation,WA4,draft,submission,approved,rejected,ward
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JDJ54C -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,British,GB,UK,England,the,underground,cable,old,history,historic,national,BT,British telecom,telecoms,Openreach,infrastructure,telephone,telephones,GPO,General,Post,Office,relic,cover,wire,wires,cables,wiring,cast,iron,metal,rust,rusty,inspection,concrete,line,lines
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JDDX84 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,city centre,Merseyside,England,UK,Levelling up,Northern Powerhouse,rail,station,RMT Union,strike,striking,infrastructure,at,railway station,L1 1JD,BR,trains,52303,TfW,Transport For Wales and Borders,train,diesel,NW,northwest,network,routes,investment,subsidy,platform,platforms,Welsh,Wales,Cymru,gorsaf
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JDDPPC -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,city centre,England,UK,Levelling up,Northern Powerhouse,Lime Street,Liverpool Lime St,rail,railway,RMT Union,strike,striking,transport,infrastructure,L1,at,mainline station,Eurovision,2023,NW,northwest,network,routes,investment,subsidy,platform,platforms,blue,city,station,WCML,mainline,main line,L1 1JD
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JDDPPK -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,city centre,Merseyside,England,UK,Levelling up,Northern Powerhouse,rail,station,RMT Union,strike,striking,transport,infrastructure,at,railway station,L1 1JD,BR,platform,platforms,building,canopy,roof,TfW,Chester,times,departure,board,indicator,service,services,Victorian,shed,6,7,timetable,hotpix.org.uk
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JDDPPR -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Jan,2020,Terminal 2,Terminal2,T2,Manchester Airport expansion,Manchester Airport,Ringway,MAG,Manchester Airports Group,Manchester Airport Holdings Ltd,Manchester,inside,?1b,?1billion,MAG Manchester Airport,infrastructure,air traffic,airport improvement,improvements,transport hub,transport,hub,North West,England,UK,North West England,Transformation Programme,Transformation,Scheme,Programme,MANTP,MAN-TP,global gateway,to the north,the north,M90 1QX
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2AJRRJR - Manchester Airport Holdings Limited, trading as MAG (originally Manchester Airports Group) is a holding company which is owned by the ten metropolitan borough councils of Greater Manchester, in North West England, and Australian investment fund IFM Investors. Founded in 2001 following the acquisition of East Midlands Airport, MAG is the largest UK-owned airport operator, following the purchase of BAA by Spain's Ferrovial Group in 2006. MAG owns three British airports, East Midlands and Manchester Airport (which is the busiest airport outside the London region), as well as London Stansted Airport. In the 2017/18 financial year, 58.9 million passengers used MAG airports.
Of the ten metropolitan boroughs of Greater Manchester, Manchester City Council holds the largest stake, at 35.5%. The remaining nine councils hold a total of 29%. IFM Investors own a 35.5% stake in MAG. The Group has its registered office at Manchester Town Hall. MAG operates on a commercial basis at arm's length from its public owners who only take a dividend from profits. This was ?20 million in 2010 while MAG retained ?80 million from the ?100 million profit
Manchester Airport opened in 1938 and was funded by Manchester City Council and has remained in public ownership ever since. It is the third-busiest airport in the United Kingdom after Heathrow and Gatwick and is fractionally busier than Stansted (see Busiest airports in the United Kingdom by total passenger traffic). The M56 motorway was built to serve the airport in 1972, a new rail station was opened in 1993 and a second runway was completed in 1997.
From https://www.mantp.co.uk/about/ - Manchester Airport is investing more than ?1bn to give the North the world class international gateway it deserves. The Manchester Airport Transformation Programme (MAN-TP) will modernise and transform the customer service experience we are able to offer passengers and to airlines whilst allowing the airport to continue in its role as job creator

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,bar,pub,kegs,ale,ales,craft,brewing,brewery,30,thirty,Christmas Bar,Manchester,England,UK,pipe,pipes,connected,linked,piped,dispenser,lager,infrastructure,bars,pubs,bier,keg,line,lines,back,yard,machinery,support,retail
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2ADE4AG -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,England,English,London,South East,EC4N,entrance,night,dusk,evening,crowded,wet,rain,at,workers,strike,RMT union,walkout,city,centre,central,stations,commuter,commuters,nighttime,rushhour,rush hour,busy,outside,concourse,rainy,BR,railways,infrastructure
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2ABY94H - Cannon Street station, also known as London Cannon Street, is a central London railway terminus and connected London Underground station in Travelcard zone 1 located on Cannon Street in the City of London and managed by Network Rail. It is one of two London termini of the South Eastern main line, the other being Charing Cross, while the Underground station is on the Circle and District lines, between Monument and Mansion House. The station runs services by Southeastern, mostly catering for commuters in southeast London and Kent, with occasional services further into the latter.
The station was built on a site of the medieval steelyard, the trading base in England of the Hanseatic League. It was built by the South Eastern Railway in order to have a railway terminal in the City and compete with the rival London, Chatham and Dover Railway. This required a new bridge across the River Thames, which was constructed between 1863 and 1866. The station was initially a stop for continental services from Charing Cross.
Planning permission was granted in March 2007 to replace the Poulson building, with a new air rights building designed by Foggo Associates. Hines, the US developer, led a ?360 million project involving the demolition of Poulson's office block, replacing it with a mixed-use development containing more than 400,000 sq ft (37,000 m2) of office space alongside 17,000 sq ft (1,600 m2) of station retail space. The redevelopment was part of a larger regeneration programme undertaken by Network Rail to modernise and unlock the commercial potential of the main London termini
Euston and London Bridge were also redeveloped. Network Rail's director of commercial property said that the finished station would be less congested and more accessible for passengers.[46] Cannon Street won the award for Major Station of the Year at the 2013 National Rail Awards

Description
Keywords: HotpixUk,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,UK,England,English,BMO,GWR,City Centre,West Midlands,Historic,transport,architecture,shopping,area,Bull Ring,Selfridges,retail,modern,BW,Black and White,black,white,restoration awards,Chiltern railways,rail,public transport,station,stations,infrastructure,BR,British Rail,Moor St,Moor Street,Brum,Birmingham Moor Street,council,bankrupt,cuts
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2AAT2GM - Birmingham Moor Street is one of three main railway stations in the city centre of Birmingham, England, along with Birmingham New Street and Birmingham Snow Hill.
Today's Moor Street station is a combination of the original station, opened in 1909 by the Great Western Railway as a terminus for local trains, and a newer Moor Street station with through platforms, a short distance from the original, which opened in 1987, replacing the original. The two were combined into one station in 2002, when the original was reopened and restored, and the newer station rebuilt in matching style.
Moor Street has become more important in recent years
two of the original terminus platforms were reopened in 2010, and the station is now the terminus of many Chiltern Railways services from London Marylebone, as well as being an important stop for local services on the Snow Hill Lines. It is now the second busiest railway station in Birmingham.

Description
Keywords: HotpixUk,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,UK,England,English,BMO,GWR,City Centre,West Midlands,Historic,transport,architecture,platform,travelers,Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games,restoration awards,Chiltern railways,rail,public transport,station,stations,infrastructure,BR,British Rail,Moor St,Moor Street,Brum,Birmingham Moor Street,Victorian,historic railways,preserved,terminus,route,London Marylebone,services,service
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2AAT2GN - Birmingham Moor Street is one of three main railway stations in the city centre of Birmingham, England, along with Birmingham New Street and Birmingham Snow Hill.
Today's Moor Street station is a combination of the original station, opened in 1909 by the Great Western Railway as a terminus for local trains, and a newer Moor Street station with through platforms, a short distance from the original, which opened in 1987, replacing the original. The two were combined into one station in 2002, when the original was reopened and restored, and the newer station rebuilt in matching style.
Moor Street has become more important in recent years
two of the original terminus platforms were reopened in 2010, and the station is now the terminus of many Chiltern Railways services from London Marylebone, as well as being an important stop for local services on the Snow Hill Lines. It is now the second busiest railway station in Birmingham.

Description
Keywords: HotpixUk,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,UK,England,English,BMO,GWR,City Centre,West Midlands,Historic,transport,architecture,Chiltern Railways Clock,restoration awards,Clock,plaques,Chiltern railways,rail,public transport,station,stations,infrastructure,BR,British Rail,Moor St,Moor Street,Brum,Birmingham Moor Street,Victorian,historic railways,preserved,terminus,route,London Marylebone,services,service
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2AAT2GP - Birmingham Moor Street is one of three main railway stations in the city centre of Birmingham, England, along with Birmingham New Street and Birmingham Snow Hill.
Today's Moor Street station is a combination of the original station, opened in 1909 by the Great Western Railway as a terminus for local trains, and a newer Moor Street station with through platforms, a short distance from the original, which opened in 1987, replacing the original. The two were combined into one station in 2002, when the original was reopened and restored, and the newer station rebuilt in matching style.
Moor Street has become more important in recent years
two of the original terminus platforms were reopened in 2010, and the station is now the terminus of many Chiltern Railways services from London Marylebone, as well as being an important stop for local services on the Snow Hill Lines. It is now the second busiest railway station in Birmingham.

Description
Keywords: HotpixUk,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,UK,England,English,West Midlands,city Centre,B2,New Street Railway Station,central hub of UK rail network,B2 4QA,Redeveloped,developed,Grand Central,New St Railway Station,Birmingham New St,interior,inside,Gateway Plus project,pano,panorama,showing roof,travelers,Foreign Office Architects,domed atrium,Grand Central shopping centre,shopping centre,rail network,network rail,Midlands engine,partnership,infrastructure,New St,New Street,rail,station,mainline
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2AAT2T7 - The Gateway Plus (previously known as Birmingham Gateway) project was a redevelopment scheme that regenerated Birmingham New Street railway station and the Pallasades Shopping Centre above it in Birmingham, England. It finished in September 2015. The project aimed to enhance the station to cope with increased passenger numbers as well as expected future growth in traffic, but did not alter the train capacity of the station. In 2008, the station handled passenger numbers far in excess of the capacity of its existing design. The current station and Pallasades shopping centre were completed in 1967 and have become the subject of criticism for the congestion of the station and shabbiness of the shopping centre and parts of the station. It is part of the Big City Plan.
Birmingham New Street is the largest and busiest of the three main railway stations in the Birmingham City Centre, England. It is a central hub of the British railway system. It is a major destination for Avanti West Coast services from London Euston, Glasgow Central and Edinburgh Waverley via the West Coast Main Line, and the national hub of the CrossCountry network ? the most extensive in Britain, with long-distance trains serving destinations from Aberdeen to Penzance. It is also a major hub for local and suburban services within the West Midlands, including those on the Cross City Line between Lichfield Trent Valley, Redditch, and Bromsgrove, and the Chase Line to Walsall and Rugeley Trent Valley.
The station is named after New Street, which runs parallel to the station, although the station has never had a direct entrance to New Street except via the Grand Central shopping centre. Historically the main entrance to the station was on Stephenson Street, just off New Street. Today the station has entrances on Stephenson Street, Smallbrook Queensway, Hill Street and Navigation Street

Description
Keywords: @HotpixUK,HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,UK,Cheshire,England,GB,Great Britain,BT,Wilson Patten street,Warrington,WA1,GPO,building,telephone,WBC,Warrington Borough Council,BT exchange,engineers,facade,telecoms,history,historic,buildings,architecture,sunny,blue sky,blue skies,OpenReach,Open Reach,infrastructure,cabling,01925,office,offices,landmark
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2ABJGGT -

Description
Keywords: HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,Bridgwater,Somerset,SDC,Sedgemoor,Sedgemoor District Council,South West England,England,UK,South West,town,TA6,cables,cabling,network,gray cables,grey,gray,connections,cable,infrastructure,connection,connect,connecting,link,linking,up,plug,plugs,socket,sockets,plugged,in,numbered
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2AFMK16 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@Hotpixuk,bridge,dusk,nighttime,night time,England,UK,Britain,Great Britain,lighting,Motorway Lighting,northbound,road,network,superstructure,two bridges,delay,delays,longest,Pell Frischmann Consultants Ltd,Pell Frischmann,Consultants,Limited,Department of Transport,highways England,Traffic management,traffic,congestion,Cheshire,Motorway Network,night,evening,infrastructure,roads
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2BBXPB0 - The Thelwall Viaduct (grid reference SJ664883) is a steel composite girder viaduct in Lymm, Warrington, England. It carries the M6 motorway across the Manchester Ship Canal and the River Mersey. Its location on the motorway network is between junctions 20 and 21 of the M6, the former being also known as junction 9 of the M56.
It actually comprises two entirely separate bridges, one of 4,414 feet long carrying the northbound carriageway, which was the longest motorway bridge in England when it was opened in July 1963, and one 4,500 feet long carrying the southbound carriageway which was opened in 1995.The longest single span is the one of 336 feet crossing the ship canal.
In July 2002 a failed roller bearing was discovered and it became necessary to close all but one northbound lane. As the M6 at the time carried an estimated 150,000?160,000 vehicles per day, this led to serious congestion. The viaduct was not completely reopened to daytime traffic until February 2005, and subsequently remained partially closed at night for further remedial work to take place. In all, 148 bearings were replaced, with the repair scheme costing around ?52 million.
Given the bridge's height and openness to the elements it has frequently been the subject of speed reductions due to strong gusts of wind that badly affect the stability of high-sided vehicles. On several occasions lane closures have resulted as a consequence of articulated vehicles simply being blown over. However, the open sides of the bridge are a deliberate design feature to reduce the likelihood of snow drifts building on the carriageways.
In April 2011 a massive free party took place under the bridge, with reportedly over 5,000 ravers in attendance

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Dalkeith,Eskbank,Lothian,Midlothian,Scotland,UK,Eco,electricity,carbon neutral,carbon free,car park,Electric Vehicle Recharging Point,Electric car,Recharging,Point,College,Edinburgh College,Charger,charging parking space,Electric mobility,transport,electric transport,electric vehicles,clean vehicles,Charging Station,station,highway pump,Chargemaster,Charging infrastructure,poor,underdeveloped,developing,EV,EV Charging,electric vehicle,Charge Your Car,ChargePlace Scotland network
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy R9GT4R - There are 2 electric car charging points (connectors) available at Eskbank Station - see details and other nearby charge points below. The charge points are operated under the Charge Your Car, ChargePlace Scotland network, more information on accessing points on this network can be found on the public charging network area. ChargePlace Scotland is a national network of electric vehicle charge points available across Scotland. The ChargePlace Scotland network has been developed by the Scottish Government through grant funding of Local Authorities and other organisations to install publicly available charge points. Recipients of the funding are known as 'Hosts'. A Host is the designated owner of the charge points they have installed and are also responsible for maintenance and general upkeep of their charge points. The ChargePlace Scotland network is operated on behalf of the Scottish Government by Charge Your Car Ltd.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Germany,German,Mainz,Rhine,City Centre,Deutschland,city,ancient Mogontiacum,ancient,Mogontiacum,mogontiacum,ministry,of the,interior,local government,administration,government,local,Palatinate,region,building,sport,und f?r Sport,pink,white,exterior,Roger Lewentz,Bassenheimer Hof,state government,state,State of Rhineland-Palatinate,Sport and Infrastructure,Infrastructure,SPD,Authority
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy RGGE6K - The Ministry of the Interior and Sports Rhineland-Palatinate is a supreme Land authority based in the Bassenheimer Hof in the state capital Mainz . It is next to the State Chancellery of one of the nine ministries of the state government of Rhineland-Palatinate . Since May 18, 2011 Roger Lewentz (SPD) Minister of Interior and Sport of the State of Rhineland-Palatinate. State Secretaries are G?nter Kern and Randolf Stich (both SPD).

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith @HotpixUK,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,platforms,Mainline,Abelio,UK,Gordon St,people,passengers,roof,shops,retail,Glasgow Central Concourse,transport,public transport,canopy,Central,station,Mainline Station,workers,strike,RMT union,Champagne Central,pub,pubs,bar,bars,Victorian,history,historic,infrastructure,stations,Scottish,99,Gordon Street,commuters
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy PE1J44 - Glasgow Central also known simply as Central) is the major mainline rail terminus in Glasgow, Scotland. The station was opened by the Caledonian Railway on 1 August 1879 and is one of nineteen managed by Network Rail. It is the northern terminus of the West Coast Main Line (397 miles (640 km) north of London Euston), and for inter-city services between Glasgow and England. The other main city-centre railway station in Glasgow is Glasgow Queen Street.
With over 32 million passengers in 2016?17, Glasgow Central is the twelfth-busiest railway station in Britain, and the busiest in Scotland.[6] According to Network Rail, over 38 million people use it annually, 80% of whom are passengers. The station is protected as a category A listed building.
In Britain's 100 Best Railway Stations by Simon Jenkins, the station was one of only ten to be awarded five stars. In 2017 the station received a customer satisfaction score 95.2%, the highest in the UK

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith @HotpixUK,Champagne Central bar,Gordon St,Scotland,UK,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,city centre,Gordon street,drinking,tourist,tourism,Champagne Central,pub,pubs,bar,bars,Victorian,history,historic,infrastructure,stations,Scottish,99,Gordon Street,ceiling,commercial,Scotrail,Champagne Bar,Central,wood,wooden,mahogany,brand,branding,overlooks,overlooking
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy PE1J5A - Pull up a seat and step back in time. Our Champagne bar overlooks Central Station and evokes the golden age of travel, with a sash of style and lashings of charm. Vintage Champagne is served in coupes, and bottles chilled in elegant vintage ice buckets.
For those feeling peckish, food is fine, flavoursome, and focuses on small plates and sharing boards. Afternoon Tea has a special place on the menu and is ? of course ? best taken with a glass of Champagne.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,England,GB,Great Britain,Lime Street Low Level Railway Station Entrance,North West England,UK,Merseyrail,Lime St,Lime,Street,Low Level,station,Entrance,underground,entrance,escalator,rail,platform,loop tunnel,Merseyrail Loop Tunnel,ticket hall,mainline station,transport,public transport,terminus,subway,pedestrian subway,NetworkRail,Network Rail,infrastructure,refurbished,refurbishment,Merseyrail underground stations,Merseyrail underground station,Wirral Line loop,Wirral Line
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy PCTA5K - The underground, low level station consists of a single platform, alongside the Liverpool Loop tunnel, a single track tunnel bored in the 1970s, and a ticket hall above. The station, opened in 1977, is connected to the mainline station by means of a pedestrian subway and escalators, accessed via a long passageway which crosses beneath Lime Street itself, and by a lift from the main concourse.
As part of a programme of improvements by Merseytravel, the underground station has been fitted with automatic ticket barriers and machines.
Network Rail announced in early 2013 that Lime Street was to be the third station to be refurbished as part of the ?40 million investment which would see all Merseyrail underground stations excluding Conway Park refurbished. This included the refurbishment of the platform and the booking hall. The station refurbishment work took place between April and August 2013.
Subway refurbishment
The subway linking the underground station to the mainline station was refurbished in June 2014. The subway was fitted out with new tiles, lighting, flooring and automatic doors to some of the entrances.
The underground station had WiFi installed in January 2016.
In March 2016, it was announced that the Wirral Line loop would be having its track renewed. The underground station was closed between 3 January 2017 and 18 June 2017 whilst the works took place.
Services
Services operate on a 5-minute frequency Monday-Saturday, and between 5- and 10-minute frequency on Sundays in the winter. All trains travel through to Liverpool Central and Birkenhead of which:
4 trains per hour continue to New Brighton
4 trains per hour continue to West Kirby
4 trains per hour continue to Chester
2 trains per hour continue to Ellesmere Port
To reach destinations on the Northern Line of the network, passengers must either use the Wirral Line and change at Liverpool Central station or walk the short distance to the station.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,south,England,UK,viaduct,underpass,road,walkway,pavement,CharingX,area,transport,railways,history,historic,South Eastern Railway,south bank,tunnel,rail,BR,stations,people,walkers,walking,railway,infrastructure,Victorian,the,Charing Cross Railway,bricks,tiled,sign,signs,south of the river
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JHB6XP - Charing Cross railway station (also known as London Charing Cross)[4] is a central London railway terminus between the Strand and Hungerford Bridge in the City of Westminster. It is the terminus of the South Eastern Main Line to Dover via Ashford. All trains are operated by Southeastern, which provides the majority of commuter and regional services to south-east London and Kent. It is connected to Charing Cross Underground station and is near to Embankment Underground station and Embankment Pier.
The station was originally opened by the South Eastern Railway in 1864. It takes its name from its proximity to the road junction Charing Cross, the notional centre of London from which distances from the city are measured. During the 19th century the station became the main London terminus for continental traffic via boat trains, and served several prestigious international services. It was badly damaged by a roof collapse in 1905 and extensively rebuilt, subsequently becoming an important meeting point for military and government traffic during World War I. By this time, Charing Cross station was seen as out of date by some politicians and proposals were made to replace Hungerford Bridge with a road bridge or road/rail combination, with the station moving to the south bank of the River Thames in the case of a road-only replacement. The station was bombed several times during World War II, and was rebuilt afterwards, re-opening in 1951. In the late 1980s, the station complex was redesigned by Terry Farrell and rebuilt to accommodate a modern office block, now known as Embankment Place.

Description
Keywords: City,Birmingham City,WM,Brum,Brummie,Mainline,railway,station,Rail station,WCML,Virgin,London Midland,Midland,Midlands,GoTonySmith,new,redeveloped,rail,Arts and Crafts style,cock fighting,central,hub,Virgin Trains,transport,infrastructure,Gateway Plus,Midland Railway,LNWR,British Rail,BR,Network Rail,Network,redevelopment,Eastern Entrance,Entrance,regeneration scheme,regeneration,approved,plan,plans
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy MJ2YEB -

Description
Keywords: GoTonysmith,@HotpixUK,Warrington Bank Quay station at dusk,Cheshire,England,UK,winter,at platform,in station,yellow,tamper,Railway,Network Rail,Networkrail,track maintenance,engine,vehicle,at,night,nighttime,night time,BR,British Rail,Railtrack,Network Rail Maintenance Engine,DMU,Track Repair,Red Signal,MPV,investment programme,GRIP,Governance for Railway Investment Projects,Railway Investment Projects,measuring,Running the railway,infrastructure monitoring train,maintaining and renewing track,necessary maintenance,RMT Union
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy MM99XN - Network Rail is the owner (via its subsidiary Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd which was known as Railtrack plc before 2002) and infrastructure manager of most of the rail network in England, Scotland and Wales.Network Rail is an arms length public body of the Department for Transport with no shareholders, which reinvests its income in the railways.
Network Rail's main customers are the private train operating companies (TOCs), responsible for passenger transport, and freight operating companies (FOCs), who provide train services on the infrastructure that the company owns and maintains. Since 1 September 2014, Network Rail has been classified as a public sector body.
To cope with quickly rising passenger numbers, Network Rail is currently undertaking a ?38 billion programme of upgrades to the network, including Crossrail, electrification of lines, upgrading Thameslink and a new high-speed line.

Description
Keywords: City,Centre,City Centre,mojo,groove,Camden,at Night,night,dusk,North London,London,North,England,UK,Camden Lock Village,Camden Lock,Village,Regents,Canal,Camden Lock,market,trendy,funky,Town,at,North,London,England,UK,shut,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,at night,Camden at night,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6DY - Camden Town often shortened to Camden (ambiguously also used for the much larger London Borough of Camden of which it is the central neighbourhood), is an inner city district of northwest London, 2.4 miles (3.9 km) north of the centre of London. It is one of the 35 major centres identified in the London Plan.
Laid out as a residential district from 1791 and originally part of the manor of Kentish Town and the parish of St Pancras, London, Camden Town became an important location during the early development of the railways, which reinforced its position on the London canal network. The area's industrial economic base has been replaced by service industries such as retail, tourism and entertainment. The area now hosts street markets and music venues which are strongly associated with alternative culture.

Description
Keywords: City,Centre,City Centre,fashion,mojo,groove,Camden Town,Camden,at Night,night,dusk,North London,London,North,England,UK,seedy,Camden Lock Village,Village,Regents,Canal,Camden Lock market,Camden Lock,funky,243,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6E6 - Camden Town often shortened to Camden (ambiguously also used for the much larger London Borough of Camden of which it is the central neighbourhood), is an inner city district of northwest London, 2.4 miles (3.9 km) north of the centre of London. It is one of the 35 major centres identified in the London Plan.
Laid out as a residential district from 1791 and originally part of the manor of Kentish Town and the parish of St Pancras, London, Camden Town became an important location during the early development of the railways, which reinforced its position on the London canal network. The area's industrial economic base has been replaced by service industries such as retail, tourism and entertainment. The area now hosts street markets and music venues which are strongly associated with alternative culture.

Description
Keywords: City,Centre,City Centre,fashion,mojo,at Night,night,dusk,North London,London,North,England,UK,seedy,Camden Lock Village,Camden Lock,Village,Regents,Canal,Camden Lock,trendy,funky,Camden Market at Night,Camden Market,at,Night,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,at night,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6HH - Camden Town often shortened to Camden (ambiguously also used for the much larger London Borough of Camden of which it is the central neighbourhood), is an inner city district of northwest London, 2.4 miles (3.9 km) north of the centre of London. It is one of the 35 major centres identified in the London Plan.
Laid out as a residential district from 1791 and originally part of the manor of Kentish Town and the parish of St Pancras, London, Camden Town became an important location during the early development of the railways, which reinforced its position on the London canal network. The area's industrial economic base has been replaced by service industries such as retail, tourism and entertainment. The area now hosts street markets and music venues which are strongly associated with alternative culture.

Description
Keywords: City,Centre,City Centre,fashion,mojo,groove,at Night,North London,London,North,England,UK,seedy,Alternative Culture,Camden Lock Village,Village,Regents,Canal,Camden Lock market,Camden Lock,market,trendy,funky,lock,market,Lock and Market,pano,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,at,night,at night,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6HW - Camden Town often shortened to Camden (ambiguously also used for the much larger London Borough of Camden of which it is the central neighbourhood), is an inner city district of northwest London, 2.4 miles (3.9 km) north of the centre of London. It is one of the 35 major centres identified in the London Plan.
Laid out as a residential district from 1791 and originally part of the manor of Kentish Town and the parish of St Pancras, London, Camden Town became an important location during the early development of the railways, which reinforced its position on the London canal network. The area's industrial economic base has been replaced by service industries such as retail, tourism and entertainment. The area now hosts street markets and music venues which are strongly associated with alternative culture.

Description
Keywords: Lines,rail,railways,good,transit,Overground,Underground,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6JE -

Description
Keywords: City Centre,City,Centre,dusk,pub,pubs,bars,bar,classic,CAMRA,real,ale,realale,real ale,art,deco,artdeco,art-deco,The Black Friar,at,night,dusk,drinking,beer,beers,gin,palace,gin palace,pano,panorama,classic,Henry Poole,Herbert Fuller-Clark,Art Nouveau,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,pubs,bars,of,London,classic,tourist,attraction,travel,vacation,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre,Pubs Of London,must see
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6K3 - The Black Friar Pub. Post-1903 work by Herbert Fuller-Clark (b.1869, d. after 1912). Original building 1875. Remodelled in several stages beginning 1903, 1914, and 1925. 174 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4. Individual sculptures by Nathaniel Hitch, Frederick Callcott, Henry Poole, and Farmer and Brindley. According to Philip Ward-Jackson,
Hitch was responsible for the stonework grotesques on the exterior, and for a considerable amount of similar work in wood in the interior. Callcott created the pattern for the larger copper relief scenes, representing the day to day activities of the friars. . . . It seems probable that Callcott went on working on those reliefs until shortly before his death in 1925, when the rather more prestigious Henry Poole took over, to produce the relief work in the Small Saloon Bar. One of Callcott's frieze-like panels, entitled Saturday Afternoon, was to be repeated on the screen wall, separating the Luncheon Bar from the Small Saloon Bar, although it looks quite different in its new form, because the figures are much more widely spaced out, and the coloured marbles in the second rendering give it more depth.
Of these artists, Hitch (1841-1935), deserves to be better known. Following an apprenticeship to Farmer and Brindley, he had a very long and distinguished career as a sculptor: his work can be found at Cardiff Castle, suggesting that he was probably a member of William Burges's workforce there, and also in many churches and cathedrals including Truro Cathedral and Westminster Abbey. He was particularly associated with the architects W. D. Car??e and J. L. Pearson.
It is worth noting that the popular London Encyclopaedia disagrees about the dates and artists involved here, stating simply that the building was erected in 1875, the ground floor being remodelled in 1905 by H. Fuller Clark. The outside is covered with mosaics and carved figures by Henry Poole (1903).

Description
Keywords: City Centre,City,Centre,dusk,pub,pubs,bars,bar,classic,CAMRA,real,ale,realale,real ale,art,deco,artdeco,art-deco,The Black Friar,at,night,dusk,drinking,beer,beers,gin,palace,gin palace,ornate,interior ceiling,interior,ceiling,design,Henry Poole,Herbert Fuller-Clark,Art Nouveau,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,pubs,bars,of,London,classic,tourist,attraction,travel,vacation,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre,Pubs Of London,must see
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6M8 - The Black Friar Pub. Post-1903 work by Herbert Fuller-Clark (b.1869, d. after 1912). Original building 1875. Remodelled in several stages beginning 1903, 1914, and 1925. 174 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4. Individual sculptures by Nathaniel Hitch, Frederick Callcott, Henry Poole, and Farmer and Brindley. According to Philip Ward-Jackson,
Hitch was responsible for the stonework grotesques on the exterior, and for a considerable amount of similar work in wood in the interior. Callcott created the pattern for the larger copper relief scenes, representing the day to day activities of the friars. . . . It seems probable that Callcott went on working on those reliefs until shortly before his death in 1925, when the rather more prestigious Henry Poole took over, to produce the relief work in the Small Saloon Bar. One of Callcott's frieze-like panels, entitled Saturday Afternoon, was to be repeated on the screen wall, separating the Luncheon Bar from the Small Saloon Bar, although it looks quite different in its new form, because the figures are much more widely spaced out, and the coloured marbles in the second rendering give it more depth.
Of these artists, Hitch (1841-1935), deserves to be better known. Following an apprenticeship to Farmer and Brindley, he had a very long and distinguished career as a sculptor: his work can be found at Cardiff Castle, suggesting that he was probably a member of William Burges's workforce there, and also in many churches and cathedrals including Truro Cathedral and Westminster Abbey. He was particularly associated with the architects W. D. Car??e and J. L. Pearson.
It is worth noting that the popular London Encyclopaedia disagrees about the dates and artists involved here, stating simply that the building was erected in 1875, the ground floor being remodelled in 1905 by H. Fuller Clark. The outside is covered with mosaics and carved figures by Henry Poole (1903).

Description
Keywords: City Centre,City,Centre,dusk,pub,pubs,bars,bar,classic,CAMRA,real,ale,realale,real ale,art,deco,artdeco,art-deco,The Black Friar,at,night,dusk,drinking,beer,beers,gin,palace,gin palace,interior,inside,Haste Is Slow,Haste,Is,Slow,Henry Poole,Herbert Fuller-Clark,Art Nouveau,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,pubs,bars,of,London,classic,tourist,attraction,travel,vacation,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre,Pubs Of London,must see
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6NP - The Black Friar Pub. Post-1903 work by Herbert Fuller-Clark (b.1869, d. after 1912). Original building 1875. Remodelled in several stages beginning 1903, 1914, and 1925. 174 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4. Individual sculptures by Nathaniel Hitch, Frederick Callcott, Henry Poole, and Farmer and Brindley. According to Philip Ward-Jackson,
Hitch was responsible for the stonework grotesques on the exterior, and for a considerable amount of similar work in wood in the interior. Callcott created the pattern for the larger copper relief scenes, representing the day to day activities of the friars. . . . It seems probable that Callcott went on working on those reliefs until shortly before his death in 1925, when the rather more prestigious Henry Poole took over, to produce the relief work in the Small Saloon Bar. One of Callcott's frieze-like panels, entitled Saturday Afternoon, was to be repeated on the screen wall, separating the Luncheon Bar from the Small Saloon Bar, although it looks quite different in its new form, because the figures are much more widely spaced out, and the coloured marbles in the second rendering give it more depth.
Of these artists, Hitch (1841-1935), deserves to be better known. Following an apprenticeship to Farmer and Brindley, he had a very long and distinguished career as a sculptor: his work can be found at Cardiff Castle, suggesting that he was probably a member of William Burges's workforce there, and also in many churches and cathedrals including Truro Cathedral and Westminster Abbey. He was particularly associated with the architects W. D. Car??e and J. L. Pearson.
It is worth noting that the popular London Encyclopaedia disagrees about the dates and artists involved here, stating simply that the building was erected in 1875, the ground floor being remodelled in 1905 by H. Fuller Clark. The outside is covered with mosaics and carved figures by Henry Poole (1903).

Description
Keywords: City Centre,City,Centre,dusk,pub,pubs,bars,bar,classic,CAMRA,real,ale,realale,real ale,art,deco,artdeco,art-deco,The Black Friar,at,night,dusk,drinking,beer,beers,gin,palace,gin palace,Industry Is All,Industry,Is,All,interior,Henry Poole,Herbert Fuller-Clark,Art Nouveau,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,pubs,bars,of,London,classic,tourist,attraction,travel,vacation,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre,Pubs Of London,must see
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6PK - The Black Friar Pub. Post-1903 work by Herbert Fuller-Clark (b.1869, d. after 1912). Original building 1875. Remodelled in several stages beginning 1903, 1914, and 1925. 174 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4. Individual sculptures by Nathaniel Hitch, Frederick Callcott, Henry Poole, and Farmer and Brindley. According to Philip Ward-Jackson,
Hitch was responsible for the stonework grotesques on the exterior, and for a considerable amount of similar work in wood in the interior. Callcott created the pattern for the larger copper relief scenes, representing the day to day activities of the friars. . . . It seems probable that Callcott went on working on those reliefs until shortly before his death in 1925, when the rather more prestigious Henry Poole took over, to produce the relief work in the Small Saloon Bar. One of Callcott's frieze-like panels, entitled Saturday Afternoon, was to be repeated on the screen wall, separating the Luncheon Bar from the Small Saloon Bar, although it looks quite different in its new form, because the figures are much more widely spaced out, and the coloured marbles in the second rendering give it more depth.
Of these artists, Hitch (1841-1935), deserves to be better known. Following an apprenticeship to Farmer and Brindley, he had a very long and distinguished career as a sculptor: his work can be found at Cardiff Castle, suggesting that he was probably a member of William Burges's workforce there, and also in many churches and cathedrals including Truro Cathedral and Westminster Abbey. He was particularly associated with the architects W. D. Car??e and J. L. Pearson.
It is worth noting that the popular London Encyclopaedia disagrees about the dates and artists involved here, stating simply that the building was erected in 1875, the ground floor being remodelled in 1905 by H. Fuller Clark. The outside is covered with mosaics and carved figures by Henry Poole (1903).

Description
Keywords: City Centre,City,Centre,dusk,pub,pubs,bars,bar,classic,CAMRA,real,ale,realale,real ale,art,deco,artdeco,art-deco,The Black Friar,at,night,dusk,drinking,beer,beers,gin,palace,gin palace,saloon bar,174,drinkers,outside,exterior,Henry Poole,Herbert Fuller-Clark,Art Nouveau,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,pubs,bars,of,London,classic,tourist,attraction,travel,vacation,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre,Pubs Of London,must see
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6RB - The Black Friar Pub. Post-1903 work by Herbert Fuller-Clark (b.1869, d. after 1912). Original building 1875. Remodelled in several stages beginning 1903, 1914, and 1925. 174 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4. Individual sculptures by Nathaniel Hitch, Frederick Callcott, Henry Poole, and Farmer and Brindley. According to Philip Ward-Jackson,
Hitch was responsible for the stonework grotesques on the exterior, and for a considerable amount of similar work in wood in the interior. Callcott created the pattern for the larger copper relief scenes, representing the day to day activities of the friars. . . . It seems probable that Callcott went on working on those reliefs until shortly before his death in 1925, when the rather more prestigious Henry Poole took over, to produce the relief work in the Small Saloon Bar. One of Callcott's frieze-like panels, entitled Saturday Afternoon, was to be repeated on the screen wall, separating the Luncheon Bar from the Small Saloon Bar, although it looks quite different in its new form, because the figures are much more widely spaced out, and the coloured marbles in the second rendering give it more depth.
Of these artists, Hitch (1841-1935), deserves to be better known. Following an apprenticeship to Farmer and Brindley, he had a very long and distinguished career as a sculptor: his work can be found at Cardiff Castle, suggesting that he was probably a member of William Burges's workforce there, and also in many churches and cathedrals including Truro Cathedral and Westminster Abbey. He was particularly associated with the architects W. D. Car??e and J. L. Pearson.
It is worth noting that the popular London Encyclopaedia disagrees about the dates and artists involved here, stating simply that the building was erected in 1875, the ground floor being remodelled in 1905 by H. Fuller Clark. The outside is covered with mosaics and carved figures by Henry Poole (1903).

Description
Keywords: city,centre,England,LU,LT,Black,Friars,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6RF -

Description
Keywords: City,Centre,transit,City Centre transit,transport,City Centre Transport,Circle Line,Circle Line Train,passengers,London underground,England,UK,LU,Westminster,platform,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6RJ -

Description
Keywords: 6,six,Oyster,London,West London,offpeak,off,peak,fare,estate,agent,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6TN -

Description
Keywords: South,West,Trains,TOC,South West Trains,franchise,zone6,xone,six,6,artdeco,suburban,Platform 3,Kingston,West London,England,UK,London,Surbiton Station,BR,building,Waiting Room,Fare,Fare zone6,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6XD -

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Keywords: LDN,Comedy,South West Trains,TOC,Stagecoach,railway,BR,display,British Railways,Clapham Junction,Waterloo,Jingle Bells,UK,GB,fun,Train Operating Company,station,platform,deck the halls,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6Y6 - London train stations have been given a festive makeover with a series of Christmas puns.
South West Trains made the change to celebrate the coming of the Christmas holidays and provide some much-needed cheer to long-suffering London commuters.
Delighted passengers have been sharing pictures and video of the new names, which include London Winterloo and Deck the Vauxhall.
Other highlights included Three Kingston, New Mald-wine and Raynesdeer Park

Description
Keywords: Caledonian,railway,Caledonian railway,names,to the honoured memory of the men,served,the railways,in memoriam,sacrificed,their,lives,Glasgow Central,Great War,Glaswegian,Glaswegians,G1,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ66C - Inscription:
To the honoured memory of the men of the Caledonian Railway who gave their lives for their country in the Great War 1914 - 1918
Adam, Harry Alexander, David Alexander, John Allan, Matthew Allison, George Anderson, John Anderson, John Anderson, Thomas Anderson, Thomas Anderson, William Archibald, Geo. Archibald, John Archibald, Robert Baillie, John Baird, William Bairden, Andrew Ballantyne W. G. Ballentine, Jas. Barclay, Geo. Barclay, Robert Barker, Herbert R. Barnes, Douglas Barnes, John Barnes, John Barr, William Barron, John Bateman, Henry Beaton, John Begg, William Pollock Bell, John W. Bell, Robert Bell, Thomas Black, Francis A. Black, Henry Blair, Jas. McLay Blair, John A. Blythman, Charles Borland, Henry Borthwick, Hugh Boyd, Hugh Boyd, Robert S. Boyle, John Boyle, John Boyle, Patrick Boyle, Peter Boyles, Charles Braid, George Briggs, Wiliam C. Brodie, Thomas R. Brodie, William Brooks, Robert Brough, Alfred Brown, Charles Brown, Donald Brown, George Brown, Hugh Brown, James Brown, James Brown, Thomas Brown, Thomas Brown, William Brown, William J. Brownlie, John Bruce, Robert Buchanan, Jas. Buchanan, John Buchanan, Lauchlan Budd, James Buick, William Burnett, Geo. Burnett, Gladstone Burns, David Burrell, Adam Butchart, William Cairney, William Cairns, William Calderwood, William Cameron, Peter Cameron, Robert Cameron, Roderick Campbell, Jas. Campbell, Jas. Campbell, John Campbell, John Campbell, John Campbell, John K. Campbell, Matthew J. Campbell, Samuel Campbell, William Campbell, William S. Cargill, Daniel Cartner, John Casey, Bernard Cation, Thomas Chalmers, Archibald Chapman, John Cherry, Thomas Chilcott, Edward Christie, Jas. Church, Robert Clapperton, John Clark, Alexander Clark, James Clark, John B. Clark, Robert Cleghorn, Herbert S. Clink, John Cloughley, David Coates, Alexander Cogan, John Colquhoun, Archibald Colvin, James Connell, Hugh Connor, John J. Cooper, Hubert Couper, Thomas S. Cowan, Alexander Cowan, and others....

Description
Keywords: Caledonian,railway,Caledonian railway,names,to the honoured memory of the men,served,the railways,in memoriam,sacrificed,their,lives,Glasgow Central,Great War,Glaswegian,Glaswegians,G1,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ66R - Inscription:
To the honoured memory of the men of the Caledonian Railway who gave their lives for their country in the Great War 1914 - 1918
Adam, Harry Alexander, David Alexander, John Allan, Matthew Allison, George Anderson, John Anderson, John Anderson, Thomas Anderson, Thomas Anderson, William Archibald, Geo. Archibald, John Archibald, Robert Baillie, John Baird, William Bairden, Andrew Ballantyne W. G. Ballentine, Jas. Barclay, Geo. Barclay, Robert Barker, Herbert R. Barnes, Douglas Barnes, John Barnes, John Barr, William Barron, John Bateman, Henry Beaton, John Begg, William Pollock Bell, John W. Bell, Robert Bell, Thomas Black, Francis A. Black, Henry Blair, Jas. McLay Blair, John A. Blythman, Charles Borland, Henry Borthwick, Hugh Boyd, Hugh Boyd, Robert S. Boyle, John Boyle, John Boyle, Patrick Boyle, Peter Boyles, Charles Braid, George Briggs, Wiliam C. Brodie, Thomas R. Brodie, William Brooks, Robert Brough, Alfred Brown, Charles Brown, Donald Brown, George Brown, Hugh Brown, James Brown, James Brown, Thomas Brown, Thomas Brown, William Brown, William J. Brownlie, John Bruce, Robert Buchanan, Jas. Buchanan, John Buchanan, Lauchlan Budd, James Buick, William Burnett, Geo. Burnett, Gladstone Burns, David Burrell, Adam Butchart, William Cairney, William Cairns, William Calderwood, William Cameron, Peter Cameron, Robert Cameron, Roderick Campbell, Jas. Campbell, Jas. Campbell, John Campbell, John Campbell, John Campbell, John K. Campbell, Matthew J. Campbell, Samuel Campbell, William Campbell, William S. Cargill, Daniel Cartner, John Casey, Bernard Cation, Thomas Chalmers, Archibald Chapman, John Cherry, Thomas Chilcott, Edward Christie, Jas. Church, Robert Clapperton, John Clark, Alexander Clark, James Clark, John B. Clark, Robert Cleghorn, Herbert S. Clink, John Cloughley, David Coates, Alexander Cogan, John Colquhoun, Archibald Colvin, James Connell, Hugh Connor, John J. Cooper, Hubert Couper, Thomas S. Cowan, Alexander Cowan, and others....

Description
Keywords: SNP,Hollyrood,back,into,state,ownership,after,poor,service,renationalise,nationalised,TOC,national,late,overcrowded,trains,fines,fine,penalty,penalties,transport,travel,infrastructure,slow,packed,Dutch,operator,devolved,powers,Scottish National Party,train operating company,Scotrail Franchise,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,livery,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre,Scotrail problems,Scotrail delays,Scot Rail problems,Scot rail delays
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ697 - Thousands sign petition calling for Dutch firm Abellio to be stripped of ScotRail contract
THE Dutch firm running ScotRail have come under constant criticism due to the poor performances. NEARLY 14,000 people have called for the controversial Dutch firm in charge of ??Scotland's train ??service to be stripped of their contract unless ScotRail improves.
The online petition urges the Scottish ??Government to take action against ??Abellio over the delays and cancellations suffered by commuters using ScotRail. The firm have already been hit with ?1.5million in fines for poor service.

Description
Keywords: SNP,Hollyrood,back,into,state,ownership,after,poor,service,renationalise,nationalised,TOC,national,late,overcrowded,trains,fines,fine,penalty,penalties,transport,travel,infrastructure,slow,packed,Dutch,operator,devolved,powers,Scottish National Party,train operating company,Scotrail Franchise,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,livery,Alba,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre,Scotrail problems,Scotrail delays,Scot Rail problems,Scot rail delays,Reile na h-Alba
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6A3 - Thousands sign petition calling for Dutch firm Abellio to be stripped of ScotRail contract
THE Dutch firm running ScotRail have come under constant criticism due to the poor performances. NEARLY 14,000 people have called for the controversial Dutch firm in charge of ??Scotland's train ??service to be stripped of their contract unless ScotRail improves.
The online petition urges the Scottish ??Government to take action against ??Abellio over the delays and cancellations suffered by commuters using ScotRail. The firm have already been hit with ?1.5million in fines for poor service.

Description
Keywords: SNP,Hollyrood,back,into,state,ownership,after,poor,service,renationalise,nationalised,TOC,national,late,overcrowded,trains,fines,fine,penalty,penalties,transport,travel,infrastructure,slow,packed,Dutch,operator,devolved,powers,Scottish National Party,train operating company,Scotrail Franchise,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,livery,3,three,Alba,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre,Scotrail problems,Scotrail delays,Scot Rail problems,Scot rail delays,Reile na h-Alba
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6BX - Thousands sign petition calling for Dutch firm Abellio to be stripped of ScotRail contract
THE Dutch firm running ScotRail have come under constant criticism due to the poor performances. NEARLY 14,000 people have called for the controversial Dutch firm in charge of ??Scotland's train ??service to be stripped of their contract unless ScotRail improves.
The online petition urges the Scottish ??Government to take action against ??Abellio over the delays and cancellations suffered by commuters using ScotRail. The firm have already been hit with ?1.5million in fines for poor service.

Description
Keywords: Wealth,empire,night,dusk,nightshot,dark,in the dark,arch,stone,building,architecture,grand,grandeur,wealth,rich,riches,Merchant City area,City Lights,Glasgow Building,Glasgow Buildings,Dec,Christmas,December,Winter,curtain,light,lights,shopping,bar,pub,bars,entertainment,gallery,GOMA,royal,exchange,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,The Citation Bars,Citation,glaswegians,glaswegian,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ5MJ - The medieval Glasgow Cross was located on the road between High Street and Saltgait. Its modern replacement was built to the south-east of the original location to aid traffic. The town's tron was placed on the steeple of the town house in the 1550s. The Tron Steeple, as it became known, still stands in Glasgow Cross, one of the few remaining pre-Victorian buildings in Glasgow.
The area now known as 'Merchant City' was developed from the 1750s onwards. Residences and warehouses of the wealthy merchant tobacco lords (who prospered in shipping and, amongst other things, tobacco, sugar and tea) were built in the area. The district west of the High Street formed the historic backbone of the city, the development of what is now known as with wide, straight streets, vistas, and squares, marked the beginning of a process of aspirational residential movement westwards that would continue throughout the 19th century and into the 20th with the development of Blythswood Hill, Hillhead and the West End of Glasgow.

Description
Keywords: City Centre,office,building,architecture,G1,30,St Vincent,Pl,place,Victorian,old,Bank,Chambers,chamber,PLC,headquarter,office,banking,money,licence,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ5WT -

Description
Keywords: Glaswegian,hello,Hello Glasgow,lit,lighted,up,illumination,illuminated,Hola,Glasgow,neon,sign,city,centre,Glasgow!,signs,electric,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ5YG -

Description
Keywords: SNP,Hollyrood,back,into,state,ownership,after,poor,service,renationalise,nationalised,TOC,national,late,overcrowded,trains,fines,fine,penalty,penalties,transport,travel,infrastructure,slow,packed,Dutch,operator,devolved,powers,Scottish National Party,train operating company,Scotrail Franchise,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,livery,Motherwell,Strathclyde,dusk,evening,morning,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre,Scotrail problems,Scotrail delays,Scot Rail problems,Scot rail delays
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ619 - Thousands sign petition calling for Dutch firm Abellio to be stripped of ScotRail contract
THE Dutch firm running ScotRail have come under constant criticism due to the poor performances. NEARLY 14,000 people have called for the controversial Dutch firm in charge of ??Scotland's train ??service to be stripped of their contract unless ScotRail improves.
The online petition urges the Scottish ??Government to take action against ??Abellio over the delays and cancellations suffered by commuters using ScotRail. The firm have already been hit with ?1.5million in fines for poor service.

Description
Keywords: subway,images,mural,tile,tiles,tiled,murals,famous,places,famous places,Lanarkshire,Scotland,deprevation,person,with,with person,shopper,old,man,woman,holding bags,holding,bag,North,North Lanarkshire,crime,danger,walking,crime,hotspot,poor,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ64P - For other things to do in Motherwell - see this link:
https://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Attractions-g551774-Activities-Motherwell_North_Lanarkshire_Scotland.html

Description
Keywords: subway,images,mural,tile,tiles,tiled,murals,famous,places,famous places,Lanarkshire,Scotland,deprevation,person,with,with person,shopper,old,man,woman,holding bags,holding,bag,North,North Lanarkshire,crime,danger,poor,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Motherwell,problem,with,problem with,issue with,Town,Centre,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,British Isles,Motherwell Town Centre,Town Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ64T - For other things to do in Motherwell - see this link:
https://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Attractions-g551774-Activities-Motherwell_North_Lanarkshire_Scotland.html

Description
Keywords: WCML,repayment,rebate,credit,TOC,compensation,for,late,rail,journey,DelayRepay,VirginTrains,timetable,NRCoT,late,trains,train,franchise,privatised,renationalised,private,fragmented,infrastructure,railway,refund,refunded,Train Operating Company,West Coast Trains Limited,West Coast Trains Ltd,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,BR,Scottish,British,Welsh,problem,with,problem with,issue with,TOC,TOCs,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,fail,infrastructure,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,Expensive,ticket,price,prices,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,British Isles,train operating companies,National Rail Conditions of Travel,ticket prices
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ5KF - The National Rail Conditions of Travel (NRCoT) are a contractual document setting out the consumer's rights and responsibilities when travelling on the National Rail railway network in Great Britain. These replaced the National Rail Conditions of Carriage (NRCoC) as of October 1st 2016.
When a train ticket is purchased, a contract is established. The NRCoT are the principal terms of that contract between traveller and train operating company (TOC), which have been established by the Rail Settlement Plan, which is part of the Association of Train Operating Companies. The document is available for public viewing at the National Rail website, and also as a free PDF download.
Additional terms do apply to travellers, primarily from two sources:
For certain ticket types (such as those purchased at discount in advance), the TOCs concerned apply additional terms and conditions on top of the NRCoT.
The NRCoT cover the entitlement and restrictions of travellers, however they are not the only document to do so. Under the Transport Act 2000 (section 219), the Railway Bylaws also apply, though more generally.
Whilst the NRCoT are referred to on all train tickets, at stations, and on internet sites selling tickets for rail travel, very few travellers ever bother to read the document, unless they find themselves in dispute with a rail company on some matter. They are, however, of use to the consumer, because they afford considerable rights to the traveller with regards ticket validity. This has become a matter of significant public interest recently, in view of the complex and convoluted pricing structure of rail tickets in Great Britain.

Description
Keywords: Wealth,empire,night,dusk,nightshot,dark,in the dark,arch,stone,building,architecture,grand,grandeur,wealth,rich,riches,Merchant City area,City Lights,Glasgow Building,Glasgow Buildings,Dec,Christmas,December,Winter,curtain,light,lights,shopping,bar,pub,bars,entertainment,gallery,GOMA,royal,exchange,GoTonySmith,Glasgow,British,Isles,Glasgow,City,Centre,City,Centre,Stock,Images,Tony,Smith,United,Kingdom,Great,Britain,British,Isles,City,Centre,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Entrance,gate,Entrance,gate,arch,entrance,arch,glaswegians,glaswegian,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,English,England,Shakespeare,tourism,tourist,tour,destination,city,centre,Mancunian,Manc
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ5KN - The medieval Glasgow Cross was located on the road between High Street and Saltgait. Its modern replacement was built to the south-east of the original location to aid traffic. The town's tron was placed on the steeple of the town house in the 1550s. The Tron Steeple, as it became known, still stands in Glasgow Cross, one of the few remaining pre-Victorian buildings in Glasgow.
The area now known as 'Merchant City' was developed from the 1750s onwards. Residences and warehouses of the wealthy merchant tobacco lords (who prospered in shipping and, amongst other things, tobacco, sugar and tea) were built in the area. The district west of the High Street formed the historic backbone of the city, the development of what is now known as with wide, straight streets, vistas, and squares, marked the beginning of a process of aspirational residential movement westwards that would continue throughout the 19th century and into the 20th with the development of Blythswood Hill, Hillhead and the West End of Glasgow.

Description
Keywords: Wealth,empire,night,dusk,nightshot,dark,in the dark,arch,stone,building,architecture,grand,grandeur,wealth,rich,riches,Merchant City area,City Lights,Glasgow Building,Glasgow Buildings,Dec,Christmas,December,Winter,curtain,light,lights,shopping,bar,pub,bars,entertainment,gallery,GOMA,royal,exchange,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,sign,gold,golden,words,glaswegians,glaswegian,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre,Merchant City
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ5KT - The medieval Glasgow Cross was located on the road between High Street and Saltgait. Its modern replacement was built to the south-east of the original location to aid traffic. The town's tron was placed on the steeple of the town house in the 1550s. The Tron Steeple, as it became known, still stands in Glasgow Cross, one of the few remaining pre-Victorian buildings in Glasgow.
The area now known as 'Merchant City' was developed from the 1750s onwards. Residences and warehouses of the wealthy merchant tobacco lords (who prospered in shipping and, amongst other things, tobacco, sugar and tea) were built in the area. The district west of the High Street formed the historic backbone of the city, the development of what is now known as with wide, straight streets, vistas, and squares, marked the beginning of a process of aspirational residential movement westwards that would continue throughout the 19th century and into the 20th with the development of Blythswood Hill, Hillhead and the West End of Glasgow.

Description
Keywords: Wealth,empire,night,dusk,nightshot,dark,in the dark,arch,stone,building,architecture,grand,grandeur,wealth,rich,riches,Merchant City area,City Lights,Glasgow Building,Glasgow Buildings,Dec,Christmas,December,Winter,curtain,light,lights,shopping,bar,pub,bars,entertainment,gallery,GOMA,royal,exchange,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,GOMA,and,traffic cone,traffic,cone,on,head,of,Duke Of Wellington,Duke,Wellington,statue,glaswegians,glaswegian,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ5MB - The medieval Glasgow Cross was located on the road between High Street and Saltgait. Its modern replacement was built to the south-east of the original location to aid traffic. The town's tron was placed on the steeple of the town house in the 1550s. The Tron Steeple, as it became known, still stands in Glasgow Cross, one of the few remaining pre-Victorian buildings in Glasgow.
The area now known as 'Merchant City' was developed from the 1750s onwards. Residences and warehouses of the wealthy merchant tobacco lords (who prospered in shipping and, amongst other things, tobacco, sugar and tea) were built in the area. The district west of the High Street formed the historic backbone of the city, the development of what is now known as with wide, straight streets, vistas, and squares, marked the beginning of a process of aspirational residential movement westwards that would continue throughout the 19th century and into the 20th with the development of Blythswood Hill, Hillhead and the West End of Glasgow.

Description
Keywords: trains,traveler,journey,traveller,travelers,infrasructure,infrastructure,Network,transit,TOC,privatised,public,ownership,public,building,Victorian,platform,Scotrail,City,Centre,Glasgow Central,City Centre,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scottish,British,Scotland,Street,Glasgow,G1,3SL,at,dusk,evening,red,lights,dawn,travel,tourism,delay,Virgin,trains,WCML,Virgin,trains,WCML,West,Coast,Main,Line,Intercity,Inter-City,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,British Isles,Gordon St,G1 3SL,Gordon Street,Gordon St,Platform passengers,In The Evening,On the platform,Dawn Train,Network Rail,Virgin Trains,Virgin Trains,Main Line
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy H9PM3E -

Description
Keywords: transport,rail,train,passenger,journey,traveller,passengers,infrasructure,infrastructure,Network,transit,TOC,privatised,public,public,building,Victorian,platform,Scotrail,Euston,Passengers boarding,West Coast Main Line,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scottish,British,Scotland,Street,Glasgow,G1,3SL,at,dusk,evening,red,lights,dawn,travel,tourism,light,daytime,Virgin,trains,WCML,West,Coast,Main,Line,Intercity,Inter-City,City,Centre,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,British Isles,Gordon St,G1 3SL,Gordon Street,Gordon St,Platform passengers,In The Evening,On the platform,Dawn Train,Network Rail,walking down the platform,Virgin Trains,Main Line,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy H9PM3F -

Description
Keywords: UK,platform,building,brickwork,line,rails,empty,lonely,cold,GoTonySmith,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,no,train,trains,strike,strikes,main,Carlisle,Citadel,city,Railway,BR,railways,infrastructure,Cumbria,bridge,Victorian,platforms,mainline,WCML,NetworkRail,Network Rail
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy EY3RJJ -

Description
Keywords: rail,railway,improvements,HS1,high,speed,activists,facts,protest,protesters,demo,demonstration,village,community,Bridgewater,St,Street,Cheshire,England,UK,infrastructure,stop,local,resistance,sign,signs,train,trains,High Speed,Public Meeting,Stop HS2,Local Resistance,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,delayed,delays,costs,increases,Manchester To Crewe
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy DDXKNA -

Description
Keywords: infra,red,film,image,summer,busy,princess,st,street,old,town,Scotland,UK,Lothian,Lothians,August,festival,tattoo,scottish,cities,city,Play,Fair,down,blue,Scots,Tourism,tourists,things,to,see,example,of,old,streetlight,street,light,gotonysmith,suitable,for,a,brochure,leaflet,photo,guide,photoguide,to,photographers,the,infrared,edinburgh,city,centre,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Infra red
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy D8HT5B - Edinburgh city, Playfair steps in IR Infrared, Scotland UK

Description
Keywords: An,Art,Nouveau,Paris,metro,station,entrance,taken,with,an,IR,Infra-Red,adapted,Canon,5D,camera,DSLR,France,Europe,french,capital,unusual,gotonysmith,Guimard,entrances,tube,mass,transit,720nm,infrared,cast-iron,balustrade,decorated,in,plant-like,motifs,accompanied by a M??tropolitain sign supported,cast,iron,two,orange,globes,atop,ornate,cast-iron,supports,in,the,form,of,plant,stems,Metropolitan,Metropolitain,gotonysmith,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy D8HF87 - An Art Nouveau Paris metro station entrance taken with an IR Infra-Red adapted Canon 5D camera, France, Europe

Description
Keywords: Manchester,UK,city,townhall,town,hall,gothic,building,buildings,clock,tower,tony,smith,tonysmith,tonysmithhotpix,hotpix,ir,R72,hoya,infrared,infra,red,720nm,filter,colour,color,GB,great,britain
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 5894106036 - 'Completed by architect Alfred Waterhouse in 1877, the building features imposing murals by the artist Ford Madox Brown depicting important events in the history of the city. The Town Hall was rated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building in 1952 and the Town Hall Extension, completed in 1938, was Grade II* listed in 1974. Attop the clocktower is a golden cottonseed. A testament to the original source of the city's rapid growth and wealth.
The planning for a new Town Hall began in 1863. After an investigation of suitable sites, including Piccadilly, the site chosen for the new town hall was an oddly shaped triangle facing onto Albert Square. The choice of location was influenced by a desire to provide a central, accessible, but relatively quiet site in a respectable district, close to Manchester's banks and municipal offices, next to a large open area, suitable for the display of a fine building.
A competition was held to design the Town Hall. Of the 137 entries in open competition for the design, Waterhouse's design was chosen, mainly for his ingenious planning, and he was appointed as architect on 1 April 1868.
The foundation stone of the new Town Hall was laid on 26 October 1868 by the Lord Mayor of Manchester, Robert Neill. Construction took nine years, used fourteen million bricks,[6] and cost \u00a3775,000 (\u00a353.5 million as of 2011). The Town Hall was opened by Lord Mayor Abel Heywood, who had championed the project, on 13 September 1877, after Queen Victoria's refusal to attend the opening.
The building exemplifies the Victorian Gothic revival style of architecture, using themes and elements from 13th-century Early English Gothic architecture. The choice was influenced by the wish for a spiritual acknowledgement of Manchester's late medieval heritage in the textile trade of the Hanseatic league and also an affirmation of modernity, the fashionable neo-Gothic style being preferred over the Neoclassical architecture favoured in neighbouring Liverpool. The exterior, faced with hard sandstone quarried near Bradford, Yorkshire, known as 'Spinkwell stone',[9] is decorated with sculptures of important figures in Manchester's history. The interior is faced with multi-coloured Architectural terracotta by Gibbs and Canning Limited. The painted ceilings were provided by Best &
Lea of Manchester, who had also provided the ceilings in the Natural History Museum, London, also designed by Alfred Waterhouse.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>Manchester stuff from my photostream.
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(c) Hotpix / HotpixUK Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC
()',

Description
Keywords: Manchester,gothic,town,hall,Albert,Square,Manchester,England,taken,with,an,IR,adapted,Canon,5D,DSLR,camera,infra-red,infra,red,720nm,720,nm,victorian,building,buildings,bright,foliage,wide,angle,M2,5DB,M25DB,revival,architecture,Alfred,Waterhouse,Neo-gothic,municipal,building,neogothic,gotonysmith,Manchester,city,council,corporation,HQ,headquarters,local,government,region,regional,gotonysmith,Mancester,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy D8HF7X - Manchester gothic town hall , Albert Square, Manchester, England taken with an IR adapted Canon 5D DSLR camera
Manchester Town Hall is a Victorian, Neo-gothic municipal building in Manchester, England. It is the ceremonial headquarters of Manchester City Council and houses a number of local government departments.
Designed by architect Alfred Waterhouse the town hall was completed in 1877. The building occupies a triangular site facing Albert Square and contains offices and grand ceremonial rooms such as the Great Hall which is decorated with the imposing Manchester Murals by Ford Madox Brown illustrating the history of the city. The entrance and Sculpture Hall contain busts and statues of influential figures including Dalton, Joule and Barbirolli. The exterior is dominated by the clock tower which rises to 87 metres (285 feet) and houses Great Abel, the clock bell.
In 1938, a detached Town Hall Extension was completed and is connected by two covered bridges over Lloyd Street. The town hall, which was granted Grade I listed building status on 25 February 1952, is regarded as one of the finest interpretations of Gothic revival architecture in the world

Description
Keywords: Tony,smith,infra,red,infrared,IR,720nm,filter,adapted,camera,UK,ACS,false,color,colour,spring,foliage,leaf,leaves,Europe,trip,what,see,lone,man,boy,male,old,historic,capital,HDR,wide,angle,wide angle,play,sexy,fair,sex,harry,royal,british,#tonysmith,#hotpix,#tonysmithhotpix,Edinburgh Photography,edimburgh
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 5666139680 - 'The Playfair steps pay homage to architect William Henry Playfair FRSE (15 July 1790 \u2013 19 March 1857). Leading from the top of Market Street down to the square at the Mound, The Art Galleries, Princes Street and Princes Street Gardens.
Although they are as old as Auld Reekie herself, the current name dates from only just over 30 years ago.
They were renamed Playfair Steps by then Rt Hon Lord Provest, Kenneth W Borthwick on 21st April 1978. He held that post from 1977.
They were originally, The Mound Steps 1853/1972, then John Knox Way 1972/78 before Playfair steps 78 onwards. Thanks to Nicola for helping me with the history.
He was undoubtedly one of the greatest Scottish architects of the 19th century, designer of many of Edinburgh's neo-classical landmarks in the New Town.
Two of his finest works are the neo-classical buildings of the National Gallery of Scotland and the Royal Scottish Academy which are situated in the centre of Edinburgh, to the left of these steps. The Playfair Project completed in 2004 joined the two historic buildings with an underground link.
He was greatly inspired by a trip to Athens.
Playfair died in Edinburgh on 19 March 1857, and is buried in Edinburgh's Dean Cemetery, where he designed a number of monuments for others, including Lord Jeffrey.
This is an infrared shot taken with a 720nm adapted SLR. It is more convenient to use than using a Hoya R72 for IR. This spring day was heavy in infrared.
Hopefully this will be a distraction for everyone hooked today on the Kate (Catherine) Middleton and Prince William royal wedding at Westminster Abbey. In different times it might have taken place in Edinburgh and there may have been several monarchs, kings &
queens in what is now the UK. Just some food for thought. Enjoy your day if you are watching it on TV or just spending the morning buying some 3x2 at Homebase.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>infra-red from my photostream.
Keep in touch, add me as a contact www.flickr.com/relationship.gne?id=33062170@N08 so I can follow all your new uploads.
(c) TonySmith Hotpix / HotpixUK
( )',

Description
Keywords: Lymm,village,cheshire,Warrington,UK,England,Tony,Smith,Hotpix,hot,pix,hotpics,pics,picks,hotpicks,tonysmithhotpix,colour,infra,red,color,IR,720nm,filter,adapted,camera
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 5653993839 - 'The name Lymm, is of Celtic origins, means a 'place of running water' and is likely derived from an ancient stream that ran through the village centre. The Bridgewater canal (a rare one with no locks), runs through the village diagonally to the original stream.
Lymm village centre is a designated conservation area, notable for its historic buildings, both listed and unlisted. These include the French-style terracotta former Lymm Town Hall (currently unlisted)
Oughtrington Hall &
Lodge, formerly owned by a cadet branch of the Leigh family and now Lymm High School
Lymm Hall, a former Domville family residence
Foxley Hall, home to a cadet branch of the ancient Booth family, before ownership passed to the Carlisle family is no longer standing, but fustian cutting cottages on Booth's Hill Road and Arley Grove do survive. The parish church of St Peter's Church, Oughtrington is an example of Gothic Revival architecture.
St Mary's Church, Lymm is next to Lymm Dam. By 1850 an earlier 14th century building was in disrepair, and the Newcastle architect John Dobson was commissioned to rebuild it. The 1521 tower was retained and raised, but the additional stonework meant that the tower had to be rebuilt in 1887.
Lymm's village cross, known simply as 'The Cross', is a Grade I listed structure.
This is an infrared shot taken with a 720nm adapted SLR. It is more convenient to use than using a Hoya R72 for IR. This spring day was heavy in infrared.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>infra-red from my photostream.
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(c) TonySmith Hotpix / HotpixUK
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Description
Keywords: tony,smith,hotpix,tonysmith,tonysmithhotpix,ir,720nm,720,R72,Hoya,infra,red,infrared,Dublin,Trinity,college,university,Ireland,Eire,Republic,spring,europa,europe,euro,sun,education,educacion,false,color,colour,5d,mkii,mk2,5dmk2,5dmkii,pano,panorama,join,joiner,stitch,stitched,stitcher,autostitch,#tonysmithotpix
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 5601384233 - 'School Mam - 'The Stranglers' - Play this track here..
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
Gives herself to teacher although he doesn't know
Works herself into a frenzied state and it shows....'
*** By Request ***
This is a track from 'No more heroes' the second Stranglers album. It was produced by Martin Rushent, and released in 1977. The classic cover featured a photo of a wreath placed on a coffin with the tails of several rats (the Stranglers' 'trademark'). It was one of the first albums I bought, after many plugs on the John Peel show.
They are said to be the longest-surviving and most 'continuously successful' band to have originated in the UK punk scene of the mid to late 1970s. Beginning life as the Guildford Stranglers on the 11th September 1974 with pub rock origins.
The Stranglers' early sound was driven by Jean-Jacques Burnel's melodic bass, but also gave prominence to Dave Greenfield's keyboards at a time when the instrument was seen as unfashionable. Their early music was also characterised by the growling vocals and sometimes misanthropic lyrics of both Jean-Jacques Burnel and Hugh Cornwell.
To hear more (for my money), checkout any or all of the first 3 albums: Rattus Norvegicus (1977), No More Heroes (1977) &
Black and White (1978 - I still have a promo grey/white vinyl version in my loft). Do tell 'em I sent you...
------------------------
Trinity College, Dublin (TCD
Irish: Col\u00e1iste na Tr\u00edon\u00f3ide, Baile \u00c1tha Cliath), formally known as the College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, was founded in 1592 by letters patent from Queen Elizabeth I as the 'mother of a university', and is the only constituent college of the University of Dublin. Located in Dublin, Ireland, it is Ireland's oldest university.
Trinity was set up in part to consolidate the rule of the Tudor monarchy in Ireland, and it was seen as the university of the Protestant Ascendancy for much of its history
although Roman Catholics and Dissenters had been permitted to enter as early as 1793, certain restrictions on their membership of the college remained until 1873 (professorships, fellowships and scholarships were reserved for Protestants) , and the Catholic Church in Ireland forbade its adherents, without permission from their bishop, from attending until 1970. Women were first admitted to the college as full members in 1904.
Its a cool place, make time in your busy life to spend an afternoon there.
This is the place to see the Book Of Kells or just to enjoy the green on a sunny afternoon. My thanks to MOB (you know who you are) for the suggested Dublin tour. I met some old friends and old ghosts during my afternoon.
This shot uses a 720nm filter and is composed of 4 x colour infrared shots joined in a panorama. Original size 11,400x2,800pixels.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>neat architechture from my photostream.
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(c) TonySmith Hotpix / HotpixUK
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Description
Keywords: tony,smith,tonysmith,hotpix,tonysmithhotpix,stelphins,st,saint,elphin,elphins,elfins,warrington,town,cheshire,UK,england,chapel,cathedral,colour,color,infra,red,infrared,IR,R72,720nm
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 5787275251 - 'The church is dominated by its spire, 281 feet (86 m) high. It is the seventh highest in the country, the fifth highest parish church in the UK, after the St. Walburge's Church, Preston, St. James Church, Louth, St Mary Redcliffe, and St. Wulfram's Church, Grantham.
Within the church, St Ann's Chapel was founded by Thomas Massey, rector of Warrington from 1448 to 1464. It continued to belong to the Massey family until they died out in 1748. The chapel was then acquired by the Patten family who built a vault to bury members of the family, the last being Lord Winmarleigh in 1892. The Lady Chapel was founded and endowed by Sir John Boteler in 1290. He and other family members were buried in the chapel. In 1943 it became the chapel of the South Lancashire Regiment and in 1976 the chapel of The Queen's Lancashire Regiment.
The gateway to the church dates from the 18th century. It consists of two stone rusticated gate piers surmounted by a cornice and urns. Between these are two iron gates over which is a curved iron arch. To the sides are low stone side walls and small iron side gates for pedestrians. The gateway is listed Grade II. Also listed Grade II are the cobbles and the pavement leading to the gateway.
IR image taken with an adapted 720nm sensor.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>church &
cathedral images from my photostream.
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(c) TonySmith Hotpix / HotpixUK
( )',

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,capital,traffic sign,Ireland,contemporary design,urban,cityscape,skyline,modern,triangular sign,give way sign,street furniture,transport,road safety,blue sky,daylight,office buildings,docklands,Grand Canal Dock,financial district,urban development,European city,city life,reflective glass,infrastructure,public realm,summer,light,unique,lighting,street,streetscape,future,futuristic,D02 PA03,D02
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2R59WKD - This photograph shows a triangular yield road sign in the foreground, set against the modern glass fa??ade of the Grand Canal Theatre, now known as the Bord G?is Energy Theatre, located at Grand Canal Dock in Dublin. The image was taken in daylight under clear blue skies, highlighting the strong contrast between the red-bordered traffic sign and the reflective grid of the contemporary office and cultural buildings behind it.
The yield sign, a standard element of road safety infrastructure, represents regulation, priority, and controlled movement within urban transport systems. Its placement within the rapidly developed Docklands area illustrates the intersection of everyday traffic management with high-profile cultural and commercial architecture.
The surrounding buildings, characterised by steel frames and extensive glazing, reflect the regeneration of Dublin's Docklands from former industrial and port land into a modern mixed-use district housing offices, theatres, and public spaces. The clean lines and geometric repetition of the glass panels reinforce the contemporary character of the area.
Images such as this are often used to illustrate themes of urban development, transport infrastructure, road safety, modern European cities, and the coexistence of cultural landmarks with functional street furniture. The composition also lends itself to conceptual interpretations around caution, priority, and balance within fast-changing urban environments.

Description
Keywords: infrared,infra,red,b/w,mono,monochrome,scottish,border infrared,borders,UK,scotland,blue,toned,R72,filter,Hoya,tony,smith,tonysmith,hotpix,tonysmithhotpix,hotpics,hot,pix,pics,picks,hotpicks,music,HDR,digital,IR,digitalIR,landscape,church,building,spooky,mystery,mysterious,night,TheUnforgettablePictures,cool,tonesmith,tone,#tonysmithotpix
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 4975207086 - 'History - 'Cast' - Play this track here.
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
Cast are an English rock band from Liverpool, formed in 1992 by John Power (vocals, guitar) and Peter Wilkinson (backing vocals, bass) after Power left The La's and Wilkinson's former band Shack had split. Following early line-ups with different guitarists and drummers, Liam 'Skin' Tyson (guitar) and Keith O'Neill (drums) joined Cast in 1993.
Emerging from the Britpop movement of the mid-1990s, Cast signed to Polydor Records and their debut album All Change (1995) became the highest selling album for the label. Further commercial success continued with the albums Mother Nature Calls (1997) and Magic Hour (1999), however the band's fourth album Beetroot (2001) was far less successful which led to the band's split soon after.
Cast are set to reunite for a UK tour in November 2010, although I haven't got a ticket yet. The last time I saw them was at a V festival in warrington on a bill with Pulp and the excellent Elastica.
The 1995 album 'All Change' is probably the one to track down if you fancy hearing some more of this stuff.
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Melrose Abbey is a Gothic-style abbey in Melrose, Scotland. It was founded in 1136 by Cistercian monks, on the request of King David I of Scotland. It was headed by the Abbot or Commendator of Melrose. Today the abbey is maintained by Historic Scotland (open all year
entrance charge). The ruins of Melrose are widely considered among the most beautiful of religious houses in the United Kingdom, being especially notable for a wealth of well-preserved figure-sculpture, and its architecture is considered to be some of the finest in Scotland.
The east end of the abbey was completed in 1146. Other buildings in the complex were added over the next 50 years. The abbey was built in the form of a St. John's cross. A considerable portion of the abbey is now in ruins, though a structure dating from 1590 is maintained as a museum open to the public.
Alexander II and other Scottish kings and nobles are buried at the abbey. The embalmed heart of Robert the Bruce is also said to rest on the abbey's grounds, while the rest of his body is buried in Dunfermline Abbey. In 1812, a stone coffin that some speculated was that of Michael Scot the philosopher and 'wizard', was found in an aisle in the abbey's south chancel.
This is an infra red joiner panorama taken with a Hoya R72 filter.
NB: Like all the images on this stream, full size prints up to 30x20inches are available, Check my profile for how to contact me.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>B/W stuff from my photostream.
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(c) Hotpix / HotpixUK Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC
( )',

Description
Keywords: digital,IR,infra,red,infrared,pub,drinking,drinks,bars,warrington,wilderspool,cheshire,england,UK,tony,smith,tonysmith,hotpix,hotpics,hotpicks,tonysmithhotpix,stocktonheath,stockton,heath,WBC,HDR,#tonysmithotpix
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 5241989299 - 'The Bartender &
the Thief - 'Stereophonics' - Play this track feature=fvst\' rel=\'nofollow\'>here.
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
Wales has been under represented in my iPod artists so far, so hopefully I can start to put that right here. 'The Bartender and the Thief' is a 1998 single by British rock band the Stereophonics. It was the first single taken from their second album Performance and Cocktails. It was released in November 1998 and reached no 3 in the UK charts.
The song, which is one of their heavier tracks, is frequently played amongst their live sets. During live performances, vocalist Kelly Jones has been known to utilise the two bars without vocals before the final chorus to reference the Motorhead song 'Ace of Spades'. The lyrics therefore are 'The ace of spades, the ace of spades. The bartender and the thief were lovers...'
Strangely, the song's full length intro only featured on the CD1 single (and in the music video), but was edited off the Performance &
Cocktails album.
------------------------
The Saracens Head was the 'brewery tap' pub next to the old Warrington Greenall's Brewery. The concern was founded by Thomas Greenall in 1762. Initially based in St Helens, the Company relocated to Warrington in 1787.
It ceased brewing in 1991 to concentrate on running pubs and hotels. Greenall's owned beer brands were brewed by Allied Breweries at their Leeds and Burton plant. Greenall's ale can still be bought in some pubs in the North West of England, although it is thankfully slowly disappearing and often only the 'Greenall's Mild' brand can be found.
For a short while I lived fairly close to the pub and enjoyed many a good guest pint in there. I was told it was a good place to pick up the odd piece of hot property, but no-one offered me anything while I was drinking there. It has rrecently been given a lick of paint and has become a JW Lees pub. When they are serving food, apparently the hand cut chips are worth a look.
This is a digital infra red shot taken with a Hoya R72 filter.
NB: Like all the images on this stream, full size images are available, Check my profile for how to contact me.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>Infra Red from my photostream.
Keep in touch, add me as a contact www.flickr.com/relationship.gne?id=33062170@N08 so I can follow all your new uploads.
(c) TonySmith Hotpix / HotpixUK
( )',

Description
Keywords: ipod,shuffle,ir,infra,red,infrared,r72,filter,blue,mono,toned,tonysmith,tony,smoth,hotpix,hot,pix,pics,hotpics,cross,music,#smith,#tonysmithhotpix,#tonysmithotpix
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 4799723148 - 'Made of Stone - 'The Stone Roses' - Play this track here.
?Whats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
Todays first track up on my Ipod shuffle was this one. Its is the first in my new set that hopefully will marry up some of my listening habits with some of my photographic ones!
I dont have chance to 'shuffle' every day, so unfortunately it wont be one a day, but do keep up if you can!
Salford Northern Soul club night DJ Ian Brown and animator John Squire were the hub of this band. A bit of a soundtrack to my own Madchester days back in the late 1980's. Blimey I must have spent a fortune in Aflecks Palace on dodgy Harris Tweed Jackets (check the Orb) and silk ties.
The brilliant first seminal album and the wrangling later with the Silvertone label is legendary. The Second Coming was good, but those four years delay took their toll. Ian Brown, now into his 10th solo album has gone on to better things including the 'Q Awards Legend Award' in 2007.
His 2001 track 'Fear' is one of my favourites. Apparently inspired by Malcolm X and his preaching of 'control through language', each line contains an acronym from the word 'fear'. EG 'Fallen empires are ruling'. Grab a listen here.
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
Plenty of stones here, old ones, gravestones of the great and the good.
St Mary's churchyard, Lymm Village, Cheshire UK. The church is a Grade II listed building overlooking Lymm Dam. The church is constructed buff sandstone and the graveyard contains several Stone Roses.
Hoya R72, Infra Red Filter.
NB: Like all the images on this stream, full size prints up to 30x20inches are available, Check my profile for how to contact me.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\'>buildings from my photostream.
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(c) Hotpix / HotpixUK Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC',

Description
Keywords: dunham,massey,altrincham,cheshire,greater,manchester,trafford,council,local,authority,NT,mill,Ir,infrared,tonysmith,hotpicks,hotpix,hotpics,hot,pix,tony,smith,sepia,b/w,ipod,music,#tonysmithhotpix,#tonysmithotpix
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 4868172747 - 'Down In The Park - 'Gary Numan' - Play this track here.
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
I remember Gary Numan coming out of the left field in 1979 with heavy synthesizer hooks fed through guitar effects pedals. At the time the likes of the Silicon Teens and The Normal (Warm Leatherette seemed to have the post punk synth sound licked.
Hammersmith boy, Gary Webb was original front man for Tubeway Army. 'Down In The Park' was Tubeway Armys third single and appeared on the Replicas album.
Replicas was based on a book Numan hoped to complete someday as a type of concept album. It was set in a not-too-distant future metropolis where Machmen (androids with cloned human skin) and other machines keep the general public cowed on orders from the Grey Men (shadowy officials).
Numan was directly inspired by the science fiction of Philip K. Dick, particularly the book 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?'.
Numan has become acknowledged and respected by his peers, with such musicians as Dave Grohl (of Foo Fighters and Nirvana), Trent Reznor (of Nine Inch Nails), and Marilyn Manson proclaiming his work an influence and recording cover versions of old Numan hits. If you have chance and inclination, checkout the 'Premier Hits' compilation for a good into to this forgotten pioneer.
If you like bands and music, m=tags&
w=33062170@N08&
s=int\'>checkout my band pix.
------------------------
Dunham Park covers an area of over 190 acres and is part of the Dunham Park Estate, run by the National Trust (NT). The park is mostly \u201cpasture-woodland or park-woodland\u201d and has been since the Middle Ages. Many of the oak trees, which make up the larger part of the woodland, date back to the 17th century. Dunham Park is the only place in the northwest of England with such a concentration of old trees, and one of only a few remaining in England, making it a site of national importance. The park supports a range of animals, including fallow deer. The old water mill is pictured here. This image has been take using a Hoya R72 filter for infra red.
NB: Like all the images on this stream, full size prints up to 30x20inches are available, Check my profile for how to contact me.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>cool stuff from my photostream.
Keep in touch, add me as a contact www.flickr.com/relationship.gne?id=33062170@N08 so I can follow all your new uploads.
(c) Hotpix / HotpixUK Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC
()',

Description
Keywords: R72,Hoya,filter,IR,infrared,infra,red,building,buildings,northwich,cheshire,tonysmith,hotpix,UK,england,english,tony smith photography,tdktony,tdk,tony,tdktonysmith
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 4749916828 - 'St Helen's, Witton, also known as 'Northwich Parish Church' towers over the town. It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Chester, the archdeaconry of Chester and the deanery of Middlewich. Clifton-Taylor includes it in his list of 'best' English parish churches.
The church was originally a chapel of ease to St Mary and All Saints, Great Budworth and the area was then known as Witton. The present building dates from the 14th century, with additions in the 15th, 16th and 19th centuries.
A tradition that Witton had a chapel as early as the 13th century cannot be verified, but by the mid-14th century a church (technically a chapel of ease) stood on the present site. It was roughly the same length as the current building, had transepts but no aisles, side chapels or clerestory, and was covered by a steeply-pitched roof rising from about the height of the present arcade. There would have been a chancel arch with a great beam or loft across it bearing a rood, but no chancel step. The only seats would have been stone benches around the walls.
Gradually this evolved into the church as it is today. North and south aisles, narrower than those currently present, were added in the 15th century. The tower was built or rebuilt in about 1498, and the name \u2018Thomas Hunter\u2019 prominently displayed on it indicates it was the work of the mason of that name who was also associated with nearby Norton Priory outside Runcorn.
The church is built in red sandstone with flattish roofs concealed by parapets. The plan consists of a tower at the west end, a six-bay nave with north and south aisles, a chancel with a polygonal east apse, a vestry to the north and a south porch. The tower has four stages, is crenellated and has diagonal buttresses and a west door. Above this is a four-light window, two-light bellringers' windows on the north and south faces, an empty niche on the west face, a clock with faces to all sides and paired two-light bell openings
NB: Like all the images on this stream, full size prints up to 30x20inches are available, Check my profile for how to contact me.
Checkout more images from my alternative techniques set from my photostream.
Keep in touch, add me as a contact www.flickr.com/relationship.gne?id=33062170@N08 so I can follow all your new uploads.
(c) Hotpix / HotpixUK Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC',

Description
Keywords: Port,of,tourist,attractions,tourism,enjoy,merseyside,NW,England,UK,GB,Great,Britain,insurance,building,Mersey,city,of,culture,RoyalLiverBuilding,B/W,Monochrome,Ir,infrared,infra-red,grade,I,listed,buildings,in,UNESCO,designated,World,Heritage,Maritime,Mercantile,City,Three,Graces,3,clock,face,L31HT,gotonysmith,3graces,scouse,scouser,scousers,Royal,Liver,Assurance,group,liver,birds,liverbirds,calendar,shot,Royal,Liver,Group,Atop,each,tower,stand,the,mythical,designed,by,Carl,Bernard,Bartels,different,view,of,the,L3,1HT,gotonysmith,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy D8HTT4 - The Royal Liver Building is a Grade I listed building located in Liverpool, England. It is sited at the Pier Head and along with the neighbouring Cunard Building and Port of Liverpool Building is one of Liverpool's Three Graces, which line the city's waterfront. It is also part of Liverpool's UNESCO designated World Heritage Maritime Mercantile City.
Opened in 1911, the building is the purpose-built home of the Royal Liver Assurance group, which had been set up in the city in 1850 to provide locals with assistance related to losing a wage-earning relative. One of the first buildings in the world to be built using reinforced concrete, the Royal Liver Building stands at 90 m (300 ft) tall.
It was the tallest storied building in Europe from completion until 1934 and the tallest in the United Kingdom until 1961. The Royal Liver Building is now however only the joint-fourth tallest structure in the City of Liverpool, having been overtaken in height by West Tower, Radio City Tower and Liverpool Cathedral.
Today the Royal Liver Building is one of the most recognisable landmarks in the city of Liverpool and is home to two fabled Liver Birds that watch over the city and the sea. Legend has it that were these two birds to fly away, then the city would cease to exist.

Description
Keywords: Ardoe,Aberdeen,scotland,Infrared,Soapy,Hotel,IR,hoya,R72,filter,sky,trees,365days,Schotland,l'Ecosse,Ecosse,Schottland,\u03a3\u03ba\u03c9\u03c4\u03af\u03b1,la,Scozia,\u30b9\u30b3\u30c3\u30c8\u30e9\u30f3\u30c9,\uc2a4\ucf54\ud2c0\ub780\ub4dc,\u0428\u043e\u0442\u043b\u0430\u043d\u0434\u0438\u044f,Escocia,B/W,black,white,mono,monochrome,tonysmith,tony,smith,edinbrugh,hotpix!,#tonysmithhotpix
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 3782853316 - 'Certainly inspired by Balmoral with its towers etc, built by a soap magnate in the 1800's.
Interesting Restaurant with nice local ingredients and imaginative presentation.
Shame I dont do golf, it is just across from the Deeside golf club.
Intra-red treatment with Hoya R72 filter.
Another IR image here www.flickr.com/photos/hotpixuk/3874265366/
(c) Hotpix Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC',

Description
Keywords: OMD,red,filter,hoya,infra,ir,infra-red,B&W,wales,we pix,picks,hotpicks,tower,ivy OMD,welsh,NT,property,houses,tony,smith,tonysmith,hotpix,tonysmithhotpix,hotpixtonysmith,hot,pic,ipod,music,#tonysmithotpix
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 4948604819 - 'Red Frame White Light - 'Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark' - Play this track here.
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
'Red Frame/White Light' is the second single of the synthpop group Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. The song quite boringly is about the red telephone box in Meols that was used by the band to make calls to organise their gigs.
The telephone box that inspired 'Red Frame/White Light' is located at the crossing of Birkenhead Road and Greenwood Road countryCode=GB#map=53.4011,-3.15818|17|4&
bd=useful_information&
loc=GB:53.4011:-3.15818:17|4 Greenwood Road, meols|4 Greenwood Road, Meols, Wirral, Merseyside, England, CH47 6\' rel=\'nofollow\'>in Meols. In the nearby pub 'The Railway Inn' the band would meet and used the telephone box to organise their gigs and transportation.
In the songs lyrics the phone number is mentioned: 6323003. Fans would ring the number expecting to get one of the band members, but got a confused home owner in their own area code. Over the years it has become a kind of sacred place for OMD fans. In 2004 OMD fan Stephen Cork started a successful campaign to get the telephone box repainted in time for a fan tour on April 10, 2005.
------------------------
Penrhyn Castle is a country house in Llandegai, Bangor, Gwynedd, North Wales, in the form of a Norman castle. It was originally a medieval fortified manor house, founded by Ednyfed Fychan. In 1438, Ioan ap Gruffudd was granted a licence to crenellate and he founded the stone castle and added a tower house. Samuel Wyatt reconstructed the property in the 1780s.
The present building was created between 1820 and 1845 to designs by Thomas Hopper, who expanded and transformed the building beyond recognition. However a spiral staircase from the original property can still be seen, and a vaulted basement and other masonry were incorporated into the new structure. Hopper's clients were the Dawkins-Pennant family, who had made their fortune from Jamaican sugar and local slate quarries.
This image was shot using a Hoya R72 infra red filter. Vegetation appears very white and blue skies deep black.
NB: Like all the images on this stream, full size prints up to 30x20inches are available, Check my profile for how to contact me.
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>B/W stuff from my photostream.
Keep in touch, add me as a contact www.flickr.com/relationship.gne?id=33062170@N08 so I can follow all your new uploads.
(c) Hotpix / HotpixUK Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC
( )',

Description
Keywords: Lymm,Statham,Lodge,Village,cheshire,UK,InfraRed,IR,infra,red,tonysmith,tony,smith,tdktony,hotpix,hotpixuk,lymmvillage,england,GB,A56,Grappenhall Village,Grappenhall,Warrington,A50,wedding,location,venue,bar,R72,www.thewdcc.org.uk,thewdcc.org.uk,wdcc.org.uk,society,District,Camera,club,photographic,photography,SLR,DSLR,group,GYCA,Bellhouse,bellhouse Club,nature,natural,history,world,life,hotpics,hotpic,hotpick,hotpicks,hot,pics,pix,picks,hotpix.freeserve.co.uk,interesting,place,places,fujifilm,hotpix.rocketmail.com,hotpixuk.rocketmail.com,contact.tony.smith.gmail.com,tony.smith.gmail.com,tonys@miscs.com,tony.smith@mis-ams.com
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 3874263992 - 'Hoya R72 Deep red IR filter used.
More Lymm shots here www.flickr.com/photos/hotpixuk/3873477373/
(c) Hotpix Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC. Used as part of the Warrington District Camera Club photographic treasure hunt around Lymm.
Details are listed below:
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WDCC \u2013 Discover the hidden Lymm \u2013 Monday 25th June 2007
NB: In the event of very wet weather, the meeting will be held in the GYCA bar, with an opportunity to see images shot on the trail below. The route is interesting at different times of day, so if you cannot make it on the night, don\u2019t worry! Bring your images taken on the members work night 9th July with any of your other favourite pictures.
Try to find an unusual angle on what you see &
try to be surprised by the everyday!
The route can be joined at the usual meeting point of the GYCA / Bellhouse club in Grappenhall or if more convenient at 7.30pm in Lymm.
7pm Depart GYCA car park (in shared or own cars).
From the GYCA turn left into bellhouse Lane, then left to the traffic lights at the junction of A50/A56. Turn right towards Lymm.
1.After approx \u00bc mile take a left into Stanton Road. At the bottom turn right into Thelwall New Road, stopping at All Saints church yard on the right. If you have a digital camera and a deep red or hoya R72 filter, a good place for some infra-red photography.
2.From the church continue along road to Lymm. Note the Old post office, Pickering Arms and lettering on side about \u2018The city called Thelwall\u2019. Continue until the junction with the A56 and take a left into Stockport Road, then immediate left towards Statham.
3.Note the M6 road bridges that pass overhead. Continue passing the hotel on the left with climbing plants on the front. Another good spot for an infra-red shot. Continue along road and turn right after about \u00bd mile into Star lane. Continue to the top and turn left towards Lymm on A56/Stockport Road.
7.30pm Arrive at Lymm Dam. Park either in the Church Inn, next to Church or along the road beside Lymm Dam.
4.From the road, take the path to the right of the Dam to get a view of the dam framed with trees from the bank. Walk along the railings below the road and find the gameboy and the penguins with guns. Notice the bulrushes and grasses at the front of the dam. Don\u2019t forget to put on a longer lens for the ducks.
5.Walk up the road/hill to St Mary\u2019s church. Note the cross on the entrance. A polarising filter would come in handy for the tower or its stone carvings. Note the stone angels and squirrels up on the sides of the building.
6.In the graveyard find at least one cross and one carved flower in the gravestones. Some interesting door handles and locks can be seen in the graveyard &
around the buildings.
7.Cross the road and walk down towards Grappenhall on the A56/Stockport Road until you find the steps down to the Dingle. If you reach Brookfield Rd you have gone too far! Note the graffiti on the buildings behind the padlocked gates at the sides of the main pathway. Several trees have been felled beside the path. Spot the new fern growth and the purple foxgloves.
8.At the bottom of the dingle is the lower mill pool. Note the cottages reflecting in the water (as they should be illuminated by the evening light) and wild flowers adjacent to water.
9.Turn left into Eagle Brow and then right past the Lymm Chippy. Spot one of the flags on view. Continue under the canal bridge and join the canal bank on the left. If you haven\u2019t already done so, you will probably spot some ducks. Keep left along the canal towards the road bridge. Notice Bridgewater cottage on the left &
its many plants &
flowers. Miss the erotic topiary at your peril!
10.Turn left before the canal bridge along by the old canal cottages. Note the year the cottages were built above the lintel.
11.From the cottages, turn right over canal bridge towards the historic Lymm Cross &
the main street of shops (called The Cross). There are a number of notable details on the cross including the sundial with its slogan \u2018Save Time\u2019. The village cross in Lymm known as 'The Cross' is the only Grade I listed structure in the Borough of Warrington and is thought to date back to Saxon times.
12.Turn back towards the canal, (without re-crossing the canal bridge) on the opposite side to Bridgewater cottage for a good view of the cottage and canal boats. Try misting up your lens, or adding a filter for a more surreal shot of the canal &
boats. Don\u2019t forget the reflections, often more interesting than some of the boats!
13.Walk back up through the dingle to back to car for a drink back at the GYCA after 9.30pm. Forty shots taken following this walk will be available in the bar to view.
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Description
Keywords: Lymm,Cross,IR,R72,Filter,infrared,infra,red,tonysmith,tony,smith,tdktony,hotpix,hotpixuk,village,cheshire,lymmvillage,england,UK,GB,A56,B/W,black,white,mono,monochrome,fujifilm
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 3874265366 - '(c) Hotpix Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC.
The infra-red effect occurs in the Fuji S7000 camera as a result of the Hoya R72 Infra red filter fitted on the front of the lens, using the adapter. The local independent shops of the village can be seen behind the cross.
The summer trees come up as light blue under the filter.
Used as part of the Warrington District Camera Club photographic treasure hunt around Lymm Village, Warrington, Cheshire, UK.
More Lymm here www.flickr.com/photos/hotpixuk/4009559626/
',

Description
Keywords: TRex,Oxford,College,Colleges,Quad,Quads,I/R,infrared,infra,red,colour,color,R72,Tony,Smith,tonysmith,hotpix,UK,tonysmithhotpix,England,building,buildings,stone,foliage,plants,shrubs,HDR
Description: Tony Smith image Flickr 6181697231 - 'Marc Bolan and Trex - By The Light Of The Magical Moon - Play this track here.
Follow me on Twitter twitter.com/HotpixUK
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
This classic track can be found on 'A Beard of Stars'. Its the fourth album by Tyrannosaurus Rex (Trex), comprising Marc Bolan (vocals, guitar, organ, bass) and the first with new partner Mickey Finn (percussion). It was released in March 1970. It is notable for the beginning of Bolan using electric instruments on the T.Rex albums.
Early Tyrannosaurus Rex released four albums and four singles, flirting with the charts, reaching as high as number fifteen and supported with airplay by legendary Radio 1 DJ John Peel. One of the highlights of this era was when the duo played at the first free Hyde Park concert in 1968.
Although the free-spirited, drug-taking Steve Took was fired from the group after their first American tour, they were a force to be reckoned within the hippy underground scene while they lasted. Their music was filled with Marc's otherworldly poetry, a book of which he published in 1969, 'The Warlock Of Love'. In keeping with his early rock and roll interests, Bolan began bringing amplified guitar lines into the duo's music, buying a vintage Gibson Les Paul guitar (later featured on the cover of the album T. Rex in 1970).
After replacing Took with Mickey Finn, he let the electric influences come forward even further on A Beard of Stars, the final album to be credited to Tyrannosaurus Rex. It closed with the song 'Elemental Child,' featuring a long electric guitar break influenced by Jimi Hendrix.
Bolan, by now married to his girlfriend June Child (a former secretary to the manager of another of his heroes, Syd Barrett), shortened the group's name to T. Rex and wrote and recorded 'Ride a White Swan', dominated by a rolling, hand clapping back-beat, Bolan's electric guitar and Finn's percussion.
Bolan and his producer Tony Visconti oversaw the session for 'Ride a White Swan', the single that changed Bolan's career. Recorded on 1 July 1970 and released later that year, it made slow progress in the UK Top 40, until it finally peaked in early 1971 at number two.
Bolan took to wearing top hats and feather boas on stage as well as putting drops of glitter on each of his cheekbones. Stories are conflicting about his inspiration for this\u2014some say it was introduced by his personal assistant, Chelita Secunda, although Bolan told John Pidgeon in a 1974 interview on Radio 1 that he noticed the glitter on his wife's dressing table prior to a photo session and casually daubed some on his face there and then. Other performers\u2014and their fans\u2014soon took up variations on the idea. Glam rock was born.
This infra-red image almost swaps night for day here. A Hoya R72 filter was used.
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
Checkout more w=33062170@N08\' target=\'_blank\'>ipod music from my photostream.
Keep in touch, add me as a contact www.flickr.com/relationship.gne?id=33062170@N08 so I can follow all your new uploads.
\u00bfWhats this iPod Shuffle set all about? Read about it here
(c) Hotpix / HotpixUK Tony Smith - Hotpix.freeserve.co.uk WDCC
()',

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,in,the,town,England,UK,WA4,Warrington,Cheshire,WA4 3LH,Grappenhall,building,new,homes,at,start,of,newbuild,build,local,infrastructure,planning,unleashing,skip,skips,usage,on,site,sites,development,developments,NIMBY,NIMBYS,slowdown,mortgage,interest,planning permission,local plans
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JNBXTC -

Description
Keywords: South,West,Trains,TOC,South West Trains,franchise,zone6,xone,six,6,artdeco,suburban,Platform 3,Kingston,West London,England,UK,London,Surbiton Station,BR,building,Waiting Room,Fare,Fare zone6,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6Y2 -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Glasgow Central Station,UK rail transport,Scottish public transport,public ownership railways,rail nationalisation Scotland,transport policy Scotland,public services debate,sustainable transport,rail reform UK,commuter mobility,everyday public transport,Glasgow Central G1 3SL,Glasgow Scotland UK,ScotRail EMU,railway platforms interior,station architecture Scotland,commuter rail Scotland,nationalised railway,rail travel UK,transport infrastructure,editorial image,daytime interior,landscape format,commuter,carriages,trains,stacked,ready,at,platforms,Abellio train carriages,following petition to bring back into state ownership,after poor service,G1,G1 3SL,GBR,Great British Railways
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6BD - ScotRail passenger trains stand at the platforms inside Glasgow Central Station, Glasgow G1 3SL, one of the busiest and most architecturally significant railway stations in the UK. The image shows modern ScotRail rolling stock beneath the station's historic iron-and-glass roof, highlighting the contrast between Victorian engineering and contemporary rail operations.
ScotRail operates Scotland's domestic passenger rail services and, since 2022, has been run as a publicly owned railway under the control of the Scottish Government. The move marked a significant shift in UK transport policy, positioning Scotland as the first part of Great Britain in modern times to return a national rail operator to public ownership. The change followed ongoing debate over rail franchising, performance, value for money and public accountability.
Glasgow Central is a key hub within Scotland's rail network, handling long-distance intercity services as well as dense commuter traffic across the Central Belt. As such, it plays a vital role in daily mobility, economic activity and efforts to promote rail as a lower-carbon alternative to road and air travel.
Images like this are frequently used editorially to illustrate discussions around public ownership of infrastructure, transport reform, sustainable travel and the future of railways in the UK. The presence of multiple trains and platforms reinforces the scale and complexity of operating a national rail system as a public service.
Photographed in landscape format with clear station context, the image offers strong editorial value for coverage of Scottish transport policy, public services, rail nationalisation, commuting culture and contemporary railway operations.

Description
Keywords: transport,rail,railway,train,trains,passenger,traveler,journey,traveller,travelers,infrasructure,infrastructure,Network,transit,TOC,privatised,public,ownership,public,building,Victorian,platform,Scotrail,City,Centre,Glaswegian,walking down,City Centre,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scottish,British,Scotland,Street,Glasgow,G1,3SL,at,red,lights,dawn,travel,tourism,delay,shadow,shadows,dark,nighttime,Virgin,trains,WCML,Virgin,trains,West,Coast,Main,Line,Intercity,Inter-City,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,British Isles,Gordon St,G1 3SL,Gordon Street,Gordon St,Platform passengers,In The Evening,On the platform,Dawn Train,walking down the platform,Virgin Trains,Virgin Trains,Main Line
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy H9PM3H - Avanti West Coast is a train operating company in the United Kingdom owned by FirstGroup (70%) and Trenitalia (30%) that operates the West Coast Partnership.
During November 2016, the Department for Transport (DfT) announced the InterCity West Coast franchise would be replaced by the West Coast Partnership (WCP). In August 2019, the DfT awarded the WCP franchise to the First Trenitalia consortium. On 8 December 2019, Avanti West Coast took over operations from the prior operating company Virgin Trains, which had run the franchise since 1997. Originally, the franchise was initially scheduled to run until March 2030, and had also been set to operate the initial High Speed 2 services from 2026. However, during December 2020, it was announced that First Trenitalia and the DfT had agreed to terminate the WCP franchise at the earlier date of 31 March 2026 as part of the abolition of the franchise system. Since then a number of contract changes have taken place due to COVID-19 and then poor performance by the company. As of March 2023, the company's contract will expire in October 2023.
Between 14 August and 18 September 2022, Avanti West Coast reduced its timetable, citing unofficial strike action from its employees. However, this allegation was disputed by Aslef, which accused the company of lying and blamed their lack of recruitment, especially of train drivers, for the problems. Trains were running at one service per hour on the majority of routes, as opposed to the three which would typically occur on the London Euston to Manchester Piccadilly route. Following these changes, Avanti West Coast was subject to public criticism
news stories emerged of numerous train cancellations, overcrowded services, delays, and expensive fares. Many commuters faced difficulties reaching their destinations on the reduced services and some travellers have been left to wait for to two days before travel for tickets to be released for sale

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,showing,1950s,nationalised,network,rail,trips,transport,infrastructure,Great Britain,Britain,England,UK,English,train,trains,destination,BR,1950s using British railways,info,Wales,United Kingdom,GB,British,poster,posters,history,historic,heritage,old,olden,times,system,systems,route,routes
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JR5WBD -

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Cheshire,England,UK,station,train,trains,historic,hub,on,history,transport,spelt,railway,PWAY,permanent way,Crewe North Junction,Crewe North,junction,CW1,heritage,infrastructure,tourist,tourism,attraction,box,junctions,points,rail,rails,track,tracks,windows,electrification,electrified,Crewe Railway Age
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2JX2WN6 - Crewe Heritage Centre is a railway museum located in Crewe, England. Managed by the Crewe Heritage Trust, the museum is located between the railway station and the town centre
the site was the location of the 'Old Works' which was demolished in the early 1980s.
History
The centre was established in the old London, Midland and Scottish Railway yard, which was once part of Crewe Works, between the junction to Chester and the West Coast Main Line. It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, on 24 July 1987. It was renamed in 1992 as Crewe Railway Age by the owning registered charity but, after the management of the centre was taken over by a new group of volunteers, the museum returned to its original name of Crewe Heritage Centre in early 2008.
Exhibits
The centre has a series of exhibits, ranging from the only surviving APT-P train, miniature railways, three open signal boxes (Crewe Station A, Crewe North Junction and Exeter West) and a varied collection of standard gauge steam, diesel and electric locomotives, as well as occasional visiting locomotives. The Main Exhibition Hall features many artefacts and exhibits associated with Crewe, from its locomotive and carriage construction to its famous junction railway station. Brake Van rides are available to the public during special events.
Advanced Passenger Train
APT No.370 003/006 at Crewe Heritage Centre
Built by British Rail (BR) the 1970s and 1980s, this Class 370 Advanced Passenger Train (APT) is the only surviving APT set. Numbered 370 003/006, it is open at all times with an occasional cafe run from the original buffet car (selected days only). The APT-P museum can be found inside one of the carriages, with photographs on display from the APT project

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,HotpixUK,@HotpixUK,Warrington,south,Cheshire,England,UK,WA4 2SJ,WA4,village,BT,cherry picker,access,platform,engineer,on,phone,line,telephone,lines,broadband,up,a,telegraph,pole,rural,rollout,wait here,sign,infrastructure,boom lift,powered,wooden,PPE,van,vehicles
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy 2MAEY78 -

Description
Keywords: SNP,Hollyrood,back,into,state,ownership,after,poor,service,renationalise,nationalised,TOC,national,late,trains,fines,fine,penalty,penalties,transport,travel,infrastructure,slow,Dutch,operator,devolved,powers,train operating company,Scotrail Franchise,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,livery,Central,station,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,passengers,Glaswegians,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre,Scotrail problems,Scotrail delays,Scot Rail problems,Scot rail delays
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ676 - Thousands sign petition calling for Dutch firm Abellio to be stripped of ScotRail contract
THE Dutch firm running ScotRail have come under constant criticism due to the poor performances. NEARLY 14,000 people have called for the controversial Dutch firm in charge of ??Scotland's train ??service to be stripped of their contract unless ScotRail improves.
The online petition urges the Scottish ??Government to take action against ??Abellio over the delays and cancellations suffered by commuters using ScotRail. The firm have already been hit with ?1.5million in fines for poor service.

Description
Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,overcrowded railway carriage,Scottish rail commuting,peak time train Scotland,public transport pressure UK,Scotland,commuter challenges,rail overcrowding,transport policy Scotland,reliability and performance debate,sustainable transport tension,everyday commuter experience,public service strain,cost of living travel impact,waiting for trains,passengers,Glasgow Central,G1,G1 3SL,Glasgow Scotland UK,ScotRail passenger train,busy station platform,rail capacity issues,commuting Scotland,weekday rush hour,rail travel demand,transport infrastructure strain,editorial image,daytime interior,people,delays,punctuality,issues,strike,strikes,industrial action
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ68T - Passengers crowd a ScotRail train and platform at Glasgow Central Station, Glasgow G1 3SL, illustrating peak-time congestion and the everyday pressures of rail commuting in Scotland's busiest transport hub. The image shows a dense flow of people boarding and alighting from a modern ScotRail carriage beneath the station's historic iron and glass roof.
Glasgow Central handles some of the highest passenger volumes in the Scottish rail network, serving long-distance intercity services as well as heavily used commuter routes across the Central Belt. During peak periods, platforms and carriages can become severely crowded, reflecting sustained demand for rail travel linked to employment patterns, housing location and urban concentration.
Since ScotRail's return to public ownership in 2022, issues such as capacity, reliability, rolling stock availability and timetable resilience have remained central to political and media debate. Supporters of public control argue that long-term planning and social value should take precedence, while critics highlight ongoing challenges faced by daily commuters, including overcrowding and service disruption.
Images like this are commonly used to illustrate discussions around commuter experience, transport investment, public service delivery and the limits of existing rail infrastructure. The visible mix of ages, workwear and shopping bags emphasises the role of rail as an essential, everyday service rather than a discretionary mode of travel.
Photographed at platform level with strong contextual detail, the image carries high editorial value for coverage of commuting pressures, public transport policy, rail reform and the lived experience of passengers in Scotland's urban centres.

Description
Keywords: City,Centre,City Centre,fashion,mojo,groove,Camden,at Night,night,North London,London,North,England,UK,seedy,Camden Lock,Village,Regents,Canal,Camden Lock market,Camden Lock,market,trendy,funky,Camden Lock,bridge,railway,rail,viaduct,pano,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attractions,at night,Camden at night,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6JA - Camden Town often shortened to Camden (ambiguously also used for the much larger London Borough of Camden of which it is the central neighbourhood), is an inner city district of northwest London, 2.4 miles (3.9 km) north of the centre of London. It is one of the 35 major centres identified in the London Plan.
Laid out as a residential district from 1791 and originally part of the manor of Kentish Town and the parish of St Pancras, London, Camden Town became an important location during the early development of the railways, which reinforced its position on the London canal network. The area's industrial economic base has been replaced by service industries such as retail, tourism and entertainment. The area now hosts street markets and music venues which are strongly associated with alternative culture.

Description
Keywords: SNP,Hollyrood,back,into,state,ownership,after,poor,service,renationalise,nationalised,TOC,national,late,trains,fines,fine,penalty,penalties,transport,travel,infrastructure,Dutch,operator,devolved,powers,Scottish National Party,train operating company,Scotrail Franchise,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,Scots,Scottish,British,Scotland,Glasgow,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,livery,Central,station,very,busy,delay,delays,delayed.late,later,passengers,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater Glasgow,British Isles,Glasgow City Centre,City Centre,Scotrail problems,Scotrail delays,Scot Rail problems,Scot rail delays,very busy
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ66Y - Thousands sign petition calling for Dutch firm Abellio to be stripped of ScotRail contract
THE Dutch firm running ScotRail have come under constant criticism due to the poor performances. NEARLY 14,000 people have called for the controversial Dutch firm in charge of ??Scotland's train ??service to be stripped of their contract unless ScotRail improves.
The online petition urges the Scottish ??Government to take action against ??Abellio over the delays and cancellations suffered by commuters using ScotRail. The firm have already been hit with ?1.5million in fines for poor service.

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Keywords: City,Centre,City Centre,fashion,mojo,groove,Camden Town,Camden,at Night,dusk,North London,London,North,England,UK,seedy,Village,Regents,Canal,Camden Lock market,Camden Lock,market,trendy,funky,224,GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,Tony,Smith,UK,GB,Great,Britain,United,Kingdom,English,British,England,London,Greater,problem,with,problem with,issue with,LDN,City,Centre,cities,Urban,Urbanist,town,infrastructure,transport,tour,tourism,tourists,urban,attraction,attractions,The,Elephants Head,pub,Elephant,head,pubs,bars,of,London,classic,tourist,attraction,travel,vacation,Buy Pictures of,Buy Images Of,Images of,Stock Images,Tony Smith,United Kingdom,Great Britain,Greater London,British Isles,City Centre,Pubs Of London,must see
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy HEJ6HC - Camden Town often shortened to Camden (ambiguously also used for the much larger London Borough of Camden of which it is the central neighbourhood), is an inner city district of northwest London, 2.4 miles (3.9 km) north of the centre of London. It is one of the 35 major centres identified in the London Plan.
Laid out as a residential district from 1791 and originally part of the manor of Kentish Town and the parish of St Pancras, London, Camden Town became an important location during the early development of the railways, which reinforced its position on the London canal network. The area's industrial economic base has been replaced by service industries such as retail, tourism and entertainment. The area now hosts street markets and music venues which are strongly associated with alternative culture.

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Description: Tony Smith image Alamy EY5KEE -

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,Manchester Ship Canal,high level railway bridge,Cheshire,dusk canal scene,blue hour canal,industrial heritage,calm water reflections,nightfall landscape,infrastructure,transport history,industrial Britain,regeneration,waterways,canals,railways,blue hour photography,night photography,public realm,sustainable travel,slow travel,editorial travel,northern England,inland waterway,canal bridge,rail infrastructure,Victorian engineering,steel bridge,urban industrial landscape,evening light,street lights reflection,towpath,riverside path,cycling route,walking trail,quiet water,long exposure,WA4
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy CEXEG5 - A tranquil dusk scene at the Manchester Ship Canal showing the high level railway bridge at Latchford in Warrington, Cheshire, reflected almost perfectly in the still water below. The bridge spans the canal as evening light fades into deep blue hour tones, while warm street lights and industrial lamps glow along the canal banks and towpath. The symmetry created by the reflection emphasises the scale and solidity of the historic structure, contrasting sharply with the calmness of the water.
This section of the Manchester Ship Canal forms part of one of Britain's most ambitious civil engineering projects, constructed to allow ocean-going vessels to reach inland industrial centres. The high level railway bridge, associated with the former Cheshire Lines Committee network, is a reminder of the dense transport infrastructure that once supported manufacturing, trade and movement across North West England. Today, the area has taken on a quieter role, serving pedestrians and cyclists using routes such as the Trans Pennine Trail, which runs alongside the canal.
The image captures the layered history of the location: heavy engineering repurposed within a modern landscape of leisure, sustainable travel and urban regeneration. The absence of visible movement on the water, combined with the soft glow of lights and deepening sky, conveys a sense of stillness and transition from working industrial corridor to reflective public space. Trees and vegetation along the canal edges soften the scene, framing the bridge and reinforcing the balance between engineered infrastructure and reclaimed landscape.
This photograph is well suited for editorial use covering British industrial heritage, canals and waterways, rail infrastructure, regeneration and sustainable travel routes, as well as commercial applications requiring atmospheric evening imagery of transport landmarks in Northern England.

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Keywords: GoTonySmith,@HotpixUK,HotpixUK,local authority surveyor,road survey,total station,UK roads,bypass road,roadside survey,public sector worker,civil engineering,infrastructure,transport,public services,local government,highways maintenance,road safety,civil engineering industry,construction,planning,surveying profession,working outdoors,risk management,safety at work,UK infrastructure,editorial industry,surveyor at work,highway inspection,infrastructure inspection,traffic survey,road measurement,construction surveying,engineering survey,professional surveyor,roadside working,blurred traffic,passing lorry,motion blur,safety clothing,PPE
Description: Tony Smith image Alamy CF0N8R - A local authority surveyor carries out roadside measurement work on a bypass road in the United Kingdom, using a Leica total station survey instrument mounted on a tripod. The surveyor is dressed in high-visibility protective clothing and gloves, reflecting standard safety requirements for working close to live traffic. A large vehicle passes in the background, captured with motion blur, emphasising both the speed of the traffic and the risk-managed nature of the work.
The image highlights the practical, front-line role of surveyors in maintaining and improving transport infrastructure. Such work underpins road design, maintenance, safety improvements and asset management carried out by local authorities and public bodies. The presence of the Leica surveying equipment points to modern digital measurement techniques used to collect accurate positional data for highways, junctions and roadside assets.
The roadside setting, blurred lorry and focused posture of the surveyor convey concentration, professionalism and situational awareness. This visual contrast between static precision equipment and fast-moving traffic reinforces themes of risk control, engineering discipline and public safety. The scene reflects the everyday reality of civil engineering and surveying work that often takes place unnoticed alongside busy roads.
This image is well suited for editorial use covering local government, transport infrastructure, road safety, public services, engineering and surveying professions, as well as commercial applications relating to construction, infrastructure planning, professional services, workplace safety and UK transport systems.




