Exclusivepix Media Ltd

Show Navigation
  • View All Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • About
  • Contact
  • Portfolio
  • Sell Your Story
  • Work for Exclusivepix Media
  • info on Purchasing Images

Search Results

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

Loading ()...

  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Light Railway Passes Through Residential Building<br />
<br />
 A light railway train passes through a residential building in Chongqing, China. Chongqing Rail Transit No.2 and a 19-storey residential building have been built across each other. The railway set its Liziba Station on the sixth to eighth floor in the building with noise reduction equipment. ©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Railway_Passes_Through_Residen...jpg
  • GUIYANG, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Living Under The Bridge<br />
Residential buildings are seen under the Shuikousi bridge  in Guiyang, Guizhou Province of China. There are more than ten residential buildings under the Shuikousi bridge. The bridge was completed in May 1997, and the residential buildings were completed two years later as low-rent housing and resettlement housing projects. <br />
©Wang Pingping/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Living_Under_The_Bridge...jpg
  • GUIYANG, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Living Under The Bridge<br />
Residential buildings are seen under the Shuikousi bridge  in Guiyang, Guizhou Province of China. There are more than ten residential buildings under the Shuikousi bridge. The bridge was completed in May 1997, and the residential buildings were completed two years later as low-rent housing and resettlement housing projects. <br />
©Wang Pingping/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Living_Under_The_Bridge...jpg
  • GUIYANG, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Living Under The Bridge<br />
Residential buildings are seen under the Shuikousi bridge  in Guiyang, Guizhou Province of China. There are more than ten residential buildings under the Shuikousi bridge. The bridge was completed in May 1997, and the residential buildings were completed two years later as low-rent housing and resettlement housing projects. <br />
©Wang Pingping/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Living_Under_The_Bridge...jpg
  • GUIYANG, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Living Under The Bridge<br />
Residential buildings are seen under the Shuikousi bridge  in Guiyang, Guizhou Province of China. There are more than ten residential buildings under the Shuikousi bridge. The bridge was completed in May 1997, and the residential buildings were completed two years later as low-rent housing and resettlement housing projects. <br />
©Wang Pingping/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Living_Under_The_Bridge...jpg
  • GUIYANG, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Living Under The Bridge<br />
Residential buildings are seen under the Shuikousi bridge  in Guiyang, Guizhou Province of China. There are more than ten residential buildings under the Shuikousi bridge. The bridge was completed in May 1997, and the residential buildings were completed two years later as low-rent housing and resettlement housing projects. <br />
©Wang Pingping/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Living_Under_The_Bridge...jpg
  • GUIYANG, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Living Under The Bridge<br />
Residential buildings are seen under the Shuikousi bridge  in Guiyang, Guizhou Province of China. There are more than ten residential buildings under the Shuikousi bridge. The bridge was completed in May 1997, and the residential buildings were completed two years later as low-rent housing and resettlement housing projects. <br />
©Wang Pingping/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Living_Under_The_Bridge...jpg
  • GUIYANG, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Living Under The Bridge<br />
Residential buildings are seen under the Shuikousi bridge  in Guiyang, Guizhou Province of China. There are more than ten residential buildings under the Shuikousi bridge. The bridge was completed in May 1997, and the residential buildings were completed two years later as low-rent housing and resettlement housing projects. <br />
©Wang Pingping/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Living_Under_The_Bridge...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - NOVEMBER 26: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun and cover a residential building<br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun at a residential building during a sunshine day on November 26, 2015 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Clothes_cover_residenti...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - NOVEMBER 26: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun and cover a residential building<br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun at a residential building during a sunshine day on November 26, 2015 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Clothes_cover_residenti...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - NOVEMBER 26: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun and cover a residential building<br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun at a residential building during a sunshine day on November 26, 2015 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Clothes_cover_residenti...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - NOVEMBER 26: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun and cover a residential building<br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun at a residential building during a sunshine day on November 26, 2015 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Clothes_cover_residenti...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - NOVEMBER 26: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun and cover a residential building<br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun at a residential building during a sunshine day on November 26, 2015 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Clothes_cover_residenti...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - NOVEMBER 26: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun and cover a residential building<br />
<br />
Clothes are aired in the sun at a residential building during a sunshine day on November 26, 2015 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Clothes_cover_residenti...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Buildings Painted with Sexy Women in China<br />
<br />
Wall paintings of sexy beauties are seen on residential buildings on January 13, 2015 in Qingdao, Shandong province of China. Giant wall paintings which were painted sexy beauties were shown on the residential buildings in east China's Shandong province, with a largest painting being at the height of seven storeys.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Buildings_Painted_with_...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - APRIL 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Building that Looks Like Honeycomb<br />
<br />
 Photo shows a 32-storey honeycomb-style residential block on April 17, 2014 in Chongqing, China. The building has nearly 800 apartments, and each has 20 square meters.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Building_Like_Honeycomb...jpg
  • HAIKOU, CHINA - AUGUST 19: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Photo shows a three-storey villa built on a 19-storey residential block on August 19, 2013 in Haikou, Hainan Province of China. There are two families living on the 20th floor, and they both have property ownership certificates.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Villa_Built_On_Resident...jpg
  • HAIKOU, CHINA - AUGUST 19: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Photo shows a three-storey villa built on a 19-storey residential block on August 19, 2013 in Haikou, Hainan Province of China. There are two families living on the 20th floor, and they both have property ownership certificates.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Villa_Built_On_Resident...jpg
  • HAIKOU, CHINA - AUGUST 19: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Photo shows a three-storey villa built on a 19-storey residential block on August 19, 2013 in Haikou, Hainan Province of China. There are two families living on the 20th floor, and they both have property ownership certificates.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Villa_Built_On_Resident...jpg
  • HAIKOU, CHINA - AUGUST 19: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Photo shows a three-storey villa built on a 19-storey residential block on August 19, 2013 in Haikou, Hainan Province of China. There are two families living on the 20th floor, and they both have property ownership certificates.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Villa_Built_On_Resident...jpg
  • HAIKOU, CHINA - AUGUST 19: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Photo shows a three-storey villa built on a 19-storey residential block on August 19, 2013 in Haikou, Hainan Province of China. There are two families living on the 20th floor, and they both have property ownership certificates.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Villa_Built_On_Resident...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • What It’s Like To Live In A $95-Million Penthouse 1,396 Feet Above New York City<br />
<br />
432 Park Avenue – this is the address of the New York skyline’s newest ornament and of the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere. Towering up to 1,396 ft, the skyscraper offers 104 apartments at 30,000 sq ft each with 12.5 ft ceilings, 10 x 10 ft windows, and prices ranging from $16,95 million to $82,5 million.<br />
The breathtaking condo tower was designed by Rafael Viñoly and took three years to construct. It is situated in the center of Manhattan, and the upper penthouses offer a view of all of New York City: from the Hudson to the East River, from the Bronx to Brooklyn, and from Central Park to the Atlantic Ocean. The building also features a private restaurant with an outdoor terrace, a 75ft swimming pool/spa, a screening room/ performance venue, climate-controlled wine cellars, a children’s playroom and a board room.<br />
The skyscraper will welcome its first residents next year, so if you’re looking for a nice little place in NY and have a solid bank account, you’d better hurry, as the penthouses are going like hot cakes.<br />
©432 Park Avenue/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Live_In_A_95_Million_Pe...jpg
  • CHENGGONG, CHINA -China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Ghost City <br />
<br />
Lights illuminate dozens of windows of several residential blocks on November 22, 2013 in Chenggong, Yunnan Province of China. Chenggong is a satellite city located just south of Kunming. As of 2012, much of the newly constructed housing in Chenggong is still unoccupied, and it is reportedly one of the largest ghost towns in Asia. According to a China Youth Daily report in July, at least 12 such ghost cities across the country have been found. Besides the best known of these - Ordos in North China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, the list also included Changzhou in Jiangsu, Zhengdong New Area in Henan Province, Shiyan in Hubei and Chenggong District of Kunming in Yunnan.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Ghost_City2.jpg
  • CHENGGONG, CHINA -China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Ghost City <br />
<br />
Photo shows residential blocks on November 22, 2013 in Chenggong, Yunnan Province of China. Chenggong is a satellite city located just south of Kunming. As of 2012, much of the newly constructed housing in Chenggong is still unoccupied, and it is reportedly one of the largest ghost towns in Asia. According to a China Youth Daily report in July, at least 12 such ghost cities across the country have been found. Besides the best known of these - Ordos in North China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, the list also included Changzhou in Jiangsu, Zhengdong New Area in Henan Province, Shiyan in Hubei and Chenggong District of Kunming in Yunnan. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Ghost_City9.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete15.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete12.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete11.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete10.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete09.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete08.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete04.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete01.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete02.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete17.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete16.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete14.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete13.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete07.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete06.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete05.jpg
  • Wild Concrete<br />
<br />
Focusing solely on the phenomena of trees sprouting from residential buildings in Hong Kong, Wild Concrete compares the living conditions between plants and humans. Such peculiar sight of ‘wild concrete’ is by no means exclusive. They can be found everywhere in the heart of the city: roots spiralling down the external pipes of a Mong Kok loft; shoots lurking behind a window frame of an apartment in Central hills; or branches spreading across a residence in Sham Shui Po, collapsing it from the inside out.<br />
<br />
Given Hong Kong’s favourable coastal geography and subtropical humid climate, plants require minimal nutrition to thrive even on concrete walls. Sufficient annual precipitation enables an organic layer to form on the surface of buildings, where rainwater and moisture can be collected and stored. The decaying paint and weathered walls serve as a moist growing ground on which microalgae, fungi, lichens and mosses may bud.<br />
<br />
On multiple levels, ‘wild concrete’ symbolises the spirit of the city and its people. While it appears a mismatch for organic roots to grow on concrete, Hong Kong people finding attachments to the floating city of investments feels no less intriguing. In the modern society, people’s lives are literally cemented together like the entangled wood and concrete; yet they build walls against each other.<br />
<br />
The sense of human alienation and indifference is equally embodied by these clusters of trees standing aloof in midst of the foreign human settlements. On a more positive note, the saplings share the same exceptional qualities as their human counterparts: perseverance, diligence, and independence. Despite the harsh surroundings, both plants and humans strive for upward mobility and a better life with their high adaptability and flexibility.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Wild_Concrete03.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon03.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon15.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon14.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon13.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon12.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon09.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon10.jpg
  • Vertical Horizon<br />
<br />
Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical expansion.<br />
<br />
The title itself is a reminder of the angle of my photo as well as a description of the vertical growth that human try to build for themselves. Although there was already a lot of land that has been reclaimed on the sea, the city had to find another way in order to accommodate its population. This other way to find the direction upward and to grow higher and higher. This is the extreme growth that I have been documenting in my project. In order to be the most accurate possible in my representation of the city, I decided to shoot Hong Kong in its diversity and thus in the 3 different kinds of district that we can find here: the business districts, the old-style districts and the densely-populated residential districts. For me, Vertical Horizon is the expression of the vertical expansion of human's urban environment when facing the physical limitation of a territory and land. It is a way of optimizing space, by reclaiming the sky instead of expanding mainly horizontally like it is the case in most of the cities in the world.<br />
©Romain Jacquet-Lagreze/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Vertical_Horizon11.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x