Industrial Corporate and Editorial Photographer - Leeds - Manchester -UK

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Transport 18 images Created 2 Feb 2012

Transport images from around Europe
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  • London - office buildings at night
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel  - Frankfurt , Germany - shots of traffic and city building s at night
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Frankfurt , Germany - traffic coming into Frankfurt in the morning rush on a wet and rainy day.
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof (usually translated from German as Frankfurt (Main) Central Station, - shots of lines and trains
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Frankfurt Airport - Frankfurt am Main Airport (IATA: FRA, ICAO: EDDF), or simply Frankfurt Airport, known in German as Flughafen Frankfurt am Main or Rhein-Main-Flughafen, is a major international airport located in Frankfurt, Germany, 12 km (7.5 mi) southwest of the city centre.[2]. .Run by transport company Fraport, Frankfurt Airport is by far the busiest airport by passenger traffic in Germany, the third busiest in Europe (after London Heathrow Airport and Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport) and the ninth busiest worldwide in 2010. Passenger traffic at Frankfurt Airport in 2010 was 53.0 million. As of summer 2011, Frankfurt Airport serves the most international destinations in the world, serving 298 destinations in 110 countries[3] and is the second busiest airport in Europe by cargo traffic. The southern side of the airport ground was home to the Rhein-Main Air Base, which was a major air base for the United States from 1947 until 2005, when the air base was closed and the property was acquired by Fraport
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Frankfurt Airport - Frankfurt am Main Airport (IATA: FRA, ICAO: EDDF), or simply Frankfurt Airport, known in German as Flughafen Frankfurt am Main or Rhein-Main-Flughafen, is a major international airport located in Frankfurt, Germany, 12 km (7.5 mi) southwest of the city centre.[2]. .Run by transport company Fraport, Frankfurt Airport is by far the busiest airport by passenger traffic in Germany, the third busiest in Europe (after London Heathrow Airport and Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport) and the ninth busiest worldwide in 2010. Passenger traffic at Frankfurt Airport in 2010 was 53.0 million. As of summer 2011, Frankfurt Airport serves the most international destinations in the world, serving 298 destinations in 110 countries[3] and is the second busiest airport in Europe by cargo traffic. The southern side of the airport ground was home to the Rhein-Main Air Base, which was a major air base for the United States from 1947 until 2005, when the air base was closed and the property was acquired by Fraport
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof (usually translated from German as Frankfurt (Main) Central Station, - shots of lines and trains
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof (usually translated from German as Frankfurt (Main) Central Station, - shots of lines and trains
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel - Manchester Airport in the City of Manchester within Greater Manchester, UK. In 2010 it was 4th busiest airport in the United Kingdom in terms of passenger numbers,[2] and the busiest airport in the UK outside the London region. It was also the 3rd busiest UK airport in terms of total aircraft movements, and the 24th busiest airport in Europe.   .The airport has two parallel runways, three terminals, a goods terminal, and a ground transport interchange, including a railway station and is one of only 17 airports in the world with the highest 'Category 10' rating enabling the airport to handle larger 'Code F' aircraft.[8] meaning from September 2010 the airport could handle the world's largest passenger plane, the Airbus A380.[9].  On every flight to New York and back, each traveller emits about 1.2t of CO2, using Department for Transport figures. This compares to an average British personal total of 9.5t. To get down to a fair share of the world’s total, this must be cut by 87%, leaving 1.2t. Air travel is really worse than this because it puts out more pollution than just CO2. For example water vapour at high levels forms thin clouds that have a warming effect. We can see trails visibly blanketing the earth. This and other effects mean that air travel has more than twice the warming effect of the carbon dioxide alone. So each flight adds more to climate change than we should be emitting altogether.
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel - Manchester Airport in the City of Manchester within Greater Manchester, UK. In 2010 it was 4th busiest airport in the United Kingdom in terms of passenger numbers,[2] and the busiest airport in the UK outside the London region. It was also the 3rd busiest UK airport in terms of total aircraft movements, and the 24th busiest airport in Europe.   .The airport has two parallel runways, three terminals, a goods terminal, and a ground transport interchange, including a railway station and is one of only 17 airports in the world with the highest 'Category 10' rating enabling the airport to handle larger 'Code F' aircraft.[8] meaning from September 2010 the airport could handle the world's largest passenger plane, the Airbus A380.[9].  On every flight to New York and back, each traveller emits about 1.2t of CO2, using Department for Transport figures. This compares to an average British personal total of 9.5t. To get down to a fair share of the world’s total, this must be cut by 87%, leaving 1.2t. Air travel is really worse than this because it puts out more pollution than just CO2. For example water vapour at high levels forms thin clouds that have a warming effect. We can see trails visibly blanketing the earth. This and other effects mean that air travel has more than twice the warming effect of the carbon dioxide alone. So each flight adds more to climate change than we should be emitting altogether.
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , - Cars UK near Manchester - Road transport is one of the biggest sources of pollution in the UK, contributing to poor air quality, climate change, congestion and noise disturbance. Of the 33 million vehicles on our roads, 27 million are cars.
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Consumerism , Water
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel - YORK Station , UK  York is one of the most important railway junction stations on the British railway network, approximately halfway between London and Edinburgh; it is also a few miles north of the point where the Cross Country and Trans-Pennine routes via Leeds leave the ECML. The junction was historically a major site for rolling stock manufacture, maintenance and repair.
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Consumerism , Water - . The majority of commuters to central London (about 80% of 1.1 million) arrive by either the Underground (400,000 daily) or by surface railway into these termini (860,000 daily)
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel - YORK Station , UK  York is one of the most important railway junction stations on the British railway network, approximately halfway between London and Edinburgh; it is also a few miles north of the point where the Cross Country and Trans-Pennine routes via Leeds leave the ECML. The junction was historically a major site for rolling stock manufacture, maintenance and repair.
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel , Consumerism , Water - City of London - Most of an office building’s energy consumption over its lifetime is in lighting,.lifts, heating, cooling and computer usage. Buildings in the City can be made.more sustainable by architecture that responds to the conditions of a site with.integrated structure and building services. Effective use of passive solar heat.and the thermal mass of the building, high insulation levels, natural daylighting.and wind power can all help to minimise fossil energy use
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  • Nov/Dec 2011 - Stock photo shoot - Greenpeace Int - Transport, Travel - More London is a new development on the south bank of the River Thames, immediately south-west of Tower Bridge in London. The southern exit is on Tooley Street. - City of London - Most of an office building’s energy consumption over its lifetime is in lighting,.lifts, heating, cooling and computer usage. Buildings in the City can be made.more sustainable by architecture that responds to the conditions of a site with.integrated structure and building services. Effective use of passive solar heat.and the thermal mass of the building, high insulation levels, natural daylighting.and wind power can all help to minimise fossil energy use
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  • M62 at night
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