“Elizabeth, we loved everything!”
Categories: Culture | Europe | History | Photo project
By Pictolic https://pictolic.com/article/elizabeth-we-loved-everything.htmlAmong the pieces of peeling paint and fragments of broken mirrors, everything breathes history, surrounded by dead silence. Urban explorer and photographer Andrew Marland captures the breathtaking beauty of Britain's abandoned buildings. The series includes photographs of the gloomy rooms of an empty psychiatric hospital, the halls of an old fire station, the doors of which have not been opened for more than 40 years, the walls of a forgotten church. All photos were taken with a Samsung smartphone.
(Total 15 photos)
London Road fire station in Manchester.
London Road fire station in Manchester.
Fire station in Manchester.
London Road fire station in Manchester.
London Road fire station in Manchester.
London Road fire station in Manchester.
Packham Church, London.
Packham Church, London.
Crossense Pumping Station, Bexley.
Crossense Pumping Station, Bexley.
Crossense Pumping Station, Bexley.
Crossense Pumping Station, Bexley.
St. Clement's Psychiatric Hospital, London.
St. Clement's Psychiatric Hospital, London.
St. Clement's Psychiatric Hospital, London.
Keywords: Abandoned buildings | Smartphone | Photography | B/w
Post News ArticleRecent articles
In 1960, located in the East of the African continent Uganda gained independence from Britain. But getting rid of colonial rule did ...
No one likes to wash dishes, so we found some good ideas on how to make it edible. As soon as the party ends, you wash the glasses ...
Related articles
Have you ever noticed that if you turn a photo of a human face upside down, what you see seriously resembles the physiognomy of a ...
Just in time for National Cake Day, celebrated on November 26th, we have the picture-perfect way to mark the occasion: a showcase ...
Every parent of a baby younger kindergarten age knows that the most terrible sound in the house at the same time which causes ...
Work and life take up so much of our time that most often we simply have no time to notice the various interesting things that ...