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ny210425225010 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before Wednesday 12:01 A.M. ET April 22, 2025. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Sargeant Rob Goacher of the Rural Crime Team stopped two farmers with a trailer of straw during his daily patrol of the roads of Wiltshire, England, March 4, 2025. In rural England, increasingly sophisticated farming equipment has become a target for thieves, adding to pressure on farming communities. (James Hill/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny301124175813 When it comes to naming streets ?You have to strike the right balance,? according to Lorrie Parise, who since 1998 has come up with the names for hundreds of streets, roads, drives and trails that crisscross two Houston-area planned communities. (Kathleen Fu/The New York Times/Fotoarena) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY WITH STREET NAMES BY JOANNE KAUFMAN FOR NOV. 30, 2024. ALL OTHER USE PROHIBITED.
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ny301124175711 When it comes to naming streets ?You have to strike the right balance,? according to Lorrie Parise, who since 1998 has come up with the names for hundreds of streets, roads, drives and trails that crisscross two Houston-area planned communities. (Kathleen Fu/The New York Times/Fotoarena) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY WITH STREET NAMES BY JOANNE KAUFMAN FOR NOV. 30, 2024. ALL OTHER USE PROHIBITED.
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ny041124180111 Joel Engardio, a Supervisor for the Sunset District, on the Great Highway, Oct. 19, 2024. Proposition K on the San Francisco ballot would permanently close the flat, two-mile stretch of pavement to cars, turning it over to cyclists, pedestrians, roller skaters and dogs. (Lauren Segal/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny041024225111 Volunteers fill up water jugs for local residents at a water distribution center at Pack Square Park in Asheville, N.C., on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024. The limit was two gallons per person, or five per family. City officials have refused to provide estimates of when the devastated water system in Asheville, N.C., will be back in operation. (Christian Monterrosa/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny070924134921 Linda Nelson, Economic and Community Development Director for Stonington, Maine, stands for a portrait at Fifield Lobster, a commercial wharf and seafood wholesale dealer, in Stonington, Maine, on Aug. 8, 2024. After two devastating storms hit Stonington in January, plans are multiplying to raise and fortify wharves, roads and buildings. (Tristan Spinski/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130624191311 Father G?rard Tsatselam holds a Thursday evening Mass, for which only two people showed up, at the Marie-Reine-des-Indiens church in Unamen Shipu, Quebec on Jan. 18, 2024. In this indigenous community on the Gulf of St. Lawrence and unreachable by roads, a sexual abuse scandal pushed a church to the edge; Tsatselam, from Cameroon, must comfort the afflicted to bring it back. (Renaud Philippe/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130124200607 A campaign sign for Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina and a Republican presidential candidate, is surrounded by snow outside a campaign event in Davenport, Iowa on Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024. With the final weekend before the Iowa caucuses upon them, Republican presidential candidates are battling two forces ? brutally cold temperatures and the threat of low voter turnout ? as they navigate snow, icy roads and stiff, subarctic winds, and urge people to show up on Monday night. (Ruth Fremson/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130124185706 A campaign sign for former President Donald Trump stands buried in snow outside the Trump campaign headquarters in Urbandale, Iowa on Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024. With the final weekend before the Iowa caucuses upon them, Republican presidential candidates are battling two forces ? brutally cold temperatures and the threat of low voter turnout ? as they navigate snow, icy roads and stiff, subarctic winds, and urge people to show up on Monday night. (Jon Cherry/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny061123145806 A group of students from the College of Staten Island cheer for passing cyclists riding the route of the the New York City Marathon ahead of the runners, in Brooklyn, Nov. 5, 2023. For the last two decades, cyclists have been riding the course in the magic time after the roads are partially closed and before the thousands of racers begin running. (Pete Kiehart/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny151023140206 Flowers and a cross, left, in memory of Po?omaika?i Estores-Losano, a 28-year-old father of two who died in August in the Lahaina wildfire, on display with crosses for other victims along a bypass road in Lahaina, Hawaii, Sept. 2, 2023. Over the last two months, the names of those who perished in the fires on Maui have been revealed in a slow and unsettling trickle. (Michelle Mishina Kunz/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny140823125207 Two women walk along a gravel road in Chak, in Wardak province, Afghanistan, on July 13, 2023. Residents in this stretch of central Afghanistan that harbored deep support for the Taliban say decades of war transformed the young generation. (Jim Huylebroek/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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MG1195268 FRANCE. Verneuil-sur-Seine. 2023. "Red bricks" housing projects, young people from different generations get together for a barbecue to pass the time.A hooded man on a motorcycle.
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ny050623204505 The road leading to the Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Bonne Terre, Mo., where Michael Tisius is scheduled to be executed for the June 22, 2000, murders of two jail guards, May 31, 2023. Gov. Mike Parson of Missouri said on Monday that he would not intervene to stop the execution of Tisius. (David Robert Elliott/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny040623162206 The road leading to the Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Bonne Terre, Mo., where Michael Tisius is scheduled to be executed for the June 22, 2000, murders of two jail guards, May 31, 2023. As Tisius, the Missouri man convicted in the killings, awaits execution on Tuesday, June 6, 2023, some jurors have expressed regret and asked the governor to commute the death sentence to life in prison. (David Robert Elliott/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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MG1172213 TURKEY. Antakya. 2023. Two women clean communal dishes used for cooking for the vast number of displaced people from the earthquake. They are scattered across tent cities in municipal parks and in the outskirts of town. On February 6, 2023, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake hit central and southern Turkey, and Northern Syria. It was followed by a 7.7 magnitude earthquake. It is estimated that there were 45,000 deaths in Turkey, and approximately 7,000 in Syria.
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ny201222224006 Thomas Stewart looks for signs of structural damage to Fernbridge, the main access route to the city of Ferndale, Calif., Dec. 20, 2022, after a 6.4-magnitude earthquake shook Humboldt County in Northern California early Tuesday morning. The bridge was closed to traffic because of broken pavement caused by an earthquake in the area overnight. The quake struck southwest of Eureka at about 2:30 a.m., leaving at least two people dead and knocking out power for tens of thousands of customers in Humboldt County. (Justin Maxon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny231122165006 Art handlers install works by Anatol Petrytskyi from left: two costume designs for the ballet ÒEccentric DancesÓ (1922) and one for the opera ÒTurandotÓ (1928), at the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum in Madrid, Nov. 22, 2022. An exhibition in Spain is the first comprehensive survey of Ukrainian modernist art abroad Ñ it was a long road from Kyiv to Madrid. (Emilio Parra Doiztua/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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MG1118990 UKRAINE. Mayaki. 17 March 2022. A Ukrainian couple bound for Moldova walk toward the Palanca border crossing between Odesa Province in Ukraine, and Moldova.According to Doctors Without Borders, thousands of Ukrainians are arriving at the Palanca border crossing in Moldova every day to escape the fighting in the south of Ukraine. Since the war began, more than 230,000 refugees (as of March 8) have arrived in Moldova. However, less than half of them have stayed – heading west to other countries in Europe.
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ny240522142805 Mourners kneel by the side of the road as the funeral procession for Ukrainian soldiers Igor Olefir, 31, and Mykhailo Grygorash, 22, passes by in Synyak, Ukraine, on Tuesday, May 24, 2022. The two were killed by a Russian missile strike against their military base on May 17. (Nicole Tung/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny030422231005 Gulabuddin cleans a truck for 50 cents to $1 along the Salang Pass, the only viable land route to Kabul, the capital, from AfghanistanÕs north, March 3, 2022. After overthrowing the government, the Taliban are now trying to save whatÕs left of the roads they spent years blowing up, with none more critical than the two-mile-high pass through the Hindu Kush. (Kiana Hayeri/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny150322230605 Tea is boiled in makeshift stoves for travelers at a roadside stop in Zabul Province along the 300-mile road that connects Kabul and Kandahar, AfghanistanÕs two largest cities, in December 2021. The once-perilous journey from Kabul to Kandahar has changed under the Taliban. (David Guttenfelder/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny150322230205 Passengers wait for their bus to be reparied at a roadside stop in Zabul Province, Afghanistan, while traveling along the 300-mile road from Kabul to Kandahar, AfghanistanÕs two largest cities, in December 2021. The once-perilous journey from Kabul to Kandahar has changed under the Taliban. (David Guttenfelder/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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MG172485 NORTH MACEDONIA. 2019. Veles. The small Macedonian town of Veles (population ca 50 000) placed itself on the world map during the US elections in 2016, when it became an epicentre for the production of fake news. Looking for a way to make money, local youth created hundreds of “news” websites that emulated American political news portals, with names such as NYTimesPolitics.com, Trump365.com, USAnewsflash.com. These were spread to millions through Facebook and Twitter, and while the local youth made good money from the resulting Google ad revenues, they could also have inadvertently have had an impact on the election of Donal Trump. Facebook and Twitter changed their algorithms to shut down such activities, but several of the Veles operators were found to have been active in the 2020 Trump vs Biden election as well.("The Book of Veles" series is an exploration of the possibilities of digitally manufactured imagery, with every picture being subject to manipulation.)
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MG172503 NORTH MACEDONIA. 2019. Veles. The small Macedonian town of Veles (population ca 50 000) placed itself on the world map during the US elections in 2016, when it became an epicentre for the production of fake news. Looking for a way to make money, local youth created hundreds of “news” websites that emulated American political news portals, with names such as NYTimesPolitics.com, Trump365.com, USAnewsflash.com. These were spread to millions through Facebook and Twitter, and while the local youth made good money from the resulting Google ad revenues, they could also have inadvertently have had an impact on the election of Donal Trump. Facebook and Twitter changed their algorithms to shut down such activities, but several of the Veles operators were found to have been active in the 2020 Trump vs Biden election as well.("The Book of Veles" series is an exploration of the possibilities of digitally manufactured imagery, with every picture being subject to manipulation.)
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MG172515 NORTH MACEDONIA. 2020. Veles. The small Macedonian town of Veles (population ca 50 000) placed itself on the world map during the US elections in 2016, when it became an epicentre for the production of fake news. Looking for a way to make money, local youth created hundreds of “news” websites that emulated American political news portals, with names such as NYTimesPolitics.com, Trump365.com, USAnewsflash.com. These were spread to millions through Facebook and Twitter, and while the local youth made good money from the resulting Google ad revenues, they could also have inadvertently have had an impact on the election of Donal Trump. Facebook and Twitter changed their algorithms to shut down such activities, but several of the Veles operators were found to have been active in the 2020 Trump vs Biden election as well.("The Book of Veles" series is an exploration of the possibilities of digitally manufactured imagery, with every picture being subject to manipulation.)
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MG172520 NORTH MACEDONIA. 2019. Veles. The small Macedonian town of Veles (population ca 50 000) placed itself on the world map during the US elections in 2016, when it became an epicentre for the production of fake news. Looking for a way to make money, local youth created hundreds of “news” websites that emulated American political news portals, with names such as NYTimesPolitics.com, Trump365.com, USAnewsflash.com. These were spread to millions through Facebook and Twitter, and while the local youth made good money from the resulting Google ad revenues, they could also have inadvertently have had an impact on the election of Donal Trump. Facebook and Twitter changed their algorithms to shut down such activities, but several of the Veles operators were found to have been active in the 2020 Trump vs Biden election as well.("The Book of Veles" series is an exploration of the possibilities of digitally manufactured imagery, with every picture being subject to manipulation.)
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MG172693 MEXICO. El Pescado, Guerrero. April 2021. The Arroyo family walks in the dark for two hours to get home. They have been forcibly displaced by organized crime.
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MG187296 POLAND. Bialystok. 01 September 2021. Ruslan and Tanya Kulevich posing for portrait in the residential district of Bialystok. Ruslan has been arrested, beaten by Omon ( Belarusian special police forces) and inprisoned for reporting on antigovernmental protests in Grodno. His wife Tanya has been beaten and arrested. They are now political refugees in Poland.
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MG1105526 AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. December 10, 2021. Drug addicts gather in a haunt for drug users in the western edge of Kabul. A survey on Drug Use in Afghanistan, issued by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), shows that around one million Afghans (age 15-64) suffer from drug addiction. At eight per cent of the population, this rate is twice the global average.
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MG172140 CANADA. Ontario, London. June 12th, 2021. impromptu memorial for the Muslim family killed in a hate attack few days before.
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ny280821142805 Les Pieux, France, where Dr. Dr. Martial Jardel replaced a local doctor for two weeks, June 10, 2021. Newly graduated from medical school, Jardel set off on a five-month road trip to help out in areas of France suffering from a shortage of physicians. (Andrea Mantovani/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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NN11620931 USA. Minneapolis, Minnesota. April 18, 2020. Chris Sayers, 51, has been homeless for 10 months. Last year his Ojibwe tribe, Red Lake Nation, started construction on a housing complex for the homeless in Minneapolis called Mino-Bimaadiziwin, which roughly translates as "live the good life." Chris had hoped to be living there by now but construction has been delayed because of the pandemic. When I met him, Chris and his girlfriend (name withheld) were waiting to have their car towed. "Each day is a gift," he told me, "it took me a long time to learn that, but now I'm a happy person. I'm just grateful to be alive."
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NN11620934 USA. Minneapolis, Minnesota. April 18, 2020. Chris Sayers, 51, has been homeless for 10 months. Last year his Ojibwe tribe, Red Lake Nation, started construction on a housing complex for the homeless in Minneapolis called Mino-Bimaadiziwin, which roughly translates as "live the good life." Chris had hoped to be living there by now but construction has been delayed because of the pandemic. When I met him, Chris and his girlfriend (name withheld) were waiting to have their car towed. "Each day is a gift," he told me, "it took me a long time to learn that, but now I'm a happy person. I'm just grateful to be alive."
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NN11620979 POLAND. Warsaw. April 18, 2020. Martyna and Pawel with their dog Zima (Winter) posing for portrait next to Poniatowski bridge. Dog walkers are one of the few people you can meet in the streets of Warsaw overnight. Due to COVID-19 people are not allowed to be outside except for walking the dog, going to grocery or pharmacy.
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NN11630653 GREECE. Lesbos. July 2020. Moria Camp. A mother and child spending their afternoon at the sunset.
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MG124969 JORDAN. May 17, 2020. Zaatari Syrian Refugee Camp. The Zaatari camp for Syrian refugees in Jordan. Although the Jordanian authorities report no Coronavirus cases inside the refugee camps. the living conditions of refugees present a further challenge to containing the spread of COVID-19. Social distancing in public is also difficult in the two densely populated main camps, Zaatari (hosting about 76,000 refugees) and Azraq (about 36,000). In urban areas, Syrian refugees live in similarly crowded settings, with dwellings consisting of two or three rooms for households of five or more. Jordan has served as a haven for different groups fleeing persecution throughout history, from the arrival of Palestinian refugees after 1948 and again after 1967, to the acceptance of Iraqi refugees in the wake of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. Since 2012, there has been an influx of Syrian refugees. Recently, Sudanese Somali, and Yemeni refugee populations have also started to grow, as has the presence of migrant workers from Egypt, and others from African and Southeast Asian countries.
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MG124968 JORDAN. Mafraq. May 12, 2020. Syrian refugees gather for a distribution organized by UNICEF of COVID-19 hygiene kits and other supplies to assist Syrian refugees living in an informal tent settlement on the outskirts of Mafraq, Jordan. The living conditions of refugees in these settlements, as well as in urban and camp settings present a further challenge to containing the spread of COVID-19. Social distancing in public is also difficult in the two densely populated main camps, Zaatari (hosting about 76,000 refugees) and Azraq (about 36,000). In urban areas, Syrian refugees live in similarly crowded settings, with dwellings consisting of two or three rooms for households of five or more. Jordan has served as a haven for different groups fleeing persecution throughout history, from the arrival of Palestinian refugees after 1948 and again after 1967, to the acceptance of Iraqi refugees in the wake of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. Since 2012, there has been an influx of Syrian refugees. Recently, Sudanese Somali, and Yemeni refugee populations have also started to grow, as has the presence of migrant workers from Egypt, and others from African and Southeast Asian countries.
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MG124976 JORDAN. May 21, 2020. Zaatari Syrian Refugee Camp. Syrian children inside the Azraq refugee camp in Jordan, where living conditions of refugees present a further challenge to containing the spread of COVID-19. Two-thirds of households living in Jordan’s Syrian refugee camps have more than three people per room, making effective self-isolation impossible. Social distancing in public is also difficult in the two densely populated main camps, Zaatari (hosting about 76,000 refugees) and Azraq (about 36,000). In urban areas, Syrian refugees live in similarly crowded settings, with dwellings consisting of two or three rooms for households of five or more.
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MG137089 SUDAN, Gedaref Region, Eastern border with Ethiopia/Tigray Region. Um Rakuba Camp. 2020/12. Ethnic Tigray, Ethiopian, refugees who fled the central goverment’s military offensive against what is perceived as separatism by the Tigray regional governement and it’s military branch TPLF. When crossing into Sudan the refugees are transferred and settled in Um Rakuba, which was already a site of camps during the 1984 famine.MSF runs the water supplies and has an emergency clinic in the camp.
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NN11616525 FRANCE, Paris, 2020/3. Coronavirus crisis. Before the lockdown. Shopping for WC paper.
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ny140120140504 A briefing on Sunday, Jan. 12, 2020, for people who were part of the first convoy to leave Mallacoota, Australia, after the military cleared some roads north of town. With the only road in or out blocked for two weeks by fallen and smoldering trees, the usually laid-back beach town, Mallacoota, had grown tense with the hardships that come with isolation. (Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny231019142004 Amado waits for a train on a Time Square-42nd Street station platform in New York, on June 31, 2019. Amado sometimes attends protests and meetings for Make the Road New York, an immigrant advocacy group that helped him two years ago. (Ryan Christopher Jones/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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NN11610788 South Africa. Gauteng. Sharpeville. Two local young men gesture for the camera on the ground that was once the field the protesters ran across while fleeing from police bullets on 21st March 1960, the day of the Sharpeville Massacre. The area has now been redeveloped.
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ny190918173803 First responders gather along Highway 76 where they were searching for a submerged van near Nichols, S.C., Sept. 19, 2018. Two patients trapped inside a sheriff?s van died on Tuesday evening after the van became submerged in floodwaters from Hurricane Florence, the authorities said. (Johnny Milano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny190918174004 A flooded section of Highway 76 where law enforcement were searching for a submerged van near Nichols, S.C., Sept. 19, 2018. Two patients trapped inside a sheriff?s van died on Tuesday evening after the van became submerged in floodwaters from Hurricane Florence, the authorities said. (Johnny Milano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny190918174204 A police helicopter lands where police were searching for a submerged van along Highway 76 near Nichols, S.C., Sept. 19, 2018. Two patients trapped inside a sheriff?s van died on Tuesday evening after the van became submerged in floodwaters from Hurricane Florence, the authorities said. (Johnny Milano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny190918215803 A flooded grain business along Highway 76, which follows the power lines at left, where law enforcement were searching for a submerged van near Nichols, S.C., Sept. 19, 2018. Two patients trapped inside a sheriff?s van died on Tuesday evening after the van became submerged in floodwaters from Hurricane Florence, the authorities said. (Johnny Milano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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NN11542656 AZERBAIJAN, Lerik. 2018. A mother and her daughter walk on a road of Zarikumecu village.(Obligatory Credit: The credit for this image must read as "© Emin Ozmen/Magnum Photos with support from the Pulitzer Center”.)
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NN11542920 UKRAINE. Myorske (East Ukraine). 2018. Checkpoint for Donetsk residents in line-ups usually lasting for 7-8 hours, returning to pro-Russian separatist side where they live. The elderly cross monthly into Ukraine to collect pension cheques.
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NN11547805 IRAN. Zardkuh, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari. 2018. Zeynab Gheybipour, 20 years old left bringing water for their family with her cousin Mahtab Gheybipour, 20 years old. Zeynab didn’t get married yet and she got her bachelor in computer. “ I always wanted to be a nurse but because there no nursing school around us I had to study computer. I am looking for a job which is really hard to find because we are moving twice a year. My sister and I studied in a boarding school as our parents really wanted us to study.” Mahtab who is at the same age with Zeynab is married and have 2 kids. There are many things within Bakhtiaris which are women’s job and no man would do that such as bringing water or milking the flock.
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NN11547804 IRAN. Zardkuh, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari. 2018. Zeynab Gheybipour, 20 years old right bringing water for their family with her cousin Mahtab Gheybipour, 20 years old. Zeynab didn’t get married yet and she got her bachelor in computer. “ I always wanted to be a nurse but because there no nursing school around us I had to study computer. I am looking for a job which is really hard to find because we are moving twice a year. My sister and I studied in a boarding school as our parents really wanted us to study.”Mahtab who is at the same age with Zeynab is married and have 2 kids. There are many things within Bakhtiaris which are women’s job and no man would do that such as bringing water or milking the flock.
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NN11547806 IRAN. Zardkuh, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari. 2018. Zeynab Gheybipour, 20 years old left bringing water for their family with her cousin Mahtab Gheybipour, 20 years old. Zeynab didn’t get married yet and she got her bachelor in computer. “ I always wanted to be a nurse but because there no nursing school around us I had to study computer. I am looking for a job which is really hard to find because we are moving twice a year. My sister and I studied in a boarding school as our parents really wanted us to study.” Mahtab who is at the same age with Zeynab is married and have 2 kids. There are many things within Bakhtiaris which are women’s job and no man would do that such as bringing water or milking the flock.
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NN11547807 IRAN. Zardkuh, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari. 2018. Zeynab Gheybipour, 20 years old left bringing water for their family with her cousin Mahtab Gheybipour, 20 years old. Zeynab didn’t get married yet and she got her bachelor in computer. “ I always wanted to be a nurse but because there no nursing school around us I had to study computer. I am looking for a job which is really hard to find because we are moving twice a year. My sister and I studied in a boarding school as our parents really wanted us to study.” Mahtab who is at the same age with Zeynab is married and have 2 kids. There are many things within Bakhtiaris which are women’s job and no man would do that such as bringing water or milking the flock.
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NN11547810 IRAN. Zardkuh, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari. 2018. Zeynab Gheybipour, 20 years old left bringing water for their family with her cousin Mahtab Gheybipour, 20 years old. Zeynab didn’t get married yet and she got her bachelor in computer. “ I always wanted to be a nurse but because there no nursing school around us I had to study computer. I am looking for a job which is really hard to find because we are moving twice a year. My sister and I studied in a boarding school as our parents really wanted us to study.” Mahtab who is at the same age with Zeynab is married and have 2 kids. There are many things within Bakhtiaris which are women’s job and no man would do that such as bringing water or milking the flock.
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NN11577665 MEXICO. Santo Domingo Ingenio, Oaxaca. 29 October, 2018.Central American migrants taking part in a caravan of thousands making their way from Central America to the US border, wait for a ride by the side of the road outside the village of Santo Domingo Ingenio, Oaxaca, Mexico.On October 3, a so-called "Migrant Caravan" of about 1,500 Hondurans left the city of San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Fleeing from the violence, lack of opportunities and political repression in their country, they are on their way to the southern U.S. border with the hope of seeking asylum in the United States. On October 19, the caravan reached the border between Guatemala and Mexico. After tension and harassment they finally entered the Mexican territory. By then the caravan included other Central American migrants and had grown to more than 7,000 people according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM). It is now making its way through the state of Oaxaca where they have been sleeping on the streets and other improvised shelters provided by the local governments inside the different towns they have reached. The journey continues as they head toward their final destination, the USA/Mexican border.
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NN11548227 A stockpile of sand and gravel in Bedok, eastern Singapore, as seen from a public road. This reserve, which belongs to the country's main building authority - the Housing and Development Board - is ringed by two layers of fencing. Land-scarce Singapore, which has reclaimed about 20 per cent of its area since becoming an independent country in 1965, has had a long history of creating land out of the sea and swamps since British colonial times in the 1820s. It flattened many of its hills and ran out of its own supply of sand decades ago and has been buying sand from its Southeast Asian neighbours for reclamation and construction work.
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ny040618214111 Signs advertising candidates for Congress on the side of the road in Carlsbad, Calif., June 4, 2018. For the 2018 primaries in California, all Democrat eyes are on three Orange County House districts, where they fear their glut of contenders could lock them out of the general election. (Hilary Swift/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny290518190112 Would-be patrons peer into a Starbucks, cosed for companywide anti-bias training on Street Road in Feasterville-Trevose, Pa., May 29, 2018. The training is part of a well-choreographed effort to improve its corporate image after the arrests of two African-American men in a Starbucks in Philadelphia last month prompted accusations of racial bias. (Corey Perrine/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny110318195512 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before Monday, 2:59 a.m. ET March 12, 2018. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Charcoal for sale along the main road in Turkana County in Kenya, Feb. 6, 2018. Four severe droughts have walloped the area in the last two decades, a rapid succession that has pushed millions of the world?s poorest to the edge of survival in the horn of Africa. (Joao Silva/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny310118210212 Carolyn Higgins, a former marketer in San Francisco who has a sizable following on YouTube for "Carolyn's RV Life," with her dog Capone, in her camper at the Rubber Tramp Rendezvous in Quartzite, Ariz., Jan. 17, 2018. A disparate tribe of vehicular nomads flock to this dusty desert town each winter. (Jake Michaels/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny310118205013 Carolyn Higgins, a former marketer in San Francisco who has been on the road with her RV named Matilda for two years, at the Rubber Tramp Rendezvous in Quartzite, Ariz., Jan. 17, 2018. A disparate tribe of vehicular nomads flock to this dusty desert town each winter. They come for the boondocking -- nomad vernacular for free or low-cost camping -- and for the community. (Jake Michaels/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny110917170803 Tyler Carque and Terri Dowell on a bus for another shelter after staying at Highland Oaks Middle School in Miami, Sept. 11, 2017. The two live in Marathon, in the Florida Keys, and will not be able to return home immediately. About 70 percent of the city remained without electricity Monday in the wake of Hurricane Irma, and roads were not only impassable but traffic lights were not working, city officials said. (Kevin Hagen/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny240817202110 Gov. Andrew Cuomo at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the opening of the first span of the Gov. Mario M. Cuomo Bridge in Tarrytown, N.Y., Aug. 24, 2017. After two decades of dithering by government officials and four years of herculean construction, the bridge is set to open at the Tappan Zee on Saturday. (Kevin Hagen/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny070817150111 Journeymen Ñ itinerant craftsmen who travel for work experience Ñ repair the roof of a building near Wittstock, Germany, June 20, 2017. Honoring a tradition dating to Medieval times, the Wandergesellen adhere to arcane rules and customs as they live by their wits, their craft and the generosity of strangers, vowing to not return home for two or three years, plus a day. (Tomas Munita/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny070817150411 Journeymen Ñ itinerant craftsmen who travel for work experience Ñ check their maps as they hitchhiked through Germany, June 16, 2017. Honoring a tradition dating to Medieval times, the Wandergesellen adhere to arcane rules and customs as they live by their wits, their craft and the generosity of strangers, vowing to not return home for two or three years, plus a day. (Tomas Munita/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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NN11521443 TUNISIA. Tabarka. July 2017. Maintenance of aromatic and medicinal plants by a female workforce in the context of a project for culture and distillation of aromatic and medicinal plants.
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NN11526416 BANGLADESH. Teknaf. October 12, 2017.Recently arrived Rohingya refugees from Myanmar wait for permission to pass a Bangladeshi police checkpoint and proceed their journey toward one of the refugee camps.
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NN11561842 A stockpile of sand and gravel in Bedok, eastern Singapore, as seen from a public road. This reserve, which belongs to the country's main building authority - the Housing and Development Board - is ringed by two layers of fencing. Land-scarce Singapore, which has reclaimed about 20 per cent of its area since becoming an independent country in 1965, has had a long history of creating land out of the sea and swamps since British colonial times in the 1820s. It flattened many of its hills and ran out of its own supply of sand decades ago and has been buying sand from its Southeast Asian neighbours for reclamation and construction work.
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NN11561920 VIETNAM. Mekong Delta. 2017. Sand barge workers hose down a mountain of sand pumped up from the Mekong River's tributaries for road building near Can Tho city in the heart of the Mekong Delta. Barge after barge of sand arrives for these men to hose down as the sand is then pumped directly from their craft through pipes underground inland where the road is being built and a river being filled and diverted.
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NN11561932 VIETNAM. Mekong Delta. 2017. Sand barge workers hose down a mountain of sand pumped up from the Mekong River's tributaries for road building near Can Tho city in the heart of the Mekong Delta. Barge after barge of sand arrives for these men to hose down as the sand is then pumped directly from their craft through pipes underground inland where the road is being built and a river being filled and diverted.
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NN11561923 VIETNAM. Mekong Delta. 2017. Sand barge workers hose down a mountain of sand pumped up from the Mekong River's tributaries for road building near Can Tho city in the heart of the Mekong Delta. Barge after barge of sand arrives for these men to hose down as the sand is then pumped directly from their craft through pipes underground inland where the road is being built and a river being filled and diverted.
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NN11561934 VIETNAM. Mekong Delta. 2017. Sand barge workers hose down a mountain of sand pumped up from the Mekong River's tributaries for road building near Can Tho city in the heart of the Mekong Delta. Barge after barge of sand arrives for these men to hose down as the sand is then pumped directly from their craft through pipes underground inland where the road is being built and a river being filled and diverted.
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NN11561933 VIETNAM. Mekong Delta. 2017. Sand barge workers hose down a mountain of sand pumped up from the Mekong River's tributaries for road building near Can Tho city in the heart of the Mekong Delta. Barge after barge of sand arrives for these men to hose down as the sand is then pumped directly from their craft through pipes underground inland where the road is being built and a river being filled and diverted.
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ny070817143611 Two journeymen Ñ itinerant craftsmen who travel for work experience Ñ cross a field, setting out to hitchhike near Reutlingen, Germany, June 10, 2017. Honoring a tradition dating to Medieval times, the Wandergesellen adhere to arcane rules and customs as they live by their wits, their craft and the generosity of strangers, vowing to not return home for two or three years, plus a day. (Tomas Munita/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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NN11456541 USA. Fabens, NM. 2016. Bathrooms have been closed for last two days and they say this happens a lot here. These are old rest areas, built when the road was built.
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NN11467360 China. Shanghai. 2016. Men are laying cables on a road inside the former British Consession area in preparation for the erection of a new building. Here, they are passing a poster showing old and new architecture. The Treaty of Nanking in 1842 concluded the First Opium War and brought peace between China and Britain; the opening of Shanghai and other port cities, as well as residence for foreigners and consulates in those cities; fair import and export tariffs and the possession of Hong Kong. In 1843 the first British consul moved into the Old Town, signalling a foreign presence that would last until the Japanese invasion of China during WWII. The year 2017 commemorates 175 years of the British Concession in Shanghai.
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NN11480788 GB. England. London. Jeremy Corbyn, MP for Islington North and current leader of the Labour Party, stops to chat to two women on his way to his office when interrupted by a man who wonders whether he should be butting in. 2016
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NN11483427 IRAQ. Makhmour Front Line. JuLy 25, 2016. Women and children fleeing ISIS-controlled areas near the Iraqi town of Qayarah arrive at a Peshmerga front line position on the outskirts of Makhmour.
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NN11488758 CANADA, Nova Scotia, Cape Breton Island. 2016/10. Sydney. A couple disguised as Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton trick-a-treat-ing with their kids for Halloween.
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NN11488766 CANADA, Nova Scotia, Cape Breton Island. 2016/10. Sydney. A couple disguised as Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton trick-a-treat-ing with their kids for Halloween.
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NN11490724 IRAQ. Mosul. November 10, 2016.Civilians are fleeing from a neighborhood in East Mosul where Iraqi forces and ISIS are fighting.The Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) moved deeper into Mosul’s eastern neighborhoods
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NN11493520 USA. 2016. Jazz Hall of Fame guitarist Jimmy Stewart, reconnects with Laine Kazan at a Studio, City, California Italian restaurant. Besides being an film actress, Laine is a well established jazz singer and Jimmy was her director of music on the road for five years.
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NN11507349 United Arab Emirates. Sharjah. Sharjah Mega Mall, King Abdul Aziz Road at Abu Shagara. In the food court, two women order hamburgers and drinks from the McDonald's stand for their lunch. 2016
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MG17457 GREECE. Idomeni. 2016. It was early morning when I saw this father and his son walking in the cold on the rail of Idomeni's train station, where thousands of refugees were stuck at the border between Macedonian and Greece. Most of these people spent weeks or month on the road before to arrive in this camp. They had a long journey, they fled their home because of conflicts, violent or economical crisis. Their stories, their fates seen to hang in a state of "in betweenness" where the wait, hope, anxiety, confusion and anguish coexist, clash and confine them to a vague and confused state: the Limbo.
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ny131216203805 Threading through the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa near Kokstad during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in January of 2016. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216204003 A sign for Mikumi National Park in Tanzania, near Morogoro, during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in December of 2015. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216204703 Giraffes at Mikumi National Park in Tanzania, near Morogoro, during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in December of 2015. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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NN11446707 GREECE. Idomeni. September 30, 2015. Members of a Greek Christian church stand on a road waiting for refugees to pass and give them information about the Christian faith.
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ny131216204603 Roadside wares in rural Mozambique during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in January of 2016. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216203803 Asa, 4, the son of Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, and new friends in Praia Do Bilene, Mozambique, during a road trip across Africa with his family and another family, in January of 2016. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216204403 A pool hall in coastal Mozambique during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in January of 2016. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216203507 A bakery in Inhassoro, Mozambique during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in January of 2016. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216204103 The beach in Inhassoro, Mozambique, during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in December of 2015. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216204202 Robert Kluijver and his family take a break during a road trip across Africa he took with Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, and his family, in December of 2015. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216203702 Jackfruit for sale in Tanzania during a road trip Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, took across Africa with his family and another couple and their children, in December of 2015. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny131216204803 Apollo, 6, the son of Jeffrey Gettleman, the East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times, views the scenery in Tanzania during a road trip across Africa with his family and another family, in December of 2015. The two married couples, with five young children between them, traveled through six African countries and 4,250-miles in 16 days, starting in Nairobi and ending in Cape Town. (Jeffrey Gettleman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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NN11384607 IRAQ. Khazer. July 17, 2014. Two Iraqi girls walk toward a food distribution point at a makeshift camp for internally displaced people along the road from Mosul to Erbil. The girls fled the mostly-Shiite town of Tal Afar after ISIS militants, who consider non-Sunnis to be heretics, moved into the area. Hundreds of Shiite families from Tal Afar are now waiting in this camp at the southern entrance to Erbil province, awaiting permission from Kurdish authorities to cross into Kurdish-controlled territory.
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LON160950 Mexico. Mexico City. Torre BBVA-Bancomer, Under construction, in the summer of 2014, which will when finished be the tallest building in Latin America. Designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners in collaboration with Legorreta & Legorreta architects working as a joint venture, LegoRogers were commissioned to design a new headquarters building for BBVA Bancomer in Mexico City. The site is one of the most prominent in the Mexican capital, adjacent to Chapultepec Park, and the new building will serve as a physical manifestation of the partnership between Bancomer, Mexico’s premier bank and BBVA, one of the foremost financial institutions in the world.The collaboration between the two practices - with different architectural languages but with common values has generated a unique approach which, rather than manifesting the diverging expressions of each practice will create an innovative design for this project and for Mexico City.2014
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NN11555482 SOUTH AFRICA. Johannesburg. Thokoza 2014. Hustling for the next fix.
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