View allAll Photos Tagged 2026
Whitby Goth Weekend, Female, Steampunk, Corset, Blouse, Cross Bow, Hat, Feather, Brown, Bronze, Gold, Black, Leather, Coat, Jacket
I was told I need to upload photos more often - so this is for you "Wizard" ;)
For the record - one of my weight loss goals is to be as sexy as my car! :)
I was a nice day to go topless! :)
And Gooner - I seem to have lost one leg again!
Stagecoach in Hampshire Optare Solo SL 47545 (GX57 DJU) is seen on a service 72 working in Fleet Road, Cove, Farnborough, Hampshire on 17/02/2015.
A pair of Tier 4 ES44AC test units, GECX 2025, and GECX 2026, lead a NTWMIN 'round the bend in Hawley on this grey post Christmas day....Check out those huge radiator flares and the new "box" in front of them.
2026 Geely EX5 Chinese electricity mini SUV thingies on display inside High Chelmer shopping centre in the City of Chelmsford in the County of Essex (UK).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geely_EX5
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geely_Auto
My cars album flic.kr/s/aHsiNiGeyZ
Photograph taken by and copyright of my regular photostream contributor David and is posted here with very
TAKHT-BAHI: PAKISTAN: 20-August-2009..Children of Pakistan's Internaly Displaced People or IDP's enjoy a swing at the Fun Area of Jalala camp near Mardan. Most of the IDP camps in Mardan, Peshawar and Naushera were closed recently after many areas were declared "clear" after a military operation against militants. Some 700 families are still taking refuge at this camp at Takht-Bahi. Photo by Muzammil Pasha for The National
www.youtube.com/watch?v=3yYMqdR1neg
This is a fictional interview based on real interview material :
issuu.com/cesarharada/docs/2016_web_light
issuu.com/cesarharada/docs/2026_web
issuu.com/cesarharada/docs/2066_web
July, 2016
" I live in Cha Kwo Ling. I am getting older. I love being here. I have a lot
of friends, my neighbours look after me, we have shops and restaurants. My parents were born here so I came back to our home. It is very safe here, our doors are always open. Long time ago, we had fishermen, people working in the stone quarry, and later in the oil industry on the docks. All of this is gone now. We have a recycling centre, waste materials everywhere, trucks come and go all day long, it is a good business but some people are complaining about the noise and the dirt ; I don’t mind. I take the minibus everyday in and out. When there is heavy rain, some roofs are leaking. We have mosquitoes, rats running around at night, sometimes even snakes, but we are used to it. We love it here. I don’t have much hope for Cha Kwo ling, I live day by day, trying to live a happy life. We are proud of our beautiful temple and festivals that attract people from all around."
== Exhibitied at ==
Osage Gallery
觀塘興業街二十號
聯合興業工廠大廈四樓
4/F, Union Hing Yip Factory Building,
20 Hing Yip Street, Kwun Tong, Kowloon, Hong Kong
== Authors ==
Documentation: Selina XinYi Zhang William Wong
House 2016: Song Jia Rui, Hao Jia, Li Dai
House 2026: David Tam Bobo Ngai Orlando Chan Pearl Cao Janet Choi Wen Nian
House 2066: Venus Ng TingTing Ng Timothy Lam Ivan Chan Desmond Chang
Mentors: Susanne Trumpf, Georg Hoehne, Cesar Jung-Harada
Director of Program: Tobias Klein
== Brief ==
SUGAR is delicious. And Hong Kong exemplifies our global society’s addiction to the sweet life. Life in Hong Kong is fast-paced, convenient, delicious and glittery. In Hong Kong, you will find people shopping in both luxury goods stores and fast fashion giants, dining in Michelin-starred restaurants, traveling via one of the best public transportation systems in the world and living in beautiful homes in the sky.
As with the gaping cavities that result from over-consumption of sugar, Hong Kong also suffers negative consequences of its sugar addiction. The pursuit of the good life has led society to wilfully turn a blind eye to the cost and consequence of its consumption. Hong Kong is paying the toll of its addiction. Overflowing landfills, polluted air and waterways, hungry children and homeless seniors are the untold parts of Hong Kong’s story. The city that hosts the highest density of millionaires is also the home of caged home dwellers.
The concentration of wealth and power have reached such extent that the whole city landscape manifests how decisions are taken: top down. Big scale investments shape the urban life. The way of financing, the use of resources and targeted clientele for the majority of projects are decided based on the expected revenue. The lack of responsible involvement and intervention is not only an emerging factor in architectural profession. Hong Kong young generation see themselves with little perspective due to unaffordable property prices and question the inequality in the city's population. The aesthetic of the city is for most “business-friendly”, which really is sterile, technocentric, vacant of any form of spontaneity and life.
How can city dwellers move away from pure consumption and reclaim an active advocacy? How can the future population of Hong Kong deal more responsibly with the offer of sugar? Can life come back in the constructed environment? How can we break away from sugar addiction and build together a sustainable city?
Cesar Jung-Harada and Susanne Trumpf, with the support of Georg Hoehne.