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The Thames Barrier is behind me. Millennium Mills is right in the background - the location for the face off in Episode 2, Second Series of Luther BBC1.
vue d,automne sur le lac Quévillon
© Tous droits réservés. L'utilisation sans ma permission écrite est illégale.
© All rights reserved. The use without my written permission is illegal.
© Prince des glaciers et Réal Lavigne
The Thames Barrier is a flood control structure on the River Thames, constructed between 1974 and 1984 at Woolwich Reach, London. It is the world's second largest movable flood barrier.
More info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thames_Barrier
The No Barriers Summit is the place where aspiring visionaries from all walks of life unite to discover how to bring the No Barriers Life to a world ready for greater possibilities.
Learn more at NoBarriersUSA.org
— Photo Credit: Todd Newcomer / No Barriers
— Photo by Todd Newcomer (www.instagram.com/toddnewcomer/)
— Image # 20210829_2314_ToddNewcomer
This barrier was put into place to contain debris during construction of a new lakeside marina. The image suffers a bit from addition of a 1.7x telephoto lens, making an effective focal length of 714mm with the Panasonic FZ30.
Thames Flood Barrier on Woolwich Reach - the end of our 10 mile walk from Tower Bridge.
Read about the Thames Flood Barrier - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thames_Barrier
The bamboo poles act as a barrier against the wawes. Instead of the sediment being transported away from the area it is now accumulated behind the barrier. Each year approximately half a metre of sediment is added. Coastal erosion has been stopped here - and mangroves are growing again.
The No Barriers Summit is the place where aspiring visionaries from all walks of life unite to discover how to bring the No Barriers Life to a world ready for greater possibilities.
Learn more at NoBarriersUSA.org
— Photo Credit: Todd Newcomer / No Barriers
— Photo by Todd Newcomer (www.instagram.com/toddnewcomer/)
— Image # 20210829_2111_ToddNewcomer