Bilbao. A regeneration story.

Ten years ago, a bizarre “it”, a between a and a gigantic fish, was anchored on the banks of the river Nervión, in the ex-industrial area of . Its back was clad in titanium panels and its stomach was filled up with masterpieces of art. The Bilbaínos went down to see. They were dazzled by the sudden glare that flooded their grey city; shocked by the amount of money spent for this project, totally funded by the Basque authorities, they were incredulous of the . Ten years later, this “it”, the , changed the city’s image. , the former coal-mining city has become like the Mecca of and avant guard , and consequently a boosting tourist destination.

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Photos ©/Lightmediation Text ®Elisavet Laloudaki

Contact - Thierry Tinacci Lightmediation Photo Agency +33 (0)6 61 80 57 21 thierry[AT]lightmediation.com


Spain : the future’s lab.

The Spanish architectural landscape is in turmoil… Local creators or international stars turned this peninsula into one of the finest experimentation grounds.

Photos ©/Lightmediation Text ® and Rafael Pic

Contact - Thierry Tinacci Lightmediation Photo Agency +33 (0)6 61 80 57 21 thierry[AT]lightmediation.com


Parution Italie - PRIVATE - The Shipwrecks of the night by Michel Lozano


Parution Espagne - Muy Interesante- Versailles par Marc Deville

Un article détaillé sur la rénovation du château de Versailles d’après le reportage de Marc Deville dans le Muy espagnol:


Les caves se rebiffent !

Dans les vignes de la . Du verre, du bois, du béton, le futur claque dans le ciel d’, où les plus grands architectes créent des chais ultra contemporains. Pour le meilleur de l’image et du .

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Shipwrecks of the night

Hoping to find a better life in Europe, every year, dozens of men women and children die while tempting to cross the Strait of Gibraltar on board makeshift crafts, without anybody showing the slightest interest. Hardly twenty years ago, southern European countries like , Portugal, Italy and Greece were exporting labor. During almost a century, these developing countries, who were experiencing a population explosion, pushed millions of poor people to move to the developed countries of Europe (France, Belgium, Germany, UK, Switzerland).The massive emigration was painful to families but beneficial for the countries’ economy. In the 1960s, the transfer of currencies of Spanish workers working abroad was, together with tourism, the first national resources. Today, these countries from southern Europe have become members of the EU and are part of the very select club of rich nations. They have reached a long-dreamt-of modernity and seem to have totally forgotten their past as lands of emigration as well as the humiliation and discrimination, which their citizens have had to endure abroad. For the past ten years, thousands of emigrants from western Africa and from the Maghreb are fleeing misery, under-development , wars… Risking their life, they cross deserts, a Straight and are the victims of dishonest smugglers, and end up as illegal immigrants exploited by slave traders of times who offer them illegal work, paying them a miserable amount of money, with no rights, no papers, no health care, no respect…It took me four years to make this photographic work and to better understand the route of suffering and fear which these men and women must take. I’ve followed and shared their journey on both sides of the Strait of Gibraltar, mostly in the cities and around Tarifa, Tangiers and the two Spanish enclaves Ceuta and Melilla. For the thousands of candidates to the eldorado, the cities are the entry gates of illegal immigration to Europe.

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