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DUKAS_189440732_ZUM
Israel-Hamas War 2025: Palestinian Solidarity Rally: ROME
September 30, 2025, Rome, Italy: Hundreds of students unfurl a Palestinian flag and march through the streets of La Sapienza University in solidarity with the Palestinians and the Global Sumud Flotilla. The students protest the Italian government's complicity with Israel and called on the university rector to sever ties with arms manufacturers. Students occupy the Faculty of Political Science. (Credit Image: © Marco Di Gianvito/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc. -
DUKAS_188696762_NUR
IFA 2025 Technology Trade Fair In Berlin
BERLIN, GERMANY – SEPTEMBER 6:
The face-care LED mask is on display at the Cecotec booth during IFA 2025 in Berlin, Germany, on September 6, 2025.
The Spanish home appliance and consumer electronics company is showcasing its latest innovations in smart home solutions, connected technology, and modern household appliances. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_163255818_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255870_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255868_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255820_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255864_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255823_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255817_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255848_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255826_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255828_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255821_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255847_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255822_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255846_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255827_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255851_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255850_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255825_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255867_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255866_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255865_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255869_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255824_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255819_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163255849_EYE
The heat is on as Britain's boom in seaside saunas stirs up some local sweat
Hot boxes are popping up on the coast, as well as beside lakes and rivers, but not everyone is happy about the trend.
Seaside saunas were just a wisp of a dream until 2018. Now anyone walking along a beach at one of the UK's main resorts is likely to come across a converted horse box offering heat and steam as a respite from bleak skies and icy winds.
There are now 70 such saunas operating in the UK according to the British Sauna Society, mostly at beaches or lakes, fuelled by the growth in wild swimming and healthy living.
In 2018, Liz Watson and her friend Katie Bracher set up a pop-up sauna at the Brighton fringe festival. It proved so popular that Brighton council asked them to stay, and now Watson runs Beach Box Spa, a venture that has inspired the seaside sauna movement.
The single converted horsebox has been joined by four others, corralled around a campfire on the pebbles along with two plunge pools and an ice bath, and 14 staff. Sitting at the campfire, Watson, a former homeopath, talks passionately about the connection people have with loyly, the Finnish word for steam evaporating from a hot stove, and the importance of introducing sauna rituals from Nordic and Baltic countries.
Photographs of Liz Watson and her Sauna business Beach Box Spa on the beach in Brighton.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10150693_001
NEWS - Das James-Webb-Weltraumteleskop der NASA liefert das bisher umfassendste Infrarotbild des Universums
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nasa/UPI/Shutterstock (13027006a)
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has produced the deepest and sharpest infrared image of the distant universe to date. Known as Webb's First Deep Field, this image of galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 was taken by Webb's Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam), and is a composite made from images at different wavelengths, totaling 12.5 hours - achieving depths at infrared wavelengths beyond the Hubble Space Telescope's deepest fields, which took weeks. The image shows the galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 as it appeared 4.6 billion years ago. NASA/UPI
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Delivers Deepest Infrared Image of Universe Yet, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 11 Jul 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_015
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251a)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_014
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251b)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_013
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251c)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_012
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251d)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_011
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251e)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_010
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251f)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_009
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251h)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_008
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251g)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_007
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251j)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_006
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251l)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_005
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251k)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_004
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251m)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_003
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251i)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_002
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251o)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_001
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251n)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
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King Philippe Queen Mathilde Visit Spa
Belgium, Spa, 18 november 2021.
Their Majesties the King Philippe of Belgium and Queen Mathilde visit Spa city recognized as UNESCO Pratrimoine and visit Spadel in Spa as part of the company's centenary. After visiting the mineral water production lines, the Monarchs go to the Domaine de Berinzenne. The Monarchs are presiting a working meeting on sustainable water management, the conservation of natural resources and biodiversity. Walloon Minister of Nature Celine Tellier and experts on the environment and biodiversity will participate in this meeting.
© Andrieu
(FOTO:DUKAS/ISOPIX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_131750998_ISO
King Philippe Queen Mathilde Visit Spa
Belgium, Spa, 18 november 2021.
Their Majesties the King Philippe of Belgium and Queen Mathilde visit Spa city recognized as UNESCO Pratrimoine and visit Spadel in Spa as part of the company's centenary. After visiting the mineral water production lines, the Monarchs go to the Domaine de Berinzenne. The Monarchs are presiting a working meeting on sustainable water management, the conservation of natural resources and biodiversity. Walloon Minister of Nature Celine Tellier and experts on the environment and biodiversity will participate in this meeting.
© Andrieu
(FOTO:DUKAS/ISOPIX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_131750977_ISO
King Philippe Queen Mathilde Visit Spa
Belgium, Spa, 18 november 2021.
Their Majesties the King Philippe of Belgium and Queen Mathilde visit Spa city recognized as UNESCO Pratrimoine and visit Spadel in Spa as part of the company's centenary. After visiting the mineral water production lines, the Monarchs go to the Domaine de Berinzenne. The Monarchs are presiting a working meeting on sustainable water management, the conservation of natural resources and biodiversity. Walloon Minister of Nature Celine Tellier and experts on the environment and biodiversity will participate in this meeting.
© Andrieu
(FOTO:DUKAS/ISOPIX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_131750960_ISO
King Philippe Queen Mathilde Visit Spa
Belgium, Spa, 18 november 2021.
Their Majesties the King Philippe of Belgium and Queen Mathilde visit Spa city recognized as UNESCO Pratrimoine and visit Spadel in Spa as part of the company's centenary. After visiting the mineral water production lines, the Monarchs go to the Domaine de Berinzenne. The Monarchs are presiting a working meeting on sustainable water management, the conservation of natural resources and biodiversity. Walloon Minister of Nature Celine Tellier and experts on the environment and biodiversity will participate in this meeting.
© Andrieu
(FOTO:DUKAS/ISOPIX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_131750876_ISO
King Philippe Queen Mathilde Visit Spa
Belgium, Spa, 18 november 2021.
Their Majesties the King Philippe of Belgium and Queen Mathilde visit Spa city recognized as UNESCO Pratrimoine and visit Spadel in Spa as part of the company's centenary. After visiting the mineral water production lines, the Monarchs go to the Domaine de Berinzenne. The Monarchs are presiting a working meeting on sustainable water management, the conservation of natural resources and biodiversity. Walloon Minister of Nature Celine Tellier and experts on the environment and biodiversity will participate in this meeting.
© Andrieu
(FOTO:DUKAS/ISOPIX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_131750865_ISO
King Philippe Queen Mathilde Visit Spa
Belgium, Spa, 18 november 2021.
Their Majesties the King Philippe of Belgium and Queen Mathilde visit Spa city recognized as UNESCO Pratrimoine and visit Spadel in Spa as part of the company's centenary. After visiting the mineral water production lines, the Monarchs go to the Domaine de Berinzenne. The Monarchs are presiting a working meeting on sustainable water management, the conservation of natural resources and biodiversity. Walloon Minister of Nature Celine Tellier and experts on the environment and biodiversity will participate in this meeting.
© Andrieu
(FOTO:DUKAS/ISOPIX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141033_031
SPORT - Formel 1: Testfahrten in Bahrain
Mandatory Credit: Photo by DPPI/Florent Gooden/LiveMedia/Shutterstock (11796790o)
Fernando Alonso (spa), Alpine F1 A521, portrait
F1 Championship Formula 1 Bahrain Pre-season testing, Sakhir, Bahrain - 12 Mar 2021
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