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  • Mat Osman: ‘I wanted to write about a dirty, dangerous, working-class London’
    DUKAS_167723136_EYE
    Mat Osman: ‘I wanted to write about a dirty, dangerous, working-class London’
    The Suede bassist and author Mat Osman on writing without a safety net, terrifying himself for his next novel and which of the Thursday Murder Club books - by his brother Richard - he likes best,

    Mat Osman author of The Ghost Theatre. Photographed at home in London.

    Suki Dhanda / 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)

    Suki Dhanda

     

  • Mat Osman: ‘I wanted to write about a dirty, dangerous, working-class London’
    DUKAS_167723137_EYE
    Mat Osman: ‘I wanted to write about a dirty, dangerous, working-class London’
    The Suede bassist and author Mat Osman on writing without a safety net, terrifying himself for his next novel and which of the Thursday Murder Club books - by his brother Richard - he likes best,

    Mat Osman author of The Ghost Theatre. Photographed at home in London.

    Suki Dhanda / 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)

    Suki Dhanda

     

  • 'This secret that crippled me for 50 years has been lifted': Lucy Sante on becoming a trans woman at 67
    DUKAS_167293400_EYE
    'This secret that crippled me for 50 years has been lifted': Lucy Sante on becoming a trans woman at 67
    The American author and critic Lucy Sante on being in a band with Jim Jarmusch, the macho pre-Aids world of the gay scene in New York, and on coming out to her wife and son.

    Author Lucy Sante photographed at her home in upstate New York.

    Mike McGregor / 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)

     

  • 'This secret that crippled me for 50 years has been lifted': Lucy Sante on becoming a trans woman at 67
    DUKAS_167293399_EYE
    'This secret that crippled me for 50 years has been lifted': Lucy Sante on becoming a trans woman at 67
    The American author and critic Lucy Sante on being in a band with Jim Jarmusch, the macho pre-Aids world of the gay scene in New York, and on coming out to her wife and son.

    Author Lucy Sante photographed at her home in upstate New York.

    Mike McGregor / 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)

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977298_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Outside private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977300_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Outside private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977275_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Outside private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977292_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Outside private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977285_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.
    Kanneth Clausen, 64, entrepreneur and bunnker owner.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977287_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.
    Kanneth Clausen, 64, entrepreneur and bunnker owner.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977301_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.
    Micael Steneland, estate agent for Mäklarhuset Ljungby.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977303_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.
    Micael Steneland, estate agent for Mäklarhuset Ljungby.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977288_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.
    Micael Steneland, estate agent for Mäklarhuset Ljungby.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977278_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977291_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977290_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977304_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977283_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977276_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977293_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977279_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977302_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977299_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977295_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977281_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.
    Tom and Micael Steneland, estate agent for Mäklarhuset Ljungby

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

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    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977294_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977273_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977280_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977286_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    DUKAS_166977274_EYE
    Swedish home with cold war bunker attracts buyers as Russia fears grow
    Underground building complete with bar and own power plant makes waves on property market amid Putin’s threats.

    Above ground, the former school building - now a private home - fits with the typical scene of southern Sweden. Surrounded by farmland and red wooden houses common in this part of the country, it has a flagpole outside and looks like a large, but not especially extraordinary, house.

    But below one of the outbuildings - which looks like a guest suite - of this 16m-krona (£1.2m) sprawling property in Ljungby, Smaland, an unexpected world unfolds.

    An (initially) unassuming stairway, labelled "mancave", reveals a 1.25-metre thick concrete roof, chunky orange metal doors and an operating airlock, behind which lies a fully functioning cold war bunker.

    Private bunker in Ljungby, Sweden on Feburary 29, 2024.

    Josefine Stenersen / 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)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546996_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546982_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    One of David’s works on the walls of his home.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546998_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    Some of David’s ceramics.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546989_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    Some of David’s ceramics.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546988_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    Pastel work in progress.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546986_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    One of David’s “From the Nebula” series of paintings, stored among other works in his loft.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546984_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    Studio details.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546980_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    Studio details.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546997_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.
    One of David’s works on the walls of his home.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546991_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546985_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546992_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546983_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546990_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546981_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546993_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546978_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546979_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546987_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

  • David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    DUKAS_167546995_EYE
    David Hampton on painting and memorising poetry at 97: 'Anyone creative is more likely to live longer'
    In his first ever interview, the artist David Hampton talks about a life spent making dazzling pictures, why he's not bitter about being undiscovered, and why his art school 'didn't get' Matisse.

    Artist David Hampton at his home in Bath.

    Sam Frost / Guardian / eyevine

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    Copyright ©2024 Sam Frost

     

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