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Dobropillia in eastern Ukraine
A broken cupboard is among the rubble in front-line Dobropillia, Donetsk region, Ukraine, on April 22, 2025. (Photo by Nina Liashonok/Ukrinform/POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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Rotel Tours, the coach which acts as a hotel, Rapallo, Italy - 14 May 2009
Mandatory Credit: Photo by EPS / Rex Features ( 923017c )
Cupboard space inside the Rotel Tours bus
Rotel Tours, the coach which acts as a hotel, Rapallo, Italy - 14 May 2009
TRAVELLING THE ROTEL WAY
For a real slice of life on the road a German company has come up with a novel idea - a tour bus that doubles as a hotel.
The front of the 'Rotel Tours' bus is just like any regular coach; however, the back has been converted into individual cubicles, stacked three to four high.
These 'couchettes' come in single or double size, complete with mattress, sheets and pillows, portioned off from each other by a thin wall and a privacy curtain.
There's no air conditioning, but each cubicle does boast its own window.
Meanwhile, other parts of the bus have been converted into cupboard space for clothes storage and there's even a kitchen.
These 'rolling hotels' take people on tours all around the world - from Africa and Australia to Europe to the U.S - all without the need to pay for expensive hotels.
A 10 days European tour costs from 690 Euros, while 50 days rolling around Australia will set you back around 3,500 euros.
According to the company the method of travelling is particularly popular with single travellers as it means they get to tour with a close knit group and avoid paying single room supplements.
MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: EPS / Rex Features
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Design cities that changed the world from Milan to Tokyo exhibition,Design Museum, London, Britain - 04 Sep 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Tony Kyriacou / Rex Features ( 800422AH )
Simple buffet cupboard, 1901 Timber and Paint -Koloman Moser 1868-1918, The Design Museum in London is currently hosting 'Design Cities
Design cities that changed the world from Milan to Tokyo exhibition,Design Museum, London, Britain - 04 Sep 2008
DESIGNS THAT CHANGED THE WORLD
The Design Museum in London is currently hosting 'Design Cities: 8 Moments that Changed the World', an exhibition on the planning and development of cities.
The exhibition identifies particular periods that shifted the direction of design, including: the Great Exhibition in London (1851); Le Corbusier in Paris (1936); and the creative explosion in Tokyo (1987).
It finishes off in present-day London, which is once again the world's leading city for design and is home to top designers like Ron Arad, Ross Lovegrove and Jasper Morrison.
Through the use of a wide range of objects, from textiles and fashion to industrial pieces, furniture and prints, the exhibition tells the story of contemporary design through seven key cities - London, Vienna, Dessau, Paris, Los Angeles, Milan and Tokyo - at their creative height.
It includes designs from the like of William Morris, Christopher Dresser, Ron Arad, Adolf Loos, Josef Hoffman and Le Corbusier.
One of the more unusual items on display in the exhibition is a wooden prototype car that was created by Le Corbusier in 1929. Le Corbusier created the model for a competition organised by the French car industry, the aim of which was to design a low cost car suitable for mass production. His efforts to persuade FIAT to manufacture his design were unsuccessful but the general form prefigures Pierre Boulanger, one of France's greatest car designers.
Leaping forward 60 years and we have the Nissan S-Cargo (1989). Japanese car design in the 1980s moved attitudes to car design away from purely ...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/MXJVGVU
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Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by South West News Service / Rex Features (690061u)
Falconer Jonathan Marshall with Sampson - Sampson - who has a seven-foot wingspan - has re-trained to fly just a year after he was stolen from a British zoo and cruelly kept locked in a small cupboard where he struggled so violently to escape that he broke all the feathers in his wings
Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by South West News Service / Rex Features (690061n)
Sampson - Sampson - who has a seven-foot wingspan - has re-trained to fly just a year after he was stolen from a British zoo and cruelly kept locked in a small cupboard where he struggled so violently to escape that he broke all the feathers in his wings
Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by South West News Service / Rex Features (690061m)
Sampson photographed from the microlight piloted by Falconer Jonathan Marshall - Sampson - who has a seven-foot wingspan - has re-trained to fly just a year after he was stolen from a British zoo and cruelly kept locked in a small cupboard where he struggled so violently to escape that he broke all the feathers in his wings
Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by South West News Service / Rex Features (690061k)
Sampson photographed from the microlight piloted by Falconer Jonathan Marshall - Sampson - who has a seven-foot wingspan - has re-trained to fly just a year after he was stolen from a British zoo and cruelly kept locked in a small cupboard where he struggled so violently to escape that he broke all the feathers in his wings
Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by South West News Service / Rex Features (690061c)
Falconer Jonathan Marshall with Sampson - Sampson - who has a seven-foot wingspan - has re-trained to fly just a year after he was stolen from a British zoo and cruelly kept locked in a small cupboard where he struggled so violently to escape that he broke all the feathers in his wings
Falconer Jonathan Marshall and Golden Eagle Sampson who he has re-trained to fly, Barnstaple, Devon, Britain - Aug 2007
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
UK PAPERS OUT
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Matthew Power / Rex Features (614164j)
A dog and a duck have struck up an unlikely friendship - behind the bar of a pub called the Green Dragon. The unlikely story began when landlord Grant Adlam saved several eggs from a duck's nest which had been attacked by crows. The mother had abandoned the nest so Mr Adlam incubated the eggs in his airing cupboard, turning them every day. 'Two weeks after I saved the eggs, I heard a squeaking noise coming from the cupboard, and when I opened it Daffy was sitting on the floor' he said. Mr Adlam, landlord of the Green Dragon pub in Cambridge asked for advice from the Wildlife Society, which advised him on how to care for Daffy. Daffy, now eight weeks old, has been a huge hit with visitors to the pub as well as Mr Adlam's pet dog, west highland terrier Jock. Jock, who Mr Adlam describes as incredibly friendly and loving, has become very protective of the young bird. Mr Adlam said: 'They get on like a house on fire. Jock is there waiting for her first thing every morning when I go to let her out'. And it seems Jock's feelings are reciprocated - Jock and Daffy in the beer garden of the pub
Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
UK PAPERS OUT
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Matthew Power / Rex Features (614164i)
A dog and a duck have struck up an unlikely friendship - behind the bar of a pub called the Green Dragon. The unlikely story began when landlord Grant Adlam saved several eggs from a duck's nest which had been attacked by crows. The mother had abandoned the nest so Mr Adlam incubated the eggs in his airing cupboard, turning them every day. 'Two weeks after I saved the eggs, I heard a squeaking noise coming from the cupboard, and when I opened it Daffy was sitting on the floor' he said. Mr Adlam, landlord of the Green Dragon pub in Cambridge asked for advice from the Wildlife Society, which advised him on how to care for Daffy. Daffy, now eight weeks old, has been a huge hit with visitors to the pub as well as Mr Adlam's pet dog, west highland terrier Jock. Jock, who Mr Adlam describes as incredibly friendly and loving, has become very protective of the young bird. Mr Adlam said: 'They get on like a house on fire. Jock is there waiting for her first thing every morning when I go to let her out'. And it seems Jock's feelings are reciprocated - Jock and Daffy in the beer garden of the pub
Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
UK PAPERS OUT
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Matthew Power / Rex Features (614164f)
A dog and a duck have struck up an unlikely friendship - behind the bar of a pub called the Green Dragon. The unlikely story began when landlord Grant Adlam saved several eggs from a duck's nest which had been attacked by crows. The mother had abandoned the nest so Mr Adlam incubated the eggs in his airing cupboard, turning them every day. 'Two weeks after I saved the eggs, I heard a squeaking noise coming from the cupboard, and when I opened it Daffy was sitting on the floor' he said. Mr Adlam, landlord of the Green Dragon pub in Cambridge asked for advice from the Wildlife Society, which advised him on how to care for Daffy. Daffy, now eight weeks old, has been a huge hit with visitors to the pub as well as Mr Adlam's pet dog, west highland terrier Jock. Jock, who Mr Adlam describes as incredibly friendly and loving, has become very protective of the young bird. Mr Adlam said: 'They get on like a house on fire. Jock is there waiting for her first thing every morning when I go to let her out'. And it seems Jock's feelings are reciprocated - Jock and Daffy in the bar of the pub
Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
UK PAPERS OUT
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Matthew Power / Rex Features (614164e)
A dog and a duck have struck up an unlikely friendship - behind the bar of a pub called the Green Dragon. The unlikely story began when landlord Grant Adlam saved several eggs from a duck's nest which had been attacked by crows. The mother had abandoned the nest so Mr Adlam incubated the eggs in his airing cupboard, turning them every day. 'Two weeks after I saved the eggs, I heard a squeaking noise coming from the cupboard, and when I opened it Daffy was sitting on the floor' he said. Mr Adlam, landlord of the Green Dragon pub in Cambridge asked for advice from the Wildlife Society, which advised him on how to care for Daffy. Daffy, now eight weeks old, has been a huge hit with visitors to the pub as well as Mr Adlam's pet dog, west highland terrier Jock. Jock, who Mr Adlam describes as incredibly friendly and loving, has become very protective of the young bird. Mr Adlam said: 'They get on like a house on fire. Jock is there waiting for her first thing every morning when I go to let her out'. And it seems Jock's feelings are reciprocated - Jock and Daffy in the bar of the pub
Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
UK PAPERS OUT
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Matthew Power / Rex Features (614164a)
A dog and a duck have struck up an unlikely friendship - behind the bar of a pub called the Green Dragon. The unlikely story began when landlord Grant Adlam saved several eggs from a duck's nest which had been attacked by crows. The mother had abandoned the nest so Mr Adlam incubated the eggs in his airing cupboard, turning them every day. 'Two weeks after I saved the eggs, I heard a squeaking noise coming from the cupboard, and when I opened it Daffy was sitting on the floor' he said. Mr Adlam, landlord of the Green Dragon pub in Cambridge asked for advice from the Wildlife Society, which advised him on how to care for Daffy. Daffy, now eight weeks old, has been a huge hit with visitors to the pub as well as Mr Adlam's pet dog, west highland terrier Jock. Jock, who Mr Adlam describes as incredibly friendly and loving, has become very protective of the young bird. Mr Adlam said: 'They get on like a house on fire. Jock is there waiting for her first thing every morning when I go to let her out'. And it seems Jock's feelings are reciprocated - Jock and Daffy in the bar of the pub
Daffy the duck and Jock the West Highland Terrier who are best friends at the Green Dragon pub, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Britain - 09 Oct 2006
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Tower Of London, domestic life for those living in the Tower.
1951 (FOTO:DUKAS/TOPFOTO)
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