Network Rail showcases Britain’s most stunning landscapes as search begins for Landscape Photographer of the Year: Winner of the Network Rail Lines in the Landscape award, 2015 Take-a-View Landscape Photographer of the Year - Freightliner Coal Train, Ribblehead Viaduct, North Yorkshire ©Robert France

Thursday 19 May 2016

Network Rail showcases Britain’s most stunning landscapes as search begins for Landscape Photographer of the Year

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Leeds station will host a nationwide photography exhibition showcasing some of the most highly acclaimed images of British landscapes.

Featuring winning and commended images from last year’s Landscape Photographer of the Year Award, the exhibition will be opened by the award’s founder and renowned photographer, Charlie Waite, on Friday 20 May as part of a nationwide tour of railway stations across Britain.

 

The exhibition marks the tenth Landscape Photographer of the Year competition and will showcase the best of Britain’s rural and urban scenery, while offering a top cash prize of £10,000. Network Rail is supporting the competition, offering the ‘Lines in the Landscape’ award, celebrating images that really capture the spirit of today’s rail network and its surrounding landscapes.

 

The 2016 winner will be given the opportunity to take pictures from normally restricted areas of one of the most iconic structures in Britain – the Forth Bridge in Scotland. Standing at 110 metres above water and spanning 2.5km in length, the winner will really be able to put their camera to work while taking advantage of the breathtaking views the bridge has to offer.

 

David Biggs, managing director of property at Network Rail, said: "An important part of our Railway Upgrade Plan is creating stations that are truly exceptional places for commuters, leisure travellers and for those wanting to visit stations in their own right.  The Landscape Photography exhibition  proved extremely popular while on display at London Waterloo station, and we are delighted to bring it to other parts of the country where it can be enjoyed by millions more people.  I hope that the exhibition inspires budding photographers to go out and capture their favourite railway image and enter into the competition.”

 

Charlie Waite is keen to encourage more people to enter the railway award. Commenting ahead of the 2016 competition, he said: “Britain’s railways have always been close to my heart and it seems fitting that we should be launching the Landscape Photographer of the Year competition in this fantastic station which has had a dramatic effect on this city’s landscape”.

 

The tour dates for the 2016 Landscape Photographer of the Year exhibition are:

 

Leeds station: 20 -29 May

 

Edinburgh Waverley station: 31 May- 8 June

 

Reading station: 10 -20 June

 

The exhibition was launched at Birmingham New Street station earlier this month. 

 

Notes to editors:

 

For high resolution and additional images from the exhibition or requests to interview awards founder Charlie Waite please contact: info@take-a-view.co.uk

Please note that all images & logos supplied by Take a view, or Take a view’s authorised associates, remain the copyright of their respective photographers or organisations. They may only be used for press/promotional purposes in direct connection with the Take a view Landscape Photographer of the Year Awards and must be credited.

 

The exhibition features 60 winning and commended images from the 2015 Landscape Photographer of the Year competition. Around 150 of the best photographs from the competition appear in the Awards book – Landscape Photographer of the Year: Collection 9 - by AA Publishing.

 

All entries to the 2016 competition must be uploaded via the competition website: www.take-a-view.co.uk by 10th July 2016. Entry fees apply. Full terms and conditions can be found on the site.

 

The Network Rail ‘Lines in the Landscape’ Special Award will be presented to the one photographer who best captures the spirit of today’s rail network as it relates to the landscape around it. Images may be submitted for this Award of the operational national rail network anywhere in Great Britain (excluding Northern Ireland). Please note that images of any underground railway systems, light rail systems, heritage railways, disused infrastructure, pier railways or model railways are not eligible for this award. Images may be entered into any category of the main Award, but entrants must select from the appropriate dropdown on the entry form that it is also eligible for the Network Rail Award.

 

More information on how to enter can be found at: www.take-a-view.co.uk

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We own, operate and develop Britain's railway infrastructure; that's 20,000 miles of track, 30,000 bridges, tunnels and viaducts and the thousands of signals, level crossings and stations. We run 20 of the UK's largest stations while all the others, over 2,500, are run by the country's train operating companies.

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