• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

RealTime Images

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Archive
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 102 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Indian doctors have saved the life of a 21-year-old man who fell off an under construction building and got himself impaled on iron rods that pierced though his chest that miraculously missed his heart but puncturing the liver. The incident happened on January 12 around 7pm when Rajendra Pal, a construction worker from West Bengal, slipped and fell off the roof of a building at a construction site in Nariman Point, Mumbai. Fortunately, Pal did not suffer any fatal injuries as the rods did not puncture most of his vital organs. Hearing the loud thud and the cries of Pal, his fellow workers rushed to the spot. They soon informed the police and fire brigade about the accident. The rescue time arrived at short notice, cut the rods off the pillar and managed to rush him to the state-run GT hospital. According to the hospital authorities, the rods had caused penetrating trauma to chest and abdomen, patient was rescued by fire brigade after cutting the 12mm construction iron rods. Dr Jitendra Sankpal, senior surgeon at GT hospital, said: "The patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital. Two 5-ft-long iron rods pierced his abdomen and chest. However, the man was lucky as the rods did not puncture his lungs or other vital organs. When the patient was brought in, his condition was critical. On inspection, we discovered there were two 12mm iron rods, each 75cm long had penetrated through his chest and upper abdomen. According to the doctors, the first one had entered from right anterior axillary line subcutaneously to the upper side of left chest. Clothes were stuck inside the entry point of rod. The second rod had penetrated from right posterior axillary line through seventh intercostal space to epigastric region. “It was a very difficult operation. The first rod that came out though his chest barely missed the patient’s heart by 1 inch. We started the operation at 10pm and concluded it at 1am. The patient’s vitals are normal and he is out of da
    MEGA145800_001.jpg
  • August 3, 2017 - College Park, MD, U.S - The Brendan Iribe Center for Computer Science and Innovation, under construction near the corners of Route 1 and Campus Drive, and Campus Drive and Paint Branch Drive on the University of Maryland campus in College Park, MD...Photo taken from near the intersection of Campus Drive and Paint Branch Drive..Earlier in the day it was reported that a construction worker fell from an upper floor of the building. (Credit Image: © Evan Golub via ZUMA Wire)
    20170803_zap_g228_001.jpg
  • August 1, 2018 - Huai'An, Huai'an, China - Huai'an, CHINA-Construction workers work at a construction site in Huai'an, east China's Jiangsu Province. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    20180801_zaa_s145_233.jpg
  • August 28, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - A construction worker is pictured from above as he places concrete paving stones to build up a new pavement in the Kizilay square of Ankara, Turkey on August 28, 2017. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170828_zaa_n230_227.jpg
  • December 17, 2018 - Dhaka, Bangladesh - Construction workers use plastic sheets to during rain as they are working a construction site in Azim Pur. According to news, part of the country experienced light to moderate rain due to the cyclonic storm, “Phethaiâ (Credit Image: © MD Mehedi Hasan/ZUMA Wire)
    20181217_zap_h143_001.jpg
  • May 26, 2019 - Wu'An, Wu'an, China - Wu’an, CHINA-People including construction workers and traffic policemen stick to their posts under the scorching sun in Wu’an, north China’s Hebei Province. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    20190526_zaa_s145_132.jpg
  • April 13, 2018 - Ankara, Turkey - A man walks past a field, while a residential apartment is seen under construction in Ankara on April 13, 2018. Despite one of the most profitable businesses in Turkey, construction sector now loses its popularity in consequence of the Turkish Lira's continuous depreciation against foreign currency, including the euro, the U.S. dollar and the British pound, in the last months. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180413_zaa_n230_755.jpg
  • September 11, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - The construction site of a new road project is pictured after cutting through the Middle East Technical University's (METU) forested campus in Ankara, Turkey on September 11, 2017. The university's rector Prof. Dr. Mustafa Versan Kok recently announced that the rectorship and the Ankara Metropolitan Municipality signed a protocol on a new road project of 4.8 kilometres in length passing through the university with the destruction around 24 hectares of the forest land. In the late evening hours of September 09, approximately 500 trucks and construction equipments with hundreds of police officers escorting them unexpectedly started to cut down the trees in the land a day after the signing the protocol. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170911_zaa_n230_302.jpg
  • May 10, 2017 - Dhaka, Bangladesh - A man boils bitumen which is used for the production of tarmac for the road construction in Dhaka, Bangladesh, May 10, 2017. (Credit Image: © Suvra Kanti Das via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170510_zap_d117_001.jpg
  • April 28, 2018 - London, UK. 28th April 2018. Unite workers pose with a large poster 'Remember the Dead. Fight for the Living' at the start of the International Workers’ Memorial Day rally at the statue of a building worker on Tower Hill remembering all those killed at work, around 500 in the last ten years, mainly in the construction industry, as well as those injured, disabled and made unwell, almost all in preventable incidents. The actual number of work-related deaths is several orders of magnitude greater, estimated at over 150 per day, but the official figures only include those actually killed at work for which accident reports have been submitted - and not for example the 18,000 that die years after exposure from work-related cancers. The Government 'red tape initiative' has resulted in fewer and less rigorous safety inspections and the removal of many important safety checks that protect workers. At the centre of the event was a coffin with a pair of empty boots and a hard hat, and after the speeches by Peter Kavanagh, secretary London & Eastern Region Unite, Helen Clifford, a solicitor working on workplace deaths, Moyra Samuels of Justice4Grenfell and Gail Cartmel, Assistant General Secretary Unite, wreaths were laid and there was a period of silence before black balloons were released, one for each worker killed this year in the construction industry. Peter Marshall/Images Live (Credit Image: © Peter Marshall/IMAGESLIVE via ZUMA Wire)
    20180428_zap_d99_001.jpg
  • April 26, 2017 - Chornobyl, Ukraine - Worker walks next to the Safe Confinement arch over the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear plant on April 26, 2017. The presidents of Ukraine and Belarus attended the construction site of the Chernobyl plant arch to mark 31 years since the world's worst civil nuclear accident spewed radiation across Europe. The station's fourth reactor in the north of former Soviet Ukraine exploded in 1986 after a safety test went horribly wrong at 1:23 am on April 26. (Credit Image: © Sergii Kharchenko/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170426_zaa_n230_344.jpg
  • April 27, 2018 - Naples, Campania/Napoli, Italy - Naples flash mob against deaths at work.A flash mob to say enough to the dead at work: it is the initiative promoted by the “Cgil” and “Fillea CGIL Campania”unions on the occasion of “Giornata Mondiale per la salute e la sicurezza del lavoro”.In picture reproduction of a construction site (Credit Image: © Salvatore Esposito/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20180427_zaa_p133_036.jpg
  • May 1, 2019 - Munich, Bavaria, Germany - Two Munich trams stopped at the Sendlinger Tor construction zone. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar/ZUMA Wire)
    20190501_zbp_b160_045.jpg
  • May 1, 2017 - Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand - Thai women worker hold demonstrate banners during parade to celebrate for Labour Day in on 1st May 2017 in Bangkok, Thailand. (Credit Image: © Anusak Laowilas/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170501_zaa_n230_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: David Beckham's Inter Miami stadium looks far from finished even with the first game against the LA Galaxy scheduled for March 14. The pink and black accented Lockhart Stadium site was still filled with construction workers and debris and was not nearly complete as the opening day looms. 08 Jan 2020 Pictured: Inter Miami Stadium General View Construction. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA581219_029.jpg
  • May 1, 2017 - Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand - 01 May 2017. Thai workers takes part during parade to celebrate for Labour Day in Bangkok, Thailand. (Credit Image: © Anusak Laowilas/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170501_zaa_p133_002.jpg
  • Cars on the Final Assembly line, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578647.jpg
  • Cars on the Final Assembly line, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578647.jpg
  • KOSRAE, Micronesia (May 17, 2017) Sailors assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 1 work with Kosraean workers to construct the Walung Health Clinic in Kosrae, Micronesia. NMCB-1 provides expeditionary construction and engineering support to expeditionary bases and responds to humanitarian assistance disaster relief requests. (U.S. Navy Combat Camera photo by Information Systems Technician 1st Class Ledget Glover III/Released)170517-N-YV613-0290<br />
Join the conversation:<br />
http://www.navy.mil/viewGallery.asp<br />
http://www.facebook.com/USNavy<br />
http://www.twitter.com/USNavy<br />
http://navylive.dodlive.mil<br />
http://pinterest.com<br />
https://plus.google.com
    20170517_sha_z03_512.jpg
  • June 30, 2017 - Kathmandu, NP, Nepal - Migrant works from India, installing concrete mixer machine for the construction at Kirtipur, Kathmandu, Nepal on Friday, June 30, 2017. (Credit Image: © Narayan Maharjan/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170630_zaa_n230_129.jpg
  • April 17, 2018  - Zhengzhou, China - A worker welds on the Zhengzhou Yellow River bridge under construction on the Zhengzhou-Jinan high-speed railway. The bridge is expected to be completed in April of 2020. (Credit Image: © Zhu Xiang/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20180417_zaf_x99_066.jpg
  • July 27, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - Workers are seen at the construction site of Turkey's biggest retractable-roof shopping mall, which will be opened in September, in Ankara, Turkey on July 27, 2017. Turkey has one of the largest construction industries in the world with more than 180,000 companies, and more than 1,8 million people currently employed by this sector. Turkish companies have been active particularly in Algeria, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Libya, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkmenistan, and other nearby countries. In 2015, Turkey were ranked second after China in the 'Top 250 International Contractors' list. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170727_zaa_n230_053.jpg
  • South Africa - Durban -  03 May 2020 -  A cable laying construction company is scrambling to recall workers after a road they were working on, in the Berea, partially collapsed after the rains . Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency(ANA)
    Maze-Road-Construction-9223.jpg
  • South Africa - Durban -  03 May 2020 -  A cable laying construction company is scrambling to recall workers after a road they were working on, in the Berea, partially collapsed after the rains . Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency(ANA)
    Maze-Road-Construction-9223.jpg
  • March 23, 2019 - Rome, Italy - Hundreds of thousands of people demonstrated against the exploitation imposed by the capitalist economic system. Exploitation that affects people and the environment. Workers are forced to choose between their health and safety and their jobs every day. Meanwhile, multinationals pollute the territories, burying toxic waste and dumping waste in the seas and rivers. The state allows the continuous construction of houses, cementing entire neighborhoods, but workers and citizens are unable to pay a rent or a mortgage. The very long procession that went through Rome shouted its no to capitalist policies, exploitative policies for all and profit for the few. (Credit Image: © Elisa Bianchini/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20190323_zaa_p133_269.jpg
  • April 27, 2018 - Lahore, Pakistan - Pakistani laborers are busy melting steel and shaping rods for construction at the steel factory in Salamatpura area and the Federal Budget for Financial Year 2018-2019 has also been presented in the Parliament. Labor Day is commemorated across the world on 1st May to honor the contributions that workers make to the strength, prosperity, laws and well-being of the country. (Credit Image: © Rana Sajid Hussain/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20180427_zaa_p133_038.jpg
  • June 2, 2017 - Kolkata, West Bengal, India - The  Residency tower in kolkata New Town on June 02,2017.With the announcement of the rates for taxation under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) for various goods, India is now one step closer to becoming a unified tax market. However, while the impact of GST on various sectors and goods is now known, industry experts are still divided over how GST will impact real estate going ahead as clarity on the tax slabs for services is still awaited.....According to industry experts, prima facie it looks like that there will be a neutral impact from cost perspective. Although the work contracts will attract around 12% and most of the construction material is under the 18% and 28% slab, the availability of input tax credit should neutralize the overall impact. A lot, therefore, will depend on the proper implementation and a proper system of claiming tax credits...the Real Estate Development and Regulation Act (RERA) also under implementation, developers may need to focus much more on streamlining their processes. We may expect initial teething issues, but implementation of GST should further enhance India’s attraction as an investment destination by encouraging greater transparency and ease of operation in all property deals,” says Surabhi Arora, Senior Associate Director, Research, Colliers International India. (Credit Image: © Debajyoti Chakraborty/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170602_zaa_n230_462.jpg
  • April 29, 2019 - Minnesota, USA - Seven workers fallen workers were remembered on this Worker's Memorial Day observance, a day to remember workers who lost their lives during this past year.  The Minnesota Construction Trades Council represents 15 trades, 48 local unions representing 70,000 members of the construction industry.       ] GLEN STUBBE • glen.stubbe@startribune.com   Monday, April 29, 2019     ..Looking for a standalone from this public ceremony which honors building and construction trades members that have passed away during the past year due to work related injury or illness. Monday, April 29th at 10:30 at the Workers Memorial Garden on the southeast corner of the State Capitol mall.   Memorial honoring public workers who have died in the line of duty. More info here: https://www.facebook.com/events/420172958718391/ (Credit Image: © Glen Stubbe/Minneapolis Star Tribune via ZUMA Wire)
    20190429_zaf_m42_010.jpg
  • January 30, 2018 - Tampa, Florida, U.S. - Reverend ANDY OLIVER, left, of Allendale United Methodist Church of St. Petersburg, Florida supports LUIS BLANCO of Plant City who works as a construction worker after talking with news reporters when arriving for his appointment at the United States Department of Homeland Security office. Blanco a father of six children and his wife Lauren who is pregnant with their seventh child was detained at the office after not having his humanitarian visa renewed under the President Donald Trump's administration. (Credit Image: © Octavio Jones/Tampa Bay Times via ZUMA Wire)
    20180130_zan_s70_043.jpg
  • 30 April 2017 London : Premier League Football : Tottenham Hotspur v Arsenal :<br />
a construction worker celebrates the first Tottenham goal, scored by Dele Alli.<br />
Photo: Mark Leech
    OFS_Spurs_Arsenal_11-3.jpg
  • October 6, 2018 - Washington, District of Columbia, U.S. - A construction worker paints the exterior of the United States Capitol dome in Washington, DC on Saturday, October 6, 2018. .Credit: Ron Sachs / CNP (Credit Image: © Ron Sachs/CNP via ZUMA Wire)
    20181006_zaa_c306_005.jpg
  • January 29, 2018 - Tampa, Florida, U.S. - LUIS BLANCO of Plant City and his wife LAUREN of Plant City who works as a construction worker poses for a portrait the night before he was detained during his appointment at the United States Department of Homeland Security. Blanco a father of six children and his wife Lauren who is pregnant with their seventh child was detained at the office after not having his humanitarian visa renewed under the President Donald Trump's administration. (Credit Image: © Octavio Jones/Tampa Bay Times via ZUMA Wire)
    20180130_zan_s70_011.jpg
  • January 30, 2018 - Tampa, Florida, U.S. - Reverend ANDY OLIVER, left, of Allendale United Methodist Church of St. Petersburg, Florida supports LUIS BLANCO of Plant City who works as a construction worker after talking with news reporters when arriving for his appointment at the United States Department of Homeland Security office. Blanco a father of six children and his wife Lauren who is pregnant with their seventh child was detained at the office after not having his humanitarian visa renewed under the President Donald Trump's administration. (Credit Image: © Octavio Jones/Tampa Bay Times via ZUMA Wire)
    20180130_zan_s70_023.jpg
  • Mar 4, 2016 - Police are examining what's been described as a knife said to have been found at the Los Angeles-area estate once owned by former football star O.J. Simpson, Los Angeles police Capt. Andy Neiman said Friday. Police learned within the last month that a former Los Angeles police officer received the item from a construction worker who found it, possibly when Simpson's former estate in Brentwood was being demolished, Neiman said. It is being examined for forensics. It's not known when the object was discovered or whether it is related to the 1994 deaths of Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, according to Los Angeles police spokeswoman Norma Eisenman. O.J. Simpson was acquitted in those killings. The weapon used in the two stabbing deaths was described as a long, serrated knife. It was never found. Flanked by his all-star legal team, Simpson was found not guilty in the two killings on October 3, 1995. Pictured: Sep 19, 2007 - Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. - O. J. SIMPSON in court with his attorney Gaabriel Grasso (L) and Yale Galanter (R) in Las Vegas where he was given 25,000 bail and read 11 charges against Simpson stemming from a robbery in a Las Vegas hotel. (Credit Image: © Court POOL/ZUMA Press)
    20170720_sho_z03_002.jpg
  • 18th March 2017 - Premier League - Stoke City v Chelsea - A construction worker watches from the building site in the corner of the ground - Photo: Simon Stacpoole / Offside.
    OFS_Sto_Che_180317_017.jpg
  • Aug 18, 2002; New York, NY, USA;  A sign from the Bexar County Sheriff's Office stands Sunday August 18, 2002 in New York, New York outside St. Paul's Chapel near the World Trade Center Ground Zero site as a construction worker conintues to repair damage from the September 11 attack.    (Credit Image: © William Luther/San Antonio Express-News/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20020818_sep_a27_183.jpg
  • South Africa -Cape Town - 28 September 2020- Construction workers are busy with their daily duty near the Cape Town International Airport.The vacant space has been built and will be a business park when completed.Picture:Phando Jikelo/African News Agency(ANA)
    Construction-1958.jpg
  • JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - APRIL 25: A worker checks drainage piping at the Nasrec quarantine site currently under construction. With isolation units, consultation areas, ICU capabilitiies, medical facilities, power points, drainage and ablutions the quarantine site has a total bed capacity of 2300 on April 25, 2020 in Johannesburg South Africa. Under pressure from a global pandemic. President Ramaphosa declared a 21 day national lockdown extended by another two weeks, mobilising goverment structures accross the nation to combat the rapidly spreading COVID-19 virus - the lockdown requires businesses to close and the public to stay at home during this period, unless part of approved essential services. (Photo by Dino Lloyd)
    FXT20820.jpg
  • File photo dated 16/11/16 of the construction site of the Paddington Crossrail station in central London. Contractors working on the Crossrail project have been fined more than &pound;1 million over the death of a worker and two other incidents, said the Health and Safety Executive.
    32214625.jpg
  • June 7, 2017 - inconnu - A wriggling robot able to burrow could help find victims of disasters like earthquakes.The RoboWorm could be fitted with a camera or microphone and work its way around rubble in a collapsed building or deep snow after an avalanche, and relay images to rescuers.The German industrial design company behind it says can help construction workers.It can also move easily on uneven and slippery surfaces, soft floors and in canals, pipes and ducts.The robot, inspired by a caterpillar, mirrors how the insect moves,.The motions of a caterpillar’s wriggling muscle movement are copied using magnetic of metal rings, wrapped in a durable silicone tube.The unique construction allows this robot to move on rough and uneven surfaces where more traditional tools might get stuck.Designer company Emami says RoboWorm can contort itself out of trouble.RoboWorm has two “heads” , one at each end, making it possible to move backwards without having to flip over. This lets it move backwards and forwards even in very tight spaces.It is equipped with cameras and additional sensors, for example a microphone, to make recordings possible in hard-to-reach areas such as a collapsed building in rescue work.The recordings can be sent to a receiving station immediately or stored in the device for later extraction.The device , which is still being developed, was rewarded with a special mention at the German Design Award. It rewards ground-breaking work in communication and product design.A spokesman for Emami Design said:” Flexibility and mobility, if nothing else, make RoboWorm with its camera and microphone a life-saving helper in earthquake zones where robots can for instance localise buried persons in collapsed building or under snow or rock avalanches.” # ROBOT VER DE TERRE (Credit Image: © Visual via ZUMA Press)
    20170607_zaf_v01_152.jpg
  • March 27, 2019 - Recife, Brazil - RECIFE, PE - 27.03.2019: OCUPE ESTELITA EM RECIFE PE - One day after the suspension of the demolition of the Jose Estelita Quay by the court, representatives of the New Recife Consortium were registered civil construction workers who formed since yesterday. The Occupy Estelita Activists are still camped there. (Credit Image: © Veetmano Prem/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
    20190327_zaa_f109_083.jpg
  • April 26, 2018 - Rome, Italy - A protest to the Mise Ministry of Economic Development of workers of the company Condotte, the third largest construction group in Italy, to the 3000 workers risk that is in a very difficult financial situation. The trade unions FenealUil, Filca-Cisl, Fillea-Cgil denounce ''the unacceptable behaviour of the company's top management, who have not provided clear information on the situation in which the company finds itself and on the real prospects' (Credit Image: © Andrea Ronchini/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20180426_zaa_p133_173.jpg
  • Construction workers dismantle scaffolding that encompasses a yacht under construction at Harbor Towne Marina in Dania Beach ahead of Hurricane Irma. Photo by Mike Stocker /Sun Sentinel/TNS/ABACAPRESS.COM
    606093_006.jpg
  • Construction workers dismantle scaffolding that encompasses a yacht under construction at Harbor Towne Marina in Dania Beach ahead of Hurricane Irma. Photo by Mike Stocker /Sun Sentinel/TNS/ABACAPRESS.COM
    606093_005.jpg
  • Construction workers dismantle scaffolding that encompasses a yacht under construction at Harbor Towne Marina in Dania Beach ahead of Hurricane Irma. (Photo by Mike Stocker /Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA)<br />
SOUTH FLORIDA OUT; NO MAGS; NO SALES; NO INTERNET; NO TV
    RTIsipausa_21008353.jpg
  • Construction workers dismantle scaffolding that encompasses a yacht under construction at Harbor Towne Marina in Dania Beach ahead of Hurricane Irma. (Photo by Mike Stocker /Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA)<br />
SOUTH FLORIDA OUT; NO MAGS; NO SALES; NO INTERNET; NO TV
    RTIsipausa_21008352.jpg
  • Construction workers dismantle scaffolding that encompasses a yacht under construction at Harbor Towne Marina in Dania Beach ahead of Hurricane Irma. (Photo by Mike Stocker /Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA)<br />
SOUTH FLORIDA OUT; NO MAGS; NO SALES; NO INTERNET; NO TV
    RTIsipausa_21008353.jpg
  • June 28, 2017 - London, London, United Kingdom - Image ©Licensed to i-Images Picture Agency. 28/06/2017. London, United Kingdom. Pipe repair Westminster. Construction workers repair pipes under the road surface outside the entrance to the House of Commons, in Parliament Square, Westminster, central London. Picture by Andrew Parsons / i-Images (Credit Image: © Andrew Parsons/i-Images via ZUMA Press)
    20170628_zaa_ap2_012.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Boxberg, Saxony, Germany - Construction workers follow the preparations for the installation of the large lever (Grosse Schwinge) on the F60 conveyor bridge at the Nochten strip mine in Boxberg, Germany, 06 September 2016. In order to replace two parts - the large lever and the roller table that lies above it - the conveyer belt will be closed for a total of 13 weeks and will be in operation again starting 22 October. Photo: SEBASTIAN KAHNERT/dpa (Credit Image: © Sebastian Kahnert/DPA via ZUMA Press)
    20160906_zaa_d20_031.jpg
  • Construction workers dismantle scaffolding that encompasses a yacht under construction at Harbor Towne Marina in Dania Beach ahead of Hurricane Irma. (Photo by Mike Stocker /Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA)<br />
SOUTH FLORIDA OUT; NO MAGS; NO SALES; NO INTERNET; NO TV
    RTIsipausa_21008352.jpg
  • May 30, 2017 - New York, New York, U.S. - A view the former 126th Street Bus Depot in Upper Manhattan. Plans have recently been announced to plans to convert a former MTA bus depot on East 126th Street and First Avenue in East Harlem into affordable housing including 730 apartments and a memorial for the African Burial Ground. Construction workers discovered a 17th century slave burial ground on the location.  The bus depot now closed, began as a cemetery after Peter Stuyvesant ordered African slaves to build a 9-mile road from lower Manhattan to what was then an unincorporated part of the city known as Nieuw Haarlem. (Credit Image: © Nancy Kaszerman via ZUMA Wire)
    20170530_zaf_k03_036.jpg
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_171.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_178.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_171.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_178.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_171.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_178.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_171.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Calais, France - Construction workers demolish during the eviction of the Calais Jungle a hut  in Calais, France, on 25 October 2016. Up to the evening, about 4,000 migrants from the Refugee camp on the coast at the English Channel were distributed to several regions in France. The police have begun to tear down the huts and tents in the camp. (Credit Image: © Markus Heine/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161025_zaa_n230_178.JPG
  • May 4, 2019 - Algiers, Algeria - Algiers, May 04, 2019 Algeria: The Grand Mosque of Algiers, also known as Djamaa el Djazair, is the largest mosque in Africa and must open its doors. Facing the sea, the Great Mosque of Algiers, colossal work of Abdelaziz Bouteflika pushed to resign by demonstrations on April 2, would have cost two billion US dollars for construction. The mega-mosque complex covers an area of 400,000 square meters, making it the third largest mosque in the world. Its 20,000 square meter prayer room is designed to accommodate 37,000 worshipers at a time. The giant mosque also includes the world's tallest minaret, 265 meters high, designed to withstand a magnitude 9.0 earthquake. The project was overseen by the China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC), which has deployed approximately 2,300 engineers, construction officials and workers from China, Algeria and other African countries. Construction began in August 2012  (Credit Image: © Billal Bensalem/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190504_zaa_n230_516.jpg
  • May 9, 2017 - Gaza City, The Gaza Strip, Palestine - A Palestinian worker uses a pottery wheel to construct pots, at pottery workshop in Gaza City. (Credit Image: © Mahmoud Issa/Quds Net News via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170509_zaa_q100_001.jpg
  • October 9, 2018 - Hong Kong, CHINA - Hong Kong bamboo scaffolding engineers ( workers ) constructing a bamboo scaffolding along hotels outer wall, a hotel which is to be demolished soon. Hong Kong is a place where old method of bamboo scaffoldings are being kept as a Chinese traditional architectural craft, the scene of scaffolding engineers working on the bamboo scaffolding often surprise foreign tourists who visit Hong Kong.Oct-9,2018 Hong Kong.ZUMA/Liau Chung-ren (Credit Image: © Liau Chung-ren/ZUMA Wire)
    20181009_zap_l137_001.jpg
  • October 9, 2018 - Hong Kong, CHINA - A bamboo scaffolding engineers ( workers ) constructing bamboo scaffoldings along outer wall of a hotel awaiting to be demolished. Hong Kong is a place where old skill of bamboo scaffolding is kept as Chinese traditional architectural craft. Oct-9,2018 Hong Kong.ZUMA/Liau Chung-ren (Credit Image: © Liau Chung-ren/ZUMA Wire)
    20181009_zap_l137_002.jpg
  • October 2, 2018 - London, England, United Kingdom - The skyline of Canary Wharf, London's financial district, is pictured under a cloudy sky, London on October 2, 2018. Business groups expressed alarm about a crackdown on low-skilled workers.The Confederation of British Industry said it would make a shortage of care, construction and hospitality workers worse, adding: ''Restricting access to the workers the UK needs is self-defeating. (Credit Image: © Alberto Pezzali/NurPhoto/ZUMA Press)
    20181002_zaa_n230_157.jpg
  • May 18, 2018 - Kiev, Ukraine - Ukrainian workers carry a construction as they install a fan zone for the UEFA Champions League final in central Kiev, Ukraine, on 18 May 2018. Real Madrid will face Liverpool FC in the UEFA Champions League final at the NSC Olimpiyskiy stadium in Kiev on 26 May 2018. (Credit Image: © Serg Glovny via ZUMA Wire)
    20180518_zap_g194_005.jpg
  • May 5, 2018 - Hubei, China - Workers lay tracks at the construction site of Wuhan-Shiyan high-speed railway in Zaoyang, central China's Hubei Province.  The 399-km-long line will operate in 2019. (Credit Image: © Du Huaju/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20180505_zaf_x99_204.jpg
  • February 6, 2018 - Bogor, Indonesia - Rescue workers uncover a victim. Five people were buried alive from landslide at Maseng-Cijeruk-Bogor-West Java. The landslide happen because heavy rain hit the area and poor construction of the rail way near the houses built below the rail way, causing three houses where 9 people live there, 5 were killed from the landslide. Police and Millitary continue search and rescue along with evacuations. (Credit Image: © Donal Husni via ZUMA Wire)
    20180206_zap_h128_005.jpg
  • May 5, 2018 - Workers lay tracks at the construction site of Wuhan-Shiyan high-speed railway in Zaoyang, central China's Hubei Province, May 5, 2018. The 399-km-long line will operate in 2019. (Credit Image: © Du Huaju/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20180505_zaf_x99_184.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278854.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278853.jpg
  • Workers during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278850.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278848.jpg
  • Discarded sports equipment as workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278846.jpg
  • Workers during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278843.jpg
  • Workers during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278841.jpg
  • A discarded rugby ball and nets as workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278839.jpg
  • A discarded rugby ball and nets as workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278837.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278833.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278831.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278828.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278826.jpg
  • Workers lay flooring during the construction of a field hospital, which will hold up to 340 beds for coronavirus patients, at Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Neath, as the health services in the Swansea Bay area prepare their response to the coronavirus outbreak.
    53278822.jpg
  • ZHIJIN, Sept. 14, 2016 (Xinhua) -- Photo taken on Sept. 14, 2016 shows the accident site in Zhijin County, southwest China's Guizhou Province. Seven workers were trapped after a highway tunnel collapsed during construction on Tuesday. (Xinhua) (zyd) (Credit Image: © Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20160914_zaf_x99_011.jpg
  • Baver, a university student. In summers he goes to Sivas to work in constructions to meet his education expenses. July 09, 2016.<br />
The Southern Kurtalan Train Express route, starting from Kurtalan, stops in Diyarbakir, Malatya, Sivas, Kayseri and Ankara from summer to fall. This train route is mostly used by seasonal workers that are living in east Turkey, but are working on the western part of the country from spring to fall. Photo by Aylin Kizil/NARphotos/ABACAPRESS.COM
    560898_010.jpg
  • The White House West Wing in Washington, DC is undergoing renovations while United States President Donald J. Trump is vacationing in Bedminster, New Jersey on Friday, August 11, 2017. 11 Aug 2017 Pictured: Thermometer outside the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC as it is undergoing renovations while United States President Donald J. Trump is vacationing in Bedminster, New Jersey on Friday, August 11, 2017. Credit: Ron Sachs / CNP. Photo credit: Ron Sachs - CNP / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA66510_007.jpg
  • The White House West Wing in Washington, DC is undergoing renovations while United States President Donald J. Trump is vacationing in Bedminster, New Jersey on Friday, August 11, 2017. 11 Aug 2017 Pictured: Stone masons work on the steps of the South Portico of the White House in Washington, DC as it is undergoing renovations while United States President Donald J. Trump is vacationing in Bedminster, New Jersey on Friday, August 11, 2017. Credit: Ron Sachs / CNP. Photo credit: Ron Sachs - CNP / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA66510_008.jpg
Next