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DUKAS_189204942_NUR
Maerklin Store Sign
The red Maerklin logo is displayed on the storefront of a shop in Utrecht, Netherlands, on September 8, 2025. Maerklin is a German manufacturer of model trains and railway accessories. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617876_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A view of a scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617875_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is placed in Mini World Tourist Complex in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617874_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is placed in Mini World Tourist Complex in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617873_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is placed in Mini World Tourist Complex in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617872_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is placed in Mini World Tourist Complex in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617871_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is placed in Mini World Tourist Complex in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617908_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is placed in Mini World Tourist Complex in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188617907_NUR
Model Of Paris’ Eiffel Tower In Malayer
A scale model of Paris' Eiffel Tower is placed in Mini World Tourist Complex in the city of Malayer in Hamedan province, 391 km (243 miles) southwest of Tehran, Iran, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188249013_NUR
Students From Around The World Compete In Mars Rover Challenge
KRAKOW, POLAND – AUGUST 29:
Miniature robotic models are on display in the Scientific Exhibitors Zone during the European Rover Challenge at AGH University in Krakow, Poland, on August 29, 2025.
The competition's finals feature 27 student teams from 12 countries, all vying for the top spot in Europe's premier Mars rover challenge. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188248957_NUR
Students From Around The World Compete In Mars Rover Challenge
KRAKOW, POLAND – AUGUST 29:
Miniature Marioinex robot replicas are displayed in the Scientific Exhibitors Zone during the European Rover Challenge at AGH University in Krakow, Poland, on August 29, 2025.
The competition's finals feature 27 student teams from 12 countries, all vying for the top spot in Europe's premier Mars rover challenge. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188195277_NUR
London Daily Life
The public contemplates the 6-meter-high reproduction of Big Ben inside the Lego store in London, England. It features numerous large figures built with the famous blocks of this brand. (Photo by Joaquin Gomez Sastre/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188153295_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Xing Zhilei
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153286_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153277_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153259_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153250_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153241_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153232_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Xing Zhilei
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153223_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153214_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153205_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153196_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153187_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Xing Zhilei
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153178_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Xing Zhilei
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153169_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Cat Town station.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188153304_FER
Metro station and train for cats
Ferrari Press Agency
Station 1
Ref 17106
28/08/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Xing’s World
A collection of pampered pet cats can now arrive in style — at their own mini metro station.
A YouTuber built a replica train with sliding doors that automatically open as it pulls into the subway stop.
As well as carrying pets as passengers there is also a pussy in the driver’s cab.
It was built over four months by China based Xing Zhilei under the title Xing’s World who has named the stop Cat Town Station.
The tiny infrastructure also has a moving escalator, lineage and platform lights.
The metro joins a portfolio of miniature environments that Xing has created, including a pool f, a private island, a parking lot, supermarket and movie theatre.
Xing and an assistant used woodworking skills and 3D printed parts.
The final station includes realistic details that echo urban transit environments, from the train’s arrival sequence to the boarding process.
Platform screen doors line the edge, complete with signage and warning strips, while overhead maps and directional boards recreate the look of a real concourse.
Even rubbish bins are carefully crafted to scale.
Training the cats, led by his Maine Coon Mr Nice, to use the miniature system became part of the process.
OPS: Xing Zhilei
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_187793215_NUR
President Of Argentina Javier Milei Opens Campaign Ahead Legislative Elections
A supporter holds a miniature of the President of Argentina, Javier Milei, before La Libertad Avanza's campaign rally in La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina, on August 14, 2025. (Photo by Julian Martinez/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187793213_NUR
President Of Argentina Javier Milei Opens Campaign Ahead Legislative Elections
A supporter holds a miniature of the President of Argentina, Javier Milei, before La Libertad Avanza's campaign rally in La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina, on August 14, 2025. (Photo by Julian Martinez/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187793207_NUR
President Of Argentina Javier Milei Opens Campaign Ahead Legislative Elections
A supporter holds a miniature of the President of Argentina, Javier Milei, before La Libertad Avanza's campaign rally in La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina, on August 14, 2025. (Photo by Julian Martinez/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187451534_NUR
Daily Life In Old Quebec City
Figures of mice made out of glass are displayed at a glass workshop in Old Quebec City, Quebec, Canada, on June 26, 2025. (Photo by Creative Touch Imaging Ltd./NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187192138_NUR
Production Of Wooden Masks For Traditional Festivals
Artisan Elsa Padilla shows miniature wooden masks during the production of carnival masks, which takes four months to complete. Elsa Padilla has been dedicated to this craft for more than 30 years in Tizatlan, Mexico, on July 22, 2024. (Photo by Essene Hernandez/ Eyepix Group) (Photo by Eyepix/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187143094_NUR
Daily Life In Berlin
The Museum Island miniature is in the area of Mitte, in Berlin, Germany, on July 15, 2025. (Photo by Alberto Pezzali/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187405144_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
A detailed look of the miniature model of The Tote during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / 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) -
DUKAS_187405146_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
A detailed look of the miniature model of The Gasometer Hotel during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / 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) -
DUKAS_187405149_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
A detailed look at the Espy Hotel during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / 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) -
DUKAS_187405142_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
A detailed look at the Espy Hotel during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / 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) -
DUKAS_187405148_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
David Hourigan inside his studio with his miniature model of The Punters Club hotel during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / 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) -
DUKAS_187405150_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
David Hourigan inside his studio with his miniature model of The Gasometer Hotel during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / 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) -
DUKAS_187405147_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
David Hourigan inside his studio with his miniature model of The Gasometer Hotel during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_187405145_EYE
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue.
David Hourigan made his first model of a Melbourne music venue - the venerated Cherry Bar - during the Victorian capital’s long Covid lockdowns.
Now he has created enough mini masterpieces for an exhibition of his work.
David Hourigan holds his miniature model of the Espy outside his studio during a visit to David Hourigan studio on the 10th of July 2025 in Melbourne Australia.
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake / 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) -
DUKAS_148837298_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
Building a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837241_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
Building a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837239_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
Building a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837299_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
Building a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837300_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
Building a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837243_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
On a test track, a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837301_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
On a test track, a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837242_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
On a test track, a Bugatti Baby..
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_148837297_EYE
'Brilliant fun': UK automaker shrinks classic cars for big spenders.
The Little Car Company, housed in a converted RAF base at Bicester, makes miniature classics that run on batteries.
Building cars is hard, so when Ben Hedley started his business he started small. To be precise, he started at 75% of the size. The Little Car Company does what its name suggests, producing shrunken but drivable battery electric toy versions of full-size classics from the likes of Aston Martin and Ferrari.
The company has made its way to £10m in turnover and 60 employees almost by accident over four years, Hedley says, walking around the company's workshop in Bicester Heritage, a converted Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire that has been turned into a hub for classic car businesses. The company made its first profits in the last financial quarter, despite supply chain problems that have hit automotive manufacturers big and small.
The replicas start at Ä36,000 (£30,800), meaning they can only be playthings for the rich. But Hedley is not content with building small, expensive electric versions of big cars. The company is launching an ambitious, even quixotic, effort to do the opposite: build a full-scale, road-legal version of a remote-controlled toy car that was popular when Hedley was a child. By next summer he hopes to launch a stripped-back, electric off-road buggy for £15,000.
The Little Car Company producing junior cars in partnership with elite car manufacturers. They hand-build each car in the UK.
Bicester, Oxfordshire.
On a test track, an Aston Martin DB5 Junior.
31-08-2022.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.