In the autumn of 2015, central London was disrupted for two days by a fire raging underneath a main road in Holborn.
Firefighters eventually extinguished the blaze, but not before nearly two days of disturbance to office workers and theatre-goers.
Emergency services released footage filmed from overhead thermal imaging cameras, revealing bright white spots on the ground where the intense heat of the blaze glowed beneath manhole covers.
Without the help of thermographic imaging, fire services would not have been able to see the full extent of the fire and how dangerously close it was to the surface.
For advice on how to use thermographic imaging effectively, click here.
Published date: 9th December 2016
According to a recent survey carried out by the Environment Agency and the AA, nearly half of drivers aged 65 and over would be willing to drive through a flood, putting themselves and their vehicle at risk, rather than turn around and find a different route.
Most of us are familiar with the warm orange glow of street lighting. The lamps are lit with sodium bulbs, which work by passing an electric current through a tube containing solid sodium. The reaction produces large amounts of heat and light.
This office is definitely not one for claustrophobics. Danish creative director Jonas Hallberg has renovated an old trailer into his own shabby-chic mobile office, meaning he can work wherever he likes.
Many regions around the UK have been hit by storms and floods in the past few months.
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