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Life.Culture.Discovery.

Plains, trains and uncommon zeal: China’s varied landscapes photographed via railways that traverse them

  • Shanghai-based Wang Lu devotes himself full time to taking spectacular drone photographs of trains traversing China’s plains, deserts, valleys and mountains

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In November 2023, a freight train crosses a bridge near Liupanshui, Guizhou province, southwest China, on the Liupanshui-Hongguo Railway. Photographer Wang Lu, who captured the image using a drone-mounted camera, spends up to five months a year shooting along the country’s rail network. Photo: Wang Lu

“I am currently in Dayi county, Sichuan province,” says Wang Lu over the phone, some 2,000km (1,240 miles) inland from his home in the coastal metropolis of Shanghai.

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“It’s a historic place and there are some notable museums,” he explains, “and, of course, there’s a railway I’m interested in photographing.”

Travelling to distant locales such as Dayi in search of obscure stretches of railway track is not unusual for the 38-year-old Shanghainese shutterbug.

Since leaving full-time employment in 2015 – a seven-year, post-university stint as an accountant for professional services network Deloitte – Wang’s interest in railways, and photographing them, has morphed from a hobby into his raison d’être.

Photographer Wang Lu. He spends three to five months of every year travelling to photograph railway scenes in China. Photo Courtesy Wang Lu
Photographer Wang Lu. He spends three to five months of every year travelling to photograph railway scenes in China. Photo Courtesy Wang Lu

“I spend about three to five months on the road each year,” he says. “I’ve visited every province in mainland China, countless times. I’m even writing a travelogue of my experiences to go along with my images.

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“I’m inspired by foreign books about China, books like Peter Hessler’s River Town [2001] and Michael Meyer’s In Manchuria [2015], which contain strong observations about China.”

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