Another take on repeating patterns. This time — in stairs and steps.
Spirals of staircases, amphitheater steps, stairways with stone balustrades, the gentle curves of urban staircases, massive steps leading to Brutalist buildings… All these share one thing: even the most ordinary staircase becomes a pattern when you look at it not as a way to go up or down, but as a form. In this black-and-white photo series, I’m focusing on that very geometry — diverse, yet always rhythmic.
The most striking staircase structure I’ve seen in my travels is the Initiation Well at the
Quinta da Regaleira historic estate in
Sintra, Portugal. It’s not really a well at all, but an inverted tower once used for ceremonial purposes. And yes — you don’t climb this tower; you descend deep into the ground.

Amphitheater steps in the ancient city of
Myra, Türkiye
.

Staircase with balustrades by the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
Prčanj, Bay of Kotor, Montenegro
.



Steps leading to a building in the center of
Užice, Serbia
.

Stairway to Heaven — a fragment of the Kadinjača Memorial Complex, Serbia
.

Street staircase in Istanbul, Türkiye.

Staircase in one of the palaces of Alexander Park,
Pushkin, Russia
.

And finally — not quite a staircase, but the levels of a large shopping mall. Perm, Russia.

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Around the World.
2017-2025.
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