Deep Blue, 2026
Honorable Mention for documentary work
in the 2025 Annual Photography Awards
In 2010, along the Roman coastline, in Fiumicino, the foundation stone was laid for the construction of a harbour. The works continued for several years before coming to a halt. In 2022, the concession for the development of the port was awarded at auction to Fiumicino Waterfront (part of the Royal Caribbean Group), which subsequently integrated a specific cruise function into the original project.
The entire area concerned lies within a delicate context of great landscape, historical, and social value. The presence of a lighthouse, the bilancioni (wooden fishing structures), and a small fishing harbor make this place particularly evocative. Framing it all are the Tiber River, the residential area of Passo della Sentinella, and a Special Area of Conservation (SAC) — a stretch of land characterized by a brackish marsh that constitutes an environmental asset of European interest.
These images aim to show the context into which a major project such as a cruise port would be inserted. A place where scenes seem to echo through time, shaking it; a place where people intermingle, each at once both foreign and native, bound together by the land itself. A place that twists your mouth into a grimace and then leaves it open in wonder, as it tells a story of conflict between sea and concrete that slowly erodes the heritage beneath the feet of the elderly and of children.
Are we truly convinced that there are projects worth accepting the disappearance of places with unique characteristics — places we have no possibility of finding elsewhere?
Do we truly believe there are no longer any limits? Are we really prepared to strip ourselves of everything, failing in our responsibility to preserve the Earth we have enjoyed, and depriving future generations of the chance to do the same?
The entire area has been living in a state of suspension for over ten years.
Isola Sacra, Fiumicino, Rome, Italy.
Summer storm at sea, viewed from the old lighthouse area, 2025
Section of the coast involved in the port development project, 2024
Traditional fishing structure (Bilancione) within the construction site area, 2026
Gianfranco Miconi, known as ‘Attila’, in his home: one of the Bilancioni within the construction site area, 2024
Waterfront structure, installed during marina construction, 2024
Fishermen at the inlet of the small fishing harbor, 2024
Dredging operations cover the sea, construction site area, 2026
A man in front of the wall blocking access to the sea, 2024
Construction site around the old lighthouse, 2026
Lorenzo, activist of the “No Porto” collective, opposed to the construction of the cruise port, 2024
Eugenio, activist of the “No Porto” collective, opposed to the construction of the cruise port, 2024
Offshore storm, Tyrrhenian Sea, 2024
Nicola getting the dinghy read to head out, 2025
‘Barrucca’, fisherman, in the inner room
of the ‘Porticciolo’, 2024
Adjacent countryside area bordering the construction site, 2026
Regulars at the ‘Porticciolo’ and Bilancioni, 2024
Surfers entering the water, construction site area, 2024
Tyrrhenian Sea, viewed from the coast, 2026
People attending a music event at one of the Bilancioni, 2025
Swan in the brackish area after a storm surge, 2026
A church in Passo della Sentinella, 2026
Inhabitant of Passo della Sentinella inside their home, Tiber River backdrop, 2025
One of the Bilancioni at the mouth of the Tiber River, 2025
Alberto heading out for a night fishing trip; in the background, the breakwaters installed during the initial port construction, 2025
Territories are not merely a geographical point