As gyms closed and travel was restricted during Covid lockdowns, a Homerton boulder become the heart of a new community of local climbers.
The large lump of quarried Cornish granite on Mabley Green was installed in 2008 by sculptor John Frankland.
It forms half of the artist's work called Boulder, with its sister rock situated in Shoreditch.
But photographer and Mabley Green climber Benjamin Hughes says the boulder "fell into forgotten space" for years, until "lockdown gave it new life".
He told the Gazette how he captured the growth of a community during coronavirus lockdowns: "I started visiting when the first lockdown kicked in. I am about a five minute bike ride from [the boulder].
"I hadn’t really done much outdoor climbing and I was looking for somewhere, to get out the house, get a bit of daily exercise and get a bit of relief from home schooling and everything else going on."
The photographer said he noticed the odd person turning up during the first lockdown in March 2020, but by the second, "a massive community had grown".
"It was just nice," he said.
"A bit of company and helping each other get through the dodgy times we have been living in."
Benjamin will be releasing a photobook documenting the boulder and group which formed around it.
He says since lockdown ended, "a lot of climbing faded off there, people have gone back into gyms, but the nice thing is the community that formed" continues to flourish and grow.
The Mabley Green climbers keep in touch via a WhatsApp group, planning day trips and camping trips to climbing spots.
"So its kind of spurred this whole new community which has just carried on," Benjamin added.
The photographer has called his upcoming photobook, Mabley Green: Class of '21.
He hopes the first-edition run of 100 books will "serve as a form of historical document".
"One of many around the globe that will go on to tell a community's story of dealing with a global pandemic and the stresses it placed on individuals," Benjamin said.
He says his book tells the story of "communities growing and people coming together, being drawn together by this thing and helping each other at times when we really needed it."
Find out more at www.benhughesphotography.com/mabley-green-class-of-21
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