Nothing to do with the photography, but everything to do with the architecture: grim.
Trouble is, these towers come with a negative history which doesn't always have much to do with the purpose of the building. There's an abandoned factory up here in the north of the island which has been abandoned for as long as anyone here seems to know; in fact, it has been reported as having been a textile factory, a shoe factory. The truth? No idea.
Anyway, the reason I shot it was because of the sense of evil that it gives off, even on a sunny day. Some buildings are benevolent whilst others are not. This one, I would never enter. From a hill high above it, you can see that the interior takes what seems to be a sort of quadrangular shape surrounding an overgrown yard. What lies within is anyone's guess, and the thought of stumbling into it, perhaps falling into a disused water tank and rotting away there with nothing but the scorpions, spiders and ants for company is a bit too much.
But apart from that, which line of thought came much later, its original spur to photographic intererst was the idea of Nazi concentration camps with machine gun towers.
Whether concentration camp or factory, both dedicated to keeping the toilers within, does a school require the same symbolism? Is LA as the movies tell it?
I enclose the Mallorcan version just to illustrate the sense of oppression that towers might give.
Rob C