The photograph on the cover features Jerusa posing on the Casa Blanca stairs. I chose it because during the visit of the young Moengonese to Casa Blanca, they made the place their own, which symbolised the project as a whole
The photo captions are printed on the inside cover, which can be folded out. This makes it possible to view the captions and the photographs at the same time
These pages combine archival images with recent photographs by the young Moengonese. On the left: the hospital, then and now. On the right: the church, and modern day church-goers
Left: much of Moengo's signage, for example the street sign of the Queen Wilhelmina Square, keep the colonial past in the foreground. Right: the water tower. Some of the pictures have been partially treated with a silver-like colour, symbolising aluminium
Here, the water tower can again be seen. These images also show how, in some places, nature has partly taken over the town
Left: the newspaper article that appeared in the 1960s mentioning the plans to build a swimming pool for the workers. Right: the pool in its current state
Many people travel to and from Moengo by taxi, because there's only two buses a day. The taxis leave from Clockhouse, the central square. Many of the town's young people drive taxis themselves, to make some extra money
Jean-Marc photographed his work: logging and repairing mobile phones
Casa Blanca was the manager's residence before being turned into a staff club house. The young people of Moengo had never visited the building, in part because it was supposed to be haunted by a white ghost horse
On the back and the side flaps are photographs taken behind the scenes of the workshops
Including the cover, the book has 122 pages