In 2012 I began photographing Reading, Pennsylvania and its environs. I photographed the city’s architecture, its storefronts, its streets and alleys, its homes and shops. In these walks it became apparent that parts of the city are returning to a semi-rural state, with backyard gardens and forest reclaiming space, and grass growing over alleys. I began looking for moments that evoke this period in Reading’s history, the aesthetic preferences of its current populations, and the quiet return of nature in its edges and cracks. I also began seeking out the remnants of colonial infrastructure in surrounding fields and forests of Berks County, of stone walls, farmhouse foundations, lime kilns and iron works. Images from this series have been made in dozens of locations, many revisited in different seasons and over years, to evoke the interplay of change and permanence.