Adana is a city where the past runs parallel with progress, a place shaped by its river, its bridges, and its bold, industrious spirit. At the heart of it all flows the Seyhan River, a powerful visual and cultural artery that breathes life into the city’s vibrant streets and riverside parks.
Spanning the river is Taşköprü (the Stone Bridge)—a Roman-era structure that still carries traffic today, making it one of the oldest functioning bridges in the world. Its arches, worn smooth by centuries, provide a timeless silhouette against Adana’s evolving skyline. The juxtaposition of this ancient engineering marvel with modern urban life offers filmmakers a layered, symbolic backdrop: permanence amid change.
Surrounding the river is a landscape of industrial textures—old factories, railway lines, and modern infrastructure that reflect Adana’s working-class identity and cinematic grit. There’s beauty in the contrast: the rust of old machinery beside palm-lined boulevards, concrete under the golden Mediterranean sun, and the hum of daily life grounded in resilience and motion.
For stories rooted in transformation, contrast, or urban realism, Adana offers a rich visual language and an energy that’s as raw as it is enduring.