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My home, the airport: How homeless make their lives in Madrid's terminal 4

Dozens blend into the crowd and find a space to sleep inside Madrid's terminal four which provides warmth, security and free bathrooms

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Homeless Bulgarian Valentin Giorgiev in front of luggage trolleys at Barajas Adolfo Suarez Airport's terminal 4 in Madrid which is the closest thing he has to a home. Photo: AFP

In Madrid airport's bustling fourth terminal, Edu's trolley is loaded with suitcases, but he won't be checking them in. Unlike the thousands of Christmas travellers, he is not flying anywhere.

For him the terminal is his destination - the closest thing he has to a home.

Nearly two years ago, the 49-year-old unemployed builder wandered into the airport while trying to hike up the highway to another town.

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"I came in here because I needed to sleep. And here I stayed," said Edu, who would not give his surname.

He is one of dozens who have made their home in the terminal, with its bright lights and huge glass windows overlooking the passenger planes on the runway.

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Like other hubs such as London Heathrow and Paris Charles de Gaulle, the airport's warmth, security and free bathrooms, open round the clock, draw desperate down-and-outs who blend into the crowds of travellers.

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