Every one if these images seems to have an alternating magenta and cyan diagonal banding across the sky, of which many images have quite a lot of in them.
Its subtle, but high intensity mixed in amongst the white, makes the pictures glary to look at, especially when the its the objects being softened by the fog in sharp contrast to an otherwise white background that are meant take focus of the eyes.
If you want to know what I mean, go into a dark room, let your eyes get used to it then preview this image suddenly at full brightness.
Now switch on the "night mode/colour shift", and notice how the pain in your eyes disappears. But now the image is fucked and basically orange
You'll want to colour grade the whites to strike a balance between these extremes. Soft, constant white, slightly warmed. That cyan needs to go. Fiddle with the color curves graph in your editing tool of choice.
Push the structure down and detail up ever so slightly. Snapseed has a structure slider, not sure if your editor does. Leave highlights as they are, but darken shadows.
See if you can't crop these a little more zealously. Try cropping out at least 1/3 - 1/2 of both height and width in each image. Then if you must slowly add a bit in (aspect-ratio-constrained) until you literally have just what is interesting. Apply rule of thirds.
Example:
>>3637484 - literally just needed all three pylons in image, centered, but cropped to the ⅓'s on each pylon.Your goal is within sight, just needs a bit more guidance.