Urban Explorers: Abandoned Places

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mrb627

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 12, 2001
Messages
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Location
Buford, GA
I have recently found a plethora of videos on YT regarding the exploration and documentation of modern day abandoned places. Several topics include

1) Shopping Malls
2) Hospitals
3) Colleges
4) Homes
5) Entire Towns

Anyone else watched any of these videos on YT? I especially like it when old appliances can be seen in abandoned homes.

Malcolm
 
I am a u-tube junkie

I love to watch those videos. Look under the heading urban exploration. So many videos of old and new abandoned homes and buildings. So many appliances left in these homes and buildings. Esp love when they go into the basements and you get to see the heating systems for these places. Some are small but then some are very large homes, castles and estates. Another to look up are abandoned towns. Some were built furnished and never lived in or for a very short period of time. Some towns have left the power on. Its like going back in time. Many hours of watching these videos.

Jon
 
We've a few old abandoned institutional buildings around this city. Mostly a huge old former mental hospital that nobody seems to want to do anything with.

It's actually a very architecturally stunning building but, it's totally impractical to redevelop as it's just the wrong shape and very few people here opt for apartments (only 3% of Irish people live in apartments).

The sheer scale of the place is quite scary. The staff used to move around it on bicycles in the early 20th century as it had corridors that would have taken 20 mins to walk!!

Terrifying old Victorian place though with a very long, sad and often quite abusive history from an era when mental health wasn't something very well understood or discussed.

It actually started life in an era which was more enlightened and there was a belief that nice views, nice architecture, parkland, fresh air and talking therapies could cure people with mental illness.
Then during the 19th century it became medicalised and some of the cures were anything but scientific. The usual nonsense of hydrotherapy (being sprayed with cold water), chairs that spun people around and disorientated them, isolation, then shock therapies (chemical and electrical), lobotomies .. As the 20th century progressed. It closed down sometime in the 1980s with the moves towards "care in the community" and more enlightened mental health services that avoid institutional settings.

However this huge old, very impressive and imposing building now mostly sits empty.

It's way too big to be turned into a hotel, the local universities don't want it, it can't be turned into apartments as nobody wants to live there and turning it into office space is probably vastly too expensive to justify.

So, until we find a purpose for it, it's become a bit of abandoned Ireland.
 
More than anyone wants to know

Another term for this is urban archaeology. The History Channel has some fascinating programs of what's beneath the streets o some cities where the only access is through a non-descript locked doorway in a regular building through which a guide takes the crew down into bunkers, abandoned subway stations, etc. The New York Subway has abandoned stations which can be toured at various times with a group of people sort of like us, except about the subway. The stations were abandoned because they were turn around stations and had curved platforms from when the cars only had doors at either end. Once the started using cars with doors in the middle as well as at the ends, they could no longer use these old stations because there was only a drop to the tracks when the middle doors opened. Somewhere on the link is the story of these old, very opulent stations.

Here in Maryland, we have Glenn Dale Hospital which was a TB sanitarium built in 1934 before the discovery of antibiotic treatment. My brother and I discovered it when taking the back road route to Annapolis and did not know what it was. When my parents came up to visit, we drove that route and my mother immediately knew what it was because her college roommate had become a medical librarian and had worked at one in Minnesota. If you Google Glenn Dale Hospital, you can see pictures. It was closed in 1981 because of asbestos.

"Well, we have cured your TB, but now you will have asbestos-related cancer."

1934 was when asbestos was known as the "miracle fiber."

"Asbestos was called the "miracle fiber: because it could be used in so many different products. Asbestos was not expensive, easy to work with, and it was abundant. The fibers were wonderful because they didn't burn and didn't conduct heat and electricity. The fibers were durable, strong, flexible, and resistant to wear. More than 3000 different products were made using asbestos. Some of these included pipe insulation, sprayed-on fireproofing, floor tiles, ceiling tiles, brake pads, clutch facings, plasters, mastics, adhesives, gaskets, packing materials for valves, asbestos gloves, siding shingles, roofing materials, firemen's clothing, and thousands more products."



 
Abandoned videos-yes,watch these they are fascinating!On YouTube a site there Called "Dan Bell" seems to specialize in "dead" malls.He also explores an "abandoned" bowling alley and gets chased out by homeless squatters living there.Bowling balls,pins,and bowling shoes scattered about the place.Power is still on.Someone left the "Cosmic" bowling UV lights on giving the place an even more erie look.A broken ceiling fan spins and wobbles.
Other Urban Explorers "Proper People" explore an abandoned movie theater with the power on.They manage to get a projector going They delight in lighting up the screen with the projectors Xenon lamp-but the projector has a serious hazard-the lamphouse door interlock doesn't shut off the Xenon bulb when opened.The explorers get a faceful of bright light and UV-and---what if that Xenon bulb blew--Probably another explorer would find their bodies!Also one of those guys finds a Xenon bulb laying in a power-and breaker room.The other fellow warns him of its dangers.He carries it around with him while they were exploring the theater.They also find a reel of film and try to play it.None of the projectors lamphouses start anymore.Guess possibly air interlocks won't make so the bulbs won't start.And they probably didn't turn on the exhaust blowers for the lamphouses.Then they call the projection system motors and film transports"Finger chopper things"The sound racks at the theater have been stripped of amps and digital sound decoders.Some of the speakers missing,too.
Power still on in buildings and explorers fiddling about with things they don't understand could spell disaster besides the asbestos and flaking lead paint!
I liked the urban explorer films about Centrilia,Pa--VERY SPOOKY!!!!Smoke coming out of the ground!!!One explorer putting digital thermometers into the vents and measuring temps.
Then there are guys that explore abandoned mines--better them than me-these can contain poisonous gas,and collapsing shafts and tunnels and water.
 
**It closed down sometime in the 1980s**
Geezus, you mean Ronald Reagan mentality extended to Ireland? Condoleezas, rice. And 'mentality' was a double pun.

Sweeping the mentally-marginal under a (literal) bridge was a little too Hitleresque to escape criticism. I know people who worked in m-m healthcare. A great many people depended upon that. Those people and those who cared for them were rent asunder by one swell foop of bureaucratic idiocracy.

In (rural) college in the mid 60s I had a Honda 90. When I wasn't using it to/from class I rode around the dirt county roads stopping at abandoned and soon-to-be abandoned structures. One gets a unique sense of time.
 
The only urban exploration I have done is an abandoned house in my neighborhood.One of the doors is un locked.the owners died several years ago.Power meter and other utilities long off.The place has all Kenmore appliances-washer,dryer(DD washer)mold hasn't taken over YET.In another neighborhood an abandoned home plastered with "condemmed" signs.Roof starting to collapse-holes in the siding.Mold on the walls.A lone sofa and central vacuum wand and powernozzle are seen thru the living room windows.Thru another window-the dining room table is neatly set-ready for a meal to be served.Becuase of the extreme mold I didn't go in.Bet raccoons,possums,squirrels,insects,birds now live in the place thru the holes mentioned.In the backyard a swingset is still there-ready for kids to use it.A plastic "turtle" pool is full of yucky water and frogs live in it.sliding glass doors in back broken-pried off their tracks and laying on the porch.Plywood boards cover the openings.The place is slated for demolition--But when?And this used to be a quarter mill house!!the people living in it divorced-then just left.
The place has two HVAC units-Goodman and Trane.
 
Infiltration (urban exploration site)

This site has images from urban & rural explorations in its forums. I've have also explored construction sites,counting a hotel & a hospital.

 
I go through phases like that. Abandoned mansions were particularly interesting at one stage. However, it left me feeling a little melancholy seeing places that were lived in and the center of someone's life, then almost suddenly abandoned with contents left to rot away. Often there is no explanation provided about what happened to the owners, which I find irksome.

One of the creepiest places, in my opinion, is Pripyat. They actually shot a half-decent horror movie there a few years back.
 
My favorite urbex site is  Opacity.us.    Mr. Mott's at Opacity has  a NOLA Six Flags gallery.  His site is still photography and more than likely a site he has photographed is not far from you.  I also like that he concentrates on the photography of abandonment and does not subscribe to the ghost hunter philosophy.

 
This urban explorer found an abandoned house with a Dexter Double Tub wringer right in the front door as well as what seems a couple of other washers/dryers. Pretty neat! I love watching Urban Explorers but can only admire the courage some of the solo ones have walking around these abandoned creepy places. I'd crap my pants!

Matt
 
Washers Abandoned

I saw that video a while back. After starting this thread, I looked for it to post and couldn't find it. Thanks for posting it!

Malcolm
 

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