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Abandoned Rides: Old Cars, Reclaimed by Nature
Some stunning images: http://media.treehugger.com/assets/i...crop-smart.jpg http://media.treehugger.com/assets/i...crop-smart.jpg http://media.treehugger.com/assets/i...crop-smart.jpg http://media.treehugger.com/assets/i...crop-smart.jpg http://media.treehugger.com/assets/i...crop-smart.jpg http://media.treehugger.com/assets/i...crop-smart.jpg Photo credit: http://www.peterlippmann.com/ |
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Funny story. I was sitting at my booth at a craft show, a young woman comes up to me..."omg, you're the lady that makes the beautiful Goddesses... I take them with me everywhere!!! let me show you..." she runs off and returns with her purse/tote with several of my stolen items... "The BIG ones are at home, I love them, my boyfriend bought them for me!!!" I smiled and replied, "Really? How sweet of him." And lo and behold she brought him over later to show him off. Now I know where all my porcelain is also. He was a fellow student in my classes. Needless to say, he could not look me in the eye. |
I have not taken any of these pic Myself. Got these off of Google so don't know who the photographers are...
http://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e3...4/DSCN3532.jpg http://www.lotustalk.com/forums/atta...very-scary.jpg |
Daktari,
Another point of view might be that if the piece is not protected (ungrabbable, watermarked, signed, copyrighted, etc) and it is on the web, then it is being shared…deliberately so. I have photos that I am totally cool with sharing, particularly ones of nature and the environment. I regularly encounter photos that are protected one way or another and don’t use them. I see images where there are literally hundreds of the same image all from different websites and I can't find where they are from. Others are obviously not for public use. If I see that someone is selling their image I bounce away and don’t use it. I’m not interested in stealing. People post pictures as gifts to each other all over this website giving joy to each other. I am wondering why you just decided to speak to me and Sleepy Butch. With all the picture posting that goes on here on the Planet, including on your visitor page, I'm wondering what this is really about... |
http://media-cache-lt0.pinterest.com...e19bbbf1c0.jpg
Abandoned home in Havana. http://media-cache-lt0.pinterest.com...64d16f8072.jpg The Paris Time Capsule Apartment The owner of this apartment, Mrs. De Florian left Paris just before the rumblings of World War II broke out in Europe. She closed up her shutters and left for the South of France, never to return to the city again. Seven decades later she passed away at the age of 91. It was only when her heirs enlisted professionals to make an inventory of the Parisian apartment she left behind, that this time capsule was finally unlocked. http://media-cache-ec6.pinterest.com...745b61bbcf.jpg Books decaying on shelves in an abandoned castle in Spain. Castel du CJ by Martino ~ NL on Flickr. |
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Seaside Ghost Town:
The Abandoned Millionaire’s Resort
Varosha was home to over 39,000 residents but today the holiday town is completely fenced off, forbidding anyone from entering. No tourists roam the streets except for the rare brave explorer who dares find a way in. http://www.messynessychic.com/2012/0...naires-resort/ http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...htST83Dvff.jpg http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...wLeR6yDSos.jpg http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...VatvpMEs5u.jpg |
http://media-cache-ak1.pinimg.com/73...805d069eb0.jpg
http://media-cache-ec3.pinimg.com/73...a7ef78d920.jpg Starlite Drive-In Theatre in Schertz, Texas http://media-cache-ec4.pinimg.com/73...5b66f0b3b2.jpg By the red door. Photo and caption by Ben Halpin Found this at an abandoned building in Door County Wisconsin. It looked like it could've been an old motel at one point in it's life. I would love to go back and pry that red refrigerator door off and put it on my wall. |
hunny!!! that starlite one, do you know where it is?? I grew up in schertz texas during my high school years, and i've NEVER seen that. I'd like to check it out.
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http://video.us.msn.com/videos/watch...om=en-us_msnhp
I found this on the msn news headlines today, while looking through. I haven't watched the video yet, but the first picture was neat. was an abandoned amusement park in beijin, so i read. Nifty-ness |
Ospedale Pedagogico di Aguscello
http://www.opacity.us/images/db/232/0000008911.jpg
This small hospital is surrounded with rumors of being haunted by the ghosts of “insane” children, the nuns who supposedly tortured them, and even a burial site on the grounds. It was originally a residence built circa 1870 and changed hands for a few years, until a Doctor Bernardi purchased it to be used as a Tuberculosis clinic. In 1940 it was sold to the Italian Red Cross (Croce Rossa), who apparently treated young children with physical and mental illnesses (TB, epilepsy, etc). The institution reportedly closed in 1970.The institution reportedly closed in 1970. |
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I took this picture in southern Iceland. The landscape there changes fast. Think your back yard is a grassy rolling field? Think again!
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3060/3...576b2b87_z.jpg |
awesome thread - I used to really love this stuff - back in livejournal days I really enjoyed the rural ruin and urban decay communities. I used to go into abandoned houses out around here in the country just to take photos, but I haven't done that since I fell through the floor of one, then realized the whole corner of the front room was a massive and active beehive. ack! But maybe it's time to start exploring again.
I took this photo somewhere between Nacodoches and Austin several years ago. I don't remember the rest of the house that well, but there was a grave right up against it. http://farm1.staticflickr.com/142/35...5147864714.jpg |
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Abandoned and for Sale!
i would live here!
http://www.messynessychic.com/2012/0...omes-for-sale/ http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...r0e26tyN_3.jpg Imagine converting old cinema converted into a home?! The Tivoli Theater stands as one of Owen County’s most recognizable landmarks. Constructed in 1928 by E.M. Viquesney, famed artist of “The American Doughboy” sculpture, the Tivoli is the only example of Mission Revival architecture in the county. Original exterior elements include stucco, stylized parapet, clay tile pent roofs, and second-floor balconies and arched windows. Original theater space elements include the stage, wood seats, and decorative plaster moldings, architectural features and sculptural figures. Small street-level commercial space and second-floor apartment provide additional income potential. The approximate square footage is 5500. Extensive roof repairs completed in 2008. http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...xzWg_3HJ25.jpg http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...7cdc1nEVy5.jpg |
10 Creepy, Beautiful Modern Ruins
http://www.thecoolist.com/abandoned-places-10-creepy-beautiful-modern-ruins/
http://www.thecoolist.com/wp-content...-meffre_18.jpg In the United States, few cities have felt the burn of urban decay more than Detroit. To capture its slow fade into history, photographers Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre explored some of Detroit’s dying landmarks for their photo series The Ruins of Detroit. As the industrial revolution came to a close and race riots crippled a once bustling city, many buildings throughout Detroit fell into disrepair and eventual abandonment. Today, visitors to Detroit can experience two sides of the city– the revitalized, re-invested downtown area, and the high-rises and industrial complexes which crumble around it. http://www.thecoolist.com/wp-content...tion-nyc_1.jpg Under the busy streets of New York City rests a perfectly preserved monument to that city’s transportation history. The City Hall Subway Station was first constructed over 100 years ago, a part of New York’s earliest underground transport network. It was shut down in 1945, where it lay dormant and untouched until a one night public exhibition on the station’s centennial. NYCSubway.org and photographer Fred Guenther have documented this event with a great collection of photos, showing this amazing abandoned place in all its pristine, untouched glory. http://www.thecoolist.com/wp-content...ea-forts_2.jpg During the Second World War, the British Royal Navy constructed a series of sea forts for an advanced line of defense against inbound air raids and potential sea invasions from the Axis powers. The Maunsell Sea Forts still stand today, silent and abandoned a few meters above the North Sea. One, however, remains inhabited, now a nation of its own referred to as the Principality of Sealand. These sea forts are a favorite of maritime explorers, a lonely collection of stilted fortresses not far off the coast of eastern England. [see more photos of the Maunsell Sea Forts by slimmer jimmer] |
http://www.oddee.com/_media/imgs/art..._cleopatra.jpg
Off the shores of Alexandria, the city of Alexander the Great, lies what is believed to be the ruins of the royal quarters of Cleopatra. A team of marine archaeologists led by Frenchman Franck Goddio made excavations on this ancient city from where Cleopatra, the last queen of the Ptolemies, ruled Egypt. Historians believe this site was submerged by earthquakes and tidal waves more than 1,600 years ago. The excavations concentrated on the submerged island of Antirhodus. Cleopatra is said to have had a palace there. Other discoveries include a well-preserved shipwreck and red granite columns with Greek inscriptions. Two statues were also found and were lifted out of the harbour. One was a priest of the goddess Isis; the other a sphinx whose face is said to represent Cleopatra's father, King Ptolemy XII. The artifacts were returned to their silent, because the Egyptian Government says it wants to leave most of them in place to create an underwater museum. Read more at http://www.oddee.com/item_96695.aspx...StmRs4O5oUg.99 |
Underwater City
http://media-cache-ec3.pinimg.com/73...cdc1c619f8.jpg
2 ancient cities in China were drowned in 1959 by a man-made lake and were forgotten about until discovered in 2001 by a tourist diving company. The cities remain intact and in good condition. http://lh5.ggpht.com/-ijW5MzBpXr0/T8...jpg?imgmax=800 The city of Shi cheng under water. (Photo: Chinese National Geography) http://lh6.ggpht.com/-NsM4JAPVOPA/T8...jpg?imgmax=800 http://www.amusingplanet.com/2012/05...-lake-and.html |
Abandoned Luxury Cars
http://www.messynessychic.com/2013/0...-of-a-problem/
Some cities have a litter problem, some suffer from high crime rates and others might have a lack of affordable housing. And then you have Dubai, which for the last several years has been facing the unusual problem of high end sports cars being abandoned and left to gather thick layers of dust at airport car parks and on the roadside across the city. http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...n82W5tDojr.jpg Thousands of the finest automobiles ever made are now being abandoned every year since Dubai’s financial meltdown, left by expatriates and locals alike who flee in a hurry because they face crippling debts. With big loans to repay to the banks (unpaid debt or even bouncing a cheque is a criminal offence in Dubai), the panicked car owners make their way to the airport at top speeds and leave their vehicles in the car park, hopping on the next flight out of there, never to return. http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...mevSAusz9q.jpg http://1-ps.googleusercontent.com/x/...sgj2oZBfCG.jpg Last year, a Ferrari Enzo, one of only four hundred manufactured, was seized by police having spent several months in a car park collecting dust. The million dollar motor went on sale at auction alongside other Ferraris, Porsches, Range Rovers and Mercedes plucked from the roadside. |
Burlington Cold War City
http://www.soap.com.au/underground/b...bunker_600.jpg
http://www.soap.com.au/underground/b..._escalator.jpg A 35 acre subterranean Cold War City that lies 100 feet beneath Corsham. Built in the late 50s this massive city complex was designed by Government personnel in the event of a nuclear strike. A former Bath stone quarry the city, code named Burlington, was to be the site of the main Emergency Government War Headquarters - the hub of the Country's alternative seat of power outside London. Over a kilometre in length, and boasting over 60 miles of roads. Blast proof and completely self-sufficient the secret underground site could accommodate up to 6,000 people, in complete isolation from the outside world, for up to three months. An underground lake and treatment plant could provide all the drinking water needed whilst 12 huge tanks could store the fuel required to keep the four massive generators, in the underground power station, running for up to three months. And unlike most urban cities, above ground, the air within the complex could also be kept at a constant humidity and heated to around 20 degrees. The city was also equipped with the second largest telephone exchange in Britain, a BBC studio from which the PM could address the nation and an internal Lamson Tube system that could relay messages, using compressed air, throughout the complex. Below are some photos of the unused facilities. It was maintained in working order until the late 1980's until it was cut back to a staff of 4 and then decommisioned in December 2005. The BBC Article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/wiltshire/conte..._feature.shtml http://www.theblogbelow.com/2008/07/...nker-at-c.html |
As ever, I am endlessly fascinated by this thread.... I so need to contribute to it....
I was just pondering the other day, the occurrence of things that just suddenly stop being useful to us. I see ancient (formerly horse drawn) plows left in fields....cars left in driveways of long empty houses...buildings crumbling...things that once had a purpose..and meant something to someone. I think about the very last time that place or thing was utilized...and how it's owner probably didn't know that would BE the last time... I find roads in the woods all the time..that surely used to go somewhere...one thing I have learned about human nature is that we don't really do or make anything without a reason...being a history buff my brain loves to meander on the thoughts of many yesterdays ago... |
I just found out that there's an abandoned amusement park not too far from me. I am totally going to go see it!
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bumping a much loved (by me!) thread....
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Abandoned Malls
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USS America, wrecked in 1994 after54 years of service, in the Canary Islands.
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abandoned City Hall NYC Transit subway station
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Kayakers Find Ship with 110 Years History
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What a pleasant surprise!
I came to this thread expect something totally different! What amazing pictures of moments lost in time...I just had to contribute. :)
http://thegirloutdoors.co.uk/wp-cont...3/01/jesus.jpg http://thegirloutdoors.co.uk/wp-cont.../01/tunnel.jpg |
Abandoned amusement park in berlin.
http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p...erlin-6262.jpg http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p...erlin-6100.jpg |
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A result of hurricane Katrina. NOLA
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This is an amazing thread.
The pictures evoke such a depth of feeling of loss and sadness. The beauty of the old and the forgotten objects of our history. The pictures do all of that and they are stunning. |
How cool would this be to stumble upon? I would love to touch it and hear the conversations that were once had inside this car....http://33.media.tumblr.com/d291cf32b...fqbo1_1280.png
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