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femmeInterrupted 04-07-2013 07:46 PM

Abandoned
 
Abandoned Places and Spaces.

http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enha...4329851-24.jpg

Kolmanskop in the Namib Desert


http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enha...64329937-5.jpg

The abandoned Wonderland Amusement Park outside Beijing, China

http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enha...64330224-5.jpg

The Kerry Way walking path between Sneem and Kenmare in Ireland


http://www.buzzfeed.com/awesomer/the...s-in-the-world

femmeInterrupted 04-07-2013 07:48 PM

Train Graveyard
 
http://media-cache-ec6.pinterest.com...7133fcc51e.jpg

femmeInterrupted 04-07-2013 07:50 PM

Abandoned Amusement Parks
 
http://media-cache-ec2.pinterest.com...9bbb5a1cf9.jpg
http://media-cache-ec3.pinterest.com...08bb168edf.jpg

http://media-cache-ec4.pinterest.com...7677d37819.jpg

http://media-cache-ec4.pinterest.com...93721945cc.jpg

http://media-cache-ec6.pinterest.com...d3a2849be0.jpg

Daktari 04-07-2013 08:08 PM

Cool! Have ya been to all these places. I'm a derelict places enthusiast too. I go to take pictures but some just prefer a more psychogeographic experience. What kit do you take with you?

DapperButch 04-07-2013 08:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daktari (Post 779646)
Cool! Have ya been to all these places. I'm a derelict places enthusiast too. I go to take pictures but some just prefer a more psychogeographic experience. What kit do you take with you?

Ha! I was just about to visitor message you about this thread!

Bèsame* 04-07-2013 11:10 PM

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_xKMlVvfsrs...0/asylum13.jpg

JustBeingMe 04-07-2013 11:47 PM

It's a sad reality that these places, buildings, and the like actually exist in the US. Detroit actually has so many of these empty and alone buildings and houses. I lived only 5 mins from south Detroit, and it was very sad and gloomy there. I hated it.

Cailin 04-08-2013 05:00 AM

I love this thread. Though sad, I find it absolutely breath taking, the way nature reclaims what is hers.



http://331931524.r.cdn77.net/wp-cont...l2-620x520.jpg

~ocean 04-08-2013 05:03 AM

ty for sharing Femme ~ interesting shots :) ~

Ginger 04-08-2013 05:15 AM

[QUOTE=Cailin;779759]I love this thread. Though sad, I find it absolutely breath taking, the way nature reclaims what is hers.

I agree! The economic story behind the abandoned place is a story of pain and loss for many people, but also, there is the story of reclamation, resiliency, all the ways nature fights for a place on earth.

Glenn 04-08-2013 05:20 AM

Ruin Porn
 
The History Channel's program, "Life After People" illustrates what would happen to our cities, buildings, structures, etc. if everyone just disappeared today. Many of the buildings still standing, believe it or not, are still structurally sound, and were built of such a quality, that current churches, buildings, structures, etc., cannot match.

DapperButch 04-08-2013 05:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Uniqueswtfemm (Post 779730)

Hair dryers for the Coneheads. :|

Daktari 04-08-2013 06:59 AM

Just a reminder that if these pictures aren't taken by you and you don't attribute the photographer of the pictures you're stealing their work.

Me and other urbexer friends have had our work stolen regularly. There's even been folks passing other's pictures off as their own. Copyright is serious stuff folks.




Awww Dapper :winky:

Daktari 04-08-2013 08:26 AM

A couple of my fave urbexing shots.

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3265/3...a9bee45e70.jpg
table revisted by Dr.Doo, on Flickr
T.G Green Cornish Ware pottery factory

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3074/2...9153772733.jpg
Wheelchair Access by Dr.Doo, on Flickr
My best urbexing selfie at Nocton Hospital, Lincolnshire.

Ginger 04-08-2013 08:56 AM

Dkatari brought up a word I didn't know: "urbexing."

I found this definition in http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Urbexing

"Urbexing is the act of exploring urban areas that are generally off-limits to regular civilians."


I've always been intrigued by spaces that are off-limits to many. I'm not talking about private residential space, but private spaces within public settings.

I like meeting people who share access to those spaces. Like, an old friend who was the head of pathology at a hospital in NYC. He gave me a tour through lab areas that were off limits to visitors, so I could take notes for a poem.

I would love to find a guide who could share access with me to:
  • abandoned subway stations
  • animal clinics at the Bronx zoo
  • places in the redwood forests in Humboldt Park, Northern California, where the largest trees on earth are growing (their sites are off limits to the general public, for the trees' protection)
  • the construction site of the new Freedom Tower, looking out from the cage of steel beams at 100 stories

Before 9/11, when security all over the City was more slack, I would sneak behind the scenes at Madison Square Garden at the Westminster Dog Show, so I could wander up and down the aisles where the show dogs were being temporarily housed and groomed.

Their owners sat in lawn chairs, and the dogs were on leashes next to them. The owners were happy to talk about their dogs, and the dogs were friendly and well behaved. I got to pet an Irish Wolf Hound; I'd never seen one before in person.

And it was so cool to watch the dogs being blow dried and groomers trimming their whiskers and eye brows and so on. It's a real art, grooming some of the dogs, like standard poodles, where such precision goes into their hair cuts.

So I guess I have the heart of an urbexer. Who knew.

femmeInterrupted 04-08-2013 09:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daktari (Post 779646)
Cool! Have ya been to all these places. I'm a derelict places enthusiast too. I go to take pictures but some just prefer a more psychogeographic experience. What kit do you take with you?

I have not been to all these places...Though i'm drawn to the images and visiting when possible! I'm leaving for Europe in the end of May and will hopefully come back with some great shots!
My friend is coming loaded down with photo equipment, so this should be pretty fun! We've been researching some great locations in Portugal and Spain.
What do you use to shoot with?
:)

Daktari 04-08-2013 09:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by IslandScout (Post 779857)
Dkatari brought up a word I didn't know: "urbexing."

I found this definition in http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Urbexing

"Urbexing is the act of exploring urban areas that are generally off-limits to regular civilians."


I've always been intrigued by spaces that are off-limits to many. I'm not talking about private residential space, but private spaces within public settings.

I like meeting people who share access to those spaces. Like, an old friend who was the head of pathology at a hospital in NYC. He gave me a tour through lab areas that were off limits to visitors, so I could take notes for a poem.

I would love to find a guide who could share access with me to:
  • abandoned subway stations
  • animal clinics at the Bronx zoo
  • places in the redwood forests in Humboldt Park, Northern California, where the largest trees on earth are growing (their sites are off limits to the general public, for the trees' protection)
  • the construction site of the new Freedom Tower, looking out from the cage of steel beams at 100 stories

Before 9/11, when security all over the City was more slack, I would sneak behind the scenes at Madison Square Garden at the Westminster Dog Show, so I could wander up and down the aisles where the show dogs were being temporarily housed and groomed.

Their owners sat in lawn chairs, and the dogs were on leashes next to them. The owners were happy to talk about their dogs, and the dogs were friendly and well behaved. I got to pet an Irish Wolf Hound; I'd never seen one before in person.

And it was so cool to watch the dogs being blow dried and groomers trimming their whiskers and eye brows and so on. It's a real art, grooming some of the dogs, like standard poodles, where such precision goes into their hair cuts.

So I guess I have the heart of an urbexer. Who knew.

I'm not at home so can't answer fully. I can explain a lot more about urbexing later. Now you've looked up urbexing now try flanneur and psychogeography.

:chaplin:

Sadly there's been a fashion for over-processing urbex shots with the HDR technique. As can be seen in some of the above pictures. I personally don't like it and think that it spoils the natural beauty of decay.

Ginger 04-08-2013 10:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daktari (Post 779878)
I'm not at home so can't answer fully. I can explain a lot more about urbexing later. Now you've looked up urbexing now try flanneur and psychogeography.

:chaplin:

Sadly there's been a fashion for over-processing urbex shots with the HDR technique. As can be seen in some of the above pictures. I personally don't like it and think that it spoils the natural beauty of decay.


I feel a strong affinity (regarding my work, and way of being in the world), with both the flanneur and psychogeographic aesthetic!

Thanks for bringing those words to mind.

As for the HDR technique—I Googled it: "High Dynamic Range" photography.

As for "spoiling the natural beauty of decay," I agree in the sense that the technique seems to romanticize decay, whereas if you didn't HDR the shots of abandoned places—in which the human-made decays, and the natural thrives—there would still be plenty of opportunity to capture intensity, longing, despair, joy, and other feelings they might evoke.

I'm not a photographer and I don't want to dis the HDR thing outright, just saying in some instances I think it's the easy way out.

But still beautiful.

And as for stuff that's romanticized, I like it romanticized to the point of being almost hallucinogenic.

Hollylane 04-08-2013 10:50 AM

I agree with Cailin and IslandScout. Thank you for starting this thread femmeInterrupted!

I adore seeking out abandoned buildings, especially in the countryside. There are a lot of abandoned homes and barns in Oregon, and Mother Nature takes them back with gusto. I find them hauntingly beautiful.

I took all of the photos below, while exploring in Oregon...

http://i47.tinypic.com/357oe41.jpg

White River Falls Abandoned hydro power generation plant 2012

http://i49.tinypic.com/nqnsch.jpg

White River Falls Abandoned hydro power generation plant 2012

http://i45.tinypic.com/zkea.jpg

White River Falls Abandoned hydro power generation plant 2012


All of these images were taken within walking distance of the home I lived in, in Brownsmead Oregon...

http://i48.tinypic.com/2zno2gw.jpg

Aldrich Point Rd in Brownsmead Oregon 2006

http://i47.tinypic.com/2s5zart.jpg

Abandoned home, on Aldrich Point Rd in Brownsmead Oregon 2006

http://i47.tinypic.com/k3k48w.jpg

Old gray barn, on Aldrich Point Rd in Brownsmead Oregon 2006

Here's one I found on accident when driving back from a hike in the Columbia Gorge...

http://i50.tinypic.com/2rcucnq.jpg

Abandoned home, Columbia River Gorge Area 2012

Hollylane 04-08-2013 11:05 AM

I took this one in 2012, in Kid Valley Washington. This A-Frame, was buried in a river of mud after the May 18th, 1980 eruption, at Mount St. Helens.

http://i48.tinypic.com/30ib9z7.jpg



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