The condemned live longer.
Correctional institution for criminal children, Germany, 2019.
flickr ◄ ► instagram
603 notes
·
View notes
it's paradox - I feel most grounded when my feet lose touch to the ground
4 notes
·
View notes
Dynamit AG
A few days ago we went to visit a few lost buildings. I was a little worried about them being hard to reach, but we got to them very easily.
The factory was built around 1939 for the maufacturing of nitrocellulouse and was a part of the armament program of the NS-government.
There were around 130 Buildings built in a forest to stay hidden. Some of them were production-buildings, facilities for power-supplies and social buildings. The roofs were grown over with trees and other plants so they were even more difficult to spot. In the year 1941, shortly before completion of the factory, the cronstuction stopped, and even thought it started again in 1943, it was never completed and production never started.
1945 the US-troups repurposed it as an air force base and by 1949 stripped the buildings of all technical equipment. It was planned to blow all the buildings up, but that never happened. From 1958 to 1995 the facility was used by the bundeswehr for storage, and was bought by the nearby town in 1998, to build an industrial estat on it.
As I said before all buildings were easily accesible and most of the doors were missing so you could look around inside without a problem.
There were a lot of cool graffities, but sadly no objects (exept for some rubbish).
I felt like being on adrenaline for most of the time, mostly because I was worried about getting caught, but also because in almost all of the floors had big holes in that you could easily fall through in them and I almost stepped into one of them…
We’re almost a hundred percent sure, that there were other people with us in our first building, but we never saw them.
Sadly, we didn’t have enought time to visit the rest of the buildings, but we’ll pobably come back to look ag the rest someday.
3 notes
·
View notes
This Cold War bunker was built above the ground as a big concrete cube. It protected civilians in case of a nuclear attack or war.
In the 1950s, the communist dictatorship in Hungary launched the BGS program - "Bomba-Gáz-Szilánk" (Bomb, Gas and Shrapnel). Many shelters were built around the country, some of them underground and others on the surface.
After the fall of communism, many of these shelters / bunkers were left abandoned.
We were lucky to find an intact BGS bunker that has been sealed for more than 60 years. To this day, it still contains a large amount of unused military equipment.
Enjoy our video.
0 notes
Abandoned hospital (Kinder Krankenhaus) Germany Jun 2009
A urbex video from this hospital: https://youtu.be/ybG3YxrzSf4
722 notes
·
View notes