![]() Pennsylvania: Forgotten Pennsylvania covers some of the most famous American abandonments, like the town of Centralia, as well as lesser-known deserted roads, towns and building complexes. There is little attempt to glorify or even explain these ruins – viewers are given a full tour and it is at visitor discretion to assess the meaning of each location Russia: Abandoned dot RU features very raw, rough-and-ready images from various unfinished and abandoned building sites located around Russia. His main focus is on buildings but he also covers abandoned cars, subways, sewers, bridges and more. United Kingdom: Urbex UKhas been featured in a number of national and international publications as an outstanding collection of urban explorations and building infiltrations that feature rich images, stories and other background information including maps and building plans.Īustralia: Sleepy City is an ever-evolving collection of one man’s adventures in urban exploration around the world but in particular his encounters with interesting abandonments in his home country of Australia. There is also a very active Flickr group dedicated to European Urban Exploration. This is definitely a site to visit and revisit. ![]() You can browse by building type or country and dig back through years of archived images. Also included are links to related subjects like caving, parkour and ghost towns as well as various urbex categories like draining and exploring active buildings.Įurope: Urban Travel has an incredibly well-organized database of their adventures in building infiltration and photography from all over mainland Europe at dozens of locations. A number of useful books are listed as well as the appearances of abandonments in prominent films and television. Wikipedia is of course a good place to start looking for information on many subjects but has a particularly well-rounded article on urban exploration. The group consists of over 200 members and over 2,000 images and shows a broad range of photographic possibilities in color as well as black-and-white, retouched and shot as-is, that demonstrate the various approaches different explorers take to shooting their subjects. Best of all: UER has threads based on geographical location to help people connect and share urbex info regionally.įlickr has many collectives dedicated to different kinds of abandonment imagery, including the above-linked Urban Abandonments group. ![]() There is a single dedicated section for photography with other sections relating to tools and tutorials, new urban explorers, general urban exploration information and terms and locations related to urbex. UERis another very useful urbex forum that is structured somewhat differently from 28 Days Later. Many explorers upload stories as well as images of their adventures at various urban and rural locations. Explorations are divided into category by building type including tall structures, military installations, recreational facilities, underground sites and international (non-UK) sites. The site’s creator also wrote one of the definitive books on urban exploration – purchase at your own risk!Ģ8 Days Later is definitely one of the most active urban exploration forums on the web and is focused mainly on British building infiltration. The site’s founder has since passed away but back issues of their zine are still available for purchase as well as images and stories from past explorations and on-site forums. Infiltration is one of the oldest and most respected urban exploration websites around. Not all of the locations are named to protect the integrity of the abandonments but for visual inspiration the site is unparalleled. ![]() Some of the images are enhanced and retouched for effect and the results are very compelling. ![]() Tom Kirsch, the site’s creator and primary photographer, has traveled the world photographing deserted buildings. Opacity is a great place to start developing a taste for the allure of abandonments. In addition to those listed below (right-click on the screenshots to jump), sites like DarkRoastedBlend and LookAtThis have entire categories dedicated to abandoned places and vehicles also worth exploring. Organized into helpful categories here are thirty must-bookmark resources for would-be urban explorers around the world. (Check out our complete collection of Urban Exploration Tips, Tricks and Guides.) Įver wonder what is inside that dark tunnel or deserted structure you pass on your way to work everyĭay? There are a vast number of spooky and surreal abandoned buildings that populate even the densest countries, states and cities. By Urbanist in Abandoned Places, Guerilla Action & Art, Urbex & Parkour ![]()
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