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Ever see an impressive derelict structure and wonder just how
a building so elegant, sizable or centrally located could be abandoned?
There are amazing abandonments all over the world, but some may
be closer than you think. Many are even located right in the heart
of major cities like New York or Los Angeles and are decades or
even centuries old. From zoos to steel mills, prisons to offices
complexes and monasteries to cemeteries here are 7 abandoned wonders
of the USA.

Rochester, New York: Built in the early 1800s,
Mt. Hope Cemetery was the first munipical cemetery in the United
States with graves older than the official graveyard itself. Such
famous persons as Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglas are among
those buried there in everything from lawn crypts and columbariums
to family mausoleums. It seems strange, then, that the chapel
at such an historically significant location would be abandoned
to the elements, though it remains elegant even in its disrepair.

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Western Penitentiary
is over a century old and was finally abandoned a few years back,
only to be reopened a few months ago. The site was, in a way,
one of the world’s most temporary abandonments, left in
pristine condition during its period of disuse and lending itself
to the surreal experience of a recently working prison for visitors.
Originally used in the 1800s to house Confederate Army war prisoners,
it is now used for medium to low security containment of inmates
requiring drug and alcohol treatment.


Lacawana, New York: The Bethlehem Steel Company
was once the second largest steel mill in the United States. They
manufactured everything from railroad cars and bridge and building
parts to World War II battleships. After nearly 150 years in operation,
the company finally declared bankruptcy less than a decade ago
and has left behind a series of remarkably intact abandonments.

North Brother Island, New York: This abandoned
20-acre island sits amazingly close to the bustling center of
New York City yet is completely unused. It was home to a hospital
in the 19th Century, then housed veterans after World War II before
becoming one of the first drug treatment centers for teens in
the 1950s. Corruption and failure caused the facility to close
and the island has since been off limits to the public, though
some urban explorers have made their way onto it anyway. The island
was also the site of an infamous shipwreck in 1904 in which over
1,000 people drowned or burned to death.

Palo Alto, California: During the dot-com bubble,
Sun Microsystems experienced incredible growth and rapidly expanded
in all areas including personnel, infrastructure and office space.
Sun has since had ups and downs and has streamlined their operations
and few people think twice about the amazing remnant abandonments
they have left behind, save for a few intrepid urban explorers.
Along with other things, the (above) adventurers found shotgun
shells, cans of malt liquor, rows of servers and even working
light fixtures.

Staten Island, New York: St. Augistine’s
Monastary sits atop Grymes Hill and was once a school but now
has been closed for over a half a century. Originally built as
a school for boys, it was later converted and then sat idle until
purchased in the 1980s. Each new owner, though, has since fallen
into debt and the school was eventually purchased by a local college
to avoid unwanted development, yet even Wagner College apparently
has no plans to develop the property.

Los Angeles, California: The Griffith Park Zoo
in Los Angeles is neither the oldest nor the newest of L.A.’s
massive animal habitats. Though this location was abandoned decades
ago it is unusually available to visitors even today. It isn’t
every day that a set of abandonments not only survives for generations
but also remains available to the public as a kind of museum or
window into the past.
(from www.weburbanist.com) |