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World's Eeriest Abandoned Places

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Abandoned Amusement Park, Japan

Delphine Adburgham/Alamy

Staten Island’s Tugboat Graveyard has long intrigued—even frightened—local residents, including NYC-based photographer Chris Barreto, who grew up just a few miles away. “It took me years to build up the nerve to go,” he admits. “The immense size of the shipyard is unfathomable—row after row of ships, just waiting their turn to sink into the murky waters. The stench of rotting wood and oil is almost unbearable. It’s not a welcoming place.”

Barreto is just one of the many artists, photographers, travelers, and writers inspired by the act of human abandonment. “When any man-made structure is deserted and void of people, it leaves behind an unsettling energy,” he says.

But it’s that very energy that has made these creepy places a sort of dark-side passport stamp, complete with bragging rights. So young creatives have made a hobby out of photographing derelict and discarded buildings and uploading the images to sites like Abandoned-places.com and Weburbanist.com, along with Flickr’s numerous user groups, like Abandoned Motels, Abandoned Sweden, and Best of Abandoned. The most popular group, simply called Abandoned, has 20,000-plus members and remains a go-to source for those looking to find new terrain.

“Some people find abandoned places creepy, others find them beautiful,” says Henk van Rensbergen, the 41-year-old Belgian webmaster of Abandoned-places.com (and an airline pilot). “I’m curious about the soul of the building and the stories the walls tell me when I sit down and listen to the silence.” He has photographed a deserted hospital in New Jersey, a vacant cinema house in Brazil, abandoned hotels on the beaches of Gabon, and tenantless office buildings in Beirut, Poland, and Sri Lanka. “I usually visit these places alone, unless there is a real danger, which there often is.”

Google “Visit Chernobyl” and you’ll get several tour results that guarantee a “radiation-free tour” of the infamously abandoned Reactor Number 4. The tour is so popular that Trip Advisor has a user-generated forum explaining the best way to visit it. Other abandoned places, like India’s cursed city of Bhangarh, Rajasthan, are sanctioned by their respective governments, but still pose danger. A sign erected by the Archaeological Survey of India at the entrance to Bhangarh reads: “Entering the borders of Bhangarh before sunrise and after sunset is strictly prohibited.” While the ancient curse clearly still has a hold over the current government, the sign is a sensible warning to anyone wanting to explore the city’s crumbling Hindu temples. Skellig Michael, Europe’s most inaccessible UNESCO World Heritage site, is just as dangerous: three tourists, including two Americans just this year, have fallen to their deaths while on the precipitous climb.

Whether you’re visiting sanctioned places or exploring more off-the-beaten-path terrain, it’s important to show respect. Van Rensbergen’s three rules of thumb are a good directive for anyone attempting to access an abandoned site: “Don’t break your way in. Don’t take anything, except photos. And don’t leave anything except footprints.”

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  • Times Beach, MO

    The whole town was evacuated in the 80's because dioxin (a carcinogen) was used in the roads and had seeped into the water table. It's located about 30 minutes outside St. Louis on I-44.

  • RE: Times Beach, MO
  • Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, PA

    The prison located on 23rd and Fairmount Avenue in Philadelphia once hosted a very famous outlaw by the name of Al Capone. Although this institution is closed to convicted felons and inmates, it continues to entertain paying visitors during the Holloween season. Haunted tours are performed yearly at the Eastern State Penitentiary. During this guided tour, you'll see the old cells that once caged the famous and infamous inmates. The cots with the rounded iron head-boards, the chipped paint, an... Read More

  • RE: Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, PA
  • Abandoned Mental Hospital

    "Byberry", located in Northeast Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. This has to be the largest or one of Americas largest mental health hospital that has been closed since the early 80s. This hospital's property is enormous and the morgue is still visible, I believe there are ten morgue drawers, give or take. Photos were taken of this old institution a while back and published in the Northeast Times paper. The wall peelings stand lifeless and the creepy scenes of that single chair sitting in the midd... Read More

  • RE: Abandoned Mental Hospital
  • Old Griffith Park Zoo

    The abandoned zoo in LA, CA is way creepy. You must go around back to see where the animals climbed up to their cages above the exhibits.

  • RE: Old Griffith Park Zoo
  • Centralia, PA

    Centralia has to be on this list.

    • WBfromNY — Posted Oct. 31, 2009

      YES! I totally agree. I was going to say that Centralia should be on this list!
      My husband and I went there last year and it was real creepy! To me, it seemed like aliens came and sucked up all the houses. It was an eerie feeling, walking around, almost scary.

    • RE: Centralia, PA
  • RE: Centralia, PA
  • More Subrubs and Exurbs to become ghost towns

    Ever higher oil prices and shoddy construction will lead to

    1) 1/3rd of the homes for sale, then
    2) Some are abandoned, not kept up, then
    3) Police and fire are cut back
    4) Vandalism and arson create more bad spots; a "jack-o-lantern" effect
    5) Home values plummet, no one moves in, except squatters
    6) Finally only a few older people trapped there by their equity and lack of money to move, surrounded by squatters and crime.
    7) The old people die off and the ...

  • RE: More Subrubs and Exurbs to become ghost towns
  • How About Varosha??

    Caught between North and Greek Cyprus, Varosha is a creepy, abandoned town worth a visit for sure! The locals say there are lights that have been burning since 1976, and vintage model cars still in the showrooms of this displaced town...Entry is forbidden, but driving around the perimeter (as I did last year) is spine-tingling fun.... for pics of Varosha, check out my blog at davidrozgonyi.blogspot.com....

  • RE: How About Varosha??
  • Where is Chernobyl Ukraine?

    i though while i was nearing the 11th entry, Chernobyl will be the "last but no the least" entry..the place is 'unbeatably" eerie, as it is the only place on earth that preserves everything from the 80s, and 1986 USSR to be exact..not only is the place scary, but also what happened and the aftermath that still haunts us today...

    • nopchem — Posted Oct. 27, 2009

      My thoughts exactly. There's nothing more creepy than an entire city (Prypiat, Ukraine) that has been abandoned overnight. Though I guess that technically it does not fit into this group, since it is definitely NOT a tourist attraction.

    • RE: Where is Chernobyl Ukraine?
    • Floyd_Droid — Posted Oct. 28, 2009

      I agree 100% Chernobyl, Prypiat and the glowing Wormwood forest is as creepy as it gets!

      Talk about being frozen in time!

    • RE: Where is Chernobyl Ukraine?
  • RE: Where is Chernobyl Ukraine?

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