Abandoned places - Uusküla Holiday Center, part II

in #abandoned6 years ago

Catch up with the first part here

As we circled back and entered the west wing, we took a detour to the roof as well. The view on the roof was suprisingly cool, unfortunately we were on the side, that didn't allow access to the main part of the roof, where better views could have been enjoyed.

Someone had shown his strength here too, with some roof planks being ripped up. These planks were cool and wide though - one could make some nice furniture from them. Who knows why they are ripped up, for firewood or for some other purpose, remains a question to us.

One could find shelter from the sun in the shade of the pine. Trees growing this close to buildings often contribute to the demise of them, but i loved it.


A view outside from one of the higher windows

On the way to the other wing, we followed a stairway higher, allowing us to check out the attic rooms as well. Some rooms had weird gimmicks of ropes and bottles hung up, all signs of people living here recently.

With ventilation shafts worthy a horror game, this wing is a bit emptier. The shafts though... I have visited many abandoned and old buildings, but havent seen such crawlable and large shafts, like in all the horror and action movies.

We were not gonna test them out though. The shafts smelled like tetanus and none of us felt like getting stuck in one of them.

A view from this side to the cafeteria in the above photo. The room with the sloping roof is the cafeteria. No dolls neither any ghosts in the upper windows to be seen, though. Phew.

As we passed a large lounge, where an old fireplace is seen (of course i climbed on it), we went further ahead to the west wing, reaching the more expensive suites.

It seems the building is not completely empty. Along with the weird noises and sounds that we hear from afar all the time, someone has climbed into this cupboard :)

These elite suites featured walls covered in decorative wooding and even rocked two stories. The penthouse suites, we called it. Although not that big, one could easily imagine people partying in the common rooms downstairs and later heading upstairs to do their "business".

A lonely hankerchief was hanging in one of the bathrooms, like it was used just minutes ago. Did not touch that though :)

Found the maintenance guys' room. Posters on walls, toolracks and drawers.

As we headed to the exit, we grabbed more shots from various rooms.

As it later appeared, we missed many of the rooms altogether, but fully exploring a place like this takes more time than we were willing to spend at that time.

If are interested in abandoned places like these, make sure you visit them before they get destroyed, as seen here. Being a year or even a few months late can make a big difference.

Enjoy!



Still not selling your vote to Minnowbooster to earn SBD? Do it now


Title image from pixabay

separator.png


unknown2.png
Are you looking for Minnowbooster, Buildteam or Steemvoter support? Or are you looking to grow on Steemit or just chat? Check out Minnowbooster Discord Chat via the link below.




buildTeam.io

Sort:  

Abandoned places are fascinating. Each one has a deep story.

Abandoned places
Are fascinating. Each one
Has a deep story.

                 - programmingvalue


I'm a bot. I detect haiku.

Hiii @furious-one, more lovely shots from various rooms & view on the roof looks so cool for Abandoned places part 2. Really amazing work and clean photography.

the ventalation shaft does look scary.

whoever crawls in won't crawl out haha.

I wouldnt spend a night there hahah...
Looks amazing and scary at the same time :)

Hi! This is jlk.news intelligent bot. I just upvoted your post based on my criteria for quality. Keep on writing nice posts on Steemit and follow me @jlkreiss to get premium world news updates round the clock! 🦄🦄🦄

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.31
TRX 0.11
JST 0.033
BTC 64275.02
ETH 3139.81
USDT 1.00
SBD 4.14