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 Post subject: abondoned locations?
PostPosted: Mon Oct 12, 2009 2:49 pm 
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anyone know of a good easily accessible abandoned location
near the GTA, preferably a bit north maybe

I'm doing a Trash the Dress session and would love a nice grungy location


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 12, 2009 3:47 pm 
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I bet people reserve them to themselves, would love to know also


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 12, 2009 3:55 pm 
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The. Regal. Constellation. Hotel dixon n carlingview. Near the airport very. Spooky. Place


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 12, 2009 4:53 pm 
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Mr.Walczak wrote:
The. Regal. Constellation. Hotel dixon n carlingview. Near the airport very. Spooky. Place


Hey Brian, let me know if you need some muscle to watch your back...I can tag along. :)


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 12, 2009 6:43 pm 
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http://www.uer.ca/locations/newlist.asp?n=1&posterid=1&statfilter=160&country=Canada&province=Ontario&city=Toronto


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 13, 2009 2:58 pm 
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The old Kodak plant has been mostly torn down with the exception of the auditorium building! Very cool!


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 13, 2009 3:00 pm 
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<insert joke about various members' bedrooms here>


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 11:38 am 
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I'm not here to judge (mainly because I want to explore urban decay too), but what are the legal consequences that they can charge you with?

Trespassing? Has anyone ever been hassled by cops or security guards?


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 1:49 pm 
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riellanart wrote:
I'm not here to judge (mainly because I want to explore urban decay too), but what are the legal consequences that they can charge you with?

Trespassing? Has anyone ever been hassled by cops or security guards?


Most of these places can be dangerous because of the physical decay and because of environmental issues (asbestos, mold ...). I think it was last year some one died while exploring the Hearn. Cops or security can get you charged with trespassing but they are more likely to kick you off the property with a warning at least the first time.

Quote:
Urban explorer pays for his hobby with his life


Man dies from injuries after three-storey fall inside decommissioned power station

ANTHONY REINHART
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
June 18, 2008 at 4:52 AM EDT

To urban explorers, it's known simply as Hearn, one of Toronto's top destinations for camera-toting adventurers with a fondness for abandoned buildings.

From now on, they will also know it as the place where a fellow enthusiast died after a three-storey fall into a coal hopper on the weekend.

A 26-year-old man from Northern Ontario died of brain injuries in a Toronto hospital yesterday, two days after he tumbled from a catwalk high inside the Richard L. Hearn Thermal Generating Station, a sprawling fifties-era power plant in the midst of being dismantled on the city's east-end waterfront.

Police said the man and a 24-year-old friend, who were not employees at the site, "gained access through a secure area of the building for the purposes of taking artistic photographs of the building's interior" and were on a sixth-floor catwalk when the man fell and became trapped at about 4 p.m. Emergency workers took nearly three hours to free him.

The man's family has been notified, but his name has not been released.

As Detective Constable Kim O'Toole continued her investigation yesterday, alongside officials from the Ontario Ministry of Labour because the demolition site is a workplace, another adventurer familiar with the Hearn plant lamented not only the man's death, but his decision to take such an extreme risk in the first place.

"It's a shame that he died," Alex, who lives west of Toronto and works in information technology, said yesterday. "The fact that he was crawling up through a power station that's in the process of being demolished, especially that high up, is stupid to my mind."

Urban exploration, which can involve trespassing and breaking and entering, is a fringe activity that has gained popularity in recent years, especially among photographers intrigued by the decay of the built environment.

Enthusiasts range from professionals such as Toronto's Sean Galbraith, who has parlayed his forays into high-priced fine art, to thrill-seeking amateurs who prefer a lower profile and share their work on Internet sites.

Mr. Galbraith declined to discuss the practice in an e-mail exchange yesterday, "other than to say this is a truly tragic accident and my thoughts go out to his family."

Alex, who asked that his surname be withheld, said mishaps have been rare in the three years he has been combing abandoned buildings in Southern Ontario and western New York. They are usually the result of ignorance and sometimes involve people lured to the hobby by its heightened profile in the media and on television shows like CSI and Urban Explorers, a Discovery Channel series.

"When I go into a place, I usually look to make sure that it's structurally sound," he said. "I avoid floors that have been partially knocked off, I avoid catwalks, places where there are massive holes in the floor."

He also wears safety boots with steel toes and shanks, and in some cases, a respirator mask to filter out asbestos and noxious fumes.

"I am fully trained in first aid and carry a kit with me, and have had to use it on a couple of occasions," he said, adding that he once treated another hobbyist who injured himself punching through glass.

"It's just a matter of using your head," Alex said, adding that taking a buddy along, and preferably two, is essential "so that one person can run out and make a phone call in the case that you're stuck in a place like Hearn. Cell reception is a bit spotty in there."

With four excursions into Hearn under his belt, the most recent in April, Alex said he made a point of warning his fellow enthusiasts of the dangers of their hobby when he heard about the weekend accident.

The appeal of the old generating station, mothballed in the 1980s, is simple: "It's big, it's been around for a while, and you get to see what the power stations were like when they were first built in the fifties," an era before computers when control rooms were filled with dials and buttons and gauges.

Asked how he reconciles the need to trespass to get into such sites, he said, "I don't go in with the intent to damage the property. I don't break into a building; I look for an open door, I look for a hole in the wall, an open window, something that I can just walk in. If I can't get in without walking in, I walk away."

He has been caught by on-site security guards, "and they just kick you off the property." He's never been arrested.

"The fact of the matter with trespassing is, the most you'll get is a $65 ticket, and that's only if the police can find the owner and the owner wants to pursue this. You don't get put in cuffs; you don't get jailed."

In Toronto, Alex said, Hearn has ranked alongside the Canada Malting silos at the foot of Bathurst Street and the Don Valley Brick Works as one of the top three destinations for urban explorers.

Now that there's been an accident, he expects things to change at Hearn, and if that comes at the expense of his hobby, so be it.

"Hopefully it's a wake-up call for both explorers and companies to watch themselves," he said. "I hope that they do something about Hearn; either finish the job and knock it down, or seal it up well enough that nobody gets in.

"I don't want to see other people get hurt."

Forbidden places

Urban exploration, infiltration, creeping, building hacking - whatever you call it, forays into otherwise forbidden places have become an increasingly popular, if often illicit, hobby in cities around the world, particularly since the advent of the Internet in the mid-nineties.

A Toronto man, Jeff Chapman, aka Ninjalicious, was a contemporary UE pioneer with his magazine Infiltration: the zine about going places you're not supposed to go, founded in 1996 [Mr. Chapman died in 2005 and publication has since ceased].

From photographers and graffiti artists to thrill-seekers and the simply curious, these places - some abandoned, others still active - offer the allure of the unknown, the historical, even the haunted.

Popular sites include:

factories

power plants

transit and utility tunnels

sewers

hospitals

prisons

Enthusiasts share stories and photos of their exploits on various websites, including Urban Exploration Resource, at http://www.uer.ca. Anthony Reinhart


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 3:13 pm 
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So basically bring a friend (preferably several) and don't be stupid?


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 6:28 pm 
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riellanart wrote:
So basically bring a friend (preferably several) and don't be stupid?


You have to be more careful then not stupid.


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 7:37 pm 
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What if I bring stupid friends? Does that count?


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:28 pm 
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That's too funny stos. Thanks for the laugh.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:31 pm 
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stos wrote:
What if I bring stupid friends? Does that count?
If your friends are stupid you might want to count your toes as natural selection is at work. :twisted:


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 6:45 pm 
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Trespassing in abandoned buildings in wrong. Shame on you for even suggesting such a thing be done.


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:43 pm 
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Mr.Walczak wrote:
The. Regal. Constellation. Hotel dixon n carlingview. Near the airport very. Spooky. Place


Can anyone describe what one might find there?


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:58 pm 
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A hotel in a very advanced state of destruction


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