Please turn JavaScript on
Derelict Places - Urban Exploring Forum icon

Derelict Places - Urban Exploring Forum

follow.it gives you an easy way to subscribe to Derelict Places - Urban Exploring Forum's news feed! Click on Follow below and we deliver the updates you want via email, phone or you can read them here on the website on your own news page.

You can also unsubscribe anytime painlessly. You can even combine feeds from Derelict Places - Urban Exploring Forum with other site's feeds!

Title: Derelict Places - Urban Exploring Forum

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  0.43 / day

Message History

Oldtimers House & Shed



Havent posted a residential for a while so heres one with a little twist.
This was a solo visit while I was in the area last year & it turned out to be a pleasant explore, as is most often the case with residential properties I dont have any history.

...​

Read full story
Hey,

We want to make a anime YouTube video in an abandoned/haunted area. We won’t damage etc anything to the property we just want to explore and record there.

Does anyone know good spots in London?

(Preferably near/close to Elizabeth line)

Read full story
I have fond memories of this place from the 1990's; it supplied the electronic components not available at Maplins; VCR and car radio spares, and the employees were time served bench engineers who were happy to advise relevant information.

But then sadly, Wizard Distributors moved and vanished.

Empress mill was built in the 1930's and in a prime place near the ...

Read full story
This youth camp was built at Devil's Bridge, a popular tourist spot, probably between the 1920s and the 1950s. Accommodation was in a number of huts housing between two and eight children each with separate rooms for leaders and camp staff. A central hall, kitchen, toilets and showers were also provided: being unheated, the camp would only have been used in the summer months. Th...

Read full story
Burlington Street Drill Hall was first completed in 1885 to act as headquarters for the 4th volunteer Battalion. It is situated on the border line of Hulme (Famous for the Rolls Royce factory and later on, some of the worst housing projects in Europe) the district is actually Greenheys.

With war being a big thing in those times, the attendees changed to the 7th Battalio...

Read full story