72 Comments Posted by angela

wrote:
oh now that is beautiful.

nature taking back over. wonderful.
wrote:
it really is a beautiful building though, isn't it.

yet awkward at the same time.
wrote:
i love how the floor is buckling.

it makes it so interesting.
wrote:
well that's a little depressing.

i don't know if i'd want to prepare for that or not.
wrote:
[love it].
wrote:
Just think...if EF closed in 86...that means the person who did this COULD have quite possibly have visited as a small child. Very interesting contrast.

maybe they wanted one last visit, and to make their mark, whether artistic or not.
wrote:
As soon as I saw this i thought "Don't you love the smell of razor wire in the morning" and then read Jackie's comment.

maybe secretly i'm supposed to be a corrections officer. :S :S

siiiiick.
wrote:
looks DELICIOUS!

:D
wrote:
my family used a register older than this at our business until someone stole it, but couldn't get it open. (there was a trick because it was so old) We found it outside a month later.

Now we've upgraded and have a register circa 1950s. So advanced. :P
wrote:
beautiful!

It feels like the back half has seen the sunrise while the foreground hasn't quite gotten there yet.
wrote:
I like how it looks like the mirror has semi-straightened itself from an even more crooked position.

[love it.]
wrote:
Thats incredibly eerie.
wrote:
I remember seeing this factory from the train while in Belgium.. Nice to finally get a tour! Beautiful--love this site. :)
wrote:
i have a question..how come everyone says that this building is haunted..teh story i was told was that some girl hung herself and one of the professors created acid and gave drugs to the girls...is this true?
wrote:
Her name was Anna Schuleit. The project was titled Bloom, and she filled an abandoned mental institution with wall-to-wall flowers, lined the walkways with sod, and piped in recorded sounds from when the institution was up and running. reminiscent ....