291 Comments Posted by poisonousxbeauty

Imagine you worked here, like, forever ago (okay I know you'd probally be dead but ssssshhh) and you come back and see it like this..meep..I'd feel so uncomfortable...and sad...in a way, abandoning these places is like disrespecting the people who once lived and died there.
I'm defintiely a guy...

haha okay maybe not..but I can act like one...!
Because there's 1000000 million pointless comments, here's Lyrics chat site again. I'm there. let's keep this place historical.




Lyric's Chat URL:


http://pub3.bravenet.c...t/show.php/182050583
TAKE ME!
Previous fire?


Hmm well anyways anyone hot info. on tewksbury State hospital in Ma? I'm heading there tommorrow, and I'd LOVE to have some info before I went. I grew up in Tbury but no one will talkabout the hospital even though it's running still.
It's weird.
It looks like you can walk into the stack?
railroad?
So are they rennovating this? I mean why else would they remove all the abestos?
alright, "andrew" I don't know how old you were, but I'm sure I'm not too far off my dear.
Listen, I love abandoned buildings, and I love
going inside them.
There was one, not too far from my house that
I loved to go inside.
My brothers and I always went inside when we
were younger, and as we got older it became a
place we loved.
We even fixed up rooms and made it ours.
When my oldest brother got kicked out, we all
pitched in and made the goddamn house close
to livable. All he needed was electricity and running water, we basically re-built the floors and walls.
Then one day some kids from the middle school went in and burnt down most of what we had done.
Then a few weeks later, our precious "house" we had made was,
demolished.
Please, don't do what you do. I know it's hard not to give into peer pressure, but not going along is the best thing to do.
And urban exploration, I believe should only
be done with one or two close friends with
similar interests.
I love how you can see where the books once were on the shelves. Odd, creepy, yet beautiful.
Sorry, but Steve, although that's true it's incerdibly disgusting. But it definitely is a relic of the war, and americas history.
They never taught me any of this in AP History..
I would love to live in such a beautiful structure. I mean these places were built to house the sick, and a lot of times, let's face it, they became homes for everyone.
In Danvers they used to allow poor people to live there for 1 month, free room and board. I assume that happened at many hospitals.
These places were amazing, and it's a shame to see them falling apart.
I would LOVE to buy one of these hospitals and renovate them.
But it's costs so much, you'd need to get them right when they closed. I hope someday to buy a small hospital that closed in Haverhill not too long ago, and shouldn't cost too much. I'm sure the other hospital on the ground will close soon enough, it's already old, and has a reputation for malpractice.
The building isn't nearly as beautiful as this one, and it's in a residential area, but I would love to take it over and renovate it.
Same thing with the mill buildings in the cities around me.
Currently my father and I buy run-down houses, restore them, and sell them again, and it's always fantastic to see them renovated, and to go through the layers of paint and wall paper, to see what's been there, and to imagine what when on.
I can just imagine what it would be like to renovate a hospital...
Ha yeah, forget college. lol.
Oh and my shop has over 30 printers in at, and presses, Imagine working a GIANT PRINTER 5 days a week for 6 hours with only a 25 minuet break...EEP!
(i guess it's worth it though because I get to go home to a nice computer screen to look at Motts fantastic photography, which, by the way is my SLIDESHOW BACKROUND.)
WOW....just...WOW
I have hugge pretty flat screen monitor. I speant my money for college on it-but hey who needs college when you've got a nicec Monitor?