Comments

wrote:
Beautiful shot, can see several different photos in this one composition.
wrote:
Love this photo, so far my fave in this series. I too am a photographer and I love doing these geometric, abstract shots.
wrote:
Some pictures of similar homes
http://www.bing.com/im...h+colonial&FORM=IGRE
wrote:
this is the most welcoming picture. The can invites us to come in and pick it up.
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Thank you for the update - I will append this to the history.
wrote:
I'm guessing that would be the octagon-shaped building immediately to the right of the distillery, if you were looking at it from the road?

Unfortunately I do not... it was connected to the main building by a little overpass, but it was all boarded up pretty tight, and for some reason, it seems to have evaded all of my exterior photos!
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I find the very small windows on these doors to be extremely sad. I can't imagine spending days and nights in a room like this, especially if you already had a mental illness.
wrote:
Mica,
The 3 on the left look like steam pipes, the big one in the middle may be a sewer line. The small ones look like water pipes
That looks just like my shower curtain!
Can you imagine looking through that and seeing an eye looking back at you? OMG!!
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Do you have any picture of what I believe they called the gate house. The little building to the left of the distillery?
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Love the stairways!! This must have been quite beautiful in it's day.
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One mans trash.....
This sofa doesn't look like its been outdoors for too very long.
At least it will make a nice little nest for the neighborhood chip monks and mice on these cold winter nights.
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In Greystone rooms the dust blows, among the radiators row on row
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Friday Dec. 9, 2016 at 3:00PM the stacks came down. Implosion by CDI of Maryland did the work. Buildings were taken down a few years ago according to The Reading Eagle newspaper.