We had saved the most spectacular spot for last on our tour with our friend Toeppi in June of 2018. We had seen two really cool bunkers, a doctor's villa that was more a dump than anything else, and we'd desperately tried to find a way into an abandoned water works facility that was more than tightly locked. But this one was to be the grand finale...
Situated in a very wealthy area with lots of villas that belong to celebrities, we didn't expect this one to be easy.
We parked the car roadside a bit down between a couple of other cars so as not to rise any suspicion. First, we took a little stroll down the street to look like regular tourists while evaluating our options of getting onto the property. In the end, we decided to just jump the fence and quickly run towards the bushes. We waited for the right moment, and then we ran. Finding an open door into the house was easy once we were on the property. We were in - unsuspected and undetected!
As we walked through the empty rooms, we were amazed at the luxury that the former owners must have lived in. This place had it all - an indoor pool, a bowling alley, a boat house, a wine cellar...
We took our time looking through all the rooms, and we were surprised that a nice seafront property such as this one wouldn't find a new owner to take care of it and bring it back to its former glory.
After almost two hours, we finished the tour with the mandatory selfie shot and then called it a day.
To find out about the history of the place and to check out all the photos, click the button below.
After exploring two underground air-raid shelters from World War II, we decided to explore something above ground and enjoy the weather. We decided to check out the premises of an old lung clinic that also happens to have a very large bunker.
After a short ride, we arrived at the place. Our friend Toeppi called a guy he knew from a movie shoot that took place there a few years before to see if we could get the chance for a legal visit, but there was no chance, so we checked out the area for ourselves.
The place was huge; some buildings seemed to still be in operation, and everything else was tightly locked, so after looking around enough, we decided to head back to the car. On the way, we spotted an old house between the trees. It must have been the villa of the clinic's medical director. In earlier years, it was common that the medical director had a villa on the premises of the clinic - sometimes equipped with a private practice. This house looked "palatial" enough to be the director's villa - and our research later on confirmed our assumption.
We just had to look around for a few minutes to find a large hole in the fence, and after another couple of minutes, we had found a way into the villa.
It was kind of disappointing; the place had been thoroughly vandalized, and there was nothing left that could point to the purpose of the place. We only took a few photos before we left again. There just wasn't a lot to see - but we had one more location on our list that was going to compensate us for this little disappointment, so stay tuned...
To check out the history of the place, click the button below.
The birthday barbecue had been a complete success. I can't recall how long we sat at the campfire, and we hadn't planned anytjing specific for the following day, so it really didn't matter :)
We got up pretty early anyway. When there's a pack of Greenland dogs howling at six in the morning, it's hard to stay asleep...
I think we got up at around eight in the morning for a nice breakfast on the campground. About an hour and a few coffees later, we left for our first location of the day.
A few months earlier, my wife and I had explored a small cave in the mountains, and we thought that this would also be a nice spot to explore together with our friends North Urbex and Lichtbeschatter.
The drive was about 45 minutes, and after that, we had to walk another 30 minutes or so to get to the entrance. My wife and I had taken the long way through the tunnels, but since one of our companions was a bit tall, we chose the easy way in and went through the door in the railway tunnel to get in.
The cave isn't really spectacular, but still an amazing site for someone who doesn't get to explore something like this very often, so we did spend about half an hour there to walk around take photos before we started our way back to the car.
There was one more location to explore before we concluded this tour...
To find out about the history of this place and to check out more galleries from abandoned places, click the button below.
The rain hadn't stopped during our drive away from our first location to our second location that day. We had opted for an abandoned sanatorium that wasn't too far away and where we'd identified a nice place to park without having to walk too much ;)
We parked the car and walked through the rain to the address of the sanatorium.
We were a bit disappointed by the building - it looked like a typical building from the late 1960s or early 1970s - nothing like the old sanatoriums that we'd visited in the past.
Entering was easy; there was an open window through which we were able to slip in without much difficulty.
The first part that we entered was the pool area. From the looks of it, this was no sanatorium in a classical sense, but more of a health resort - nice rooms, pool, a large dining area..this place had it all.
But unfortunately, the vandals really had a go at this place. Destruction, graffiti and general chaos is what we found. Someone even went through the trouple and put pavement slabs on the floor of the restaurant - and not just a few.
Due to the vandalism, there weren't many nice shots to be taken, but we still took our time to explore the whole place top to bottom.
From the looks of it, this location had been a playground for teenagers for many years. We, however, had the place entirely to ourselves. I guess we were lucky that vandals don't like rain ;)
To find out about the history of the place and to check out all the photos, click the button below.
In early March of 2018, my wife and I took a spontaneous trip to the mountains. We'd both had a few really exhausting months at our respective workplaces, and although our trip to Chernobyl was only three weeks away, we decided that we both needed a break.
My wife had to work on Saturday, so we took Monday and Tuesday off work and left Sunday morning.
For the first day, we had only planned to visit one location - but this was to be an exciting one.
We had never explored a "real" cave before, and this one seemed to be a good one to start, because it is fairly safe and there was no need for fancy equipment - it was good that we brought our rubber boots, though...
The cave is not "public" and is located on active property of the German railroad - namely a tunnel.
The cave was discovered when the tunnel was built through the mountain. And because of the tunnel, water that enters the cave, has to be drained so it can't damage the tunnel. To do that, drainage tunnels were dug into the mountain. And one of those tunnels was going to be our access route.
But let's start from the beginning.
There was no inconspicuous parking possibility near the cave, so we parked on a regular parking spot for hikers. Conveniently enough, a hiking path leads pretty close to the cave entrance.
Unfortunately, the hike does take some time, especially when you're carrying a bunch of equipment - after all, it was a cave, so we brought all the light we had. In addition, the sun really had a good day. Temperatures almost hit 20°C; something that usually doesn't happen in the mountains around the 10th of March.
Well, I'm not complaining. As we reached the spot where we had to leave the regular path, there was one more "obstacle" in our way - the active railway track that leads through the tunnel that goes through the cave. During the hike, we could observe the rhythm of the trains going by and wait for the opportune moment to walk along the tracks, cross them and look for the shaft that goes down to the drainage tunnels.
From the maps that I'd studied during my research, I knew that the shaft was about ten meters deep, but it was pitch black and narrow, so once you were in, you really couldn't see anything. As I had made it down the old rusty step ladder, I directed my wife down. When we had both arrived at the bottom, we started walking along the tunnel. It was dry art first, but after a while, it became too wet, so we switched shoes and put on our rubber boots. That first part of the tunnel was big enough for us to stand up, but as soon as we reached the real drainage tunnel, there was only a concrete walkway to walk on with the water flowing underneath, so from that point on, we had to go crouched and at the same time watch out not to step off the narrow walkway.
After a while, we reached the intersection that was going to lead us to the cave. At the end of that next tunnel, there were a couple of stairs that had been cut into the stone. Up the stairs, and the light of our flashlights disappeared into the darkness of the cave.
Since this cave has no natural accesses, there are no animals inside, and it was completely silent. It is a karst cave, and the rugged walls disperse every sound so everything sounds strangely muffled.
The cave was relatively small, but still seemed enormous to us, who had never been alone in a dark cave that was not a tourist attraction. We took our time and climbed around a bit in the cave and took a few photos - but the cave wasn't really photogenic. There were no stalagmites or stalactites only rubble from the cave's walls. And you could see the form of the tunnel underneath this rubble.
After about 45 minutes inside the cave, we decided to call it a day. After all - there was still the way back to the car and the drive to the bed & breakfast that we'd rented a room in for the weekend. Additionally, we had planned to visit our friend Jens at the old sanatorium for a barbecue that night, so we also had planned to go shopping for some groceries.
Since we already took the tough way in, we took the easy way out. We waited for the break between two trains going through the tunnel, and walked from the cave through the door right into the tunnel.
Yes, there was a door. It was put there by the railroad company for maintenance purposes, and we knew from the beginning that it was there.
But we thought that the adventure would be better if we took the long way in - and we were right! It really was a little adventure climbing down a shaft, walking through tunnels into a mountain and exploring a cave.
To find out about the history of this place and to check out more galleries from abandoned places, click the button below.
You can check out the short video I made of our exploration here: