Two Types
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,456
- Location
- London, UK
Knives? Guns? Shotgun shells? Evidence bags?
I assumed it was a school.
I assumed it was a school.
I am truly shocked. On this side of the pond, Britain too, has lost most of it's manufacturing industry, but the slack has been taken up with the service sector. There are deprived towns in various parts of our country, usually where there was once a large employer, like a coal mine, car factory or shipyard, but I have never seen anything like the desolation in those photos.
Knives? Guns? Shotgun shells? Evidence bags?
I assumed it was a school.
I am truly shocked. On this side of the pond, Britain too, has lost most of it's manufacturing industry, but the slack has been taken up with the service sector. There are deprived towns in various parts of our country, usually where there was once a large employer, like a coal mine, car factory or shipyard, but I have never seen anything like the desolation in those photos.
I am truly shocked. On this side of the pond, Britain too, has lost most of it's manufacturing industry, but the slack has been taken up with the service sector. There are deprived towns in various parts of our country, usually where there was once a large employer, like a coal mine, car factory or shipyard, but I have never seen anything like the desolation in those photos.
That website doesn't surprise me, in defence, much of it is the former Docklands, where Canary Wharf now stands. And yet more deriliction was removed to make way for the Olympic Stadium.I find this site quite interesting.
http://www.derelictlondon.com/
Wasn't it somewhere back there that just about a whole town was bulldozed for a Cadillac plant? I remember because just a few years after it opened they closed it and left the city holding the bag. Your empty land thing reminded me of it. Vacant land is vacant land and that is it. When you remove buildings you have devalued it by removing the "improvements." Anyone who says different is a nut. We all know you pay more for a house on land than we do for empty land---because the improvements are worth a lot more. Ok, I am done. I have hated Redevelopment out here for years and we finally killed it for the above reasons.
Wasn't it somewhere back there that just about a whole town was bulldozed for a Cadillac plant? I remember because just a few years after it opened they closed it and left the city holding the bag. Your empty land thing reminded me of it. Vacant land is vacant land and that is it. When you remove buildings you have devalued it by removing the "improvements." Anyone who says different is a nut. We all know you pay more for a house on land than we do for empty land---because the improvements are worth a lot more. Ok, I am done. I have hated Redevelopment out here for years and we finally killed it for the above reasons.
Poletown was a Detroit neighborhood on the Hamtramck city line where the original Dodge Brothers factory stood. The GM plant is still in operation (they build the Chevy Volt there now). Google will reveal the whole sordid tale. Suffice it to say that the jobs provided do nothing to balance the loss of what was a healthy, stable neighborhood.
One of the odd things about Poletown is that they left the Jewish cemetery in place inside the factory.
I think I mentioned it before somewhere but not far from Disneyland was an old residential area off of Garden Grove Boulevard. It was all bulldozed back in the '70s when the city of Garden Grove unveiled plans to build a senior center there, a project which for whatever reason never materialized. Meanwhile the vacant lots became city property for some thirty years, and it wasn't until several years ago that they finally found a buyer. Now there's a McDonalds and a community college on the site.
I find this site quite interesting.
http://www.derelictlondon.com/
Yep! We have an upper class of graffiti artist over here, check this one out: Surveyor gets three & half years for graffitiMan that graffiti of the guy with big teeth looks like something out of a horror movie.:eeek:
Cane him!Yep! We have an upper class of graffiti artist over here, check this one out: Surveyor gets three & half years for graffiti
That website doesn't surprise me, in defence, much of it is the former Docklands, where Canary Wharf now stands. And yet more deriliction was removed to make way for the Olympic Stadium.
What shocked me was the image of that Detroit picture. I've been visiting America for the last thirty years, been coming once, sometimes twice, a year and I have never seen anything like that. Although thinking about it, I have never been to the western side of the US, nor have I ever been north of the Mason-Dixon. Perhaps I am a latter day confederate, in exile.
That looks kind of close to the cliff there. It could well fall off and all you have is land.Here is a 1920's / 30's house going very cheap in Great Britian
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-23273660
:rofl: That does not sound good and it also sounds like it would cost you more than 400,000 to fix the house to inhabitable condition. Geological surveys and stabilizing the hill and the property above it can cost a fortune. Someone blew a whole lot of money on a gamble that could well leave them nothing......Give it a few months and it'll probably plunge in price.
...Most likely by several dozen yards.
Hey James, in your neck of the woods, wouldn't that be a $10,000,000 fixer upper home with a spectacular view?That looks kind of close to the cliff there. It could well fall off and all you have is land.