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Off The Deep End: 12 Abandoned Swimming Pools

25 Feb

[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

abandoned swimming pools
An abandoned swimming pool is kind of like a fish out of water in that, well, both are out of water. As far as pools go, their dry and empty aspect makes them seem exposed, naked, incomplete and bereft of purpose. Left high, dry and drained of liquid assets, these 12 abandoned swimming pools expose their bottoms for all to see. As one might expect, it’s not always a pretty sight.

Public Indoor Pool – Pripyat, Ukraine

abandoned swimming pool Pripyat Chernobyl(images via: Tim Suess)

The irradiated ghost town of Pripyat is chock full of abandonments for one simple reason: the 1986 Chernobyl disaster destroyed the town without harming any of its structures. The fate of its people are another story altogether. Swimming Pool Building 1, highlighted here, is the largest of Pripyat’s public indoor pools.

abandoned swimming pool Pripyat Chernobyl(image via: Tim Suess)

Before 1986 this pool must have been a lovely place to hang out with friends and family. Attractive styling, generous windows and modern conveniences served to please anyone from casual leisure swimmers to aspiring Olympians with their eyes on the prize. Kudos to Timm Suess for capturing this eerie echoing abandoned pool in the prime of its radioactive afterlife.

Durham City Baths – Durham, UK

Durham Baths abandoned swimming pool(images via: TZ-UK)

The mood of the Great Depression in northeastern England lightened a little when on September 28th, 1932, the Durham City Baths and Washhouses opened. The 75ft by 30ft main pool was overlooked by viewing balconies with wrought iron railings decorated with seahorse, dolphin and waterspout designs. Overhead, a striking arch-ribbed roof featuring a central greenhouse let in natural light. The townspeople of Durham enjoyed their pool for 76 years before it finally closed for good in 2008.

Durham Baths abandoned swimming pool(images via: 28 Days Later)

Plans to demolish the pool and its associated facilities were put on hold due to the 2008-09 financial crisis and subsequent recession. In the meantime, vandals and graffiti “artists” have put their inimitable stamp on the pool. Note the difference between the relatively unmarred pool at top and the later, trashed version above documented four years later in March 2012.

D. R. Plaister Aquatic House – Hobart, Tasmania, AU

D.R. Plaister Aquatic House Hobart abandoned swimming pool(images via: Swimming Pool Stories)

Originally the Hobart Tepid Baths, this all-season, heated facility was opened by the governor or Tasmania on November 10th, 1938. The complex was known as the Amateur House in the 1940s and it was finally renamed to D. R. Plaister Aquatic House in 1991 after Doug Plaister, the former Mayor of Hobart (1976 to 1984) who ran the local education department’s swimming program at the 55-yard-long pool.

D.R. Plaister abandoned swimming pool Hobart(images via: Swimming Pool Stories)

Now privately owned but in a terminal state of abuse and disuse, the complex is inhabited by squatters and the homeless with little or no security preventing unlawful trespass. The area is slated for redevelopment but it seems only the brickwork facade of the main building will be retained and preserved.

Kentucky Dirt Diving

Louisville abandoned swimming pool no diving(images via: Flickrized)

Clueless male model Derek Zoolander had a school for ants; Louisville’s Crescent Hill neighborhood has a swimming pool for worms. This exceptional image was captured by Flickr user Flickrized who snapped it on October 1st, 2007 using a Nikon D80 camera. While not technically abandoned, it’s pretty obvious no one will be practicing their backstroke here anytime soon. “No Diving” indeed.

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[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

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Flexible Paper Sculptures Bend Reality + Warp Perceptions

24 Feb

[ By Delana in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

girl ii paper accordion-like sculpture

At first glance, these sculptures look just like delicate porcelain or ceramic – but they hide a surprising secret. Beijing artist Li Hongbo‘s sculptures are actually made of thousands of layers of plain white paper, glued together into heavy accordion-like shapes that only appear totally solid when they are still.

girl and boy paper sculptures

woman on sofa paper sculpture

When grabbed and manipulated, their true nature is revealed. They are flexible and complex, capable of stretching long distances and looking altogether otherworldly, particularly the human figures.

paper sculpture bust

wooden cube paper sculpture illusion

Li Hongbo was inspired by traditional Chinese toys made from intricately folded and glued pieces of thin paper. The toys are stored flat but open up to reveal fun, playful shapes.

skull li hongbo paper sculpture

Likewise, Li Hongbo’s sculptures exist in two different states. Their static shape is stable, solid and beautiful – but when they are moved, their true nature is revealed. They are ephemeral, not stable; airy, not solid – but the beauty of these flexible sculptures remains.

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[ By Delana in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

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Lessons in Graffiti: Math Symbols Make Street Art Equations

23 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

math street art

1 window plus 1 window equals 2 windows – seems obvious, but it warrants at least a double-take, so to speak, when you see it so explicitly expressed. Simple black-outlined, white-filled, faux-three-dimensional shapes that render urban happenstance into something with a humorous sense of order.

math graffiti alley tags

Dubbed Sum Times (itself a cute play on words) this latest street project by Aakash Nihalani skips the alpha and numeric and heads straight for the symbolic, turning everything from trash cans and dumpsters to windows and doors into educational equations.

math inspired 3d symbols

The basics of multiplication, divisions, addition and subtraction – literal object lessons that makes chaos more comprehensible, and might even teach school children a thing or two (including how to subvert their surroundings).

math based installation equations

Regular readers and fans may recognize this artist’s style from similarly-abstract street artwork including this urban tape art series and this set of shifting geometries, each of which also impose a kind of three-dimensional geometry on flat urban surfaces.

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Lullaby Factory: Fanciful Installation for Children’s Hospital

22 Feb

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Lullaby Factory 1

Children at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital can enter a secret courtyard, stand beside a convoluted system of copper pipes and horns, and listen to the sound of soft lullabies. This musical art installation was created by Studio Weave to fill a narrow, otherwise unusable space created by the construction of an adjacent building.

Lullaby Factory 2

Inspired by the pipes and drainage systems that already cover the brick facade of the historic hospital building, Lullaby Factory creates visual interest, pays tribute to the 19th century origins of the structure and provides a comforting function for young patients.

Lullaby Factory 3

The installation reaches 10 stories high and is made of metal pipes in shades of silver, gold, copper and bronze; some of the components were recovered from a decommissioned hospital boilerhouse. Patients who can’t make their way outside into this magical little world between buildings can listen via radio from their rooms.

LUllaby Factory 5

The installation will remain in place until the demolition of the aging building, scheduled for 2028. Say the designers, “Our aim for this project was to re-imagine the Southwood façade as the best version of itself, accepting and celebrating its qualities and oddities; and rather than hiding what is difficult, creating something unique and site specific.”

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Transportable Tourist Towers Provide Stackable Housing

22 Feb

[ By Steph in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

Transportable Tourist Tower 1

Prefabricated, portable and modular, the Transportable Tourist Tower (TTT) by Portuguese architect Jose Pequeno is an adaptable housing solution that can be installed on almost any site, vertically or horizontally, as a single unit or a larger stacked structure.  Capable of being made from local, recyclable materials, this nearly self-contained unit is ideal for temporary installations and sensitive building sites.

Transportable Tourist Tower 2

The tower debuted at the 2010 Shanghai Expo and has since made its way around the world, installed in various locations as a tourist information center. It needs as little as 10 square meters for its installation, fitting into tight spaces. It can be transported on a truck, and lifted into place with a crane.

Transportable Tourist Tower 3

Transportable Tourist Tower 5

Vertically, the Transportable Tourist Tower can be placed alone or side-by-side. But what makes this unit even more versatile is its ability to be placed on its side. All of the components within the building are flexible and modular, making them easy to move, remove or replace as needed.

Transportable Tourist Tower 4

The three-story unit is packed with functionality despite its small size. It contains a living space, dining area, kitchen, bedroom, bathroom, study and rooftop deck. It’s easy to imagine this tower in use at large events such as the Olympics, where compact housing is only needed for a short period of time.

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3D-Printing Pen: Draw Sculptures with this Magical Marker

21 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

3d printing pen

2D or 3D? Drawing or sculpture? These dichotomies break down as you build up a physical model using a traditionally two-dimensional technique, tracing lines in the air that harden in real time to form objects.

From the creators of 3Doodler, currently running a Kickstarter campaign: “It’s a pen that can draw in the air! 3Doodler is the 3D printing pen you can hold in your hand. Lift your imagination off the page! 3Doodler is the world’s first and only 3D Printing Pen.”

3d drawing sculpture examples

Unlike many (even smaller and simpler) 3D printers, this device does not require a savvy geek to get it going: “Using ABS plastic (the material used by many 3D printers), 3Doodler draws in the air or on surfaces. It’s compact and easy to use, and requires no software or computers. You just plug it into a power socket and can start drawing anything within minutes.”

3doodler pen architectural stencils

Its uses range from practical small repairs to craft projects and even complex little structures, once you get the hang of it. They offer free stencils and templates to help you learn to create trusses and other rigid forms that will stand up and out from the page.

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City Cycle: Curved Urban Tread Wraps ‘Round Bike Tire

21 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

bike tire city

Rough around the edges, we rarely notice the unique landscape that evolves from regular wear and tear on our bicycle tires – this illustration draws on that familiar-yet-foreign topography.

bike tire cityscape concept

bike tire rubber rendering

Bruno Ferrari & Rodrigo Paranhos used Luxology and a little bit of Photoshop to craft this series of images for a creative agency – yes, sadly this is not a prototype for a real rubber bicycle tire tread pattern.

bike tire tread art

bike tire urban design

Yet you have to wonder: why not? If issues of unevenness were resolved, it would sure make a neat additional designer touch for riding around in cities. Either way, it is a neat inversion of the Halo-style ringed landscape concept.

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Abandoned Church Becomes Brilliant Urban Art Installation

20 Feb

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

Abandoned Church Art 1

A languishing, yellowed church in Washington D.C. underwent a dramatic transformation in every shade of the rainbow, with street artist HENSE using it like a massive urban canvas. The church is in a downtrodden area with the potential to become the city’s next arts district, and this project represents the hope for a more colorful future.

Abandoned Church Art 2

Dramatic and abstract, the project turns the former Friendship Baptist Church at 700 Delaware Avenue into an oversized mural just across the street from an abandoned lot set to become the site of a new art museum. Atlanta-based Alex ‘HENSE’ Brewer was commissioned to cover the church with paint.

Abandoned Church Art 3

The project not only brightens the neighborhood and gives it a sense of a new identity, it also draws attention to a structure that has been abandoned and overlooked for many years. Like many other abandoned building art projects, 700 Delaware Ave forces people to acknowledge urban blight in the hopes of encouraging action.

Abandoned Church Art 4

“Taking an existing building like the church and painting the entire thing re-contextualizes it and makes it a sculptural object,” HENSE told Design Boom. “We really wanted to turn the church into a three-dimensional piece of artwork. With projects like this one, we really try to use the existing architecture as inspiration for the direction of the painting.”

Abandoned Church Art 5

See more photos at Design Boom.

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5 Room-in-a-Box Designs Form 100% Modular Home Interior

20 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

modular interior collection

For the space-saving fanatic who hates to leave even one square inch unused, or the minimalist who wants everything to work smoothly and simply, this collection may be the ultimate(albeit ambitious and not-inexpensive) all-in-one solution.

modular space furniture collection

Rolands Landsbergs designed the Boxetti Collection to address every major type of living space, “driven by three basic design principles – functionality, advanced technologies and contemporary aesthetics of minimalism. Each of Boxetti modules is designed to achieve maximum efficiency of particular demands for functionality and suitability.”

modular bedroom bed closet

modular kitchen office units

Five boxes form the basis of the system: a bedroom box with a bed, closet and more; a living room box with couch and tables; a media center with television, music player and stereo speakers; an office with seating and work surfaces and a kitchen with storage, cooking and food preparation surfaces and spaces. Each one uses the same language of angular geometries, glossy white exteriors and warm orange interiors.

modular media center prototype

From the designer: “The capability of the modules to be transformed into compactly solid blocks is essential for the design concept in order to obtain an unobstructed and comfortable space – free of uselessness. The Boxetti Collection is a handmade product – the quality of materials as well as structural and technological solutions endues the collection to the extent of exclusiveness.”

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7 Abandoned Wonders of Residential Architecture

19 Feb

[ By Steph in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

Abandoned Homes Main

Palatial chateaus, ordinary suburban homes, skyscraper residences and vertical slums alike have been abandoned by their human inhabitants and given over to rot and ruin. Whether they represent once-opulent refuges for the rich or some of the most shocking conditions of abject poverty in the world, these 7 ghostly abandoned wonders of residential architecture are deliciously creepy and strangely beautiful, if a bit sad.

Chateau de Noisy, Belgium

Abandoned Homes Chateau de Noisy 2

Abandoned Homes Chateau de Noisy 1

(images via: polanri)

Officially named Chateau Miranda, this neogothic castle was built in 1866 by an English architect who passed away before it was completed. It served as a summer residence for a wealthy family until it was commandeered by Nazis during World War II. For decades afterward, Chateau Miranda operated as a hotel and accommodation for children of Belgian road employees, but in 1991, a fire led to its abandonment. Since then, it has been given over to decay.

Touring the dilapidated chateau is fairly dangerous, as most of the upper floors have decayed and fallen through. It’s a shame to see something that was once so beautiful fall into ruin. Urban explorers give a firsthand account of sneaking in and taking some beautiful photos of the interior at TalkUrbex.com.

Sathorn Unique Skyscraper, Thailand

Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 2 Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 3 Abandoned Sathorn Unique Skyscraper 1

(images via: abandonedjourney.com, earth-bound misfit)

The 47-story Sathorn Unique Tower was supposed to be a well-appointed modern residence for well-to-do citizens of Bangkok, Thailand. Now, it’s a ghost tower, standing eerily empty and silent against the skyline of the city, its concrete surfaces already stained and rusted. Developers built this and many other skyscrapers in Bangkok during an economic boom, but fortunes fell, the developers went bankrupt, and the buildings stand empty. During storms, debris from the structures rain down upon the streets below. Inside, it’s virtually pitch black, and exposed metal pipes and frames should make explorers wonder when they last had a tetanus shot. At the top, however, it’s easy to see why this would have become one of the city’s most prestigious addresses.

Abandoned Prince’s House, Russia

Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 1 Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 2 Abandoned Homes Russian Prince 3

(images via: english russia)

Perhaps abandoned mansions, castles and chateaus are so fascinating because it’s difficult for many of us to understand how something that cost so much money could be allowed to decay. Someone went through the trouble of designing the home, choosing decorative elements and purchasing fine fixtures, only for them to be ruined far before they should have. This Russian prince’s house located on the Black Sea in Abkhazia is one example. Overlooking what was known to upper-class Russians as the ‘Russian Riviera’, the castle is nearly 200 years old.

But, like many things, it lost its grandeur during the Soviet era. It was converted to the Hotel Seagull on Stalin’s orders, a summer residence for male government officials from Moscow. Once the Soviet Union collapsed, it was abandoned; with the nation of Georgia so often at war, restoring it is not exactly a high priority.

Kolmanskop, Namibia

Abandoned Homes Kolmanskop 1 Abandoned Homes Kolmansop 2

(images via: wikimedia commons, geoftheref, coda)

Among the most surreal abandonments is the old diamond mining town of Kolmanskop in Namibia. This ghost town was once a small but very rich village, filled with German miners who were attracted by the potential for quick and easy wealth. It’s built in a German architectural style. The town declined after World War I, and was abandoned altogether in 1954.

The most interesting thing about Kolmanskop is the fact that its homes, hospital, ballroom, school and other buildings are now filled with sand, making it seem as if they’re sinking. The hot, windy desert climate blows sand in through the windows and doors.

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