Entries Tagged as 'Urban Exploration'

Urban Exploration

Okay, so I am trying to think of a new Urban Exploration post to do.  I know people want to see more photos of the Buffalo Aud.  But I really do not have many more decent photos to show of that place.

I haven’t been exploring in some time, however many of the places I have been in the past I have never posted.  Here is a list of all the places I have photos of.

  1. ACSYS (Oshawa)
  2. Akron Caves
  3. Bethlehem Steel
  4. Brickworks (Toronto)
  5. Brighton Gravel Pit
  6. Sattler Theatre (on Broadway)
  7. Buffalo Central Terminal
  8. CANRON
  9. Carbo Sil
  10. Central State Hospital (Indiana)
  11. CFRB Studios
  12. CFRB Transmitter
  13. Church of the Transfiguration
  14. CN Tower
  15. Days Inn (Hamburg)
  16. Degra Wells Memorial (Hamilton)
  17. Detroit Office Building
  18. Detroit Theatre
  19. Edgar Air Force Base
  20. German Orphanage
  21. Guelph Steam Tunnels
  22. Hearn
  23. Houdile
  24. Kingsbury Ordinance (Indiana)
  25. Kirby Road Farm Complex
  26. Lakeview
  27. Lister Block
  28. Lyric Theatre
  29. Mamora mines
  30. Markham Airport
  31. Millgrove Drug Rehab Center
  32. NF Plant (North Bay)
  33. NIKE Missle Base
  34. Oakville Cheese Factory
  35. Oakville Mini Putt
  36. Ontario Power Company
  37. Peterbrough Radar Station
  38. Picton Rehab Hospital
  39. Port McNicholl Grain Elevator
  40. Studebaker
  41. Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
  42. Toronto Film Studios
  43. Toronto Hydro
  44. Toronto Power Company
  45. Wellington Incinirator
  46. Westleyville
  47. Whitby Psych
  48. WSIB
  49. Wurlitzer Theatre

If anyone wants to see the photos / hear a story on one of those places, please comment or email me and let me know.  I want to write another UE Story soon.

Also…  For Buffalo, NY Area land owners.  If they want to hire me as a security consultant I am willing to do such a thing.  Since I don’t explore anymore (and since I am unemployed)…   I am willing to go through abandoned properties legally and look for potential safety or security risks.  I am very pro-safety minded, and can identify many potential liability risks – from an explorers perspective.

They hire ex-hackers to develop internet protection systems,  why not hire an ex-urban explorer to point out risks on your property.  Urban Explorers are basically hackers in their own way anyhow – in fact another name for them before Urban Exploration became popular, was ‘reality hackers’.

Fathers Day Weekend!

Nightbird and I decided to go up and visit everyone this past weekend.  On Saturday we drove up to Toronto in a refreshing rain storm.  We ended up driving up to Dixon Road and picking up my friend ‘Skelly’ who had come in from Oregon to spend a few days in Toronto.  So we picked him up and then headed down to ‘Avatar-X’s loft to hang out for a bit.  Richard was there and we all sat around and watched some videos for a bit until it was time to head to a Toronto UE meet!

I haven’t been to a UE meet in years let alone a Toronto one.  Back in the day, I used to host the Roadwolf Meets in Toronto and we often did very crazy things.  i.e.  Accidentally gaining entry and getting a team of about 14 people inside an ACTIVE factory which we thought was abandoned….   I don’t think I ever hosted a boring UE meet (except maybe the ones in Buffalo).

Shiroi showed up at the UE meet wearing a dog costume…  for some reason he was the only person Skelly took pics of at the UE meet…  lol

It was nice to see some old familiar faces, and a lot of new faces.  There was a large turnout at this meet, about 32 people or so.  We had lunch, and then headed out to the first location.  After a bit of troubleshooting between Richard and I regarding our radios, we were on the road.

Shiroi and I hang out under the Hogs Hallow.

The first location was the Hogs Hallow Bridge in Toronto.  This is located on the 401 just west of Yonge Street.   The ‘location’ itself is under the bridge.  Catwalks and construction platforms were set up in order to preform bridge work.  So we hung out under the bridge for a while.  I ended up getting soaked and covered in mud.  Which is fine if I was to continue with exploration, but I had planned to meet my mother that evening for dinner as it was her birthday the week prior.

Shiroi attempts to climb a fence…

So once we cleared out of there, I said my goodbyes and headed up to Aurora/Newmarket to visit my mom.  The first thing I did when I got there was have a shower as I was covered in mud…  Then we ended up ordering pizza and enjoying coversation and TV shows.  We ordered pizza nova of course.  Actually interesting story.  I have written about how Pizza Nova is the best pizza in my opinion in the past.  Well as it turns out, it has a bit of history in my family.

The guy who ran the original Pizza Nova used to be located in Scarbrough.  My mother had never had pizza before, and I believe she said she was in high school when she had her first slice.  No one believed her that she had never had it.  So they went to Pizza Nova and got a pizza and my mom loved it.  Every week when I was a little kid growing up, I can remember my mom ordering a pizza from Pizza Nova every Friday.  Pepperoni, Mushroom and Green Pepper!

Perhaps this is why I think this is the best pizza…  I grew up with it, therefore it is what I feel pizza should taste like and feel like…  but I still think the Buffalo pizza is way too greasy.

Anyhow, Nightbird got a message from Avatar-X saying they were ready to meet up again for the evening and we left my moms and headed back into Toronto.  We met at Av’s place and ended up sitting around for a good hour or two trying to figure out how to spend the evening.  We called Caesium in Vancouver and I chatted with him for a while.  It was very nice to hear from him and catch up on things.  Him and I took many adventures together when he lived in Aurora near me.

el_nerdo plays with Av’s ‘muff’ and gives it the shocker.

We ended up getting a list of Beck Taxi frequencies and going out for a drive.   We listened to eck Taxi and impersonated a cab a few times on the radio, resulting in many laughs.  Then we headed to a hackers pad.  A rented out apartment which was shared by a community of hackers.  A place where they can come and work on things.  It had a nice little work bench and some neat tools for making things with.  It was protected by a key card access system and was actually very high tech as you would assume a hackers pad would be.

We then headed back to Av’s place and watched Bruce Almighty until about 2 am.  Nightbird and I were going to stay at Skellies hotel room, since he had an extra bed.  So we headed back up to Dixon Road and it wasn’t long before we were all asleep.  It was a long day!

Sunday I woke up early and did some surfing while the other two slept.  Skelly then got up and said he was planning on going foaming (chasing trains / rail fanning, and photographing them) in a bit with someone, so we got Nightbird up and got on the road.  After dropping Skelly off at Union Station, we decided to head up to Ikea.  But first I wanted to get some brekfast.  We stopped near my old workplace at Yonge and St. Clair and had breakfast at the Fox and the Fiddle.  It wasn’t much or impressive, but it worked.

Yonge Street was active on this sunny Sunday.  Everyone was out,  the streets were packed.  It was a nice drive up Yonge Street, as I have mentioned before.  This was real traffic!  Not this crappy Buffalo ‘traffic’.  Anyhow, we got to Ikea and enjoyed our tour of the place.   I must say that Ikea is one of the best stores I know of.  Its cheap, well laid out and it is fun!   The kitchen sets there were actually really nice.  We ended up getting a few items and then headed up to TigerDirect.  But first, we stopped at my old house in Thornhill.  I gave Nightbird a tour of the neighbourhood I grew up in.  Showed her what all used to be farmland and how quickly things grew.  A field which I remember used to be a horse pasture, was now a townhouse / highrise apartment complex.  Toronto and area has grown so much over the past 20 years, it is amazing.  Then you look at a city like Buffalo and you wonder how the hell Buffalo failed.  But we all know why Buffalo failed.  The Welland Canal, NAFTA, White Flight, and Politics.

TigerDirect was busy as usual, but full of decent prices.  Except their printers were kind of expensive.  I saw that the motherboard I purchased for my computer project was still there and was still the same great price too!  A TigerDirect sales person saw me looking at it, and asked if I needed any help.  I told him I already had one, and he said oh yes, they are very good.  They havent had many complaints or returns from it.

We then headed up to my fathers place in Aurora.  It was nice to sit and chat with him for a few hours before company showed up.  It was my dads birthday as well as Fathers Day, so we had a bit of a party with family.  It was great seeing everyone, and everyone was so very social.  Even though my dad’s side of the family is notably older then Nightbird and I, it is interesting to note that as young people, we never feel awkward or out of place with them.  Jane (my aunt) especially is very cool, and open minded.  We can talk about pretty much anything with them.

I mentioned to my father that I would like to go up north and go fishing on some remote lake with him some weekend and maybe catch some real fish!  I don’t know if we will, but I hope so.

After the party Nightbird and I returned home, to Buffalo.  All in all, it was a great weekend.  :)    Wish I could find some local friends to hang out in Buffalo, and have the same kind of fun that we had in Toronto.

I thank Skelly for the photos.  As my camera wasn’t working.  His website can be found here: ke7jff.net

The Aud: Album 1

This is Album 1 of 5 of my Aud photos.

It is a start anyhow…  Warning, this is a long post.  Please be sure to scroll down and view the rest of my recent posts too :)

I also included some videos.

This is another decent overview photo of the arena inside.

In the Aud Club…

An old air handling fan

This chair is still in great condition.  Perhaps I should of rescued it from the Aud?  It is likely scrap now.

These stairs lead up to the cat walks above the Aud Club

Looking down into the storage room near the Aud Club.

Mmmmm Cat Walk Goodness!

Broadcast networks terminations

We found some new cups.

Original outside wall of the building.

I so want that sign!

Cool pipes and condensers.

Freezer

This was some kind of chute for perhaps coal?  maybe for the old heating system.

Fire Sprinkler Pumps.

One of the sewer access points I believe.

Floor waxing brushes…

Someone left their case for their portable radio here.

Strange Locker Room.

Stereo system in the rear of a fast food vendor.

Been a while since I have seen one of these signs.

Fine desk!

One of the locker rooms in the basement was used for paint storage.

Classy…

Someone had fun lining these up.

Wonder if that will fit in my 60 watt lamp socket…  ;)

This odd area had a wall knocked down into a room with 2 doors leading into it from the same area I was standing in when I took the photo.  Why bother knocking down the wall?

Old Spotlight

This was kinda neat…  Wonder if anyone remembers this?

They obviously were not protecting it while I was in there…  Walked in through an opened door.  How secure is that???

Radio Station license and some other things in the security office.

Now with only 1200 calories!

I had a better shot of whatever this machine was… Without my friend in the way.   But I think this shot looks cooler.

Above the International Beer Garden

Looking down into the depths.  This was between the Original facade and the new renovations.

Mmmm

Did someone say they wanted some seats from the Aud?

This used to be a broom…

And I thought those kegs were real!

New Aud Photos – Coming Soon!

With the Aud growing smaller and smaller as each day passes, I have found the time to go through some of my other Aud photos.  I will be likely posting a new post with some of my less spectacular and more unusual Aud photos in the next 24 hours.  So stay tuned.   I have a lot of photos to go thru still…

I have recieved a lot of requests to see all of them.  So I shall be posting as many as I can.

Also, I will gladly post any photos that people have taken of the Auds demolition.  I don’t get a chance to get down there very often, but would gladly post progress photos.

UE: Ontario Power Company

I first explored this gem on my birthday in 2005.  It was February and it was cold out.  With snow and ice on the sidewalks surrounding the famous Niagara Falls.  At 1 am on a cold February night, we walked down to the boardwalk.  Only a few random tourists were there taking photos of the Falls.  (with the flash on of course…….  because you KNOW that will come out!!!)   Near the Maid of the Mist building there is an access ramp which runs down the cliff to the abandoned power station.  We hopped a small fence, and got onto this road.

Walking down the road was fairly uneventful.  It was interesting thinking of the tourists above us along the board walk, likely thinking ‘wow, i can’t believe I am here taking photos of Niagara Falls’.  Meanwhile we were busy walking straight into the bowels of the beast, or so it seemed.

The walk down the ramp seemed to take forever.  It was icy and slippery, with some snow on the ground.  Ours were the only tracks in the snow.  I knew if someone saw these tracks, we would likely be compromised.  But alas, the potential findings of a mostly unexplored power plant were a stronger power then the threat of getting caught.

When we got to the bottom, the scene was impressive.  The massive falls a backdrop to this building built into the cliff side.  It did not take us long to find an unlocked door (it is amazing how people forget to lock doors in these places) on the roof, and we let ourselves in.

A shot of one of the roof access doors.  The roof itself was so rough and covered in fallen rocks, it was hard to tell it was actually a roof.

Once inside, we were able to relax a little, as we were out of view from tourists.  We took a few minutes setting up cameras and flashlights.  During which I took this photo of an old stretcher.  I found it was kind of curious to have a stretcher here in the fire escape.  But then I realized it was likely used for jumpers.  People who landed on the roof.

My first view of the generating room was awesome.  I mean I knew the place was big, but wow.  Previous to this, I had only been in Hearn and a few other locations of similar size.  They were all fairly opened up and lit by natural light or still had some power.  It was a lot different coming into a room the size of this which was pitch black.

These turbines were driven by water fed from huge tunnels (pipes) under Niagara Parkway.  These tunnels were so large you could drive trucks in them.  But we shall get back to that.  The turbines themselves produced (i think) 300 Hz (or 600 Hz) AC power which was used mainly for industrial applications.  The plant was modified to produce 60 Hz in the 70’s and continued in operation until 1999.  In 1999 the land which the transformer station for the plant was located on, was purchased by the Casino.  Parts of the Transformer station have been incorporated into the construction of the Casino.

It is actually quite interesting that this location was used to help develop my favorite game, Left4Dead.  At least I am pretty sure it was.  Take a look at these following photographs and compare them to in game screen shots.

Taken from one end of the plant, looking down the length of the plant.  This image attempts to show you the scale.

Granted there is less detail, but even the ceiling rafters seem similar.  It is even possible my photos were used as reference material for the game designers.  It is very hard to say really.

The control room was kind of neat.  But fairly simple really.  It was nice however to see a control room which was not trashed and vandalized like the Hearn control room.

What was also very cool to find was John Candy’s signature.  He was in this power station during the filming of Canadian Bacon.

Sadly, in later visits we found that someone had stolen this section of the wall.  It was actually physically cut out of the metal.  Very sad.

But enough about that…

Lets see some of the cool shit I found.

Behind the control room there was a sealed door.  One similar to those you may find on a submarine.  We were able to open it after a lot of work.  It had been rusted shut.  Luckily some WD-40 was laying around.

This door led to the transformer station and valve chamber.  It was literally a 60 or so degree slope heading up into the cliff, upwards towards street level.  It looked sketchy, and possibly dangerous, so of course we ventured in.

It was fairly long.  and Was a few minutes until we got to a sort of landing.  We were actually climbing on top of a makeshift stairway on top of a giant pipe.  The landing was at the valve chamber level.

Some of us stopped for a rest there, while myself and a few others continued up the cement stairs.  The stairs were covered in slimy calcite and there was water flowing down them constantly.

We kind of hoped that it would come out into some storage room in the back of the Casino, and maybe we could grab a bag of money or something, hehe.   But really, we were curious where it led, since the casino was built ontop of the transformer station, and where else would this lead?

Eventually we got up to a upper landing, and there was a plywood board over a opening in the ceiling.  We could not move it, and there was no other way out.  We turned around and returned to the valve chambers.  From here we climbed up a very narrow opening into the valve chamber.

It was quite neat being in the valve chamber.  Knowing you were a few stories below the street was kind of neat in its own way.  Also knowing that few people have likely been in here since the plant closed.  Knowing that we did have to really work to get that door opened.

It was also neat to find images like this one in the public archives.  Its like ‘hey! I have seen that!’.

The valve chambers ran the length of the plant, and there were more then just valves in there.  I got several artistic photos in there.

Eventually we found a modern stainless steel staircase, which led to a newer area, and an elevator.  The elevator led back down to the plant.  And more stairs led up to street level.  Standing there behind the double glass ’store style’ doors looking out onto Niagara Falls Parkway it was so tempting to call it a night.  By this time it was about 6am, and the thought of climbing back down all the way into the plant, only to have to walk up a long road again was not really ideal.  We unlocked the glass doors from the inside and left that way, leaving the doors unlocked.   Surprisingly they remained unlocked for several weeks, allowing us a few more visits, before they were finally discovered and re-locked.

All in all it was a fun location.   Last I heard, everything had been cleared out of it,  including the generators, and it was being used as a storage space for the Park system.

Fun times!

Photo Review: The Aud Photo

The famous ‘Aud’ Photo above was taken by me in early 2007. While I have explained a few times about how it was photographed, I still get asked about it. At the time, Demolition had not started on the Aud. Therefore the building was completely void of any electricity. To take this photo I had to bring my own spotlights. On previous visits, I had experimented with many other methods of taking a similar photo, from setting up a 12 volt strobe light system, similar to what you would find on a police car, to walking around with camera flashes and/or flashlights while the exposure was in progress.

I finally decided to lug the spotlight in. And while myself and my friend opened our shutters at the same time, I began to light paint the arena with the spotlight, ensuring that I lit up every single portion of the frame. I believe this was a 2 minute exposure.

Frankly the result is likely the last best photograph of the inside of the Aud prior to demolition. Because of this I have had a few requests to purchase the photo, the photo has also been featured on WIVB News Channel 4 during their evening news for a story on the Aud. Some people actually requested my negatives and such. Now I may not sell many photographs or prints, but I am not really keen to sell my negatives. I will however sell prints at a reasonable price. Email me to inquire about that.

For some more photos of the Aud, please visit my in depth tour, located here. I have even more photos then what are located on this site, however I decided not to post too many. If you have a request to see a specific part of the Aud, please feel free to email me and ask if I have it on film, because I likely do.

Anyhow, thanks for your interest.

Roadwolf,