Thu, Apr 18, 5:05 PM CDT

Gutted

Photography Architecture posted on Feb 23, 2004
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


I have a thing about old houses. I have no idea what happened to this one. There was no charred smell about the place, and no sign of any type of fire. Maybe a tornado...I really couldn't say. It didn't look old enough for it to have just collapsed on itself. It fascinated me. I took this with a digital sony. Tweaked it just a bit for contrast in Pic It.

Comments (10)


)

redbeard

9:17PM | Mon, 23 February 2004

Wow, what an interesting place. Great photo and great mystery. It looks to me like this may have been some kind of storage building originally because of those two opennings right at ground level on the main part of it and what appears to be a doorway up on the second level. Also the part with the missing roof was apparently added on later and the roof wasn't connected to the original building very well. Really cool building, I'd love to convert this into a nice little house again. Thanks for sharing this!

)

SophiaDeer

9:35PM | Mon, 23 February 2004

This is exquisite!! What a beautiful building and such rich colors!! It has a dreamy charm about it indeed.

)

Marty_Mcfly84

9:40PM | Mon, 23 February 2004

very nice shot....but on the comment above the roof was added at the same time due to the fact that the header on the door was layed with the bricks also the metal flashing is the only proper way to tie the 2 together. the fact that it is flashed in this manner and the standing seam metal roof is still there says it is somewhere about 1920's or a little older, I noticed that there is no leaves on the trees and dorment grass says that cold wet or maybe snowy winters are in this area, this may hinder the true age of the structure, and cause the roof panels to rust away really fast and cause the wood to rot really quick and collapse, the holes on the bottom are access and ventalation to the crawl space, looks like Indiana USA to me....please instant message me and tell me what you know about it and yes that would be a awesome remodel with its 10 ft ceiling hight

)

hewsan

11:36PM | Mon, 23 February 2004

Great portrait of this place. Insects and other critters may have been at it as well...from personal experience... they don't like brick, but can do a number to the wood and in a very short time (relatively speaking)

MGD

11:49PM | Mon, 23 February 2004

One way to learn more about the site is to go to your county records office and check the chain of title (sequence of owners). IME, if you go there, the only charge is for the use of the copy machine -- YMMV. Once you have the owner's names, you could check for newspaper archives ... you could even try to get phone numbers.

cynlee

11:50PM | Mon, 23 February 2004

gosh, i'm no expert on building, but i like it! :]

logiloglu

11:51AM | Tue, 24 February 2004

a beautiful picture of this old building. very moody work. !!!!!!!! #:O) !!!!!!!!!

)

saad_no

1:58PM | Tue, 24 February 2004

great colors ... excellent lighting, very natioral. thanks .... :-)

Michelle A.

4:22PM | Tue, 24 February 2004

Oh how nice..... I'd be in there exploring... I love old places like this too!

)

firestorm

5:33PM | Fri, 27 February 2004

i also like old places, i like the strong colour in this.


0 120 0

Photograph Details
F Numberf/3.4
MakeSONY
ModelCYBERSHOT
Shutter Speed1/60
Focal Length11

01
Days
:
06
Hrs
:
54
Mins
:
29
Secs
Premier Release Product
Tsumugi For Genesis 9 Female
3D Figure Assets
Top-Selling Vendor Sale Item
$15.00 USD 40% Off
$9.00 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.