Decay is headed your way!
See the location where the movie was shot. We visit Alabama on the set of Big Fish. Tim Burton's movie stars Ewan Mcgregor. Ewan Mcgregor played Obi Wan Kenobi in Star Wars.
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The end of the Buck Hill Inn began with a downturn in business from the late 1970s into the 1980s. In 1990, the owners closed it for good. Numerous attempts have tried and failed, to restore the century-old resort. In the meantime, Mother Nature, scrappers, and vandals have been slowly tearing down what remains of the Inn at Buck Hill.
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60 + 60 x 0 + 1 = ???
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We tour the halls first going in and looking at some classrooms. After making our way through the halls we skate by a large set of lockers and find our way climbing some stairs where an old book room was holding many textbooks from a past life.
After that we find the auditorium which was well preserved! The stage looked pretty cool and some of the remnants of the curtains are still there too!
Making our way down to the bowels as Tom says we see another large storage area that has a lot of textbooks, computer and old printer equipment, and more!
We don't stay long but get the highlights of this awesome little explore that also includes a furnace down in the basement floors. Write in to let us know if you lived here, live here, go or went to school in this area and remember anything about this school.
Also, shoutout to ExploreNC who we found their tag on one of the chalkboards in the school!
Saluda is a small town right along the Little Saluda River. In 2010 they had a population of just about 3,000. Write in if you are from here or live here! We would love to know some history!
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Decay is headed your way!
We make our way inside and immediately see so many cool things inside, everything from old family photos, to postcards, and picture frames.
Both levels had nice fireplaces and really interesting ceilings too!
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Today we got a good one for yah! We explore this old rustic farmhouse equipped with tons of furniture inside! But man of man look out for the wasp's nests... they are everywhere! I hate bugs and exploring in the summer time is always risky. Does anyone else run into that problem? Write in and make sure to subscribe!
This abandonment was always boarded up. We finally get a peak inside and there is a lot left behind. There is even a whole in the ceiling!
With this big house do you think back in the day this was someone who was wealthy? Or had multiple families living inside?
We explore inside and outside around the back of the old abandoned house. Even the next door neightbor's house is abandoned.
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Write in and tell me what you remember about your hometown video store, what you miss, what you don't miss. What was your favorite part about it? Did you rent videos and/or video games too?
After the video store we continue through the small town and check out an abandoned structure that we aren't 100% sure what it really was but our guess was some sort of rec center or moose lodge where people gathered and hung out. Not sure, but please write in if you have any ideas!
Our final stop is an old abandoned house which looks like a school house but not too sure. Just a quick little peak before we leave this video and say so long!
We first approach the fence and realize we might not be able to get in, but continue along the fenceline until we see that it curtails off. Great! We make our way through snakey brush to see what is a big abandoned car lot with multiple abandoned cars. Tom goes through solo to check out some exteriors and even interiors.
Please write in if you know the make or model of any of these cars!
We make two more pit stops after this to check out an old 1990s Television with the built in speaker that is below the TV and a 1950s retro Packard car.
1. Water
2. Rice
Just think if you were on Survivor... what would you need
We set out in the woods and stumble upon this huge house with nice porch and interiors. We loved the fireplace and the decay that was around it.
Not a very substance heavy video but an interesting one at that.
We walk up to the overgrown greeny of a front porch and knock politely on the door. Tom hears something so it spooks him so we venture around the back to get a closer look at the whole house before venturing inside.
This house ends up being a really cool but spooky explore. There is soooo much left in this house, it almost looks like a hoarders home. The whole time as Tom is exploring he still has a very creepy vibe that someone is in that house, waiting, watching, and wondering when he will leave. Tom quickly explores the second story and then leaves.
We start in the woods today making our way through what looks like a vine jungle. These huge vines are like giant branches wrapped around each other. Such a cool site to see!
After exploring around the house we see that there are trees growing in and around the house. Definitely a cool explore. Once we finally make it inside, we get to see how old this house really is!
After making our way through the house we continue to explore through the woods to "see what we can see". The other house we reach is after passing a stable like structure. The next house doesn't have much too it, but was a neat little in the woods explore. Thanks for watching guys and gals!
This beautiful house is covered with lots of odds and ends like books, a mattress, a piano, portraits, and so much more. The beautiful bay like windows really bring in tons of light. It was sad we couldn't see this in the day when it was sunny.
We explore this pretty quickly because a majority of the floors are rotting and look like they are going to fall through. Write in and let us know what you think of these windows and what that long hallway was for??
We see some interesting things here: Plumbing in the floor of the motel room, the office with the building permit, old furniture still left like bedframe, suitcase, wardrobe, and more.
After checking out a couple rooms we go outside and explore the porch. Moving along we explore more rooms... there even are some covers present and a direct TV box! The permit listed was looking around the 90s which is something we usually don't get to see in abandonments.
Making our way along we get to the courtyard as well and explore that and come across an abandoned laundry room. After exploring that and some more almost fully furnished rooms, we finish up here at this cool roadside hotel. Thanks for watching!
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This giant warehouse has so many things just left to decay! It reminds us of Star Wars New Hope and The Walking Dead!
Drayton Hall is an 18th-century plantation located on the Ashley River about 15 miles (24 km) northwest of Charleston, South Carolina, and directly across the Ashley River from North Charleston, west of the Ashley in the Lowcountry, sometimes called (Low Country.) An outstanding example of Palladian architecture in North America and the only plantation house on the Ashley River to survive intact through both the Revolutionary and Civil wars, it is a National Historic Landmark.
The mansion was built for the father of John Drayton, John Drayton Sr. (c. 1715–1779) after he bought the property in 1738.[3] As the third son in his family, he knew he was unlikely to inherit his own nearby birthplace, now called Magnolia Plantation and Gardens.
The house has a double projecting (and recessed) portico on the west facade, which faces away from the river and toward the land side approach from Ashley River Road. The double projecting portico resembles a similar feature at Villa Cornaro, a country estate near Venice, Italy, designed by Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio in 1551. The floor plan of Drayton Hall is Palladian as well, perhaps derived from Plate 38 of James Gibbs' A Book of Architecture,[6] the influential patternbook published in London in 1728.[7] A large central entrance stair hall with a symmetrical divided staircase is backed by a large saloon, flanked by square and rectangular chambers.[8] Pedimented chimneypieces in the house are in the tectonic manner popularized by William Kent. There is fine plasterwork in several of the rooms of the main floor, which is set above a raised basement.
Located on SC 61 and included in the Ashley River Historic District, it was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1960.[2][9]
The South Carolina Department of Archives and History claims that Drayton Hall is "without question one of the finest of all surviving plantation houses in America".[10]
Drayton Hall is owned by the National Trust for Historic Preservation and managed by the Drayton Hall Preservation Trust, which opened the house to the public in 1976. It presents a full interpretation of the historic plantation economy as exemplified by the Draytons, both white and black. African slaves and free blacks created the Gullah culture of the Lowcountry. The first guide to the house, Drayton Hall, was published in 2005.
Thumbnail from: catherineannphotography.com/drayton-hall-charleston-sc
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Hey everyone! We have another video coming to you guys with Burt and Tom exploring abandoned houses from Milledgeville Georgia to Charleston South Carolina. This time we hit a couple places starting with FAIRFAX, SC.
The first house in Fairfax is a beautiful 2 story abandonment with an amazing front facade and tons of decay inside. We do make it inside this house. The first story is a little empty but still retains the beautiful structural integrity. Lots of cool fireplaces in this house. This was a quick explore but the house was really cool on the inside!
We finally make it to Charleston, SC! Our stop leads us to the infamous Drayton Hall. We explore the ground of Drayton Hall and see the little museum that is there now.
Sylvania Georgia - first house we stumbled upon and it truly was a beauty on the outside and in! This large house filled with old memories was a great little stop-off point to look at all things old and older! The house was beautiful, some might even call it a mansion but it was so rotted and decayed on the inside! There were floors collapsing and roofs caving in! We safely explore the mansion and its beautiful exteriors and hop up to our next city.
Gifford South Carolina - We have made it to our next city AND state! We cross into South Carolina and end up finding something in Gifford SC. Right next to the TOWN HALL is an abandoned house!! Decay doesn't stop though so we look inside and explore this tiny house next to city hall. It has been a long time since someone has lived there but there were rooms filled with tons of used clothing just scattered all across the floor like it was trash!
Hey guys! Hit that SUBSCRIBE BUTTON! This is the second part of our road trip from Milledgeville Georgia to Charleston South Carolina. We are trying something new like describe in the intro of the video and if you like that just let us know down below in the comment section!
The first house is nestled back just behind some brush and is a tiny little abandonment. Once inside it opened up really nicely as we explored this house in Riddleville, GA. There were two large chimneys inside but it appears as to if they are either doing work on the inside of the abandonment or reusing the wood for something else. What do you all think?
The second house we don't really venture too far inside the house but take a lot at the treasures that surround this old house. There is an abandoned boat present, two to be exact! We quickly browse through the field and then head to our next stop going from Bartow Georgia to...
We arrive in Wadley, Georgia for our next stop on the road trip through abandoned places. This roadside house looked red like a barn and was open to the air and elements which featured some odds and ends inside that were just forgotten about. Then just as we were finishing up with one house, right across the street is another house left abandoned! The house was full of clothes on hangers, collapsing floors, and weathered insides left to be forgotten about. We finish up back at the barn abandonment wondering if this could be a general store or not.