Opacity - Urban Exploration
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Ephemera Archive

  • Expand2011
    • ExpandMay (1)
    • ExpandApril (2)
    • ExpandMarch (2)
    • ExpandJanuary (1)
  • Expand2010
    • ExpandNovember (1)
    • ExpandOctober (4)
    • ExpandAugust (1)
    • ExpandJuly (1)
    • ExpandJune (1)
    • ExpandMay (2)
    • ExpandApril (1)
    • ExpandFebruary (3)
    • ExpandJanuary (1)
  • Expand2009
    • ExpandDecember (2)
    • ExpandNovember (2)

Top Tags

Baltimore Brooklyn Cemetery Safari New York abandoned churches abandoned hospitals abandoned theater cemetery collapse full moon hospital house industrial medical equipment mental hospital night photography programming state hospital state school tombstones video

Subscribe to News Feed

By subscribing to the news feed, you can be automatically updated whenever new content is added to Opacity. Just click the button below, or direct your feed reader to this URL.

Subscribe to Feed

Viewing All Posts Tagged: preservation

Bannerman's Island Arsenal Collapses Once More

Saturday, February 13th 2010

On January 25th, more of the Bannerman's Arsenal delicate facade crumbled to the ground during a winter storm. This followed a previous collapse of a corner of the main tower on December 26th. Senator Charles E. Schumer met with members of Bannerman's Castle Trust Inc. to discuss the need and importance of preserving the structure, and is lobbying for federal funding and to secue the island as one of the 11 most endangered sites on the National Register of Historic Places. An interesting quote from a tour guide was found in this YouTube video: When we first came to the island we started to clean up we started pulling these vines down that you see on the sides of the building... we had an architectural engineer come on the island and took a look at that, he said 'You'd better not pull those vines down, they're probably holding the building up.' He also told us something else interesting. If you take a look at these buildings, again remember what I said, Mr. Bannerman would draw a picture of it and say 'Build me this.' Well, he knew the space that was left between the building, so sometimes you'd have a building that was like a parallelogram, sometimes you'd have trapezoids, all different geometric shapes. So the architect told us that what was happening was these buildings were leaning against each other, and that's what's holding them up. Were the vines really holding the building together after the masonry eroded away from between the bricks? If so, perhaps this mistake can be prevented in the future with other similar ruins (nearby Renwick Smallpox Hospital comes to mind, whose wall collapsed in January 2008). Thanks to Xydexx for finding that quote and the research. More photos of the collapse can be found at Hudson Valley Ruins.

Read More »


| All content © opacity.us unless noted otherwise | contact the administrator |