Tuesday 22 July 2014

Haunting Photos Of Abandoned Olympic Stadiums

Haunting Photos Of Abandoned Olympic Stadiums. It's Scary To Think Sochi May Be Next...

As quickly as cities rise up to host the Olympics, they seem to fall even faster. After the final national anthem is played, the only thing left for these epic coliseums is wither and decay. It’s an eerie reality. Billions of dollars, thousands of hours of labor, and years later, this is what remains...

Sarajevo 1984 Winter Olympics

Mount Igman Ski Jump in 1984
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Sarajevo was the first Communist city to host the Winter Olympics, part of an effort by the Olympic Committee to include all nations regardless of the politics at the times.
Present Day
Only 10 years after the Olympians left, Yugoslavia split apart into Bosnia and Herzegovina. War broke out and Sarajevo was under siege for the next four years.
The olympic site became a war zone, as both sides battled for control of the ski slopes.
Top of Jump
Ski Jump Medal Podium

Judges stand
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The judges’ stand provided a vantage point for sharpshooters from both sides.
Overgrown Bobsled Track
For some time, the bobsled track was turned into an artillery fortress.
Graffiti on bottom turn of the track
Remains of the Olympic Village
By the end of the siege, the former olympic village was a landmine-ridden graveyard, which the people of Sarajevo would rather forget.

Athens 2004 Summer Olympics

Main Fountain Entrance
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Ten years after spending $15 billion on the 2004 Summer Olympics, most of the venues in Athens are now crumbling.
Aquatic Center in 2004
Diving pool at Aquatics Center in 2012
The economic downturn drained the wallets of Greece and as a result, drained this pool of all its life.
Volleyball Arena
OAKA Main Sports Hall
Field Hockey Stadium
Multi-Million dollar softball complexMost of the stadiums were poorly designed, focusing only on one sport that had little local interest.

1972 Munich Summer Olympics Abandoned Train Station

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2008 Beijing Summer Olympics

“Bird’s Nest” Opening Ceremonies Venue
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China spent $40 billion on the 2008 Olympics, this is what that investment looks like now...
Present day state
Beach Volleyball Stadium in July 2008
Current state
Rowing Canals
Left abandoned to waste away
Angelos Tzortzinis/AFP/GettyImages
As quickly as cities rise up to host the Olympics, they seem to fall even faster. After the final national anthem is played, the only thing left for these epic coliseums is wither and decay. It’s an eerie reality. Billions of dollars, thousands of hours of labor, and years later, this is what remains...
 
Beijing Baseball Stadium in 2008
Current state as of 2012
Olympic BMX Track

1936 Berlin Summer Olympics

Olympic Village
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You can't really blame a county for abandoning the creepy site of an Olympics hosted by the most evil man in history, Adolf Hitler.
John Macdougall, AFP/Getty Images
Main Amphitheater
John Macdougall, AFP/Getty Images
Diving Venue
Helsinki 1952 Summer Olympics
The Olympics are a wonderful way to bring the world together, but this is an aftermath most people don't see. With the 2014 games wrapping up in Sochi, you have to wonder what the $50 Billion pop-up city will look like years from now.
Beijing Baseball Stadium in 2008
Current state as of 2012
Olympic BMX Track
1936 Berlin Summer Olympics
Olympic Village
1936%20Berlin%20Summer%20Olympics
You can't really blame a county for abandoning the creepy site of an Olympics hosted by the most evil man in history, Adolf Hitler.
Main Amphitheater
Diving Venue

Helsinki 1952 Summer Olympics

Main Swimming Stadium
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The Olympics are a wonderful way to bring the world together, but this is an aftermath most people don't see. With the 2014 games wrapping up in Sochi, you have to wonder what the $50 Billion pop-up city will look like years from now.

Abandoned Route 66: The Tourist Trap Ghost Town

By MessyNessy 13th Mar, 2013
Photo

Route 66; where all those wonderfully off-beat attractions of ‘Roadside America’ culture first sprouted. By the 1920s, Route 66, known then as the National Trail, was fast-becoming the most popular road in the country for Westward pioneers travelling across the Diablo Canyon. A 19th century isolated trading post in Arizona suddenly became a bustling stop for drivers seeking gas, food, lodging and entertainment. Today, the only thing you’ll find in the barely-there town of Two Guns is the extensive ruin of a 20th century tourist trap.



The last caretaker’s mobile home has been deserted and stripped, and the rare visitors passing through can roam the site freely. It is believed the roadside town is cursed by a ghost tribe of Apaches who were burnt alive in a nearby cave in 1878 by the Navajos. Looking back at the events, it would seem the site was doomed shortly after an eccentric entrepreneur Harry “Two Guns” Miller came into town with dollar signs in his eyes.


Mr. Miller had got wind of the growing prosperity at the canyon lodge and made a deal with the landowners, Earle and Louis Cundiff, to lease a business site. He transformed the desert land into a full-blown tourist trap, complete with gas station, lodging, food emporium and of course, a zoo.

Miller, who claimed to be full-blooded Apache, also started giving tours of the canyon, which during the 19th century, was the site of the gruesome confrontation between the Navajos and the Apaches. He cleaned up  the cave which had essentially served as a tomb for the remaining skeletons of 42 Apache men that had died there in a surprise angry retaliation from the Navajos for attacking their villages.

Miller called it the Apache Death Cave and built fake ruins around it and sold the Apache’s skulls as souvenirs. To make it a little less morbid, he later strung some lights, added a soda stand and renamed it the “Mystery Cave”. This is when things started to go very wrong for Two Guns. 

A series of unfortunate events began to plague Miller and the tourist town. Two Guns suddenly spiralled into misfortune after a major robbery of the trading post. Tension between Miller and his landlords, the Cundiffs, resulted in a heated dispute where Miller shot and killed Mr. Cundiff. He was acquitted at trial but incredibly, he was soon after mauled by mountain lions, twice, on separate occasions. Next he was bitten by a native venomous lizard known as the Gila monster which left him with a disfigured arm. Finally in 1929, a devastating fire engulfed the roadside town of Two Guns. After losing his greedy court battle with Mrs. Cundiff to keep the land, Miller finally left. Louise Cundiff and her new husband tried to rebuild the site but by this time, the heyday of Route 66 was over. It had been rerouted to the opposite canyon and the tourists had stopped coming.

A derelict Two Guns was sold and leased numerous times during the 1950s, remaining in a sorry state. In 1960s, as a new Interstate 40 was being built that would give the old attraction its own highway exit and new visitors, an ambitious new owner began re-building a restaurant, souvenir shop, gas station, another zoo, and restoring the tourist trails to the Apache tomb cave. Things were looking up for the attraction but in 1971, it all went up in flames again when another devastating fire swallowed up the last hope for the Two Guns. It has never been inhabited since.

Dare to visit? The barbed-wire fences have open gates so all of the old and newer buildings are accessible.  The old stone buildings are intact, despite heavy graffiti. Today, Two Guns has an unlikely Hollywood guardian in Russell Crowe, who purchased the property in 2011 to film a remake of WestWorld.  No word on when production will start (status: ‘in development’ on IMDB.com), but it would probably be wise to make a ‘no smoking rule’ a priority on set. Until then, the site is completely abandoned; no caretaker, no soda stands, no nobody…

The Abandoned Land of Oz

Follow the Yellow Brick Road to the Abandoned Land of Oz

By Messy Nessy 31st May, 2013

When I was a kid, I was cast as Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz for my school musical. I was a very serious ten year-old and so I took the role very seriously. Another student had been cast as Dorothy’s pet dog, “Toto”, and stood next to me the entire time on stage wearing a fluffy bear costume (they couldn’t find a dog one), panting and barking after I delivered every line. Looking back, it was the performance of a lifetime. And so friends,  I felt most compelled to share a recent ‘forgotten’ find, the 1970s defunct theme park, Land of Oz….
In the resort town of Beech Mountain, North Carolina, lies a neglected theme park that survived for just ten years before it closed its doors and fell into disrepair. Entrepreneur Grover Robbins opened the park in 1970 with the investment of veteran Hollywood actress Debbie Reynolds, who bought several props and costumes from the 1939 Wizard of Oz film from MGM studios to display in the small museum. Visitors could walk down the Yellow Brick Road, “experience” the tornado which struck Dorothy’s house, and visit with the Scarecrow, Tinman, the Lion, and the Wicked Witch of the West.
But don’t forget the munchkins! As you can see, they look super friendly and cute– not at all like ghost children that have been turned to stone and sentenced to live in the overgrown woods of an abandoned theme park….

A not at all creepy ‘munchkin house’.  (c) Thomas Kerns



Dorothy’s replica house, which you can actually rent for $165 a night (Land of Oz included in the backyard), but more about that later….
The Wicked Witch’s castle…
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(c) Thomas Kerns
In 1976, a fire destroyed the park’s Emerald City at the end of the yellow brick road and some artifacts in the museum, as well as one of the dresses worn by Judy Garland as Dorothy in the movie. Despite attracting over 20,000 visitors on it’s opening day in 1970, the park failed to bring in the crowds in later years and finally closed in its tenth year. Left to the elements and vandalism, props and entire houses were stolen. Some efforts were made to restore parts of the park after a decade of abandonment, but the Land of Oz would never be the same…

I’ve found some photographs from an old album on flickr of a family who visited in 1973. Photos by Billie Nenninger.
The Land of Oz in it’s prime, 1973:
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1973-08 Land of Oz, NC - The Tinman & his house 022
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1973-08 Matthew, Billie & Chad on the Yellow Brick Road, Land of Oz, NC 019
An artificial balloon ride (a specially modified ski lift) allowed visitors to get a bird’s-eye view of the park and breathtaking mountain scenery before leaving Oz….
1973-08 Chad, Matthew & Jerry on the balloon ride , Land of Oz, NC 018
(c) Billie Nenninger
You’ll be glad to know that the Land of Oz hasn’t been totally forgotten however. In the late nineties, former employees began organising a reunion at the decaying park once a year and bringing it back to life for a day. It eventually became an annual two day festival called Autumn in Oz. The yellow brick road might still be missing quite a few of its yellow bricks, but locals and non-locals now travel to the park every year to resurrect this surviving relic from its slumber.
Dorothy’s replica farmhouse can be rented from May 1st until January 1st.
This perfect private farm tucked away atop Beech Mountain has an antique kitchen & parlor, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, down comforters, every appliance, great views, lots of adventure!”
dhouse
Rates start at $165 per night, $400 for the weekend and $1000 for the week and you’d be renting it from Cindy Keller, Oz’s keeper for the past 17 years. The park also can be rented for private parties and weddings.